Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06601 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/29/2021

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
HB 6601  
 
AN ACT PROMOTING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND 
OPTIMIZING STATE SERVICES THROUGH THE USE OF 
INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES DEVELOPED IN CONNECTICUT.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill expands the types of technologies, products, and processes 
eligible for pre-market testing by state agencies. It allows the 
Department of Administrative Services (DAS) commissioner to 
procure them for use by all state agencies if the Office of Policy and 
Management (OPM) secretary, in consultation with the commissioner, 
Connecticut Innovations, Inc. (CI) chief executive officer, and the 
testing agency head, determines that the test demonstrates specified 
objectives. 
Additionally, the bill makes minor changes concerning the process 
for participating in testing, the testing's costs, and a related recognition 
program for participating agencies. Lastly, the bill makes technical and 
conforming changes. 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  July 1, 2021 
TESTING PROGRAM 
Eligibility 
Current law allows CI-funded businesses located in Connecticut to 
test their technology, product, or process in state agencies in order to 
study its commercial viability if it meets certain criteria. Specifically, it 
must (1) promote public health and safety, environmental protection, 
or economic development; (2) be manufactured in Connecticut and be 
safe; and (3) have the potential for commercialization within two years 
of completing the test. 
The bill extends testing eligibility to small and minority business 
enterprises certified under the state’s set-aside program. It also  2021HB-06601-R000178-BA.DOCX 
 
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expands the types of eligible products to include those that CI finds 
would reduce administrative burdens or promote efficiency in state 
services, or otherwise improve them. It eliminates a requirement that 
the technology, product, or process be manufactured or produced in 
Connecticut and instead requires that it have a positive economic 
impact on the state, including prospective job growth and economic 
activity upon commercialization. 
Participation and Costs 
Upon an eligible business’s application, current law allows CI to 
recommend that the OPM secretary direct a state agency to test the 
technology, product, or process in the agency’s operations on a trial 
basis. The bill instead allows CI to recommend that OPM allow (rather 
than direct) agencies to participate in testing. (However, it retains 
OPM’s authority to direct agencies to participate.) It also specifically 
includes public higher education institutions as state agencies for 
purposes of this program. 
Under current law, CI, the business, or an investor in the business 
must pay for the cost of providing the technology, product, or process 
to the testing agency. The bill requires the OPM secretary, in 
consultation with the DAS commissioner, CI executive director, and 
the testing agency head, to determine on a case-by-case basis which of 
the above entities must bear these costs. 
Procurement 
The bill allows the DAS commissioner to procure the product, 
process, or technology for use by all state agencies if the OPM 
secretary, in consultation with the commissioner, CI chief executive 
officer, and the testing agency head, determines that the test 
demonstrates specified objectives. (Presumably, this would occur after 
the test concludes.) These objectives are (1) promoting public health 
and safety, environmental protection, economic development, or 
efficiency; (2) reducing administrative burdens; or (3) otherwise 
improving state services. 
In procuring the product, process, or technology, the bill allows the  2021HB-06601-R000178-BA.DOCX 
 
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DAS commissioner to waive competitive bidding requirements. If the 
procurement is estimated to cost $50,000 or more, the waiver must be 
approved by the Standardization Committee, which consists of the 
commissioner, the state comptroller and treasurer or their designees, 
and other department heads (or their agents) designated by the 
governor. 
Recognition Program 
Current law allows OPM and CI to develop a program to recognize 
state agencies that promote public health and safety, environmental 
protection, or economic development by participating in testing. The 
bill (1) also makes DAS responsible for developing the recognition 
program (which remains permissive under the bill) and (2) adds 
promoting efficiencies, reducing service burdens, and improving state 
services as activities eligible for recognition. As under existing law, the 
recognition program may include a fund for any savings achieved by 
testing agencies using the technologies, products, or processes. The 
fund must be used only for the recognition program. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Commerce Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 23 Nay 0 (03/11/2021)