Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00105 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/30/2022

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
SB 105 (File 254, as amended by Senate "A")*  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING RECOMMENDATIONS BY THE OFFICE OF 
HIGHER EDUCATION.  
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 
SUMMARY 
§ 1 — DEPARTMENT HEAD 
Makes the OHE executive director a “department head” appointed by the governor and 
subject to legislative approval 
§ 2 — INFORMATION ON POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION 
OPPORTUNITIES 
Requires OHE to disseminate information on postsecondary education opportunities 
throughout the state 
§§ 3-10 — OVERSIGHT OF HIGHER LEARNING PROGRAMS 
Makes various changes to the academic program approval process for independent higher 
education institutions administered by OHE 
§§ 8, 11-12, 16, 18, 21, 23-25 & 27-42 — PRIVATE CAREER SCHOOLS 
Renames “private occupational schools” as “private career schools” 
§§ 12-14 — APPLICATION PROCESS 
Modifies the private occupational school authorization certificate application requirements 
and process; removes time limit on a private occupational school's irrevocable letter of 
credit; and requires a private occupational school to provide evidence to OHE that it has 
the financial resources to serve its students in order to renew its authorization certificate 
§§ 14, 15 & 19-22 — FEES, FINES, AND OTHER PAYMENTS IN 
REGULATIONS 
Requires OHE to establish certain fees, fines, penalties, and other payments in regulations 
and eliminates amounts set in statute when the regulations become effective 
§ 17 — DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAMS 
Requires private occupational schools to request authorization to offer existing or new 
programs through a distance learning program 
§ 26 — PRIVATE CAREER OCCUPATIONAL SCHOOL STUDENT 
BENEFIT ACCOUNT 
Requires the advisory committee tasked with assisting the OHE executive director in 
administering the Private Occupational School Student Benefit Account to be established 
only when there are available funds to award  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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§ 43 — REPEALER 
Eliminates a requirement that hospital-based occupational schools pay annual fees and 
quarterly assessments into the Private Occupational School Student Protection Account 
 
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes various changes to the laws governing private 
occupational schools and higher education institutions overseen by the 
Office of Higher Education (OHE).  
The bill also makes technical and conforming changes. 
*Senate Amendment “A” (1) changes the effective dates of most 
provisions from October 1, 2022, to July 1, 2022; (2) requires OHE to 
disseminate information on postsecondary education throughout the 
state; (3) eliminates various provisions in the underlying bill, including 
(a) allowing OHE to establish an advisory council on authorizing higher 
education institutions, (b) requiring higher education institutions to 
report annually on financial information, and (c) allowing OHE to 
establish penalties in regulations for underpayment to the Private 
Occupational School Student Protection Account; (4) allows OHE to 
conduct a focused or on-site review of any higher education institution 
deemed at risk of imminent closure; (5) requires OHE to enter into a 
memorandum of understanding with an accrediting agency to conduct 
financial screenings; (6) requires OHE to only conduct financial 
screenings for schools that are not being screened by an accrediting 
agency; and (7) requires the Legislative Commissioners’ Office to make 
technical, grammatical, and punctuation changes as necessary in 
codifying provisions changing “private occupational school” to “private 
career school.” 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2022, unless otherwise noted below. 
§ 1 — DEPARTMENT HEAD 
Makes the OHE executive director a “department head” appointed by the governor and 
subject to legislative approval 
The bill adds OHE’s executive director to the statutory list of 
“department heads” appointed by the governor and subject to  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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legislative approval. Existing law already requires the governor to 
appoint the executive director with confirmation by the legislature. 
§ 2 — INFORMATION ON POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION 
OPPORTUNITIES 
Requires OHE to disseminate information on postsecondary education opportunities 
throughout the state 
The bill requires OHE to disseminate information throughout the 
state regarding postsecondary education opportunities in the state. By 
law, OHE regulates the state’s independent colleges and universities, 
licenses in-state academic programs offered by out-of-state institutions, 
and regulates postsecondary career schools, among other things. The 
bill eliminates a provision allowing the Board of Regents to prescribe 
additional responsibilities for OHE’s executive director. 
