Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05437 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/22/2024

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sHB-5437 
AN ACT CONCERNING EDUCATION MANDATE RELIEF.  
 
Primary Analyst: DD 	4/19/24 
Contributing Analyst(s):    
Reviewer: JS 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 25 $ FY 26 $ 
University of Connecticut Various - See 
Below 
See Below See Below 
Note: GF=General Fund  
Municipal Impact: 
Municipalities Effect FY 25 $ FY 26 $ 
Various Local Boards of 
Education 
See Below See Below See Below 
  
Explanation 
The bill delays, or eliminates, costs to certain local and regional 
school districts and the University of Connecticut associated with 
separating and disposing organic and inorganic solid waste. The bill 
makes several other changes to education statutes that have no fiscal 
impact. These changes are described below by section. 
Section 1 establishes the Educator Professional Development 
Mandate Review Advisory Council. This has no fiscal impact. 
Sections 2 and 3 allow professional development and evaluation 
committees within local and regional school districts to determine the 
manner and schedule of professional development requirements in 
their districts. This has no fiscal impact as it is not anticipated to impact 
the cost to districts associated with any professional development.  
Sections 4 and 5 adjust certain training requirements for school  2024HB-05437-R000592-FN.DOCX 	Page 2 of 2 
 
 
resource officers. This has no fiscal impact.  
Section 6 eliminates, for some facilities, and delays, for others, a 
requirement that has not yet taken effect for school and higher education 
facilities that generate a high volume of waste to separate and compost 
organic waste (i.e., food scraps). The bill limits the number of 
educational facilities that will be required to separate and compost food 
scraps to such facilities located within 20 miles of a composting facility. 
For those facilities that must separate and compost food scraps, the 
requirement is delayed from January 1, 2025 to July 1, 2026.  
The section results in: (1) a delay, from FY 25 to FY 27, of any fiscal 
impacts associated with these provisions, and (2) an elimination of fiscal 
impacts to those facilities that generate a high volume of food scraps and 
are more than 20 miles away from a composting facility. These changes 
may impact the University of Connecticut. 
Section 7 has no fiscal impact. It makes several changes to high school 
graduation requirements that are not expected to increase the cost of 
curriculum administration or development.  
Section 8 exempts students enrolled in endowed academies who are 
not from Connecticut from the requirement to fill out a Free Application 
for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), which has no fiscal impact to school 
districts. 
Sections 9 and 10 make technical changes and have no fiscal impact.  
The Out Years 
Any savings incurred by a local or regional school district or the 
University of Connecticut as a result of Section 6 of the bill will continue 
into the future subject to the cost of waste disposal. The other provisions 
of the bill have no fiscal impact in the out years.