Researcher: HP Page 1 5/7/24 OLR Bill Analysis HB 5523 (as amended by House "A")* AN ACT CONCERNING ALLOCATIONS OF FEDERAL AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN ACT FUNDS AND PROVISIONS RELATED TO GENERAL GOVERNMENT, HUMAN SERVICES, EDUCATION AND THE BIENNIUM ENDING JUNE 30, 2025. TABLE OF CONTENTS: §§ 1-16, 19-21 & 501-503 — ARPA ALLOCATION ADJUSTMENTS AND BUDGET PROVISIONS Adjusts ARPA allocations and makes various other budget-related changes; please refer to the fiscal note for a summary of these sections § 17 — DOC VOCATIONAL VILLAGE PROGRAM Requires the DOC commissioner to prepare and equip the department and its post- secondary education partners to use allocated funding under the vocational village program for programs that produce economic and other benefits, including inmate employment opportunities § 18 — NEEDS ASSESSMENT ON POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES Requires OPM’s Criminal Justice Policy and Planning Division, in consultation with DOC, to do a needs assessment of the facilities, materials, and staffing required to deliver postsecondary education programs in correctional facilities § 22 — STUDENT LOAN REIMBURSEMENT PILOT PROGRAM Modifies eligibility requirements for the OHE Student Loan Reimbursement Pilot Program, including (1) expanding the program to students who have attended and graduated with an associate degree, (2) requiring the OHE executive director to establish hardship waiver qualifications and forms, and (3) requiring specific documentation from participants as part of their annual reporting requirements §§ 23 & 24 — SEWERAGE GRANT PROG RAM FOR HARTFORD RESIDENTS Primarily (1) caps at $50,000 the grant amount each applicant may receive under the fund for repairs to real property and personal property used for business purposes; (2) generally, beginning May 1, 2025, limits eligibility for assistance to those who requested an assessment from the MDC’s sewer back-up prevention program by April 30, 2025; and (3) establishes procedures for judge trial referees, rather than the comptroller, to hear appeals of the Hartford Sewerage System Repair and Improvement Fund administrator’s decisions about an applicant’s eligibility or grant amount §§ 25-30 — ASSETS OF STATE HUMANE INSTITUTION RESIDENTS 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 2 5/7/24 Prohibits DAS from recovering from a deceased person’s estate charges for care in a state humane institution except under certain circumstances; requires DAS to release any liens filed for recovery of such charges. §§ 31-33 — COST OF INCARCERATION Regarding the state’s claim for an individual’s incarceration costs, generally (1) terminates claims associated with crimes on his or her erased criminal record and prohibits the reimbursement of claims paid before July 1, 2024; (2) exempts up to $50,000 from the lien the state may place on an inmate’s inheritance; and (3) specifies that any property the probate court deems an asset must be used to pay the state’s claim against the estate of certain inmates § 34 — DESPP MISSING PERSONS CLEARINGHOUSE Limits the requirement that the DESPP missing persons information clearinghouse include information on missing people with IDD to those who are adults § 35 — HOSPITAL PILOT FOR ASD SERVICES Narrows the type of hospital DSS must select for a two-year pilot program on ASD to one in Hartford County with an established program § 36 — HUMAN SERVICES CAREER PIPELINE Removes the July 1, 2024, deadline to establish the career pipeline program and requires CWO to report on its plan for the program by that date; requires CWO to establish the pipeline program within available appropriations § 37 — LOCAL VOLUNTARY PUBLIC SAFETY REGISTRATION SYSTEM Eliminates the local voluntary public safety registration system for children with IDD and the requirement that PSAP emergency dispatchers search this system’s database when dispatching emergency services to a residential address §§ 38 & 39 — INCOME LIMITS FOR HUSKY A PARENTS AND CARETAKER RELATIVES AND HUSKY C Lowers the income limit for HUSKY A parents and caretaker relatives from 155% of FPL to 133% of FPL; reduces the scheduled October 1 HUSKY C income limit increase from 105% of FPL to 159% of the TFA monthly cash benefit §§ 40-43 — PASSPORT TO THE PARKS Increases the Passport to the Parks motor vehicle registration fee; provides funding from the Passport to the Parks account for operating (1) Batterson Park and (2) the Thames River Heritage Park water taxi; requires DEEP to enter into memorandums of agreement for these purposes § 44 — UCONN HEALTH CENTER EMPLOYEE FRINGE BENEFITS Requires the comptroller to (1) use up to $4.5 million of funds appropriated for State Comptroller-Fringe Benefits to fund a portion of the fringe benefits for UCHC employees and (2) enter into an MOU with UCHC for providing operational support §§ 45 & 46 — EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS ON INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE TOWARDS PRE GNANT AND POSTPARTUM PEOPLE Requires DPH to develop educational materials on intimate partner violence toward pregnant and postpartum people; requires DPH to distribute the educational materials to certain health care providers and facilities to give to patients; transfers, from the Maternal 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 3 5/7/24 Mortality Review Committee to DPH, responsibility for developing educational materials on certain other topics §§ 47 & 48 — XL CENTER Specifies that the XL Center includes the adjoining garage for purposes of CRDA’s operating and capital project agreements with contractors; exempts from the sales and use taxes personal property or services needed for the XL Center’s operations and sold to the contractor; increases the maximum amount that the state, CRDA, or both must contribute to the center’s renovation § 49 — NEEDS ASSESSMENT ON POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES Contains identical provisions as in § 18; see above for analysis § 50 — ROBERTA B. WILLIS SCHOLARSHIP FUNDING Makes several changes to a 2023-enacted allocation of Roberta B. Willis scholarship program funds, including that all ARPA funds allocated for the program be disbursed, rather than used, by December 31, 2024, and requires OHE to reserve up to $15 million from the program’s FY 25 appropriation for disbursement during FY 26 § 51 — CONNECTICUT PORT AUTHORITY REPORT Requires CPA, by January 1, 2025, to begin quarterly reporting to the Transportation and Appropriations committees on a staffing plan to handle its needs and its efforts for certain activities and programs § 52 — THE TRANSFORMING CH ILDREN’S BEHAVIORAL HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING COMMITTEE Expands the Transforming Children’s Behavioral Health Policy and Planning Committee’s membership by adding two representatives from the federally recognized Indian Tribes in the state; extends, by two years, the committee’s reporting deadlines § 53 — 2024-25 ACADEMIC YEAR CHANGES TO THE ROBERTA B. WILLIS SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM Prohibits OHE from requiring that Roberta B. Willis scholarship program need-based grants be reduced based on a student’s initial qualifications as determined from his or her FAFSA; pauses the requirement that the program’s need and merit-based grants be awarded in a higher amount than its need-based grants §§ 54 & 55 — CONNECTICUT HYDROGEN AND EL ECTRIC AUTOMOBILE PURCHASE REBATE (CHEAPR) PROGRAM Modifies the CHEAPR rebate amount for residents of environmental justice communities from up to 100% more than the standard rebate to at least 200% more than the standard rebate; requires certain proceeds from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative to be used for the CHEAPR program (rather than the CHEAPR account) and other programs that support DEEP’s engagement with environmental justice communities § 56 — DISTRESSED MUNICIPALITY DESIGNATION Extends, from five years to 10, the time period for which certain municipalities are deemed to be distressed municipalities after being removed from the annual list published by DECD §§ 57-59 — CIGARETTE DEALER LICENSES AND RENEWALS 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 4 5/7/24 Requires cigarette dealer’s license applicants to post certain notices at their businesses and provides a remonstrance process; allows municipalities to adopt ordinances to require these dealers to notify the chief law enforcement official of license renewals and allows the official to comment; requires DRS to consider these comments and report certain statistics on these notifications to the legislature § 60 — UNION AVENUE DETENTION CENTER Starting in 2026, requires that the Union Avenue detention center in New Haven be under the jurisdiction of an OPM-determined state agency rather than that of the local police §§ 61-63 — MEDICAID COVERAGE FOR SCHOOL -BASED HEALTH SERVICES Requires DSS to amend the Medicaid state plan to expand coverage for health care services provided to eligible students (1) by or on behalf of a LEA and (2) in school nurse’s offices; establishes an interagency coalition to coordinate and make recommendations to maximize federal funding for Medicaid-eligible health care services in public schools § 64 — PHASING OUT MED CONNECT INCOME AN D ASSET LIMITS Phases out income and asset eligibility limits in the Med Connect program and eliminates them by July 1, 2029 §§ 65 & 68 — BUREAU OF SERVICES FOR PERSONS WHO ARE DEAF, DEAFBLIND OR HARD OF HEARING Establishes the bureau within ADS and requires the department to hire a bureau director; requires state agencies to appoint an employee to serve as a point of contact for concerns related to people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing §§ 66, 67, 69 & 71 — ADVISORY BOARD FOR PERSONS WHO ARE DEAF, DEAFBLIND OR HARD OF HEARING Renames the board, changes its membership, and expands its duties and reporting requirements §§ 70 & 72 — ADS SERVICES FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE DEAFBLIND Expands ADS responsibilities to include providing services for people who are deafblind, generally conforming to current practice § 73 — METHADONE MAI NTENANCE RATE INCREA SE Requires DSS to increase Medicaid rates, within available appropriations, for chemical maintenance providers who currently receive the lowest weekly reimbursement rate § 74 — MEDICAID AMBULANCE RATES Requires DSS to increase FY 25 ambulance rates within available appropriations, including increasing the mileage rate for ambulance transportation covered under Medicaid by $1.18 and providing mileage reimbursement for in-town trips § 75 — PACT PROGRAM Expands the PACT Program’s eligibility to include transition program students; increases the program’s minimum award amounts; names the awards the “Mary Ann Handley Grant”; requires BOR’s upcoming semesterly reports on certain program metrics by November 1, 2024, and March 1, 2025 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 5 5/7/24 § 76 — DEADLINE EXTENSION TO SUBMIT RECOMMENDATIONS ON CREATING A NEW SOLID WASTE-RELATED ENTITY Extends, until July 1, 2025, the deadline for OPM to give the Environment and Energy and Technology committees recommendations on the feasibility and advisability of creating a new solid waste-related quasi-public state agency, waste authority, or other entity § 77 — SMALL TOWN ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (STEAP) Increases, from $500,000 to $1 million, the maximum STEAP