Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00428 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/13/2022

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sSB-428 
AN ACT IMPLEMENTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE 
DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES RELATING TO 
SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION.  
 
Primary Analyst: EMG 	4/12/22 
Contributing Analyst(s): CP   
Reviewer: MM 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 23 $ FY 24 $ 
Treasurer, Debt Serv. GF - Potential 
Cost 
See Below See Below 
Note: GF=General Fund  
Municipal Impact: 
Municipalities Effect FY 23 $ FY 24 $ 
Various Municipalities Potential 
Cost/Revenue 
See Below See Below 
  
Explanation 
The bill, which establishes a reimbursement program for school 
HVAC system installation, repair, and upgrades, and makes multiple 
changes to eligible costs under the school construction reimbursement 
program and is expected to have several fiscal impacts, as described 
below. 
Section 1 of the bill establishes a reimbursement program, 
administered by the Department of Administrative Services (DAS), for 
local and regional school HVAC system installation, repair, and 
upgrades that is similar to, though separate from, the school 
construction reimbursement program established in CGS 10-283. State 
reimbursement levels are set annually based on municipal wealth and 
population information from 20 to 80 percent of project costs, with 
possible increases of up to ten percentage points for projects and  2022SB-00428-R000449-FN.DOCX 	Page 2 of 3 
 
 
recipients meeting certain criteria.  
The bill does not provide a funding source or amount for the 
discretionary grant program. To the extent that funds are made 
available for the program, there would be a potential cost to the state 
and a potential revenue gain and potential cost to grant recipients. sSB 
12, the revised FY 23 bond bill, as favorably reported by the Finance, 
Revenue and Bonding Committee, authorized $100 million for this 
purpose. 
The program is expected to be administered by DAS within existing 
resources, resulting in no new fiscal impact to the agency. 
Sections 2, 4, 5, and 8 of the bill make various changes to school 
construction projects process and cost eligibility, including allowing a 
larger space standard for school buildings built between 1950-1959, 
moving projects for school administration buildings from the list of 
allowable non-priority list reimbursements to needing legislative 
approval through the priority list process, automatically moving 
projects through the process when a certificate of occupancy has been 
granted, and removing a requirement for newspaper notice for 
construction contracts. To the extent these changes alter the total cost of 
future projects, the altered cost would be shared between municipalities 
and the state at the appropriate reimbursement ratio.  
School construction grants are financed through the issuance of 
General Obligation (GO) bonds in future fiscal years. The bill does not 
authorize new GO bonds. The bill may result in future General Fund 
debt service costs to be altered to the degree that it causes authorized 
GO bond funds to be expended at a different rate than they otherwise 
would have been. 
Section 3 requires DAS to report on all non-priority list grants 
approved on an annual basis and has no fiscal impact. 
The remaining sections, along with conforming changes in 
previously discussed sections, shift specified responsibilities to the  2022SB-00428-R000449-FN.DOCX 	Page 3 of 3 
 
 
School Building Projects Advisory Council from the School Safety 
Infrastructure Council, eliminating the latter, which is not expected  to 
have a fiscal impact. 
The Out Years 
The ongoing fiscal impact of school HVAC projects and school 
construction project reimbursements identified above will continue into 
the future subject to project completion, successful municipal 
application for reimbursement, and the costs of borrowing.