Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00312 Introduced / Bill

Filed 03/02/2022

                        
 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501  	1 of 23 
 
General Assembly  Raised Bill No. 312  
February Session, 2022 
LCO No. 2501 
 
 
Referred to Committee on LABOR AND PUBLIC EMPLOYEES  
 
 
Introduced by:  
(LAB)  
 
 
 
 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE EXPANSION OF CONNECTICUT PAID 
SICK DAYS. 
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General 
Assembly convened: 
 
Section 1. Section 31-57r of the general statutes is repealed and the 1 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 2 
As used in this section and sections 31-57s to 31-57w, inclusive, as 3 
amended by this act: 4 
(1) "Child" means (A) a biological, adopted or foster child, stepchild, 5 
legal ward of [a service worker] an employee, or (B) a child of a [service 6 
worker] person standing in loco parentis [, who is (A) under eighteen 7 
years of age; or (B) eighteen years of age or older and incapable of self-8 
care because of a mental or physical disability] or an individual to whom 9 
the employee stood in loco parentis when the individual was a child; 10 
[(2) "Day or temporary worker" means an individual who performs 11 
work for another on (A) a per diem basis, or (B) an occasional or 12 
irregular basis for only the time required to complete such work, 13 
whether such individual is paid by the person for whom such work is 14  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	2 of 23 
 
performed or by an employment agency or temporary help service, as 15 
defined in section 31-129;] 16 
[(3)] (2) "Employee" means an individual engaged in service to an 17 
employer in the business of the employer; 18 
[(4)] (3) "Employer" means any person, firm, business, educational 19 
institution, nonprofit agency, corporation, limited liability company or 20 
other entity, [that employs fifty or more individuals in the state, which 21 
shall be determined based on such person's, firm's, business', 22 
educational institution's, nonprofit agency's, corporation's, limited 23 
liability company's or other entity's payroll for the week containing 24 
October first, annually. "Employer" does not include: (A) Any business 25 
establishment classified in sector 31, 32 or 33 in the North American 26 
Industrial Classification System, or (B) any nationally chartered 27 
organization exempt from taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the 28 
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent corresponding 29 
internal revenue code of the United States, as from time to time 30 
amended, that provides all of the following services: Recreation, child 31 
care and education] provided, for purposes of this section, the Personal 32 
Care Attendant Workforce Council established under section 17b-706a 33 
shall be deemed the employer of any personal care attendants, as 34 
defined in section 17b-706; 35 
(4) "Family member" means a spouse, sibling, child, grandparent, 36 
grandchild or parent or an individual related to the employee by blood 37 
or affinity whose close association with the employee is the equivalent 38 
of any such family relationship; 39 
(5) "Family violence" has the same meaning as provided in section 40 
46b-38a; 41 
(6) "Grandchild" means a grandchild related to a person by: (A) 42 
Blood, (B) marriage, (C) adoption by a child of the grandparent, or (D) 43 
foster care by a child of the grandparent; 44 
(7) "Parent" means a biological parent, foster parent, adoptive parent, 45  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	3 of 23 
 
stepparent, parent-in-law or legal guardian of an employee or an 46 
employee's spouse, an individual standing in loco parentis to an 47 
employee or an individual who stood in loco parentis to the employee 48 
when the employee was a child; 49 
(8) "Paid sick leave" means paid time that is provided by an employer 50 
to an employee for the purposes described in section 31-57t, as amended 51 
by this act; 52 
[(6)] (9) "Retaliatory personnel action" means any termination, 53 
suspension, constructive discharge, demotion, unfavorable 54 
reassignment, refusal to promote, disciplinary action or other adverse 55 
employment action taken by an employer against an employee; [or a 56 
service worker;] 57 
[(7) "Service worker" means an employee primarily engaged in an 58 
occupation with one of the following broad or detailed occupation code 59 
numbers and titles, as defined by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics 60 
Standard Occupational Classification system or any successor system: 61 
(A) 11-9050 Food Service Managers; (B) 11-9110 Medical and Health 62 
Services Managers; (C) 21-1020 Social Workers; (D) 21-1093 Social and 63 
Human Service Assistants; (E) 21-1094 Community Health Workers; (F) 64 
21-1099 Community and Social Service Specialists, All Other; (G) 25-65 
4020 Librarians; (H) 29-1050 Pharmacists; (I) 29-1070 Physician 66 
Assistants; (J) 29-1120 Therapists; (K) 29-1140 Registered Nurses; (L) 29-67 
1150 Nurse Anesthetists; (M) 29-1160 Nurse Midwives; (N) 29-1170 68 
Nurse Practitioners; (O) 29-2020 Dental Hygienists; (P) 29-2040 69 
Emergency Medical Technicians and Paramedics; (Q) 29-2050 Health 70 
Practitioner Support Technologists and Technicians; (R) 29-2060 71 
Licensed Practical and Licensed Vocational Nurses; (S) 31-1011 Home 72 
Health Aides; (T) 31-1012 Nursing Aides, Orderlies and Attendants; (U) 73 
31-1013 Psychiatric Aides; (V) 31-9091 Dental Assistants; (W) 31-9092 74 
Medical Assistants; (X) 33-9032 Security Guards; (Y) 33-9091 Crossing 75 
Guards; (Z) 35-1010 Supervisors of Food Preparation and Serving 76 
Workers; (AA) 35-2010 Cooks; (BB) 35-2020 Food Preparation Workers; 77 
(CC) 35-3010 Bartenders; (DD) 35-3020 Fast Food and Counter Workers; 78  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	4 of 23 
 
