Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05441 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/25/2023

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 5441 (as amended by House "A")*  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING CLINICAL PLACEMENTS FOR NURSING 
STUDENTS, THE ESTABLISHMENT OF REGISTERED 
APPRENTICESHIPS FOR TEACHERS, REPORTING BY THE 
OFFICE OF WORKFORCE STRATEGY, PROMOTION OF 	THE 
DEVELOPMENT OF THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY AND A STUDENT 
LOAN SUBSIDY FOR HIGH -DEMAND PROFESSIONS.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes various unrelated changes affecting higher education 
statutes and programs. Principally, it does the following:  
1. creates an 11-member task force to develop a plan to establish 
clinical placements at state facilities for nursing students at public 
and private higher education institutions (§ 1); 
2. makes permanent a provision due to sunset under current law on 
October 1, 2025, that requires the Chief Workforce Officer to 
annually report to the governor and certain legislative 
committees on the Office of Workforce Strategy’s workforce 
training programs (§ 2); 
3. requires the insurance commissioner to promote the 
development and growth of, and employment opportunities 
within, the state’s insurance industry (§ 3);  
4. extends eligibility to the Connecticut Higher Education 
Supplemental Loan Authority’s (CHESLA) Alliance District 
Teacher Loan Subsidy Program to paraeducators and counselors, 
and makes conforming changes (§§ 4-5); 
5. requires CHESLA to establish a Police Officer Loan Subsidy 
Program to subsidize interest rates on CHESLA loans to eligible 
police officers employed in distressed municipalities (§ 6); and   2023HB-05441-R010829-BA.DOCX 
 
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6. amends sHB 6689 of the current session to expand a CHESLA 
loan subsidy program for specified health care professionals to 
also include emergency services professionals (§§ 7-8). 
*House Amendment “A” eliminates provisions (1) creating a state 
income tax credit for certain licensed health care providers who provide 
clinical placements for nursing students as part of an agreement with 
higher education institutions, (2) requiring the Office of Higher 
Education executive director and the labor and education 
commissioners to jointly develop a plan to establish a registered 
apprenticeship program to allow certain students to work as apprentice 
teacher’s aides, and (3) requiring CHESLA to establish a Student Loan 
Subsidy Program to subsidize interest rates on authority loans to eligible 
individuals employed in high demand professions. The amendment 
also (1) adds members to the task force and expands its charge to cover 
clinical placements at private institutions and (2) adds the provisions (a) 
modifying the Alliance District Teacher Student Loan Subsidy program, 
(b) establishing a loan subsidy program for police officers employed by 
distressed municipalities, and (c) amending provisions in sHB 6689 of 
the current session.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2023, except the police officer student loan 
subsidy program provisions take effect on January 1, 2024, and the task 
force provision is effective upon passage. 
§ 1 — NURSING STUDENT CLINICAL PLACEMENT TASK FORCE 
Duties 
The bill creates a task force to develop a plan to establish clinical 
placements for nursing students at public and private colleges and 
universities. In developing the plan, the bill requires the task force to 
examine the following: 
1. the types of state facilities that can accommodate these clinical 
placements, including state correctional facilities and facilities 
operated by the Department of Mental Health and Addiction 
Services (DMHAS), the Department of Children and Families 
(DCF), and the Department of Developmental Services (DDS);  2023HB-05441-R010829-BA.DOCX 
 
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2. the number and type of clinical placements that may be 
established at each state facility; 
3. the staffing requirements for providing the clinical placements 
and the facilities’ compliance with them; and 
4. the total and per-student cost to state facilities to provide the 
clinical placements. 
Membership 
The task force includes six members appointed by the six legislative 
leaders. The table below lists the appointees’ qualifications and 
appointing authorities. Members appointed by the legislative leaders 
may be legislators. 
Table: Task Force Membership 
Appointing Authority Number of 
Appointments 
Appointee Qualifications 
House speaker One Nursing education program 
administrator at UConn 
Senate president pro 
tempore 
One Nursing education program 
administrator at an independent 
higher education institution 
House majority leader One Nursing education program 
administrator at a state university 
within the Connecticut State 
University System 
Senate majority leader One Nursing education program 
administrator at a regional 
community-technical college 
House minority leader One Nursing education program 
administrator at an independent 
higher education institution 
Senate minority leader One Nursing education program 
administrator at UConn Health 
Center  
Department of Corrections 
(DOC) commissioner 
One Licensed medical provider 
employed by DOC 
Department of Public 
Health (DPH) 
commissioner 
One Registered nurse employed by 
DPH 
DMHAS commissioner One Registered nurse employed by 
DMHAS  2023HB-05441-R010829-BA.DOCX 
 
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Appointing Authority Number of 
Appointments 
Appointee Qualifications 
DDS commissioner  One Registered nurse employed by 
DDS 
DCF commissioner  One  Registered nurse employed by 
DCF 
 