grant amount municipalities can receive per fiscal year § 78 — VACATION AND PERSONAL DAYS DURING WORKING TEST PERIODS Gives full-time permanent state employees paid vacation days and personal days during their initial working test periods § 79 — STATE AGENCY DEPUTY DUAL EMPLOYME NT Eliminates a provision that prohibits certain state agency deputies from having other employment §§ 80 & 81 — JUDICIAL RETIREMENT SYSTEM AM ORTIZATION Changes the method for determining the state’s contribution for JRS unfunded liability from a 40-year amortization to a 15-year layered amortization, which effectively extends the contributions for an additional seven years; requires the state retirement commission to revise the JRS actuarial valuation using the new amortization method §§ 82-85 — CONNECTICUT MUNICIPAL REDEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY Requires MRDA to provide members, by request, assistance on developing project criteria and regulations to increase housing production; authorizes it to establish criteria to evaluate its projects’ potential impacts; eliminates a requirement that members appoint a local development board § 86 — INVESTMENT ADVISORY COUNCIL “GIFTS” Allows the IAC’s public members to receive travel expenses, lodging, food, beverages, and other benefits customarily provided in the course of employment § 87 — REPEAL OF STUDENT LOAN REIMBURSEMENT AND RELATED PROGRAMS Repeals several student loan reimbursement, scholarship, and related programs § 88 — REPEAL OF MULTILINGUAL LEARNER EDUCATOR INCENTIVE PROGRAM Repeals the Multilingual Learner Educator Incentive Program § 89 — CONNECTICUT PORT AUTHORITY QUARTE RLY STATUS REPORT REVIEW Eliminates the requirement that DAS and OPM review and comment on the Port Authority’s quarterly report before it is submitted to the Transportation Committee §§ 90, 91, 137, 139-142, 145-183 & 185-242 — HEALTH STRATEGY AND HIGHER EDUCATION COM MISSIONERS 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 6 5/7/24 Renames the title of OHS’s and OHE’s executive heads as “commissioners” rather than “executive directors” § 92 — TOBACCO AND HEALTH TRUST FUND TRANSFER Suspends the annual $12 million disbursement from the Tobacco Settlement Fund to the Tobacco and Health Trust Fund for FY 25 and redirects it to the General Fund §§ 93 & 94 — DSS PHARMACY APPROVALS Increases, from 2 to 24 hours, how much time DSS has to grant or deny pharmacy requests for prior authorization or dispensing name brand drug products before they are deemed approved §§ 95-97 — BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH TRUST FUND Eliminates the Biomedical Research Trust Fund and requires the state comptroller to transfer its remaining balance to the General Fund § 98 — EMS REGIONAL COORDINATOR POSITION S TO CLASSIFIED SERVICE Requires DAS to transition EMS regional coordinators and assistant regional coordinators to classified service § 99 — INFORMATION REQUESTS TO ORIGINATING AGENCIES Requires requests for certain information to be directed to the state agency where the information originated § 100 — AGREEMENTS OR SOLICITATIONS TO LOCATE UNCLAIMED PROPERTY Expands requirements and processes regarding agreements and solicitations to locate unclaimed property §§ 101-104 — COPAYMENT-ONLY HEALTH PLANS Exempts copayment-only health plans from the insurance law’s copayment limitations for certain in-network imaging services and physical and occupational therapy services § 105 — PRESUMPTIVE MEDICAID ELIGIBILITY FOR HOMECARE Eliminates Section 10 of sHB 5001, as amended by House Amendment “A,” and replaces it with generally similar provisions; requires the DSS commissioner to establish a presumptive Medicaid eligibility system for people applying to the Medicaid-funded portion of CHCPE; requires the state to pay for up to 90 days of home care applicants determined to be presumptively Medicaid eligible § 106 — MEN’S HEALTH PUBLIC AWARENESS AN D EDUCATION CAMPAIGN Requires the DPH commissioner to create a campaign promoting community-based screening and education for common diseases affecting high-risk male populations § 107 — HIGHER EDUCATION FINANCIAL SUSTAINABILITY ADVISORY BOARD Establishes the Higher Education Financial Sustainability Advisory Board, designates its members, assigns the board powers and duties, and requires public higher education institutions and the UConn Health Center to submit certain information to the board at the chairpersons’ request 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 7 5/7/24 § 108 — EDUCATION MANDATE REVIEW ADVISOR Y COUNCIL Modifies criteria for two of the council’s 10 appointees § 109 — POPULATION CENSUS USED FOR MUNICIPAL GRANTS For FY 25, requires OPM to use DPH’s 2021 population estimates to calculate municipal grants § 110 — BOARD OF REGENTS FOR HIGHER EDUCATION EXPANSION Expands the Board of Regents for Higher Education (BOR) to include the Office of Policy and Management (OPM) secretary as an ex-officio, nonvoting member § 111 — TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS DURING COD IFICATION Requires LCO to make necessary technical, grammatical, and punctuation changes when codifying the bill and related public acts §§ 112-120 — REVISIONS TO MAGNET SCHOOL AND VO-AG CENTER FUNDING PROGR AMS; CREATION OF NEW CHOICE PROGRAM GRANT Makes significant changes to education funding grant programs for (1) interdistrict magnet schools, and (2) regional agricultural science and technology centers (i.e., “vo-ag centers”); eliminates, for FY 25, the existing magnet school and vo-ag center grants, and replaces them with new grants under the choice program § 121 — SUPPLEMENTAL FUNDING AMOUNTS FOR ECS, CHARTER SCHOOL, MAGNET SCHOO L, OPEN CHOICE, AND VO-AG CENTER GRANTS Requires SDE to apportion the $150 million appropriated for FY 25 for “Education Finance Reform” in specific amounts for (1) supplemental funds for the following grants: ECS, charter schools, interdistrict magnet schools, Open Choice Program, and agriscience and technology centers, and (2) grants for specific projects, programs, towns, and agencies § 122 — PLAN TO CONVERT STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION INTO AN ADVISORY BOARD Requires the education commissioner to develop a plan to convert SBE into an advisory board and make the education commissioner the department head § 123 — ASSET AND CAPACITY MAPPING FOR NONPROFITS Requires UConn’s School of Public Policy to conduct a study and comprehensive asset and capacity mapping for nonprofit organizations to support information-sharing and collaboration between nonprofits and communities; requires the school to provide an interim report and a final report to the Education Committee § 124 — DELETED BY HOUSE AMENDMENT “A” § 125 — SDE DISTRIBUTION OF PARAEDUCATOR FUNDING Sets a September 1, 2024, deadline for SDE to distribute to school boards the FY 23 amount allocated to the department from ARPA funding for paraeducator professional development §§ 126 & 128 — PARAEDUCATOR HEALTH INSUR ANCE PROGRAMS 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 8 5/7/24 Extends by one year an HSA subsidy program for paraeducators and expands it to cover high deductible health plans for Medicare-eligible paraeducators; requires the comptroller to establish a one-year premium subsidy program for school boards that provide paraeducators with certain health plans; requires the comptroller and SDE commissioner to enter into an MOU related to these programs; repeals a program providing stipends to paraeducators to purchase a qualified health plan through Access Health CT § 127 — SERC FUNDING ALLOCATION Requires, rather than allows, the SDE commissioner to allocate funds to the State Education Resource Center §§ 129-132 — DEEP PUBLIC HEARINGS FOR TRANSPORTATION CAPITAL PROJECTS For certain transportation capital projects, requires certain information to be included in a petition for a DEEP public hearing on an application for a (1) structures, dredging, and fill permit; (2) tidal or inland wetland activity permit; or (3) certification to conduct certain work in a floodplain §§ 133-136 — DELETED BY HOUSE AMENDMENT “A” §§ 138, 143, 144 & 184 — DELETED BY HOUSE AMENDMENT “ A” §§ 243-249 — DEFICIENCY APPROPRIATIONS Please refer to the fiscal note for a summary of these sections § 504 — MRDA REQUIREMENT REPEALED Repeals the requirement that MRDA review and approve a member municipality’s economic development master plan before executing an MOA with it, as well as related provisions *House Amendment “A” (1) modifies and adds to American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) allocation adjustments and budget provisions; (2) makes the Hartford sewerage grant changes effective upon passage; (3) changes the reduction of the scheduled increase to HUSKY C income limits; (4) limits the funding from the Passport to the Parks account for the Thames River Heritage Park water taxi through FY 31 and specifies annual funding caps; (5) requires the comptroller to enter into a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the University of Connecticut Health Center (UCHC) for providing operating support; (6) narrows the scope of the XL Center sales and use tax provision in the underlying bill; (7) removes the Auditors of Public Accounts from the Higher Education Financial Advisory Board; (8) removes provisions that would have allowed certain directors of the State Education Resource Center (SERC), Connecticut Lottery Corporation, Connecticut 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 9 5/7/24 Port Authority (CPA), and Connecticut Airport Authority to join the state employee health insurance plan; (9) modifies the education funding provisions, including removing provisions that would have created new education cost sharing (ECS) grant student weighting for students who reside in state- or federally-recognized tribal reservations and restoring magnet school operators’ and vo-ag centers’ authority to charge tuition to sending school districts or parents (as applicable); (10) specifies that the bill’s provisions on public hearing petitions on transportation capital projects do not change requirements for public involvement under the state’s environmental policy act; (11) repeals a requirement in current law that the Connecticut Municipal Redevelopment Authority’s (MRDA) member municipalities submit a master economic development plan for the authority’s approval; and (12) makes various minor and technical changes. §§ 1-16, 19-21 & 501-503 — ARPA ALLOCATION ADJUSTMENTS AND BUDGET PROVISION S Adjusts ARPA allocations and makes various other budget-related changes; please refer to the fiscal note for a summary of these sections § 17 — DOC VOCATIONAL VILLAGE PROGR AM Requires the DOC commissioner to prepare and equip the department and its post- secondary education partners to use allocated funding under the vocational village program for programs that produce economic and other benefits, including inmate employment opportunities By law, the Department of Correction (DOC), in consultation with the Department of Economic and Community Development, administers a vocational village program to provide skilled trades training to inmates, including opportunities to earn nationally recognized industry certifications and credentials. The Office of Policy and Management (OPM) must allocate funds to DOC for the program from the federal funds the state has received from certain laws, including the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). The bill requires the DOC commissioner to prepare and equip the department and its post-secondary education partners to use this allocated funding for programs that produce economic and other benefits, including employment opportunities for inmates. 