(EE) 35-3030 Waiters and Waitresses; (FF) 35-3040 Food Servers, 79 
Nonrestaurant; (GG) 35-9010 Dining Room and Cafeteria Attendants 80 
and Bartender Helpers; (HH) 35-9020 Dishwashers; (II) 35-9030 Hosts 81 
and Hostesses, Restaurant, Lounge and Coffee Shop; (JJ) 35-9090 82 
Miscellaneous Food Preparation and Serving Related Workers; (KK) 37-83 
2011 Janitors and Cleaners, Except Maids and Housekeeping Cleaners; 84 
(LL) 37-2019 Building Cleaning Workers, All Other; (MM) 39-3030 85 
Ushers, Lobby Attendants and Ticket Takers; (NN) 39-5010 Barbers, 86 
Hairdressers, Hairstylists and Cosmetologists; (OO) 39-6010 Baggage 87 
Porters, Bellhops and Concierges; (PP) 39-9010 Child Care Workers; 88 
(QQ) 39-9021 Personal Care Aides; (RR) 41-1010 First-Line Supervisors 89 
of Sales Workers; (SS) 41-2011 Cashiers; (TT) 41-2021 Counter and 90 
Rental Clerks; (UU) 41-2030 Retail Salespersons; (VV) 43-3070 Tellers; 91 
(WW) 43-4080 Hotel, Motel and Resort Desk Clerks; (XX) 43-4170 92 
Receptionists and Information Clerks; (YY) 43-5020 Couriers and 93 
Messengers; (ZZ) 43-6010 Secretaries and Administrative Assistants; 94 
(AAA) 43-9010 Computer Operators; (BBB) 43-9020 Data Entry and 95 
Information Processing Workers; (CCC) 43-9030 Desktop Publishers; 96 
(DDD) 43-9040 Insurance Claims and Policy Processing Clerks; (EEE) 97 
43-9050 Mail Clerks and Mail Machine Operators, Except Postal Service; 98 
(FFF) 43-9060 Office Clerks, General; (GGG) 43-9070 Office Machine 99 
Operators, Except Computer; (HHH) 43-9080 Proofreaders and Copy 100 
Markers; (III) 43-9110 Statistical Assistants; (JJJ) 43-9190 Miscellaneous 101 
Office and Administrative Support Workers; (KKK) 51-3010 Bakers; 102 
(LLL) 51-3020 Butchers and Other Meat, Poultry and Fish Processing 103 
Workers; (MMM) 51-3090 Miscellaneous Food Processing Workers; 104 
(NNN) 53-3010 Ambulance Drivers and Attendants, Except Emergency 105 
Medical Technicians; (OOO) 53-3020 Bus Drivers; (PPP) 53-3040 Taxi 106 
Drivers and Chauffeurs; or (QQQ) 29-2034 Radiologic Technologists, 107 
and is (i) paid on an hourly basis, or (ii) not exempt from the minimum 108 
wage and overtime compensation requirements of the Fair Labor 109 
Standards Act of 1938 and the regulations promulgated thereunder, as 110 
amended from time to time. "Service worker" does not include day or 111 
temporary workers;] 112  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	5 of 23 
 
[(8)] (10) "Sexual assault" means any act that constitutes a violation of 113 
section 53a-70b of the general statutes, revision of 1958, revised to 114 
January 1, 2019, or section 53a-70, 53a-70a, 53a-71, 53a-72a, 53a-72b or 115 
53a-73a; 116 
(11) "Sibling" means a brother or sister related to a person by: (A) 117 
Blood, (B) marriage, (C) adoption by a parent of the person, or (D) foster 118 
care placement; 119 
[(9)] (12) "Spouse" means a husband or wife, as the case may be; and 120 
[(10)] (13) "Year" means any three-hundred-sixty-five-day period 121 
used by an employer to calculate employee benefits. 122 
Sec. 2. Section 31-57s of the general statutes is repealed and the 123 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 124 
(a) Each employer shall provide paid sick leave annually to each of 125 
such employer's [service workers] employees in the state. Such paid sick 126 
leave shall accrue (1) beginning [January 1, 2012] July 1, 2022, or for [a 127 
service worker] an employee hired after said date, beginning on the 128 
[service worker's] employee's first date of employment, (2) at a rate of 129 
one hour of paid sick leave for each [forty] thirty hours worked by [a 130 
service worker] the employee, and (3) in one-hour increments up to a 131 
maximum of forty hours per year. Each [service worker] employee shall 132 
be entitled to carry over up to forty unused accrued hours of paid sick 133 
leave from the current year to the following year, but no [service 134 
worker] employee shall be entitled to use more, in any year, than the 135 
maximum number of accrued hours, as described in subdivision (3) of 136 
this subsection. [, in any year] An employer may provide all paid sick 137 
leave that an employee is expected to accrue in a year at the beginning 138 
of the year. 139 
(b) [A service worker] An employee shall be entitled to the use of 140 
accrued paid sick leave [upon the completion of the service worker's six-141 
hundred-eightieth hour of employment from January 1, 2012, if the 142 
service worker was hired prior to January 1, 2012, or if hired after 143  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	6 of 23 
 