§§ 3-10 — OVERSIGHT OF HIGHER LEARNING PROGRAMS 
Makes various changes to the academic program approval process for independent higher 
education institutions administered by OHE 
The bill defines “authorization” as the approval by OHE to operate a 
higher learning program or higher education institution for subsequent 
periods and confer specified degrees. The bill replaces references to 
“licensure,” “approval,” and “accreditation” of higher education 
institutions with “authorization.” Under current law, a “program of 
higher learning” OHE regulates is any course of instruction for which 
college- or university-level credit may be given or received by transfer. 
Under the bill, this includes any course offered by dual enrollment.  
Appeal of Application Denial (§ 3) 
Current law requires OHE to establish academic review commissions 
to hear each individual appeal of a denial of an application for licensure 
or accreditation of a higher learning program or higher education 
institution. Under current law, for each appeal, OHE must select a nine-
person commission from a panel of 35 members appointed by legislative 
leaders and the governor. Current law requires a commission to review 
the appeal and make a decision on it within 30 days after the applicant 
submits the appeal. The bill instead requires OHE to conduct a hearing 
on the appeal in accordance with the Uniform Administrative  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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Procedure Act.  
Focused and On-Site Reviews (§ 3) 
The bill requires the OHE executive director or his designee to 
conduct a focused or on-site review of an application for program 
modifications, nonsubstantive changes, or authorizations if he 
determines that further review is needed due at least in part to the 
higher education institution’s financial condition indicating that the 
institution is at risk of imminent closure as determined through the 
financial screening required under the bill. A focused or on-site review 
is required under existing law if further review of an application is 
needed due to the applicant offering instruction in a new higher 
learning program or new degree level.  
By law, a “focused review” is one by an out-of-state curriculum 
expert and an “on-site review” is a full team evaluation by OHE at the 
higher education institution (CGS § 10a-34(e)).  
Accreditation by Another Entity (§ 3) 
Current law requires OHE to accept, unless it finds cause not to, (1) 
regional accreditations that satisfy its requirements and (2) national 
accreditation for Connecticut institutions accredited before July 1, 2013. 
The bill instead requires OHE to accept accreditation recognized by the 
U.S. Department of Education secretary, unless it finds cause not to 
accept it.   
Financial Conditions (§ 3) 
 The bill allows OHE, for any program or institution accredited or 
authorized to award degrees granted in accordance with law before July 
1, 1965, to discontinue the accreditation or authority if OHE finds the 
institution is at risk of imminent closure, as determined through a 
financial screening conducted under the bill (§ 4). 
Financial Screenings and Imminent Risk of Closure 
Determinations (§ 4) 
The bill requires OHE to enter into a memorandum of understanding 
with one or more accrediting agencies (i.e., accrediting associations  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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recognized by the U.S. Department of Education secretary) to conduct 
an annual financial screening of each independent higher education 
institution. If the institution does not annually complete a financial 
screening with an accrediting agency, the screening must be conducted 
by OHE, in a form and manner OHE’s executive director prescribes. 
Under the bill, OHE may determine that an independent higher 
education institution is at risk of imminent closure through: 
1. an OHE-conducted financial screening (i.e., a review and 
evaluation of financial information to determine whether the 
financial status of a higher education institution puts it at risk of 
imminent closure); or 
2. acceptance by OHE of the determination made by an accrediting 
agency. 
Under the bill, an independent higher education institution that is “at 
risk of imminent closure” means one that OHE has determined is at risk 
of being unable to continue operations or substantially fulfill its 
obligations to enroll and admit students for the balance of the current 
and subsequent academic year. 
The bill requires OHE, upon determining that an independent higher 
education institution is at risk of imminent closure, to submit a 
summary of the reasons for the determination to the institution. Once 
an institution receives a summary, it must submit to the office, in a form 
and manner prescribed by OHE’s executive director: 
1. notice of any known financial liability or risk; 
2. any information necessary to accurately determine and monitor 
the institution’s financial status and risk of imminent closure; and  
3. an updated closure plan approved by the institution’s governing 
board. 
Under the bill, if any independent higher education institution fails 
to comply with the above requirements, the OHE executive director  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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may request to suspend state funding designated for the institution, 
establish a date to suspend or revoke the institution’s degree-granting 
authority, or impose other penalties he deems appropriate.  
