Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06875 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/26/2023

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 6875 (as amended by House "A")*  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE ISSUANCE OF AN IDENTITY CARD OR 
MOTOR VEHICLE OPERATOR'S LICENSE TO A PERSON BEING 
DISCHARGED FROM A CORRECTIONAL FACILITY.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill requires the Department of Correction (DOC) and 
Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) commissioners to proactively 
ensure that eligible incarcerated individuals with sentences of at least 
one year have a state identity card or driver’s license when they are 
released from a correctional facility.   
Under current law, the commissioners must ensure an incarcerated 
individual has a card or license if he or she requests and qualifies for 
one and pays any associated fee. The bill instead requires the 
commissioners to do so unless the person (1) indicates in writing, on a 
DOC commissioner-prescribed form, that he or she does not want a card 
or license or (2) is otherwise ineligible for one due to suspension, 
revocation, or cancellation of motor vehicle provisions in Connecticut or 
another state. It also (1) imposes deadlines by which the commissioners 
must start helping incarcerated individuals get necessary 
documentation and (2) generally eliminates the requirement that the 
commissioners do so within available appropriations. 
The bill’s card and license requirements apply to those who are 
released or discharged from a correctional facility after serving any part 
of a prison term for a misdemeanor or felony conviction, rather than just 
those released, as under current law. 
The bill requires the DMV commissioner to conduct a feasibility 
examination on expanding the allowable forms of identification an 
incarcerated individual may use to obtain an identification card and 
driver’s license. It also requires the DOC commissioner to annually  2023HB-06875-R010836-BA.DOCX 
 
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report to the Judiciary Committee certain statistics, issues, and 
recommendations on giving these cards and licenses to incarcerated 
individuals.  
*House Amendment “A” (1) delays the effective date from July 1, 
2023, to April 1, 2024; (2) limits the bill’s applicability to those sentenced 
for at least one year; (3) eliminates the underlying bill’s requirement that 
DOC give incarcerated individuals an initial driver’s license; (4) only 
requires providing access to fees and fee waivers within available 
appropriations; (5) eliminates the underlying bill’s provision on those 
with life imprisonment; (6) adds the feasibility study provisions; and (7) 
makes various minor, technical, and conforming changes.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 1, 2024 
STATE IDENTITY CARD AND DRIVER’S LICENSE 
When a person is taken into DOC custody, the bill requires the DOC 
commissioner, in consultation and collaboration with the DMV 
commissioner, to determine whether the person has a current state 
identity card or driver’s license and, if so, the date it expires. 
For any individual sentenced to a term of imprisonment who wants 
an initial state identity card, to renew a driver’s license or card, or obtain 
a duplicate of a lost card or license, the DOC commissioner, in 
consultation and collaboration with the DMV commissioner, must: 
1. at least 24 months before the person’s discharge date, determine 
the documentation needed for the card or license and help enable 
the person to quickly get this documentation by providing access 
to any forms, fees, and fee waivers, within available 
appropriations, and notary services and mailing-related needs; 
and 
2. at least 13 months before the person’s discharge date, similarly 
enable him or her to quickly get any more required 
documentation or photographs by providing the same access as 
listed above and a way to get required photographs.  2023HB-06875-R010836-BA.DOCX 
 
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The DOC commissioner must also begin the process within the same 
timeframes above based on a person’s earliest eligibility date for parole. 
For those whose sentences are reduced to a discharge date within these 
timeframes (24 months and 13 months), the commissioner must 
immediately begin the process. 
Under the bill, when a person who requested assistance getting a card 
or license is released from a correctional facility, DOC must give the 
person their card or license unless he or she was ineligible to receive 
one. 
FEASIBILITY EXAMINATION  
The bill requires the DMV commissioner, by January 1, 2025, to 
examine whether any feasible modifications can be made to expand the 
allowable forms of identification that incarcerated individuals may use 
to obtain a driver’s license or identity card. The commissioner must 
implement any modifications he determines are feasible. 
ANNUAL REPORT 
By January 1, 2025, the DOC commissioner, in collaboration with the 
DMV commissioner, must begin annually reporting to the Judiciary 
Committee on: 
1. the total number of formerly incarcerated individuals who were 
issued renewal or duplicate state identity cards and driver’s 
licenses, separated by card and license type; 
2. the total number of cards and licenses issued to individuals in 
each individual correctional facility;  
3. the total number of incarcerated individuals who were not able 
to be issued an identity card or driver’s license, disaggregated to 
the extent possible by reason for non-issuance; and 
4. any issues the commissioners encountered in implementing the 
bill and feasibility examination, and any recommendations for 
improving or resolving them.  2023HB-06875-R010836-BA.DOCX 
 
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COMMITTEE ACTION 
Judiciary Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 37 Nay 0 (03/27/2023) 
 
Appropriations Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 53 Nay 0 (05/01/2023)