January 1, 2012, upon the completion of the service worker's six-144 
hundred-eightieth hour of employment from the date of hire, unless the 145 
employer agrees to an earlier date. A service worker shall not be entitled 146 
to the use of accrued paid sick leave if such service worker did not work 147 
an average of ten or more hours per week for the employer in the most 148 
recent complete quarter] as it is accrued. Alternatively, in lieu of 149 
carryover of unused paid sick leave provided pursuant to this 150 
subsection from one year to the next, an employer may pay an employee 151 
for unused paid sick leave provided pursuant to this subsection at the 152 
end of a year and provide the employee with an amount of paid sick 153 
leave that meets or exceeds the requirements of this subsection that is 154 
available for the employee's immediate use at the beginning of the 155 
following year. 156 
(c) An employer shall be deemed to be in compliance with this section 157 
if the employer offers any other paid leave, or combination of other paid 158 
leave that (1) may be used for the purposes of, and under the same 159 
conditions as provided in, section 31-57t, as amended by this act, and (2) 160 
is accrued in total at a rate equal to or greater than the rate described in 161 
[subsections] subsection (a) [and (b)] of this section. For the purposes of 162 
this subsection, "other paid leave" may include, but need not be limited 163 
to, paid vacation, personal days or paid time off. 164 
(d) Each employer shall pay each [service worker] employee for paid 165 
sick leave at a pay rate equal to the greater of either (1) the normal 166 
hourly wage for that [service worker] employee, or (2) the minimum fair 167 
wage rate, under section 31-58, in effect for the pay period during which 168 
the employee used paid sick leave. For any [service worker] employee 169 
whose hourly wage varies depending on the work performed by the 170 
[service worker] employee, "normal hourly wage" means the average 171 
hourly wage of the [service worker] employee in the pay period prior to 172 
the one in which the [service worker] employee used paid sick leave. 173 
[(e) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section and sections 31-174 
57t to 31-57w, inclusive, and upon the mutual consent of the service 175 
worker and employer, a service worker who chooses to work additional 176  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	7 of 23 
 
hours or shifts during the same or following pay period, in lieu of hours 177 
or shifts missed, shall not use accrued paid sick leave.] 178 
(e) An employee who is exempt from overtime requirements under 179 
the provisions of 29 USC 213 (a)(1), as amended from time to time, shall 180 
be assumed to work forty hours in each work week for purposes of paid 181 
sick leave accrual, unless their normal work week is less than forty 182 
hours, in which case paid sick leave shall accrue based upon the hours 183 
worked in that normal work week. 184 
(f) If an employee is transferred to a separate division, entity or 185 
location but remains employed by the same employer, the employee 186 
shall retain and be entitled to use all paid sick leave accrued or received 187 
by the employee at the prior division, entity or location. If a different 188 
employer succeeds or takes the place of an existing employer, each 189 
employee of the original employer, who remains employed by the 190 
successor employer, shall retain and be entitled to use all paid sick leave 191 
the employee accrued or received while employed by the original 192 
employer. 193 
(g) An employer may not require, as a condition of an employee 194 
taking paid sick leave, that the employee search for or find a 195 
replacement worker to cover the hours for which the employee is using 196 
paid sick leave. 197 
[(f)] (h) No employer shall (1) terminate any employee, (2) dismiss 198 
any employee, or (3) transfer any employee from one worksite to 199 
another solely in order to not qualify as an employer, as defined in 200 
section 31-57r, as amended by this act. 201 
Sec. 3. Section 31-57t of the general statutes is repealed and the 202 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 203 
(a) An employer shall permit [a service worker] an employee to use 204 
the paid sick leave accrued pursuant to section 31-57s, as amended by 205 
this act: 206  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	8 of 23 
 
(1) For (A) [a service worker's] an employee's illness, injury or health 207 
condition, (B) the medical diagnosis, care or treatment of [a service 208 
worker's] an employee's mental illness or physical illness, injury or 209 
health condition, or (C) preventative medical care for [a service worker] 210 
an employee; 211 
(2) For (A) a [service worker's child's or spouse's] family member's 212 
illness, injury or health condition, (B) the medical diagnosis, care or 213 
treatment of a [service worker's child's or spouse's] family member's 214 
mental or physical illness, injury or health condition, or (C) preventative 215 
medical care for a [child or spouse of a service worker; and] family 216 
member; 217 
(3) For closure of the employer's place of business by order of a public 218 
official due to a public health emergency or an employee's need to care 219 
for a family member whose school or place of care has been closed by 220 
order of a public official due to a public health emergency, or to care for 221 
oneself or a family member when it is determined, by a health authority 222 
having jurisdiction, an employer of the employee or employee's family 223 
member or a health care provider, that the employee or family member's 224 
presence in the community may jeopardize the health of others because 225 
of such employee's exposure to a communicable illness, whether or not 226 
the employee or family member has actually contracted the 227 
communicable illness; and 228 
[(3)] (4) Where [a service worker] an employee or an employee's 229 
family member is a victim of family violence or sexual assault (A) for 230 
medical care or psychological or other counseling for physical or 231 
psychological injury or disability, (B) to obtain services from a victim 232 
services organization, (C) to relocate due to such family violence or 233 
sexual assault, or (D) to participate in any civil or criminal proceedings 234 
related to or resulting from such family violence or sexual assault. 235 
(b) If [a service worker's] an employee's need to use paid sick leave is 236 
foreseeable, an employer may require advance notice, not to exceed 237 
seven days prior to the date such leave is to begin, of the intention to use 238  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	9 of 23 
 
such leave. If [a service worker's] an employee's need for such leave is 239 
not foreseeable, an employer may require [a service worker] an 240 
employee to give notice of such intention as soon as practicable. For paid 241 
sick leave of three or more consecutive days, an employer may require 242 
reasonable documentation that such leave is being taken for one of the 243 
purposes permitted under subsection (a) of this section. If such leave is 244 
permitted under subdivision (3) of subsection (a) of this section, a 245 
written statement from the employee affirming that the employee is 246 
taking or has taken paid sick leave for a qualifying purpose of 247 
subdivision (3) of subsection (a) of this section shall be considered 248 
reasonable documentation. Such written statement for leave pursuant 249 
to subdivision (3) of subsection (a) of this section may be written in the 250 
employee's first language and need not be notarized or in any particular 251 
format. If such leave is permitted under subdivision (1) or (2) of 252 
subsection (a) of this section, documentation signed by a health care 253 
provider who is treating the [service worker] employee or the [service 254 
worker's child or spouse] family member indicating the need for the 255 
number of days of such leave shall be considered reasonable 256 
documentation. If such leave is permitted under subdivision [(3)] (4) of 257 
subsection (a) of this section, a court record or documentation signed by 258 
[a service worker] an employee or volunteer working for a victim 259 
services organization, an attorney, a police officer or other counselor 260 
involved with the [service worker] employee shall be considered 261 
reasonable documentation. An employer may not require such 262 
documentation to explain the nature of the illness or the details of the 263 
family violence or sexual assault. If an employer chooses to require 264 
documentation for paid sick leave under this section and the employer 265 
does not offer health insurance to the employee, the employer shall pay 266 
all out-of-pocket expenses the employee incurs in obtaining the 267 
documentation. If the employee has health insurance, the employer 268 
shall pay any costs charged to the employee by the health care provider 269 
for providing the specific documentation required by the employer. The 270 
employer shall pay any costs charged to the employee for 271 
documentation of family violence or sexual assault required by the 272 
employer. 273  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	10 of 23 
 
(c) Nothing in sections 31-57s to 31-57w, inclusive, as amended by 274 
this act, shall be deemed to require any employer to provide paid sick 275 
leave for [a service worker's] an employee's leave for any purpose other 276 
than those described in this section. 277 
(d) Unless an employee policy or collective bargaining agreement 278 
provides for the payment of accrued fringe benefits upon termination, 279 
no [service worker] employee shall be entitled to payment of unused 280 
paid accrued sick leave under this section upon termination of 281 
employment. 282 
(e) Nothing in sections 31-57s to 31-57w, inclusive, as amended by 283 
this act, shall be construed to prohibit an employer from taking 284 
disciplinary action against [a service worker] an employee who uses 285 
paid sick leave provided under said sections [31-57s to 31-57w, 286 
inclusive,] for purposes other than those described in this section. 287 
Sec. 4. Section 31-57u of the general statutes is repealed and the 288 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 289 
(a) Nothing in sections 31-57s to 31-57w, inclusive, as amended by 290 
this act, shall be construed to (1) prevent employers from providing 291 
more paid sick leave than is required under said sections, [31-57s to 31-292 
57w, inclusive,] (2) diminish any rights provided to any employee [or 293 
service worker] under a collective bargaining agreement, or (3) preempt 294 
or override the terms of any collective bargaining agreement effective 295 
prior to January 1, 2012. 296 
(b) Nothing in sections 31-57s to 31-57w, inclusive, as amended by 297 
this act, shall be construed to prohibit an employer (1) from establishing 298 
a policy whereby [a service worker] an employee may donate unused 299 
accrued paid sick leave to another [service worker] employee, and (2) 300 
who provides more paid sick leave than is required under sections 31-301 
57s to 31-57w, inclusive, as amended by this act, for the purposes 302 
described in subdivision (1) of subsection (a) of section 31-57t, as 303 
amended by this act, from limiting the amount of such leave [a service 304 
worker] an employee may use for other purposes. 305  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	11 of 23 
 
(c) Any termination of [a service worker's] an employee's 306 
employment by an employer, whether voluntary or involuntary, shall 307 
be construed as a break in service. Should any [service worker] 308 
employee subsequently be rehired by the employer following a break in 309 
service, the [service worker] employee shall (1) begin to accrue sick 310 
leave [in accordance with section 31-57s] immediately upon rehire, and 311 
(2) shall [not] be entitled to any unused hours of paid sick leave that had 312 
been accrued prior to the [service worker's] employee's break in service. 313 
[unless agreed to by the employer.]  314 
Sec. 5. Section 31-57v of the general statutes is repealed and the 315 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 316 
(a) No employer shall take retaliatory personnel action or 317 
discriminate against an employee because the employee (1) requests or 318 
uses paid sick leave either in accordance with sections 31-57s and 31-57t, 319 
as amended by this act, or in accordance with the employer's own paid 320 
sick leave policy, as the case may be, or (2) files a complaint with the 321 
Labor Commissioner alleging the employer's violation of sections 31-57s 322 
to 31-57w, inclusive, as amended by this act. 323 
(b) The Labor Commissioner shall advise any employee who (1) is 324 
covered by a collective bargaining agreement that provides for paid sick 325 
days, and (2) files a complaint pursuant to subsection (a) of this section 326 
of [his or her] the employee's right to pursue a grievance with [his or 327 
her] the employee's collective bargaining agent. 328 
(c) Any employee aggrieved by a violation of the provisions of 329 
sections 31-57s to 31-57w, inclusive, as amended by this act, may file a 330 
complaint with the Labor Commissioner. Upon receipt of any such 331 
complaint, said commissioner may hold a hearing. After the hearing, 332 
any employer who is found by the Labor Commissioner, by a 333 
preponderance of the evidence, to have violated the provisions of 334 
subsection (a) of this section shall be liable to the Labor Department for 335 
a civil penalty of five hundred dollars for each violation. Any employer 336 
who is found by the Labor Commissioner, by a preponderance of the 337  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	12 of 23 
 
