Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB01055 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 09/22/2021

                    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 21-151—sSB 1055 
Human Services Committee 
 
AN ACT CONCERNING TH E DEPARTMENT OF AGIN G AND 
DISABILITY SERVICES 
 
SUMMARY:  This act makes various changes and updates in the statutes 
governing the Department of Aging and Disability Services (ADS). More 
specifically, it: 
1. consolidates gift acceptance and use provisions that allow ADS to accept 
gifts and bequests; 
2. replaces the Assistive Technology Revolving Fund, which makes direct 
loans, with a program to make and guarantee loans for the same purposes; 
3. updates the format of a required informational resource about the voter 
application process; and 
4. changes the name of the Advisory Board for Persons Who are Deaf or 
Hard of Hearing and eliminates required appointments for its eight ex-
officio members. 
The act also makes technical and conforming changes, including repealing an 
obsolete statute that referred to the Department of Social Services taking over 
programs of the former Department on Aging, as they were instead merged into 
ADS (CGS § 17a-301b). 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  July 1, 2021 
 
§§ 1, 2, 6 & 7 — GIFT ACCEPTANCE AUTH ORIZATION 
 
The act consolidates under one provision, the ADS commissioner’s existing 
authority to accept and use gifts under three separate statutory provisions. It 
specifies that she may accept and use gifts, grants, reimbursements, or bequests 
made by will or otherwise for carrying out the donor’s purposes or the laws 
governing ADS, provided they are made under conditions that she judges proper 
and consistent with state and federal law. If she accepts them, they must be held, 
invested, reinvested, and used according to the conditions of the gift, grant, 
reimbursement, or bequest.  
To effectuate the consolidation, the act eliminates two similar provisions that 
authorized the ADS (formerly the Department of Rehabilitation Services (DRS)) 
commissioner to accept and use gifts, grants, bequests, personal property, and 
reimbursements for the donor’s specified purposes, if any, or to support its 
programs. It also eliminates an authorization for ADS (formerly DRS) to expend 
its appropriation to engage consultants. 
 
§ 3 — ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY LOANS 
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Prior law authorized the ADS commissioner to establish and administer the 
Assistive Technology Revolving Fund, which made direct loans to people with 
disabilities, senior citizens, or their family members to purchase necessary 
assistive technology and adaptive equipment and services.  
The act instead authorizes her to establish and administer state financing 
activities as outlined in the federal Assistive Technology Act. This is to be known 
as the Assistive Technology Loan Program, which must make and guarantee loans 
to people with disabilities, older adults, or their family members, for the same 
purposes as the prior fund.  
 
§ 4 — VOTER INFORMATIONAL RESOURCE 
 
Prior election law required ADS to make a videotape presenting the oath 
statement on voter application forms in voice and sign language and provide it to 
the secretary of the state. The secretary then had to give a copy to municipal 
registrars of voters upon request. The statement specifies each voter eligibility 
requirement, has an attestation that the applicant meets each requirement, and 
requires his or her signature under penalty of perjury. The act instead requires 
ADS to produce an accessible version (e.g., an online video) of the oath 
statement, in consultation with the secretary, and provide it to her. In turn, the 
secretary must make it available to registrars of voters.  
 
§ 5 — ADVISORY BOARD APPOI NTMENTS 
 
The act changes the name of the Advisory Board for Persons Who are Deaf or 
Hard of Hearing to the Advisory Board for Persons Who are Deaf, Hard of 
Hearing or Deafblind. It makes several minor and conforming changes in the 
statute governing the board’s membership to allow representation by service 
providers who work with individuals who are deafblind.  
Prior law required the governor to appoint the board’s 16 members, eight of 
whom are members by virtue of holding another office. The act eliminates the 
requirement that he appoint these ex-officio members, thus enabling their 
immediate board participation upon assuming their outside positions. 
 
Background - Related Act 
 
PA 21-72 (§ 5) makes the same changes to the Advisory Board for Persons 
Who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing.