Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00210 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/22/2022

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sSB 210  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING TECHNICAL AND OTHER CHANGES TO 
THE LABOR DEPARTMENT STATUTES.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes various unrelated changes in the Department of Labor 
(DOL) statutes. It: 
1. removes a requirement for the labor commissioner to collect (a) 
population and employment data to make projections about the 
workforce and (b) data about present job requirements and 
potential needs of new industry (§ 1); 
2. limits DOL’s reporting requirements on the Subsidized Training 
and Employment (STEP-UP) program and Unemployed Armed 
Forces Member Subsidized Training and Employment (Veterans 
STEP-UP) program (§§ 2-3); 
3. eliminates a requirement for the labor commissioner to adopt 
regulations establishing procedures and requirements for 
granting exemptions to statutory meal period requirements (§ 4); 
4. makes various changes to the unemployment insurance reform 
measures passed in 2021 (see below, §§ 5-6); 
5. (a) requires the labor commissioner to make the state’s 
unemployment laws, regulations, and other related materials 
available on DOL’s website, rather than in print for distribution, 
and (b) removes a requirement for approval of the printing and 
distribution by the administrative services commissioner (§12); 
6. eliminates a requirement for the labor commissioner to adopt 
regulations on alternate use committees (committees at certain 
defense contractors that must prepare plans to reduce or  2022SB-00210-R000082-BA.DOCX 
 
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eliminate the contractor’s dependence on defense contracts) (§ 
13); 
7. removes a statutorily specified process for filing employee 
complaints about violations of the occupational safety and health 
standards that apply to public employers and employees (§ 14); 
8. repeals obsolete statutes on (a) DOL providing self-employment 
assistance (CGS §§ 31-3y & 31-3z), (b) the DOL Department of 
Factory Inspection (CGS § 31-9), (c) developing a universal intake 
form for American Job Center and Workforce Development 
Board facilities (CGS § 31-11ll), (d) requirements for physicians 
and advanced practice registered nurses to report certain types 
of occupational poisonings to DOL (CGS § 31-40a), (e) employer 
requirements to provide lung function tests to certain employees 
(CGS § 31-40b), and (f) DOL adopting regulations for using video 
display terminals in state facilities (CGS 31-40u) (§ 17); and 
9. makes various technical and conforming changes (§§ 7-11 & 15-
16). 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 
§§ 2 & 3 — CHANGES TO STEP-UP AND VETERAN STEP -UP 
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS 
Current law requires DOL to issue reports about the STEP-UP and 
Veterans STEP-UP programs twice each year, by January 15 and July 15. 
The reports, which must be provided to the Finance, Revenue and 
Bonding, Appropriations, and Labor and Public Employees committees, 
must generally include information on the number of businesses and 
individuals participating in the programs. 
The bill limits the reporting requirements to fiscal years in which the 
programs are awarding grants, with only one report due for the year, by 
October 1. Correspondingly, it requires that the reports cover the 
previous fiscal year, rather than the previous six months. 
§§ 5 & 6 — CHANGES TO THE 2021 UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE 
REFORM ACT  2022SB-00210-R000082-BA.DOCX 
 
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Experience Periods and Experience Rates (§ 5) 
PA 21-200 made numerous changes to the state’s unemployment 
insurance laws, most of which take effect in 2024. The bill makes several 
revisions to PA 21-200's provisions, as described below. 
By law, DOL annually determines each employer’s experience rate 
by calculating a benefit ratio for the employer over the experience 
period. This is the ratio between the amount charged to the employer’s 
experience account for benefits paid to former employees and the 
amount of the employer’s taxable wages. The experience period is the 
look back period (typically three years) used to determine an employer’s 
experience rate for unemployment taxes. 
PA 21-200 established a one-year experience period for employers in 
calendar year 2026 and a two-year experience period for employers in 
calendar year 2027. The bill removes these provisions, reverting to a 
three-year experience period for 2026 and 2027. 
The bill makes a related change to employers' experience rates for 
2026 and 2027. PA 21-200 requires that each employer’s charged rate for 
the 2024 and 2025 calendar years be divided by 1.471 and 1.269, 
respectively. The bill further requires that the rates for the 2026 and 2027 
calendar years be divided by 1.125 and 1.053, respectively. 
The bill also requires that, starting on January 1, 2024 (when PA 21-
200’s changes become effective), if an employer’s benefit ratio quotient 
is not an exact multiple of 0.1%, the charged rate must be the next 
highest multiple. Current law requires this same rounding-up for 
determining the rates before 2024.  
Additionally, under PA 21-200, if the average benefit ratio of all 
employers within an industry sector increases over the prior calendar 
year’s average by at least 0.01, DOL must adjust the benefit ratio for each 
employer in that sector downward by 50% of the average increase for 
the sector. The bill applies this requirement starting with calendar year 
2024, rather than calendar year 2022 (as PA 21-200 requires). 
Minimum Unemployment Benefit (§ 6)  2022SB-00210-R000082-BA.DOCX 
 
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For benefit years starting after 2024, PA 21-200 generally requires that 
the minimum weekly unemployment benefit for all workers be adjusted 
for inflation (unless the federal government provides a fully federally 
funded supplement to the benefit). The bill excludes from this 
requirement (1) the application of a construction worker’s base period 
wages in determining his or her benefits or (2) a reduction in the 
maximum benefit allowed by law. 
The bill also excludes the application of the constructions workers’ 
base period wages in determining his or her benefits, or a reduction in 
the maximum benefit allowed by law, from the law that makes the 
maximum benefit allowed to construction workers the same as the 
maximum benefit allowed to non-construction workers. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Labor and Public Employees Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 9 Nay 4 (03/10/2022)