evidence, to have violated the provisions of sections 31-57s to 31-57u, 338 
inclusive, as amended by this act, or section 31-57w, as amended by this 339 
act, shall be liable to the Labor Department for a civil penalty of up to 340 
one hundred dollars for each violation. The Labor Commissioner may 341 
award the employee all appropriate relief, including the payment for 342 
used paid sick leave, rehiring or reinstatement to the employee's 343 
previous job, payment of back wages and reestablishment of employee 344 
benefits to which the employee otherwise would have been eligible if 345 
the employee had not been subject to such retaliatory personnel action 346 
or discriminated against. Any party aggrieved by the decision of the 347 
commissioner may appeal the decision to the Superior Court in 348 
accordance with the provisions of chapter 54. 349 
(d) The Labor Commissioner, the Attorney General or any person 350 
aggrieved by a violation of any provision of sections 31-57s to 31-57w, 351 
inclusive, as amended by this act, or any entity a member of which is 352 
aggrieved by a violation of said sections, may bring a civil action in a 353 
court of competent jurisdiction against the employer for such violation. 354 
Such action may be brought by a person aggrieved by violation of this 355 
section without first filing an administrative complaint. 356 
[(d)] (e) The Labor Commissioner shall administer this section within 357 
available appropriations. 358 
Sec. 6. Section 31-57w of the general statutes is repealed and the 359 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2022): 360 
(a) Each employer subject to the provisions of section 31-57s, as 361 
amended by this act, shall, at the time of hiring, provide notice to each 362 
[service worker] employee (1) of the entitlement to sick leave for [service 363 
workers] employees, the amount of sick leave provided to [service 364 
workers] employees and the terms under which sick leave may be used, 365 
(2) that retaliation by the employer against the [service worker] 366 
employee for requesting or using sick leave for which the [service 367 
worker] employee is eligible is prohibited, and (3) that the [service 368 
worker] employee has a right to file a complaint with the Labor 369  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	13 of 23 
 
Commissioner for any violation of this section and of sections 31-57s to 370 
31-57v, inclusive, as amended by this act. [Employers] Each employer 371 
[may] shall comply with the provisions of this section by (A) displaying 372 
a poster in a conspicuous place, accessible to [service workers] 373 
employees, at the employer's place of business that contains the 374 
information required by this section in both English and Spanish, except 375 
in the case where the employer does not maintain a physical workplace 376 
or an employee teleworks or performs work through a web-based or 377 
application-based platform, notification shall be sent via electronic 378 
communication or a conspicuous posting on a web-based or 379 
application-based platform, and (B) providing written notice to each 380 
employee not later than January 1, 2023, or at the time of hire, whichever 381 
is later. The Labor Commissioner [may adopt regulations, in accordance 382 
with chapter 54, to establish additional requirements concerning the 383 
means by which employers shall provide such notice. The Labor 384 
Commissioner shall administer this section within available 385 
appropriations] shall provide such posters and model written notice to 386 
all employers. Each employer shall include in the record of hours 387 
worked, wages earned and deductions required by section 31-13a, the 388 
number of hours, if any, of paid sick leave accrued or received by the 389 
employee and the number of hours of paid sick leave used by the 390 
employee in the calendar year. 391 
(b) Each employer shall retain records documenting hours worked by 392 
employees and paid sick leave taken by employees for a period of three 393 
years and shall allow the Labor Commissioner access to such records, 394 
with appropriate notice and at a mutually agreeable time, to monitor 395 
compliance with the requirements of this section. When an issue arises 396 
as to an employee's entitlement to paid sick leave under this section, if 397 
the employer does not maintain or retain adequate records 398 
documenting hours worked by the employee and paid sick leave taken 399 
by the employee or does not allow reasonable access to such records, it 400 
shall be presumed that the employer has violated this section, absent 401 
clear and convincing evidence otherwise. 402 
(c) The Labor Commissioner may coordinate implementation and 403  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	14 of 23 
 
enforcement of this section and sections 31-57s to 31-57v, inclusive, as 404 
amended by this act, and shall adopt regulations in accordance with the 405 
provisions of chapter 54 to implement the provisions of said sections. 406 
(d) The Labor Commissioner may develop and implement a 407 
multilingual outreach program to inform employees, parents and 408 
persons who are under the care of a health care provider about the 409 
availability of paid sick leave. Such program shall include the 410 
distribution of notices and other written materials in English, Spanish 411 
and any language that is the first language spoken by not less than five 412 
per cent of the state's population to all child care and elder care 413 
providers, domestic violence shelters, schools, hospitals, community 414 
health centers and other health care providers. 415 
(e) The Labor Commissioner shall administer this section within 416 
available appropriations. 417 
Sec. 7. (NEW) (Effective from passage) As used in this section and 418 
sections 8 to 12, inclusive, of this act: 419 
(1) "Child" means a biological, adopted or foster child, stepchild, or 420 
legal ward of an employee, or a child of a person standing in loco 421 
parentis to an employee, or an individual to whom the employee stood 422 
in loco parentis when the individual was a minor child; 423 
(2) "COVID-19" means the respiratory disease designated by the 424 
World Health Organization on February 11, 2020, as coronavirus 2019, 425 
and any related mutation thereof recognized by the World Health 426 
Organization as a communicable respiratory disease; 427 
(3) "Employee" means an individual engaged in service to an 428 
employer in the business of the employer; 429 
(4) "Employer" means any person, firm, business, educational 430 
institution, nonprofit organization, corporation, limited liability 431 
company or other entity, except that the Personal Care Attendant 432 
Workforce Council established under section 17b-706a of the general 433  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	15 of 23 
 
