Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00835 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 08/02/2021

                    O F F I C E O F L E G I S L A T I V E R E S E A R C H 
P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
 
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PA 21-17—SB 835 
Public Health Committee 
 
AN ACT CONCERNING DE CEPTIVE ADVERTISING PRACTICES OF 
LIMITED SERVICES PREGNANCY CENTERS 
 
SUMMARY: This act prohibits deceptive advertising by limited services 
pregnancy centers, which it defines as pregnancy services centers (see below) that 
do not directly provide, or provide referrals for, abortions or emergency 
contraception. Specifically, it prohibits these centers intending to perform a 
pregnancy-related service from publicly making or disseminating a deceptive 
statement about the provision of these services, or the services themselves, that 
the center knows or reasonably should know is deceptive.  
This prohibition includes public statements made in advertisements, print 
publications, online, or any other manner. It also applies regardless of whether the 
(1) centers make these statements themselves or cause others to do so and (2) 
statement itself is deceptive or is deceptive by omission.  
The act allows the attorney general to bring a court action for injunctive relief 
against a center for a violation, so long as he notifies the center in advance and 
allows 10 days for it to comply before doing so. Among other things, the court 
can order the center to pay for and disseminate appropriate corrective advertising. 
If the court finds that the center violated the above prohibition, the state is entitled 
to civil penalties ($50 to $500) and reasonable attorney’s fees. 
The act specifies that it does not prohibit the state or municipalities from 
seeking any administrative, legal, or equitable relief permitted by law, including 
relief allowed under the unfair trade practices act (see BACKGROUND). 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  July 1, 2021 
 
DEFINITIONS 
 
Under the act, a “limited services pregnancy center” is a pregnancy services 
center that does not directly provide, or provide referrals for, abortions or 
emergency contraception. A “pregnancy services center” is a facility, including a 
mobile facility, that primarily serves clients who are pregnant or believe they may 
be pregnant, and that either (1) offers obstetric ultrasounds or sonograms, 
pregnancy testing or diagnosis, or prenatal care or (2) appears to be a medical 
facility by having at least two of the following five factors present: 
1. staff or volunteers who wear medical attire and uniforms;  
2. one or more examination tables;  
3. a private or semiprivate room or area with medical supplies or 
instruments; 
4. staff or volunteers who collect health information from clients; or 
5. the facility (a) is on the same premises as a licensed health care facility or  O L R P U B L I C A C T S U M M A R Y 
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provider or (b) shares facility space with a licensed provider. 
The act applies to statements about a “pregnancy-related service,” which is 
any medical or health counseling service related to pregnancy or pregnancy 
prevention, including contraception and contraceptive counseling; pregnancy 
testing or diagnosis; pregnancy options counseling; obstetric ultrasound or 
sonogram; and prenatal care. 
 
ATTORNEY GENERAL ENF ORCEMENT AND COURT A UTHORITY 
 
Under the act, before the attorney general may apply to court for injunctive 
relief in response to such deceptive advertising, he must notify the limited 
services pregnancy center in writing of the violation. If the center does not 
respond or refuses to correct the advertising within 10 days, the attorney general 
may apply to court for injunctive relief to compel compliance and correct the 
advertising’s effects. 
The court may order the center to: 
1. pay for and disseminate appropriate corrective advertising in the same 
form and using the same advertising device as the deceptive advertising, 
2. post a remedial notice that corrects the deceptive advertising’s effects, or 
3. provide other narrowly-tailored relief as the court deems necessary to 
remedy the deceptive advertising’s adverse effects on any clients seeking 
pregnancy-related services. 
If the court finds that a center violated the act’s prohibition, the state is 
entitled to recover from the center (1) civil penalties of $50 to $500 per violation 
and (2) reasonable attorney’s fees and costs. 
 
BACKGROUND 
 
Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA) 
 
The law prohibits businesses from engaging in unfair and deceptive acts or 
practices. CUTPA allows the consumer protection commissioner to issue 
regulations defining what constitutes an unfair trade practice, investigate 
complaints, issue cease and desist orders, order restitution in cases involving less 
than $10,000, enter into consent agreements, ask the attorney general to seek 
injunctive relief, and accept voluntary statements of compliance. It also allows 
individuals to sue. Courts may issue restraining orders; award actual and punitive 
damages, costs, and reasonable attorney’s fees; and impose civil penalties of up to 
$5,000 for willful violations and $25,000 for a violation of a restraining order.