The bill requires appointing authorities to make their initial 
appointments within 30 days of the bill’s passage and fill any vacancies.  
Leadership, Staff, and Meetings 
Under the bill, the House speaker and Senate president pro tempore 
must select the task force chairpersons from among its members. The 
chairpersons must schedule the task force’s first meeting to be held 
within 60 days after the bill’s passage. 
The bill requires the Higher Education and Employment 
Advancement Committee’s administrative staff to serve in this capacity 
for the task force.  
Report 
The bill requires the task force to report its findings and 
recommendations to the Higher Education and Employment 
Advancement Committee by January 1, 2024. It terminates on this date 
or the date it submits the report, whichever is later. 
§ 2 — OFFICE OF WORKFORC E STRATEGY REPORTING 
REQUIREMENTS 
The bill makes permanent the requirement that the chief workforce 
officer annually report to the governor and the Commerce; Education; 
Finance, Revenue and Bonding; Higher Education and Employment 
Advancement; and Labor and Public Employees committees on Office 
of Workforce Strategy workforce training programs. Under current law, 
the reporting requirement sunsets on October 1, 2025.  
Under the bill and existing law, the report must include information 
on the number, demographics, and outcomes of program participants.  2023HB-05441-R010829-BA.DOCX 
 
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§§ 4-5 — ALLIANCE DISTRICT EDUCATOR AND COUNSEL OR 
LOAN SUBSIDY PROGRAM 
The bill requires CHESLA to extend eligibility for the Alliance 
District Teacher Loan Subsidy Program to paraeducators and school 
counselors and renames the program the “Alliance District Educator 
and Counselor Loan Subsidy Program.” As under current law, this 
program provides subsidized interest rates on CHESLA loans to eligible 
borrowers employed in alliance districts, subject to available funding. 
§ 6 — CHESLA POLICE OFFICER LOAN SUBSIDY PROGRAM 
The bill requires CHESLA, by July 1, 2024, to establish a Police Officer 
Loan Subsidy Program to subsidize interest rates on CHESLA loans to 
eligible sworn members of municipal police departments (“police 
officers”) employed in distressed municipalities (see BACKGROUND), 
subject to available funding. 
The Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) 
annually designates distressed municipalities based on high 
unemployment and poverty, aging housing stock, and low or declining 
rates of job, population, and per capita income growth (CGS § 32-9p). 
Under the bill, CHESLA must establish a separate, non-lapsing account 
to hold program funds required by law to be deposited there, including 
any state appropriation or bond sale proceeds.  
Eligibility Criteria and Administrative Guidelines 
The bill requires CHESLA to establish the program’s eligibility 
criteria and administrative guidelines in consultation with the Police 
Officer Standards Training Council. Under the bill, the criteria and 
guidelines must address at least the following: 
1. applicant eligibility, 
2. interest rate subsidies and principal limits on authority loans 
subject to the loan subsidy program,  
3. the process for verifying applicants’ employment, and 
4. the requirement that an interest rate subsidy through the  2023HB-05441-R010829-BA.DOCX 
 
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program terminates for a subsidy recipient who no longer meets 
the program’s employment requirements during the loan’s term. 
Account Expenditure Guidelines 
CHESLA must use the funds in the program account to subsidize 
loans under the program. In addition, CHESLA must spend account 
funds to cover (1) reasonable and necessary expenses for program 
administration, (2) the issuance of authority loans to refinance one or 
more eligible loans, and (3) a reserve for any losses from issuing 
authority loans. 
By law and unchanged by the bill, “authority loans” are education 
loans by CHESLA or CHESLA loans from the proceeds of bonds to fund 
education loans. “Eligible loans” are loans in repayment that were 
issued by (1) CHESLA or (2) another private or governmental lender to 
finance college or university attendance. 
§§ 7 & 8 — CHESLA LOAN SUBSIDY PROGRAM F OR SPECIFIED 
HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS 
sHB 6689 of the current session requires CHESLA to establish a 
Nursing and Mental Health Care Professionals Loan Subsidy Program 
to subsidize interest rates on CHESLA refinancing loans to certain 
Connecticut-licensed nurses, nurse’s aides, psychologists, marital and 
family therapists, clinical and master social workers, and professional 
counselors. This bill amends sHB 6689 to expand the program to 
emergency medical service (EMS) professionals and makes various 
conforming changes. Under the bill, to qualify, the EMS professional 
must (1) be DPH-certified as an emergency medical responder, 
emergency medical technician, or advanced emergency medical 
technician and (2) meet the program’s eligibility criteria and 
administrative guidelines set by CHESLA and the education 
commissioner. 
BACKGROUND 
Distressed Municipalities 
DECD annually designates distressed municipalities based on high 
unemployment and poverty, aging housing stock, and low or declining  2023HB-05441-R010829-BA.DOCX 
 
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rates of job, population, and per capita income growth (CGS § 32-9p). 
The current (2022) distressed municipalities are Ansonia, Bridgeport, 
Bristol, Chaplin, Derby, East Hartford, East Haven, Griswold, Groton, 
Hartford, Meriden, Montville, New Britain, New London, North 
Stonington, Norwich, Plainfield, Putnam, Sprague, Sterling, Torrington, 
Waterbury, West Haven, Winchester, and Windham. 
Related Bill 
HB 5437 (File 263), favorably reported by the Higher Education and 
Employment Advancement Committee, requires CHESLA to establish 
a student loan subsidy program to offer subsidized interest rates on 
loans it makes to first responders. 
sHB 6689 (File 185), favorably reported by the Banking Committee, 
establishes a Nursing and Mental Health Care Professionals Loan 
Subsidy Program to subsidize interest rates on CHESLA refinancing 
loans to certain Connecticut-licensed nurses, nurse’s aides, 
psychologists, marital and family therapists, clinical and master social 
workers, and professional counselors. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Higher Education and Employment Advancement Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 22 Nay 0 (03/14/2023)