statutes shall act on behalf of the employer of all personal care 434 
attendants, as defined in section 17b-706 of the general statutes. 435 
"Employer" does not include the federal government; 436 
(5) "Family member" means the employee's spouse, as defined in 437 
section 31-51kk of the general statutes, child, parent, grandparent, 438 
grandchild or sibling, whether related to the employee by blood, 439 
marriage, adoption or foster care, or an individual related to the 440 
employee by blood or affinity whose close association with the 441 
employee is the equivalent of those family relationships; 442 
(6) "Parent" means a biological parent, foster parent, adoptive parent, 443 
stepparent, parent-in-law of the employee or legal guardian of an 444 
employee or an employee's spouse, an individual standing in loco 445 
parentis to an employee, or an individual who stood in loco parentis to 446 
the employee when the employee was a minor child; and 447 
(7) "Retaliatory personnel action" means any termination, 448 
suspension, constructive discharge, demotion, unfavorable 449 
reassignment, refusal to promote, reduction of hours, disciplinary 450 
action or other adverse employment action taken by an employer 451 
against an employee. 452 
Sec. 8. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) (1) Each employer shall 453 
provide to each of its employees COVID-19 sick leave in addition to any 454 
paid sick leave provided by the employer pursuant to section 31-57s of 455 
the general statutes, as amended by this act. The COVID-19 sick leave 456 
shall be (A) in the amount of eighty hours for each employee who 457 
regularly works forty or more hours per week, or (B) equal to the 458 
number of hours the employee is regularly scheduled to work or works 459 
in a two-week period, whichever is greater, for each employee who 460 
regularly works less than forty hours per week. 461 
(2) An employee exempt from overtime requirements under 29 USC 462 
213(a)(1), as amended from time to time, shall be assumed to work forty 463 
hours per week for purposes of calculating COVID-19 sick leave, unless 464 
such employee regularly works less than forty hours per week, in which 465  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	16 of 23 
 
case the COVID-19 sick leave shall be provided based upon the number 466 
of hours regularly worked per week. An employee who regularly works 467 
less than forty hours per week, but whose number of work hours varies 468 
each week, shall be provided COVID-19 sick leave using the average 469 
number of hours per week the employee was scheduled to work in the 470 
six-month period immediately preceding the date on which the 471 
employee utilizes COVID-19 sick leave, including the hours of any leave 472 
taken by the employee, except that, if the employee did not work any 473 
hours over such period, the average shall be the reasonable expectation 474 
of the employee, at the time the employee was hired, of the average 475 
number of hours per week the employee would be regularly scheduled 476 
to work. 477 
(b) COVID-19 sick leave shall be provided one time to each employee 478 
and shall be immediately available for use for any of the purposes 479 
described in subsection (c) of this section beginning on the effective date 480 
of this section, regardless of the time such employee has been employed 481 
by the employer. An employee shall be entitled to use COVID-19 sick 482 
leave retroactively beginning on July 20, 2021, until four weeks after the 483 
expiration of the public health and civil preparedness emergencies 484 
declared by the Governor on March 10, 2020, or any extension of such 485 
declarations. 486 
(c) An employee shall be entitled to take COVID-19 sick leave when 487 
the employee is unable to perform the functions of the job of such 488 
employee, including through telework, due to any of the following 489 
reasons related to COVID-19: 490 
(1) The employee's need to (A) self-isolate and care for oneself 491 
because the employee has been diagnosed with COVID-19 or is 492 
experiencing symptoms of COVID-19, (B) seek preventive care 493 
concerning COVID-19, (C) seek or obtain medical diagnosis, care or 494 
treatment if experiencing symptoms of COVID-19, or (D) seek or obtain 495 
COVID-19 immunization or immunizations, including booster doses, or 496 
recover from any injury, disability, illness or condition related to such 497 
immunizations or booster doses; 498  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	17 of 23 
 
(2) The employee's need to comply with an order or determination to 499 
self-isolate, on the basis that the employee's physical presence at work 500 
or in the community would likely jeopardize the employee's health, the 501 
health of other employees or the health of an individual in the 502 
employee's household because of (A) possible exposure to COVID-19, 503 
or (B) the employee is exhibiting of symptoms of COVID-19, regardless 504 
of whether the employee has been diagnosed with COVID-19; 505 
(3) The employee's need to care for a family member who is (A) self-506 
isolating, seeking preventive care or seeking or obtaining medical 507 
diagnosis, care, treatment or immunizations or booster doses, or 508 
recovering from such immunizations or booster doses, for the purposes 509 
described in subdivision (1) of this subsection, or (B) self-isolating due 510 
to an order or determination as described in subdivision (2) of this 511 
subsection; 512 
(4) The employee's inability to work or telework because the 513 
employee is (A) prohibited from working by the employer due to health 514 
concerns related to the potential transmission of COVID-19, (B) subject 515 
to an individual or general local, state or federal quarantine or isolation 516 
order, including a shelter-in-place or stay-at-home order, related to 517 
COVID-19, or (C) seeking or awaiting the results of a diagnostic test for, 518 
or a medical diagnosis of, COVID-19 and such employee has been 519 
exposed to COVID-19 or the employee's employer has requested such 520 
test or diagnosis; 521 
(5) The employee's need to care for a family member when the care 522 
provider of such family member is unavailable due to COVID-19 or if 523 
the family member's school or place of care has been closed by a local, 524 
state or federal public official or at the discretion of the school or place 525 
of care, due to COVID-19, including if a school or place of care (A) is 526 
physically closed but providing virtual learning instruction, (B) requires 527 
or makes optional virtual learning instruction, or (C) requires or makes 528 
available a hybrid of in-person and virtual learning instruction models; 529 
or 530  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	18 of 23 
 