Under the bill, financial information and records submitted to OHE 
for this purpose are exempt from the state’s Freedom of Information 
Act.  
Closure Plan Updates (§ 6) 
Beginning July 1, 2023, when an independent higher education 
institution receives a summary from OHE indicating risk of imminent 
closure, the bill requires the institution’s governing board to update the 
institution’s closure plan to include plans for: 
1. providing notice of impending closure to relevant stakeholders of 
the institution (e.g., enrolled students, applicants, recent 
graduates, faculty, staff, and surrounding communities); 
2. disseminating information on student borrowers’ rights and 
responsibilities; 
3. managing the institution’s finances, accreditation status, and any 
compliance issues with federal or state financial aid programs; 
and 
4. refunding student deposits and paying the cost of student record 
maintenance through means such as the provision of a bond with 
surety or a letter of credit in an amount to meet these costs. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2022, except provisions on OHE’s memo 
of understanding for financial screenings, related notice requirements, 
and suspension requests are effective July 1, 2023. 
§§ 8, 11-12, 16, 18, 21, 23-25 & 27-42 — PRIVATE CAREER 
SCHOOLS 
Renames “private occupational schools” as “private career schools” 
Under current law, a “private occupational school” is a 
postsecondary career school operated by a person, board, association, 
partnership, limited liability company, or other entity offering  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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instruction in any trade or industrial, commercial, service, professional, 
or other occupation for a renumeration, consideration, reward, or fee. 
The bill renames these schools as “private career schools” and makes 
conforming changes throughout the statutes. Under current law and the 
bill, these schools do not include (1) publicly supervised and controlled 
instruction, (2) employee or member training offered by a firm or 
organization, (3) instruction from a school authorized by the legislature 
to confer degrees, or (4) instruction offered in the arts or recreation.  
Under the bill, when the term “private occupational school” appears 
in any 2022 public or special act, it is to be substituted with the term 
“private career school.” The bill requires the Legislative 
Commissioners’ Office to make technical, grammatical, and 
punctuation changes as necessary in codifying this section’s provisions. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2022, except the provision requiring the 
Legislative Commissioners’ Office to make related changes is effective 
upon passage. 
§§ 12-14 — APPLICATION PROCESS 
Modifies the private occupational school authorization certificate application requirements 
and process; removes time limit on a private occupational school's irrevocable letter of 
credit; and requires a private occupational school to provide evidence to OHE that it has 
the financial resources to serve its students in order to renew its authorization certificate  
Application Requirements, Fees, and Evaluation Teams (§ 12) 
Application Requirements. The bill eliminates requirements for 
specific information on the application for a certificate of authorization, 
including the names and addresses of all school stockholders and the 
proposed student enrollment agreement and school catalog. The bill 
instead requires OHE to prescribe forms. The bill also requires OHE to 
adopt regulations specifying the nonrefundable initial application fee 
amount and requires each initial authorization application submitted to 
be accompanied by the fee once the regulations become effective. By 
law, anyone seeking to offer occupational instruction must submit an 
application to the OHE executive director or designee. 
Evaluation Team. By law, for applicants seeking to offer occupational 
instruction, OHE must appoint an evaluation team. Current law  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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establishes the team’s membership, procedures for challenging 
membership, and its duties, which include (1) conducting on-site 
inspections, (2) submitting noncompliance reports, (3) giving the school 
30 days to provide evidence of compliance, and (4) submitting a final 
recommendation within 120 after the inspection. Under current law, the 
evaluation team must consider set factors (e.g., whether the school has 
adequate space, equipment, instructional materials, and personnel for 
the instruction offered).  
The bill instead requires OHE to appoint an evaluation team in 
accordance with regulations and requires the evaluation team to submit 
a written report to the OHE executive director recommending 
authorization or nonauthorization after an on-site inspection. The 
evaluation team must be appointed pursuant to regulations once they 
become effective. The bill requires OHE to appoint evaluation teams in 
accordance with current law until the regulations become effective.  
Hospitals and Schools Offering Barbering or Hairdressing Instruction. 