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 10 5/7/24 EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 18 — NEEDS ASSESSM ENT ON POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN CORRECTI ONAL FACILITIES Requires OPM’s Criminal Justice Policy and Planning Division, in consultation with DOC, to do a needs assessment of the facilities, materials, and staffing required to deliver postsecondary education programs in correctional facilities The bill requires OPM’s Criminal Justice Policy and Planning Division, in consultation with the Department of Correction (DOC), to do a needs assessment of the facilities, materials, and staffing required to deliver postsecondary education programs in correctional facilities. The assessment must include at least the following: 1. feedback solicitation from higher education institutions that provide postsecondary education programs in correctional facilities to understand current needs; 2. an analysis of DOC’s policies on incarcerated individuals’ postsecondary education; 3. an estimate of the level of unmet demand for this type of education; 4. an inventory of (a) correctional facilities (including classrooms, multi-purpose rooms, libraries, and study rooms), (b) staffing, and (c) materials currently available for education delivery (including education technology and internet access); 5. recommendations for and a cost analysis of improving facilities, staffing, and materials to meet the unmet demand; 6. a survey of (a) students of postsecondary education programs in correctional facilities; (b) former students of these programs, in consultation with regional reentry programs; and (c) any person or group the division deems necessary; and 7. a listing of any other barriers to the effective delivery of these education programs. The bill requires the OPM secretary to report on the needs assessment 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 11 5/7/24 to the Higher Education and Employment Advancement Committee by January 1, 2025. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 22 — STUDENT LOAN REIMBURSEMENT PILOT PROGRAM Modifies eligibility requirements for the OHE Student Loan Reimbursement Pilot Program, including (1) expanding the program to students who have attended and graduated with an associate degree, (2) requiring the OHE executive director to establish hardship waiver qualifications and forms, and (3) requiring specific documentation from participants as part of their annual reporting requirements PA 23-204, § 174, requires the Office of Higher Education (OHE) executive director, by January 1, 2025, to establish a student loan reimbursement pilot program to annually reimburse eligible people for up to $5,000 of their student loan payments, within available appropriations, for up to four years per participant. This bill expands the program and adjusts its eligibility requirements. Program Expansion Under current law, OHE may allow anyone to participate in the program who has a student loan and who, among other things, attended and graduated with a bachelor’s degree from an in-state college (public or private). The bill expands the program to those who have attended and graduated with an associate degree. Eligibility Requirements The bill requires each program participant to annually submit to OHE, in a manner the executive director prescribes, a statement from a student loan servicer that includes the amounts for the outstanding loan balance for each student loan and the total of the year-to-date payments made on each student loan, rather than student loan payment receipts as required under current law. The law also requires participants to (1) be state residents as defined under state law and (2) have been so for at least five years. The bill specifies the OHE executive director determines if applicants meet this residency requirement. Hardship Waiver 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 12 5/7/24 The bill no longer requires OHE to require a student to leave a college or university in good academic standing before graduation to be eligible to participate in the program. It instead allows the OHE executive director to grant a hardship waiver as part of the program eligibility requirements. The bill requires the OHE executive director, by January 1, 2025, to post on the office’s website (1) hardship waiver qualifications and (2) required application forms for the student loan reimbursement program and hardship waiver. The application must include an option for a person to disclose their demographic information. Volunteer Requirement Existing law requires program participant to volunteer at a nonprofit for at least 50 unpaid hours. The bill requires the nonprofit to be registered with the Department of Consumer Protection or a municipal government. Under the bill, a program participant must annually submit to OHE, in a manner the executive director prescribes, a notarized form documenting the number of volunteer hours the program participant completed that is signed by the participant’s supervisor or other nonprofit or municipal employee for which the participant volunteered. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 23 & 24 — SEWERAGE GRANT PROGRAM FOR HARTFORD RESIDENTS Primarily (1) caps at $50,000 the grant amount each applicant may receive under the fund for repairs to real property and personal property used for business purposes; (2) generally, beginning May 1, 2025, limits eligibility for assistance to those who requested an assessment from the MDC’s sewer back-up prevention program by April 30, 2025; and (3) establishes procedures for judge trial referees, rather than the comptroller, to hear appeals of the Hartford Sewerage System Repair and Improvement Fund administrator’s decisions about an applicant’s eligibility or grant amount By law, the Hartford Sewerage System Repair and Improvement Fund must be used for specified purposes, including a program to provide grants to eligible Hartford residents and property owners to compensate them for damage caused by flooding since 2021 (see 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 13 5/7/24 Background — Hartford Sewerage System Repair and Improvement Fund Program). As described below, the bill does the following: 1. caps grant amounts for damages to certain types of property; 2. generally limits grant eligibility to individuals who requested a sewer back up assessment by a specified date; 3. designates judge trial referees, rather than the comptroller, as the hearing authority for applicants’ appeals of decisions about their eligibility or grant amounts; and 4. modifies who may conduct assessments of applicants’ damages. The bill additionally authorizes the administrator to make grant payments directly to a contractor or vendor an applicant hired to make repairs and also makes minor and conforming changes. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage Grant Amount Cap The bill caps at $50,000 the grant amount each applicant may receive for costs incurred for repairs to real property and damage to personal property that was used for business purposes when the damage occurred. Eligibility Requirement Beginning May 1, 2025, to be eligible for financial assistance for real property repairs under the bill, new applicants generally must have requested an assessment from the Metropolitan District Commission (MDC) sewer backup prevention program by April 30, 2025. (This program provides free technical assistance, on-site plumbing surveys, and other assistance to help customers avoid sewer backups into their homes.) Under the bill, an applicant who did not request this sewer backup assessment may still be eligible for assistance if the grant program 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 14 5/7/24 administrator determines, in accordance with criteria the comptroller approves, that the applicant was prevented from doing so due to extenuating circumstances. Otherwise, the administrator must, in consultation with MDC, verify that applicants requested an assessment by the specified date. Appeals By law, a grant program applicant may appeal the administrator’s decision on the applicant’s program eligibility or the grant amount awarded to him or her. Under current law, the applicant may appeal to the comptroller, who may hire an administrator to conduct these appeals. Under the bill, these appeals must instead be heard by a judge trial referee the chief court administrator assigns. The bill specifies that the applicant has the burden of showing that he or she is eligible for the grant program and payment for real property repairs or damaged personal property. The judge trial referee may consider evidence (e.g., testimony and reports) presented by the applicant, program administrator, or other interested party. If the applicant shows his or her eligibility, by a preponderance of the evidence, the judge trial referee must award the applicant the grant amount he or she is owed under the law. The judge trial referee must issue a decision within 60 days after the hearing ends, and as under current law, the decision is final. Inspectors Under existing law, inspectors must evaluate damage to each eligible applicant’s property and provide a report on it to the administrator. The bill specifies that these inspectors must be licensed home inspectors or insurance adjusters. It allows the comptroller to contract with these inspectors (rather than allowing inspectors employed by MDC to serve this function). Background — Hartford Sewerage System Repair and Improvement Fund Program By law, the Hartford Sewerage System Repair and Improvement 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 15 5/7/24 Fund program must provide grants to (1) give financial assistance to eligible owners of real property in Hartford to pay for necessary repairs from flood damage caused on or after January 1, 2021, and (2) reimburse residents for costs associated with damage to personal property due to flooding occurring on or after that date. §§ 25-30 — ASSETS OF STATE HUMANE INSTITUTION RESIDENTS Prohibits DAS from recovering from a deceased person’s estate charges for care in a state humane institution except under certain circumstances; requires DAS to release any liens filed for recovery of such charges. Beginning July 1, 2024, this bill prohibits the Department of Administrative Services (DAS) commissioner from recovering from a deceased person’s estate charges for the aid, care, or treatment the person received in a state humane institution except in the following circumstances: 1. recovery of the charges is required under federal law or 2. if the billing rate for care in the institution was set using fraudulent information, DAS may recover the difference between the amount billed and paid and the amount that would have been billed if not for fraud. The bill requires the DAS commissioner to release any liens filed for recovery of charges prohibited under the bill. However, it does not authorize the commissioner to return to any person or estate payments recovered before July 1, 2024, for charges related to care in a state humane institution. The bill also makes related technical and conforming changes. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 Background — State Humane Institutions A “state humane institution” is a state mental hospital, community mental health center, treatment facility for children and adolescents, or any other facility or program administered by the departments of Children and Families, Developmental Services, or Mental Health and Addiction Services. 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 16 5/7/24 §§ 31-33 — COST OF INCARCERATION Regarding the state’s claim for an individual’s incarceration costs, generally (1) terminates claims associated with crimes on his or her erased criminal record and prohibits the reimbursement of claims paid before July 1, 2024; (2) exempts up to $50,000 from the lien the state may place on an inmate’s inheritance; and (3) specifies that any property the probate court deems an asset must be used to pay the state’s claim against the estate of certain inmates The law requires the DOC commissioner to charge an inmate for the cost of his or her incarceration. The bill makes the following changes to the mechanisms through which the commissioner may recover the incarceration costs under current law: 1. terminates the state’s claims for incarceration costs that it incurred during time the inmate was serving for crimes that were later erased from his or her criminal record (as described below) and specifies that these inmates are not entitled to reimbursement for state claims paid before July 1, 2024; 2. exempts up to $50,000 from the lien the state may place on an inmate’s inheritance, except in cases where the inmate was incarcerated for a capitol felony, murder with special circumstances; felony murder, 1st or 2nd degree sexual assault, 1st degree aggravated sexual assault, or 1st degree aggravated sexual assault of a minor; and 3. specifies that any property the probate court deems an asset must be used to pay the state’s claim against the estate of a former inmate who dies within 20 years after his or her release. By law, record erasure eligibility is generally as follows: (1) misdemeanors are subject to erasure seven years after the person’s most recent conviction and (2) felonies are subject to erasure 10 years after the most recent conviction. The periods are calculated from the date the court entered the person’s most recent conviction for any crime (with an exception for certain drug possession crimes). These erasure provisions generally apply to (1) classified or unclassified misdemeanors, (2) class D or E felonies, and (3) unclassified felonies with up to five-year prison terms. Existing law, unchanged by the bill, specifically makes several of these crimes ineligible for this erasure (e.g., family violence crimes and 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 17 5/7/24 nonviolent or violent sexual offenses requiring sex offender registration). EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 34 — DESPP MISSING PERSONS CLEARINGHOU SE Limits the requirement that the DESPP missing persons information clearinghouse include information on missing people with IDD to those who are adults By law, the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP) administers a missing persons information clearinghouse that holds information to help law enforcement agencies locate those (1) ages 65 or older, (2) ages 18 or older with a mental impairment, or (3) with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD). The bill modifies the current requirement that the clearinghouse include information on missing people with IDD by limiting it to those who are at least age 18. It also makes a conforming change. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 35 — HOSPITAL PILOT FOR ASD SERVICES Narrows the type of hospital DSS must select for a two-year pilot program on ASD to one in Hartford County with an established program Current law requires the Department of Social Services (DSS) to establish a two-year pilot program in partnership with a hospital to provide nonresidential outpatient day services for people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The bill specifically requires DSS to partner with a free-standing, long-term acute care hospital in Hartford County with an established, specialized interdisciplinary program for younger children and adolescents with an ASD diagnosis. By law and under the bill, DSS must select a hospital by September 1, 2024, and the hospital must start providing services under the pilot by October 1, 2024. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 36 — HUMAN SERVICES CAREER PIPELINE Removes the July 1, 2024, deadline to establish the career pipeline program and requires CWO to report on its plan for the program by that date; requires CWO to establish the pipeline program within available appropriations Current law requires the chief workforce officer (CWO) to establish 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 18 5/7/24 the Human Services Career Pipeline by July 1, 2024. The bill makes this requirement within available appropriations and eliminates the deadline. By law, the career pipeline must (1) ensure enough trained providers are available to serve elderly people and people with IDD, physical disabilities, cognitive impairment, or mental illness and (2) include training and certification in specified areas and incentives to retain workers in the human services sector after the program ends. By law, the CWO must develop a plan for the career pipeline program that includes (1) a strategy to increase the number of state residents pursuing careers in human services, (2) recommended salary and working conditions needed to retain an adequate number of human services providers to serve state residents, (3) estimated funding needed to support the program. The bill requires the CWO to report on the plan by July 1, 2024, to the Aging, Appropriations, Higher Education and Employment Advancement, Human Services, Labor and Public Employees, and Public Health committees. The report must include the CWO’s recommendations for establishing the career pipeline and estimated funding needed to implement it. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 37 — LOCAL VOLUNTA RY PUBLIC SAFETY REG ISTRATION SYSTEM Eliminates the local voluntary public safety registration system for children with IDD and the requirement that PSAP emergency dispatchers search this system’s database when dispatching emergency services to a residential address The bill eliminates the 2023-enacted local voluntary public safety registration system for children with IDD, including ASD, cognitive impairments, and nonverbal learning disorders, as well as related provisions (CGS § 7-294qq). It correspondingly eliminates the requirement that, starting July 15, 2024, each emergency dispatcher employed by a public safety answering point (PSAP), when practicable, search the system when dispatching emergency services to a residential address (CGS § 28-25c). EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 19 5/7/24 §§ 38 & 39 — INCOME LIMITS FOR HUSKY A P ARENTS AND CARETAKER RELA TIVES AND HUSKY C Lowers the income limit for HUSKY A parents and caretaker relatives from 155% of FPL to 133% of FPL; reduces the scheduled October 1 HUSKY C income limit increase from 105% of FPL to 159% of the TFA monthly cash benefit The bill reduces the income limit for HUSKY A parents and caretaker relatives from 155% of the Federal Poverty Limit (FPL) to 133% of FPL. (155% of FPL for a family of three is $40,021 annually. 133% of FPL for a family of three is $34,340 annually.) The bill reduces the scheduled October 1 HUSKY C income limit increase as shown in the table below. (The table does not account for differences in income methodology (e.g., disregards) unless they are explicit in statute.) It does so by repealing a provision that, under current law and effective October 1, 2024, increases the HUSKY C income limit from 143% of the Temporary Family Assistance (TFA) monthly cash benefit to 105% of FPL after income disregards. The bill instead increases the income limit to 159% of the TFA monthly cash benefit, also effective October 1, 2024. Table: Monthly HUSKY C Income Limits (2024) Current Limit: 143% of the TFA monthly cash benefit Beginning October 1, 2024 Under Current Law: 105% of FPL, after disregards Under the Bill: 159% of the TFA monthly cash benefit Single $699 $1,317 $778 Married Couple 945 1,788 1,051 EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024, except the provision repeal is effective upon passage. §§ 40-43 — PASSPORT TO THE PARKS Increases the Passport to the Parks motor vehicle registration fee; provides funding from the Passport to the Parks account for operating (1) Batterson Park and (2) the Thames River Heritage Park water taxi; requires DEEP to enter into memorandums of agreement for these purposes Fee Increase The bill increases the Passport to the Parks fee that people registering 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 20 5/7/24 vehicles in the state must pay. Under current law, the fee is $15 for a triennial registration, $10 for a biennial registration, and $5 for an annual registration. (Annual registrations are only available to those age 65 or over.) The bill increases the fee to $24 for a triennial registration, $16 for a biennial registration, and $8 for an annual registration. By law, collected fees must be deposited in the Passport to the Parks account (see Background — Passport to the Parks Account). Account Purposes Expanded The bill expands the purposes for which money in the Passport to the Parks account must be spent. It requires the account to fund the (1) care, maintenance, and operation of Batterson Park and (2) operation of the Thames River Heritage Park taxi for FY 26 through FY 31. For the heritage park taxi service, funding cannot exceed (1) $200,000 each fiscal year for FY 26 to FY 28; (2) $100,000 for FY 29 and FY 30; and (3) $50,000 in FY 31. Batterson Park is a public park owned by Hartford and located in Farmington and New Britain. Thames River Heritage Park consists of numerous historic sites along the Thames River. The heritage park’s foundation operates water taxis to sites in New London and Groton. Memorandums of Agreement The bill requires the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP), Hartford, and Riverfront Recapture to enter into a memorandum of agreement about the care, maintenance, and operation of Batterson Park by Riverfront Recapture. (Riverfront Recapture is a nonprofit organization that manages, maintains, and operates four riverfront parks and their connected riverwalks and trails.) Under the bill, the agreement may authorize (1) Riverfront Recapture’s agents and employees to enter, maintain, and operate Batterson Park and (2) DEEP to give Riverfront Recapture a grant each fiscal year from the Passport to the Parks account for these purposes. Additionally, the bill requires DEEP to enter into a memorandum of agreement with the Thames River Heritage Park Foundation to fund the 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 21 5/7/24 operation and administration of a water taxi boat and tour operations in New London and Groton in FYs 25 to 31 from the Passport to the Parks account. (However, the bill does not specify funding for FY 25.) EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024, except the memorandums of agreement requirements take effect upon passage and the Passport to the Parks fee increase takes effect July 1, 2025. Background — Passport to the Parks Account Under existing law, the Passport to the Parks account is a separate, nonlapsing General Fund account. It must be used to (1) pay for the care, maintenance, operation, and improvement of state parks and campgrounds; (2) fund soil and water conservation districts and environmental review teams; and (3) pay the Council on Environmental Quality’s expenses. In addition, the law requires DEEP to pay $100,000 each fiscal year to each of the following entities from the account: 1. Connecticut River Coastal Conservation District, 2. Eastern Conservation District, 3. North Central Conservation District, 4. Northwest Conservation District, 5. Southwest Conservation District, 6. Connecticut Environmental Review Team, and 7. Connecticut Council on Water and Soil Conservation. § 44 — UCONN HEALTH CENTER EMPLOYEE FRIN GE BENEFITS Requires the comptroller to (1) use up to $4.5 million of funds appropriated for State Comptroller-Fringe Benefits to fund a portion of the fringe benefits for UCHC employees and (2) enter into an MOU with UCHC for providing operational support For FY 24 and each fiscal year after it, the bill requires the comptroller to use up to $4.5 million of the resources appropriated for State Comptroller-Fringe Benefits to fund the fringe benefit cost differential between the average rate for fringe benefits of private hospitals in the state and the fringe benefit rate for University of Connecticut Health 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 22 5/7/24 Center (UCHC) employees. Under the bill, the “fringe benefit cost differential” is the difference between the (1) state fringe benefit rate calculated on UCHC payroll and (2) average member fringe benefit rate of all of Connecticut’s acute care hospitals as contained in the annual reports submitted to the Office of Health Strategy’s Health Systems Planning Unit as required by law. The bill also requires the comptroller to enter into a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with UCHC for providing operating support. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 45 & 46 — EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS ON INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE TOWARDS PRE GNANT AND POSTPARTUM P EOPLE Requires DPH to develop educational materials on intimate partner violence toward pregnant and postpartum people; requires DPH to distribute the educational materials to certain health care providers and facilities to give to patients; transfers, from the Maternal Mortality Review Committee to DPH, responsibility for developing educational materials on certain other topics The bill requires the Department of Public Health (DPH), by January 1, 2025, to develop educational materials on intimate partner violence toward pregnant and postpartum people. In doing so, the department must consult with organizations that advocate on behalf of domestic violence victims. Under the bill, DPH must distribute the educational materials (1) in print to each birthing hospital and birth center in the state and (2) electronically to obstetricians and other health care providers who practice obstetrics. It correspondingly requires these facilities and providers to give the educational materials to their pregnant and postpartum patients. The bill also transfers, from the state’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee to DPH, the responsibility for developing educational materials on the following topics required under current law: 1. the health and safety of pregnant and postpartum persons with mental health disorders, including perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, for DPH to distribute to the state’s birthing hospitals; 2. evidence-based screening tools for screening patients for intimate 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 23 5/7/24 partner violence, peripartum mood disorders, and substance use disorder for DPH to distribute to obstetricians and other health care providers who practice obstetrics; and 3. indicators of intimate partner violence for DPH to distribute to (1) hospitals for emergency department health care providers and social workers to use and (2) obstetricians and other health care providers who practice obstetrics. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage §§ 47 & 48 — XL CENTER Specifies that the XL Center includes the adjoining garage for purposes of CRDA’s operating and capital project agreements with contractors; exempts from the sales and use taxes personal property or services needed for the XL Center’s operations and sold to the contractor; increases the maximum amount that the state, CRDA, or both must contribute to the center’s renovation Existing law allows the Capital Region Development Authority (CRDA) to enter into two separate agreements concerning the XL Center’s (1) management and operation and (2) reconstruction and renovation. The bill specifies that for purposes of these projects, agreements, and related requirements (e.g., for the management and operation agreement, allocating net profits and losses between the contractor and CRDA), the XL Center includes the adjoining CRDA- owned garage on Church Street, in addition to the civic center and coliseum complex as existing law provides. With respect to operations, existing law allows CRDA, by December 31, 2025, to enter into an agreement with the contractor that is managing and operating the XL Center on July 1, 2023, to continue doing so. The bill exempts from the sales and use taxes tangible personal property or services needed for the XL Center’s operations and sold to the contractor while it is operating the center. Existing law exempts, among other things, sales of personal property or services to political subdivisions (CGS § 12-412(1)). (The City of Hartford owns the XL Center.) For the reconstruction and renovation, existing law allows CRDA to enter into one or more agreements by December 31, 2025, for a project to renovate and reconstruct the XL Center. The bill increases, from $80 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 24 5/7/24 million to $125 million, the maximum amount of funding that CRDA, the state, or both together, must contribute under the agreement toward the cost of any renovation or reconstruction occurring after January 1, 2023. By law, the contractor must contribute at least $20 million. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 49 — NEEDS ASSESSM ENT ON POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN CORRECTI ONAL FACILITIES Contains identical provisions as in § 18; see above for analysis § 50 — ROBERTA B. WILLIS SCHOLARSHIP FUN DING Makes several changes to a 2023-enacted allocation of Roberta B. Willis scholarship program funds, including that all ARPA funds allocated for the program be disbursed, rather than used, by December 31, 2024, and requires OHE to reserve up to $15 million from the program’s FY 25 appropriation for disbursement during FY 26 The bill makes several changes to a 2023-enacted allocation of Roberta B. Willis scholarship program funds. PA 23-208 required OHE to use the funds appropriated or allocated for the program for FY 24 to make its awards for the need and merit-based grants and allocate funds for the need-based and Charter Oak grants for the 2023-24 and 2024-25 academic years. Additionally, it required all ARPA funds allocated for the program to be used by December 31, 2024. The bill instead requires OHE to disburse the funds appropriated or allocated for the program for FYs 24 and 25 to make its awards for the need and merit-based grants and allocate funds for the need-based and Charter Oak grants according to a plan developed by the office. It also requires that all ARPA funds allocated for the program be disbursed, rather than used, by December 31, 2024. Additionally, the bill requires OHE to reserve up to $15 million from the amount appropriated for the program for FY 25 for disbursement during FY 26. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 51 — CONNECTICUT PORT AUTHORITY REPORT 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 25 5/7/24 Requires CPA, by January 1, 2025, to begin quarterly reporting to the Transportation and Appropriations committees on a staffing plan to handle its needs and its efforts for certain activities and programs The bill requires the Connecticut Port Authority (CPA), by January 1, 2025, and then quarterly, to submit a report to the Transportation and Appropriations committees that describes its (1) work to support grants under the Small Harbor Improvement Projects Program (SHIPP), (2) dredging activities and the dredging needs of harbors in the state, and (3) marketing activities for maritime communities. The report must also include a staffing plan to handle CPA’s needs. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage Background — SHIPP SHIPP is a competitive grant program, established and administered by CPA, that provides funds for harbor improvement projects unrelated to the deep water ports in Bridgeport, New Haven, and New London. Harbor improvement projects generally must be within, near, or on an active navigational channel and include dredging, marina repair, boat ramp facilities improvement, harbor management plans, and feasibility studies. SHIPP is funded with state general obligation bonds. § 52 — THE TRANSFORM ING CHILDREN’S BEHAVIORAL HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING COMMITTEE Expands the Transforming Children’s Behavioral Health Policy and Planning Committee’s membership by adding two representatives from the federally recognized Indian Tribes in the state; extends, by two years, the committee’s reporting deadlines By law, the Transforming Children’s Behavioral Health Policy and Planning Committee must evaluate the availability and efficacy of prevention, early intervention, and behavioral health treatment services and options for children from birth to age 18. The bill expands the committee’s membership by adding two members jointly appointed by the Appropriations Committee chairpersons, each of whom must be a representative of one of the two federally recognized Indian tribes in the state (i.e., the Mashantucket Pequot and Mohegan tribes). Under current law, among other things, the committee must, by (1) December 1, 2023, report to the Appropriations, Children’s, Human 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 26 5/7/24 Services, and Public Health committees and OPM on specific subjects (e.g., recommendations on any statutory or budgetary changes concerning the behavioral health system); and (2) December 1, 2024, report on the progress of the strategic plan it must develop to integrate its recommendations. The bill extends these deadlines to December 1, 2025, and December 1, 2026, respectively. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 53 — 2024-25 ACADEMIC YEAR CHANGES TO THE ROBERTA B. WILLIS SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM Prohibits OHE from requiring that Roberta B. Willis scholarship program need-based grants be reduced based on a student’s initial qualifications as determined from his or her FAFSA; pauses the requirement that the program’s need and merit-based grants be awarded in a higher amount than its need-based grants This bill prohibits the Office of Higher Education (OHE), for the academic year beginning July 1, 2024, from requiring higher education institutions participating in the Roberta B. Willis scholarship program to reduce the amount of a need-based grant awarded under the program to an eligible student based on the initial qualifications determined from the student’s Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), even if the U.S. Department of Education subsequently revises the qualifications. The bill relatedly requires OHE to deem participating higher education institutions to be in compliance with the state law governing the program if the initial qualifications qualified an eligible student for the need-based grant that the student was awarded. Additionally, the bill pauses, for the academic year beginning July 1, 2024, the requirement that Roberta B. Willis scholarship program’s need and merit-based grants be awarded in a higher amount than its need- based grants. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 54 & 55 — CONNECTICUT HYDROGEN AN D ELECTRIC AUTOMOBILE PURCHASE REBATE (CHEAPR) PROG RAM Modifies the CHEAPR rebate amount for residents of environmental justice communities from up to 100% more than the standard rebate to at least 200% more than the standard rebate; requires certain proceeds from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative to be used 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 27 5/7/24 for the CHEAPR program (rather than the CHEAPR account) and other programs that support DEEP’s engagement with environmental justice communities Rebate Amount By law, the Connecticut Hydrogen and Electric Automobile Purchase Rebate (CHEAPR) program gives rebates and vouchers to residents, municipalities, businesses, nonprofits, and tribal entities that buy new or used battery electric vehicles, plug-in hybrid vehicles, and fuel cell electric vehicles. CHEAPR rebate or voucher amounts are set administratively by DEEP, subject to certain statutory parameters, including a requirement to provide a higher rebate to residents of environmental justice communities. Current law requires the rebate or voucher amount for residents of environmental justice communities be up to 100% more than a standard rebate (see Background — Environmental Justice Communities). The bill increases the amount to at least 200% greater than the standard amount. Funding From Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) Current law diverts a portion of Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI; see Background — RGGI) proceeds to the CHEAPR account, which is used to fund the CHEAPR program and certain activities related to the zero-emission school bus program. The bill instead requires that this funding be diverted to DEEP to fund the CHEAPR program and other programs established to support the department’s engagement with environmental justice communities. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage Background — Environmental Justice Communities By law, an “environmental justice community” is (a) any U.S. census block group, as determined by the most recent census, for which at least 30% of the population consists of low-income people who are not institutionalized and have an income below 200% of the federal poverty level or (b) a distressed municipality (CGS § 22a-20a). Background — RGGI RGGI is a regional interstate “cap and trade” program to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The program subjects the region’s power 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 28 5/7/24 plants to a declining cap on the amount of carbon dioxide they may emit and requires them to purchase emission allowances at quarterly auctions. Those that exceed the cap may buy credits from those that do not. Auction sales proceeds fund energy efficiency and renewal programs. § 56 — DISTRESSED MUNICIPALITY DESIGNATION Extends, from five years to 10, the time period for which certain municipalities are deemed to be distressed municipalities after being removed from the annual list published by DECD By law, distressed municipalities are those that the Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) determines have the highest levels of fiscal and economic distress. He annually designates 25 municipalities as distressed using statistical indicators that measure municipal fiscal capacity (e.g., tax base, residents’ personal income, and, indirectly, the residents’ need for public services). Under current law, a municipality removed from the list of distressed municipalities in a given year does not immediately lose its designation but is instead deemed to be a distressed municipality for an additional five years. The bill extends this period to 10 years for municipalities whose populations exceed 100,000 at the time they were removed from the annual list, based on the most recent U.S. census. Under current law and the bill, the municipality may reject the extension by a vote of its legislative body no more than three months after being notified by the DECD commissioner that it was removed from the list. EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024 §§ 57-59 — CIGARETTE DEALER LICENSES AND RENEWALS Requires cigarette dealer’s license applicants to post certain notices at their businesses and provides a remonstrance process; allows municipalities to adopt ordinances to require these dealers to notify the chief law enforcement official of license renewals and allows the official to comment; requires DRS to consider these comments and report certain statistics on these notifications to the legislature The bill (1) requires applicants for a Department of Revenue Services (DRS) cigarette dealer’s license to notify the town and post certain notices at their businesses about their license applications, and (2) provides a process for 10 or more people to object to an initial or renewal 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 29 5/7/24 applicant’s suitability or the proposed place of business. Similar provisions apply under existing law for liquor permits. The bill also allows municipalities to adopt ordinances requiring anyone applying to renew a cigarette dealer’s license to simultaneously give written notice of the application to the chief law enforcement official or his or her designee in the municipality where the business is located. (By law, municipalities may already do this for those applying to renew a liquor permit that allows on-premises serving or consumption.) The bill (1) allows the official or designee to send written comments on the application to the DRS commissioner within 15 days after receiving the notice and (2) requires the DRS commissioner to consider the comments before renewing the license. Lastly, the bill requires the DRS commissioner to report, by January 1, 2026, to the Finance, Revenue and Bonding; Planning and Development; and Public Safety and Security committees on: 1. the number and copies of written comments submitted; 2. a summary of actions DRS took in granting or denying any cigarette dealer’s license renewal applications for which written comments were submitted; and 3. the commissioner’s conclusions and recommendations, after consulting with chief law enforcement officials or their designees, about this notice (i.e., comment) requirement. EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024 Notice of Application for Cigarette Dealer’s License Under the bill, DRS is prohibited from issuing an initial license to an applicant until the applicant complies with the following notice provision. The bill requires a cigarette dealer license applicant, after filing the application with DRS, to give notice of the application to the clerk of the municipality where the business is to be located. The notice must 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 30 5/7/24 contain the applicant’s name and residential address and the place of business for which the license is to be issued. Upon receiving the notice, the clerk must post and maintain the notice on the municipality’s website for at least two weeks. By the day following the date an applicant provides the notice, the applicant must affix a copy of the notice, in legible condition, on the outer door of the proposed business location. When a license application is filed for an unconstructed building, the applicant must build and maintain a legible sign that is at least six feet by four feet. The sign must include the license applied for and the proposed licensee’s name and be clearly visible from the street. The applicant must make a return to DRS, under oath, of compliance with the notice requirements, on a DRS form. The department may require additional proof of compliance. Upon receiving sufficient evidence of compliance, DRS may hold a hearing on the proposed location’s suitability. Objections to a Proposed or Renewed Cigarette Dealer’s License The bill allows any 10 individuals who are at least age 18 and reside in the town in which the cigarette dealer’s business is proposed or currently located, to file a “remonstrance” (i.e., objection) with DRS. For initial licenses, they must file a remonstrance within three weeks after the last day the license applicant’s notice was posted. For renewals, they must file it at least 21 days before the license renewal date. The remonstrance must include any objection to the suitability of the applicant or proposed business place, provided the issue is not controlled by local zoning. If a remonstrance is filed and the individuals apply in writing, DRS must hold a hearing and give at least five days’ notice. The remonstrants (i.e., the people making the objection) must designate one or more agents for service to receive all DRS notices. At any time before DRS issues a decision, the remonstrants or their agents may withdraw a remonstrance and DRS may cancel the hearing or 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 31 5/7/24 withdraw the case. The DRS decision on the application is final for the remonstrance. The bill allows the remonstrants who are aggrieved by the granting of a license to appeal under the Uniform Administrative Procedure Act. § 60 — UNION AVENUE DETENTION CENTER Starting in 2026, requires that the Union Avenue detention center in New Haven be under the jurisdiction of an OPM-determined state agency rather than that of the local police Starting on January 1, 2026, the bill places New Haven’s Union Avenue detention center under the jurisdiction of a state agency, as the OPM secretary determines. Under current practice, the facility is under local police jurisdiction. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage §§ 61-63 — MEDICAID COVERAGE FOR SCHOOL -BASED HEALTH SERVICES Requires DSS to amend the Medicaid state plan to expand coverage for health care services provided to eligible students (1) by or on behalf of a LEA and (2) in school nurse’s offices; establishes an interagency coalition to coordinate and make recommendations to maximize federal funding for Medicaid-eligible health care services in public schools The bill makes several changes to expand access to Medicaid-covered health care for Connecticut schoolchildren. Specifically, it: 1. requires the Department of Social Services (DSS) commissioner, in consultation with the education commissioner, to, within appropriations, seek federal approval to amend the Medicaid state plan to expand Medicaid coverage for health services provided by or on behalf of a local educational agency (LEA; i.e., public board of education or other public school administrative authority) to any student enrolled in Medicaid; 2. requires the DSS commissioner, within available appropriations and subject to federal approval, to amend the Medicaid state plan to cover health care services in school nurse’s offices for eligible students enrolled in Medicaid; and 3. establishes an interagency coalition to coordinate and make 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 32 5/7/24 recommendations to maximize federal funding for Medicaid- eligible health services in Connecticut public schools. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage, except that the provision on nurse’s offices is effective July 1, 2024. Medicaid Coverage for School-Based Health Services The bill requires the DSS commissioner, in consultation with the education commissioner and by October 1, 2025, to seek approval to amend the Medicaid state plan to give Medicaid coverage for health services provided by or on behalf of a LEA to any student enrolled in Medicaid, regardless of whether a student qualifies for federal services for students with disabilities. The bill authorizes a LEA, to the extent permissible by federal law and within available appropriations, to submit Medicaid claims for each Medicaid-eligible student who receives Medicaid-eligible school-based services unless the student’s parent or legal guardian opts out of authorizing the LEA to do so. Under the bill, the DSS commissioner, in consultation with the education commissioner, must develop and distribute to each local or regional school board written guidance on health care services eligible for Medicaid reimbursement. The bill requires the DSS commissioner, annually by January 1, and in consultation with the education commissioner, to report to the Appropriations, Children’s, Education, and Human Services committees on Medicaid reimbursement for school-based health services and recommendations for expanding Medicaid services provided in schools. Interagency Coalition The bill establishes an interagency coalition consisting of the education and DSS commissioners and the OPM secretary, or their designees, to coordinate and make recommendations on maximizing federal Medicaid funding for health services in public schools. The coalition must (1) hold its first meeting within 60 days after the bill 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 33 5/7/24 passes and (2) meet at least quarterly. The bill requires the coalition to report annually by January 1 to the Appropriations, Children’s, Education, and Human Services committees on the following: 1. the number of students receiving Medicaid-covered health services in the previous school year and any change in their proportion of the school’s total enrollment; 2. steps taken to expand Medicaid coverage for student health services, including any Medicaid waivers or state plan amendments; and 3. a survey of what other states are doing to expand Medicaid- covered health services for students. § 64 — PHASING OUT MED CONNECT INCOME AN D ASSET LIMITS Phases out income and asset eligibility limits in the Med Connect program and eliminates them by July 1, 2029 The bill phases out income and asset eligibility limits in Med Connect, DSS’s medical assistance program for working people with disabilities. The bill increases current law’s income limit from $75,000 to $85,000; and doubles the asset limit for individuals and married couples to $20,000 and $30,000 respectively. Beginning July 1, 2026, the bill requires DSS to phase out income and asset limits for Med Connect over four fiscal years by annually increasing the (1) income limit by $10,000 and (2) asset limit by $10,000 for individuals and $15,000 for married couples. Under the bill, income and asset limits must be eliminated from the program by July 1, 2029. EFFECTIVE DATE: April 1, 2025 §§ 65 & 68 — BUREAU OF SERVICES FOR PERS ONS WHO ARE DEAF, DEAFBLIND OR HARD OF HEARING Establishes the bureau within ADS and requires the department to hire a bureau director; requires state agencies to appoint an employee to serve as a point of contact for concerns related to people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 34 5/7/24 The bill establishes a Bureau of Services for Persons who are Deaf, Deafblind or Hard of Hearing within the Department of Aging and Disability Services (ADS). The bill requires ADS, in consultation with the Advisory Board for Persons who are Deaf, Deafblind or Hard of Hearing (see below) to hire a bureau director by October 1, 2024, who reports to the ADS commissioner. The commissioner must also hire the bureau director’s administrative assistant. The bill requires the bureau director to (1) have professional experience serving deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing people; (2) be able to communicate in American Sign Language; and (3) be familiar with effective interpretation methods to help deafblind people. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024, except the provision on state agency points of contact is effective October 1, 2024. Bureau Director Duties Under the bill, the bureau director has the following duties: 1. assist in overseeing ADS employees who provide counseling, interpreting, and other help to people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing, excluding federally-funded vocational rehabilitation employees; 2. create a separate webpage for the bureau on ADS’s website that includes (a) the advisory board’s meeting schedule, agenda, minutes, and other board resources; (b) an instructional video with audio and captions on the home page on how to navigate the webpage, resources, and tools; and (c) other materials under the bill; 3. annually update a resource guide for people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing, and publish it on the ADS website and the bureau’s webpage; 4. help register interpreters, including by maintaining a list of interpreters categorized by the settings where they are qualified 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 35 5/7/24 to interpret and publishing it on the ADS website and the bureau’s webpage; 5. coordinate ADS’s efforts to provide information and referral services to people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing on available resources; 6. coordinate responses to consumer concerns, requests for help, and referrals to resources, including from state agencies; 7. coordinate education and training initiatives (e.g., working with local and state public safety and public health officials and first responders on best practices to serve and communicate with deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing people or working with interpreters to maintain or enhance their skills in various settings); 8. collaborate with interpreting services providers and training organizations to increase opportunities for mentorships, internships, apprenticeships, and specialized training in interpreting services; 9. partner with civic and community organizations serving deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing people on workshops and information sessions on new laws, regulations, or developments related to services, programs, or health care needs; 10. raise public awareness of programs and services available to deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing people; 11. work with the governor and Connecticut television stations on ways to make television broadcasts more accessible to people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing; and 12. consult with the advisory board to identify needs and address needed policy changes. The bill also requires the bureau director to help the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority (PURA) implement telecommunication relay 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 36 5/7/24 service (TRS) programs for people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing. The bill requires PURA to consult with ADS and the bureau director when awarding a contract for this service. TRS enables telephone communication between a (1) hearing- or speech-impaired person using a text telephone or a telecommunications device for the deaf and (2) person using a telephone. In practice, PURA opens a docket every five years to review proposals and choose a TRS provider. State Agency Point of Contact The bill requires each state agency to (1) appoint an employee to serve as point of contact for concerns related to people who are deaf, deafblind, or hard of hearing; (2) identify the employee’s name and contact information in a prominent place on the agency’s website; and (3) require this employee to collaborate with the bureau director to resolve these concerns. This requirement applies to the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, including any such office, department, board, council, commission, institution, constituent unit of the state system of higher education, or technical education and career school. The bill requires the bureau director to help each state agency appoint an employee to serve as this point of contact and coordinate with them to resolve concerns. §§ 66, 67, 69 & 71 — ADVISORY BOARD FOR PERSONS WHO ARE DEAF, DEAFBLIND OR HARD OF HEARING Renames the board, changes its membership, and expands its duties and reporting requirements The bill renames the advisory board from “the Advisory Board for Persons who are Deaf, Hard of Hearing or Deafblind” to “the Advisory Board for Persons who are Deaf, Deafblind or Hard of Hearing” and makes conforming changes. Among other related changes, the bill also modifies the board’s membership and expands its duties and reporting requirements. EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024 Membership and Administration The bill replaces two members on the 15-member board. It does so by 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 37 5/7/24 (1) removing the ADS commissioner or her designee and the Connecticut Chapter of We the Deaf People director and (2) adding the Hear Here Hartford (the Connecticut chapter of the Hearing Loss Association of America) president or her designee and a Connecticut hospital organization representative appointed by the House speaker. The bill makes conforming changes to allow appointing authorities to fill vacancies. The bill requires the bureau director to serve as the advisory board’s administrator beginning October 1, 2024. Annual Leadership Roundtable Meeting The bill requires the advisory board to hold an annual leadership roundtable meeting with various executive branch agencies to discuss best practices and gaps in services for people who are deaf, hard of hearing, or deafblind, and make recommendations to rectify these gaps. The meeting includes the following participants or their designees: 1. the commissioners of aging and disability services, public health, social services, mental health and addiction services, education, developmental services, children and families, early childhood, economic and community development, emergency services and public protection, correction, housing, and labor; 2. the Office of Higher Education (OHE) executive director; and 3. the Board of Regents for Higher Education (BOR). The bill eliminates a similar requirement that the advisory board meet periodically with some of the same agencies to discuss similar topics. Reporting Requirement Under current law, the advisory board must make recommendations for (1) technical assistance and resources for state agencies to serve people who are deaf or hard of hearing, (2) public policy and legislative changes needed to address gaps in services, and (3) interpreter qualifications and registration. The bill additionally requires the 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 38 5/7/24 advisory board to make recommendations on technical assistance and resources for state agencies to serve deafblind