(6) The employee's inability to work because the employee has a 531 
health condition that may increase susceptibility to or risk of COVID-19, 532 
including, but not limited to, age, heart disease, asthma, lung disease, 533 
diabetes, kidney disease or a weakened immune system. 534 
(d) An order or determination made pursuant to subdivision (2) of 535 
subsection (c) of this section or subparagraph (B) of subdivision (3) of 536 
subsection (c) of this section shall be made by a local, state or federal 537 
public official, a health authority having jurisdiction, a health care 538 
provider or the employer of the employee or the employee's family 539 
member. Such order or determination need not be specific to such 540 
employee or family member. 541 
(e) Each employer shall pay each employee for COVID-19 sick leave 542 
at a pay rate equal to the greater of (1) the normal hourly wage for that 543 
employee, or (2) the minimum fair wage rate under section 31-58 of the 544 
general statutes in effect for the pay period during which the employee 545 
used COVID-19 sick leave. For any employee whose hourly wage varies 546 
depending on the work performed by the employee, "normal hourly 547 
wage" means the average hourly wage of the employee in the pay period 548 
prior to the one in which the employee uses COVID-19 sick leave. 549 
(f) The employee shall provide advance notice to the employer of the 550 
need for COVID-19 sick leave as soon as practicable only when the need 551 
for COVID-19 sick leave is foreseeable and the employer's place of 552 
business has not been closed. 553 
(g) Notwithstanding any provision of sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of 554 
this act, no documentation from an employee shall be required by an 555 
employer for COVID-19 sick leave. 556 
(h) If an employee is transferred to a separate division, entity or 557 
location, but remains employed by the same employer, the employee 558 
shall retain and be entitled to use all COVID-19 sick leave the employee 559 
accrued or received in accordance with the provisions of sections 7 to 560 
12, inclusive, of this act, at the prior division, entity or location. If a 561 
different employer succeeds or takes the place of an existing employer, 562  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	19 of 23 
 
each employee of the original employer who remains employed by the 563 
successor employer shall retain and be entitled to use all COVID-19 sick 564 
leave the employee accrued or received in accordance with the 565 
provisions of sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of this act, while employed by 566 
the original employer. 567 
(i) An employer shall not require, as a condition of an employee's 568 
taking COVID-19 sick leave, that the employee search for or find a 569 
replacement worker to cover the hours during which the employee is 570 
using COVID-19 sick leave. 571 
Sec. 9. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) Nothing in sections 7 to 12, 572 
inclusive, of this act shall be construed to: (1) Discourage or prohibit an 573 
employer from the adoption or retention of a COVID-19 sick leave, paid 574 
sick leave or other paid leave policy more generous than the one 575 
required pursuant to section 8 of this act, including providing more 576 
leave than required under said section; (2) diminish any rights provided 577 
to any employee under a collective bargaining agreement; or (3) prohibit 578 
an employer from establishing a policy whereby an employee may 579 
donate unused COVID-19 sick leave to another employee. 580 
(b) An employee may first use the COVID-19 sick leave provided 581 
pursuant to section 8 of this act prior to using sick leave permitted 582 
pursuant to section 31-57t of the general statutes, as amended by this 583 
act. An employer may not require an employee to use other paid leave 584 
provided by the employer to the employee before the employee uses the 585 
COVID-19 sick leave. 586 
Sec. 10. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) It shall be unlawful for an 587 
employer or any other person to interfere with, restrain or deny the 588 
exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under sections 589 
7 to 12, inclusive, of this act. No employer shall take retaliatory 590 
personnel action or discriminate against an employee because the 591 
employee (1) requests or uses COVID-19 sick leave in accordance with 592 
the provisions of sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of this act, or (2) files a 593 
complaint with the Labor Commissioner alleging the employer's 594  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	20 of 23 
 
violation of any provision of said sections. 595 
(b) The Labor Commissioner shall advise any employee, who (1) is 596 
covered by a collective bargaining agreement that provides for COVID-597 
19 sick leave, and (2) files a complaint pursuant to subsection (a) of this 598 
section, of the employee's right to pursue a grievance with the 599 
employee's collective bargaining agent. 600 
(c) Any employee aggrieved by a violation of any provision of 601 
sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of this act, may file a complaint with the Labor 602 
Commissioner. Upon receipt of any such complaint, the Labor 603 
Commissioner may hold a hearing. After the hearing, any employer 604 
who is found by the Labor Commissioner, by a preponderance of the 605 
evidence, to have violated any provision of this section shall be liable to 606 
the Labor Department for a civil penalty in an amount consistent with 607 
the penalties provided in section 31-57v of the general statutes, as 608 
amended by this act. The Labor Commissioner may award the employee 609 
appropriate relief consistent with the provisions of said section. Any 610 
party aggrieved by the decision of the Labor Commissioner may appeal 611 
the decision to the Superior Court in accordance with the provisions of 612 
section 4-183 of the general statutes. 613 
(d) Any person aggrieved by a violation of any provision of sections 614 
7 to 12, inclusive, of this act, the Labor Commissioner, the Attorney 615 
General or any entity a member of which is aggrieved by a violation of 616 
any provision of sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of this act, may bring a civil 617 
action in a court of competent jurisdiction against the employer 618 
violating said sections. Such action may be brought by a person 619 
aggrieved by a violation of this section without first filing an 620 
administrative complaint. 621 
(e) The Labor Commissioner shall administer this section within 622 
available appropriations. 623 
Sec. 11. (NEW) (Effective from passage) (a) Each employer subject to the 624 
provisions of sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of this act shall, at the time of 625 
hiring or not later than fourteen days after the effective date of this 626  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	21 of 23 
 