The bill eliminates provisions requiring that hospitals offering 
postsecondary career instruction obtain a certificate of authorization 
and that OHE prioritize hospitals based on the size and scope of 
instruction offered. 
The bill also eliminates provisions requiring that schools offering 
postsecondary career instruction in barbering or hairdressing get a 
certificate of authorization.  
Credit Requirement (§ 13) 
By law and unchanged by the bill, a private occupational school must 
file with the OHE executive director an irrevocable letter of credit, 
issued by a bank with its main office or branch in Connecticut, 
guaranteeing the school’s payments to the Private Occupational School 
Student Protection Account. Under current law, the letter of credit is for 
$40,000. Under the bill, OHE must set the amount in regulations.  
The Private Occupational School Student Protection Account is used 
to refund tuition to students unable to complete a course at a private 
occupational school because the school goes bankrupt or closes (CGS §  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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10a-22u). 
The bill removes the time limit on the irrevocable letter of credit and 
requires OHE to set the associated penal amount in regulations. Under 
current law, the letter of credit is released 12 years after the date of initial 
approval. 
Renewal Application (§ 14) 
The bill also requires a private occupational school to provide 
evidence to OHE, as part of its renewal application and at the executive 
director’s discretion, that it has adequate financial resources to serve its 
current students for OHE to renew its certificate of authorization to 
operate. 
§§ 14, 15 & 19-22 — FEES, FINES, AND OTHER PAYMENTS IN 
REGULATIONS  
Requires OHE to establish certain fees, fines, penalties, and other payments in regulations 
and eliminates amounts set in statute when the regulations become effective 
The bill sunsets certain fee, fine, and payment amounts set in statute 
and instead requires OHE to set them in regulations. Current law sets 
the following fines, fees, and other payments: 
1. renewing a certificate: $200 for each school and $200 for each 
branch; 
2. changing ownership: $2,000, plus $200 for each in-state branch; 
3. penalty for violations of laws or regulations concerning private 
occupational schools:  $500 per day; 
4. operating without a certificate of operation: $500 per day; and 
5. failure to comply with school closure requirements: $500 per day. 
Existing law requires OHE to make regulations to carry out its duties. 
The bill specifies that the regulations may prescribe fines, fees, or 
penalties instead of the amounts established under current law. Under 
the bill, the statutory amounts described above are only effective until 
OHE regulations setting amounts for these payments become effective.  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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After the regulations become effective, applicants must submit 
nonrefundable application fees in the amounts established in 
regulations. 
§ 17 — DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAMS 
Requires private occupational schools to request authorization to offer existing or new 
programs through a distance learning program 
The bill requires an OHE-authorized private occupational school to 
request authorization to offer existing or new programs through a 
distance learning program at least 60 days before establishing the new 
program. Existing law already requires an OHE-authorized private 
occupational school to request authorization to establish and operate 
additional classroom sites or branch schools at least 60 days before 
establishing the new location.  
By law, a “distance learning program” is a program of study in which 
lectures are broadcast or classes are conducted by correspondence or 
over the internet, without requiring a student to attend in person (CGS 
§ 10-22h). 
§ 26 — PRIVATE CAREER OCCUPATIONAL SCHOOL STUDENT 
BENEFIT ACCOUNT  
Requires the advisory committee tasked with assisting the OHE executive director in 
administering the Private Occupational School Student Benefit Account to be established 
only when there are available funds to award 
The bill requires the advisory committee tasked with assisting the 
OHE executive director in administering the Private Occupational 
School Student Benefit Account to be established only when there are 
funds available in the account. By law, the account awards financial aid 
grants to benefit students.  
§ 43 — REPEALER 
Eliminates a requirement that hospital-based occupational schools pay annual fees and 
quarterly assessments into the Private Occupational School Student Protection Account 
The bill eliminates a requirement that hospital-based occupational 
schools pay (1) a $200 annual fee to the Private Occupational School 
Student Protection Account for each year after the school’s initial period 
of authorization, (2) quarterly assessments on tuition revenue, and (3) a  2022SB-00105-R01-BA.DOCX 
 
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$200 certificate renewal fee.  
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Higher Education and Employment Advancement Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 20 Nay 3 (03/17/2022)