section, whichever is later, provide written notice to each employee (1) 627 
of the entitlement to COVID-19 sick leave, the amount of COVID-19 sick 628 
leave provided and the terms under which COVID-19 sick leave may be 629 
used, (2) that retaliatory personnel actions by the employer are 630 
prohibited, and (3) of the right to file a complaint with the Labor 631 
Commissioner or file a civil action for any violation of sections 7 to 12, 632 
inclusive, of this act. Each employer shall also display a poster in a 633 
conspicuous place, accessible to employees, at the employer's place of 634 
business that contains the information required by this section in both 635 
English and Spanish, provided in cases where the employer does not 636 
maintain a physical workplace, or an employee teleworks or performs 637 
work through a web-based or application-based platform, notification 638 
shall be sent via electronic communication or a conspicuous posting in 639 
the web-based or application-based platform. The Labor Commissioner 640 
shall provide such posters and model written notices to all employers. 641 
Additionally, employers shall include in the record of hours worked, 642 
wages earned and deductions required by section 31-13a of the general 643 
statutes, the number of hours, if any, of COVID-19 sick leave received 644 
by each employee, as well as any use of COVID-19 sick leave in the 645 
calendar year. 646 
(b) Each employer shall retain records documenting hours worked by 647 
employees and COVID-19 sick leave taken by employees, for a period 648 
of three years, and shall allow the Labor Commissioner access to such 649 
records, with appropriate notice and at a mutually agreeable time, to 650 
monitor compliance with the requirements of this section. When an 651 
issue arises as to an employee's entitlement to COVID-19 sick leave 652 
under this section, if the employer does not maintain or retain adequate 653 
records documenting hours worked by the employee and COVID-19 654 
sick leave taken by the employee, or does not allow reasonable access to 655 
such records, it shall be presumed that the employer has violated this 656 
section absent clear and convincing evidence otherwise. 657 
(c) The Labor Commissioner may coordinate implementation and 658 
enforcement of sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of this act and shall adopt 659 
regulations, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54 of the 660  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	22 of 23 
 
general statutes, for such purposes. 661 
(d) The Labor Commissioner may develop and implement a 662 
multilingual outreach program to inform employees, parents and 663 
persons who are under the care of a health care provider about the 664 
availability of COVID-19 sick leave. This program may include the 665 
development of notices and other written materials in English and in 666 
other languages. The Labor Commissioner shall administer this section 667 
within available appropriations. 668 
Sec. 12. (NEW) (Effective from passage) Unless otherwise required by 669 
law, an employer shall not require disclosure of the details of an 670 
employee's or an employee's family member's health information as a 671 
condition for providing COVID-19 sick leave in accordance with 672 
sections 7 to 12, inclusive, of this act. If an employer possesses health 673 
information about an employee or an employee's family member, such 674 
information shall be treated as confidential and not disclosed except to 675 
such employee or with the permission of such employee. 676 
Sec. 13. Subsection (a) of section 31-397 of the general statutes is 677 
repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 678 
1, 2022): 679 
(a) The Labor Commissioner, in consultation with the Commissioner 680 
of Public Health, shall encourage the development of occupational 681 
health clinics by making grants-in-aid to public and nonprofit 682 
organizations. Such grants-in-aid shall be used to facilitate the 683 
development and operation of such clinics, including, but not limited to, 684 
preproject development, site acquisition, development, improvement 685 
and operating expenses. Such grants-in-aid may be used for activities 686 
involved in occupational disease evaluation, treatment and prevention, 687 
particularly when such activities are not compensated by other sources. 688 
Priority for such grants-in-aid may be given to organizations providing 689 
services for working age populations, including, but not limited to, 690 
migrant and contingent workers, where health disparities or work 691 
structure interfere with the provision of occupational health care 692  Raised Bill No.  312 
 
 
 
LCO No. 2501   	23 of 23 
 
services. Such grants-in-aid shall not be used to compensate any 693 
occupational health clinic for any activities that utilize commercial 694 
services or involve grants or contracts received from an outside party. 695 
The commissioner shall consult with the Occupational Health Clinics 696 
Advisory Board prior to making any such grant. For purposes of this 697 
subsection, "contingent worker" means an individu al whose 698 
employment is of a temporary and sporadic nature and may include, 699 
but need not be limited to, (1) an agricultural worker, (2) an independent 700 
contractor, as defined in section 36a-485, or [a day or temporary worker, 701 
as defined in section 31-57r] (3) an individual who performs work for 702 
another on (A) a per diem basis, or (B) an occasional or irregular basis 703 
for only the time required to complete such work, whether such 704 
individual is paid by the person for whom such work is performed or 705 
by an employment agency or temporary help service, as defined in 706 
section 31-129. 707 
This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following 
sections: 
 
Section 1 July 1, 2022 31-57r 
Sec. 2 July 1, 2022 31-57s 
Sec. 3 July 1, 2022 31-57t 
Sec. 4 July 1, 2022 31-57u 
Sec. 5 July 1, 2022 31-57v 
Sec. 6 July 1, 2022 31-57w 
Sec. 7 from passage New section 
Sec. 8 from passage New section 
Sec. 9 from passage New section 
Sec. 10 from passage New section 
Sec. 11 from passage New section 
Sec. 12 from passage New section 
Sec. 13 October 1, 2022 31-397(a) 
 
Statement of Purpose:   
To expand paid sick days and domestic worker coverage. 
[Proposed deletions are enclosed in brackets. Proposed additions are indicated by underline, except 
that when the entire text of a bill or resolution or a section of a bill or resolution is new, it is not 
underlined.]