people. Current law requires the advisory board to submit these recommendations to the governor and the Human Services Committee, but does not set a deadline or frequency for this requirement. The bill requires the board to submit a report on these recommendations annually, starting by January 1, 2025, to the Appropriations, Aging, Commerce, Education, Higher Education and Employment Advancement, Housing, Human Services, Judiciary, Labor and Public Employees, Public Health, and Public Safety and Security committees. The bill additionally requires the report to include the bureau’s activities in the previous calendar year. §§ 70 & 72 — ADS SERVICES FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE DEAFBLIND Expands ADS responsibilities to include providing services for people who are deafblind, generally conforming to current practice Under current law, ADS is responsible for providing services to, among others, people who are deaf or hard of hearing and the department may provide necessary services to them. The bill additionally makes ADS responsible for providing services to people who are deafblind. Under the bill, as under current law, ADS must annually report on its services to the governor and the Appropriations and Human Services committees. EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024 § 73 — METHADONE MAI NTENANCE RATE INCREA SE Requires DSS to increase Medicaid rates, within available appropriations, for chemical maintenance providers who currently receive the lowest weekly reimbursement rate Current law sets the minimum weekly Medicaid reimbursement rate at $88.52 for chemical maintenance providers who give methadone maintenance treatment to Medicaid beneficiaries. For FY 25, the bill requires DSS to amend the Medicaid state plan to increase rates, within available appropriations, to those providers who receive the lowest weekly reimbursement rate for this treatment. The bill prohibits its rate 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 39 5/7/24 increase for the lowest paid providers from causing a rate decrease for higher paid providers. By law, methadone maintenance is a chemical maintenance program under which an addiction to one drug (e.g., heroin) is treated with methadone in a weekly program that includes methadone administration, drug testing, and counseling. Chemical maintenance providers are certified and licensed by state and federal agencies and meet state and federal requirements. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 74 — MEDICAID AMBULA NCE RATES Requires DSS to increase FY 25 ambulance rates within available appropriations, including increasing the mileage rate for ambulance transportation covered under Medicaid by $1.18 and providing mileage reimbursement for in-town trips For FY 25, the bill requires DSS to increase the following rates, within available appropriations: 1. the Medicaid ambulance mileage rate for all emergency and nonemergency transports by $1.18 and 2. all other emergency and nonemergency ambulance service rates. The bill also requires the DSS commissioner to provide mileage reimbursement for in-town trips for FY 25, within available appropriations. The bill authorizes her to seek federal approval for a Medicaid state plan amendment if needed to implement these rates. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 75 — PACT PROGRAM Expands the PACT Program’s eligibility to include transition program students; increases the program’s minimum award amounts; names the awards the “Mary Ann Handley Grant”; requires BOR’s upcoming semesterly reports on certain program metrics by November 1, 2024, and March 1, 2025 This bill makes various changes to the Pledge to Advance CT (PACT) program, which gives eligible Connecticut high school graduates the opportunity to attend a Connecticut community college debt-free by awarding them grants for the difference between the cost of tuition and 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 40 5/7/24 fees and their scholarships, grants, and federal, state, or institutional aid. Program Expansion This bill expands PACT eligibility to include transition program students who (1) are state residents, (2) have not graduated from high school, (3) are enrolled in a transition program under their individualized education program, and (4) enroll in one or more courses at a regional community-technical college. Award Increase The bill increases the program’s minimum awards from $250 to $500 for full-time students, and from $150 to $300 for part-time students. Mary Ann Handley Grant The bill requires all grants made to eligible students under the debt- free community college program to be designated as the “Mary Ann Handley Grant.” Reporting Requirements Current law requires BOR to report certain information about the PACT program to the Higher Education and Employment Advancement and Appropriations committees each semester. The bill sets specific deadlines of November 1, 2024, and March 1, 2025, for two of the upcoming reports. Under existing law, the reports must include information on, among other things, the (1) number of qualifying students enrolled at the regional community-technical college, (2) number of qualifying students receiving minimum awards, and (3) completion rates of qualifying students by degree or certificate program. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 76 — DEADLINE EXTENSION TO SUBMIT RECO MMENDATIONS ON CREATING A NEW SO LID WASTE-RELATED ENTITY Extends, until July 1, 2025, the deadline for OPM to give the Environment and Energy and Technology committees recommendations on the feasibility and advisability of creating a new solid waste-related quasi-public state agency, waste authority, or other entity The bill extends by one year, from July 1, 2024, to July 1, 2025, the 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 41 5/7/24 deadline for the Office of Policy and Management (OPM) to submit recommendations to the Environment and Energy and Technology committees on the feasibility and advisability of creating a new quasi- public state agency, waste authority, or other entity for developing new solid waste infrastructure, operate and maintain new or existing solid waste infrastructure, and for other purposes. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 77 — SMALL TOWN EC ONOMIC ASSISTANCE PR OGRAM (STEAP) Increases, from $500,000 to $1 million, the maximum STEAP grant amount municipalities can receive per fiscal year The bill increases, from $500,000 to $1 million, the maximum total Small Town Economic Assistance Program (STEAP) grant amount a municipality may receive in a fiscal year. By law, STEAP grants provide funding to municipalities that are ineligible for Urban Action grants and must be used for economic development, community conservation, and quality-of-life capital projects. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 78 — VACATION AND PERSONAL DAYS DURING WORKING TEST PERIODS Gives full-time permanent state employees paid vacation days and personal days during their initial working test periods Existing law gives full-time permanent state employees 21 paid vacation days annually once they have worked at least one full calendar year (which, in practice, accrue incrementally throughout the year) and three paid personal days each calendar year (which are granted all at once). The bill gives this same paid time off to these employees during their initial working test period. For those that begin working on or after July 1, it requires the amount of personal days to be prorated during their first calendar year of employment. The proration must be based on the number of full calendar months remaining the year after the employee began employment, divided by six. The bill requires the administrative services commissioner, by June 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 42 5/7/24 30, 2025, to adopt or amend regulations to implement these provisions on vacation and personal days during employees’ initial working test periods. Before adopting the regulations, and by January 1, 2025, she must also adopt policies and procedures to implement them, which have the force and effect of law. The bill requires the commissioner to post the policies and procedures on the department’s website and submit them to the secretary of the state to post on the eRegulations System at least 15 days before their effective date. The policies and procedures stop being effective once they are adopted as a final regulation. EFFECTIVE DATE: January 1, 2025 § 79 — STATE AGENCY DEPUTY DUAL EMPLOYME NT Eliminates a provision that prohibits certain state agency deputies from having other employment Existing law requires each department head (e.g., state agency commissioner) to designate one deputy to exercise the department’s head’s powers and duties during his or her absence or disqualification. The bill removes a provision in current law that (1) requires these deputies to devote their full time to their department or agency duties and (2) prohibits them from having any other employment. It also makes technical changes. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 80 & 81 — JUDICIAL RETIREMENT SYSTEM AM ORTIZATION Changes the method for determining the state’s contribution for JRS unfunded liability from a 40-year amortization to a 15-year layered amortization, which effectively extends the contributions for an additional seven years; requires the state retirement commission to revise the JRS actuarial valuation using the new amortization method Starting July 1, 2024, the bill requires the state’s contribution for the Judicial Retirement System’s (JRS) unfunded past service liability to be based on a 15-year layered amortization of the unfunded liability. The 15-year period for the amortization must begin with the valuation for FY 23. Under current law, the unfunded liability payment is based on 40-year amortization, which began on July 1, 1991. In effect, the bill extends the unfunded liability’s repayment from 2032 to 2039. In 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 43 5/7/24 general, a layered amortization creates a new amortization schedule for each year’s actuarial experience and helps reduce volatility in the required amortization payments. The bill requires the State Employees Retirement Commission, which oversees the JRS, to prepare and submit (presumably, to the legislature) a revised actuarial valuation for JRS as of June 30, 2023, that incorporates the bill’s change to the 15-year layered amortization. The commission must do this by June 30, 2024. Current law generally prohibits the legislature from liberalizing JRS benefits unless the retirement commission certifies the unfunded liability created by the change and the change’s cost using full normal cost plus a 30-year amortization. The bill requires the commission to use a 15-year layered, rather than 30-year, amortization. It correspondingly requires that any unfunded liability created by the change be amortized over a 15-year, rather than 30-year, period. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage §§ 82-85 — CONNECTICUT MUNICIPAL REDEVEL OPMENT AUTHORITY Requires MRDA to provide members, by request, assistance on developing project criteria and regulations to increase housing production; authorizes it to establish criteria to evaluate its projects’ potential impacts; eliminates a requirement that members appoint a local development board The bill requires the Connecticut Municipal Redevelopment Authority (MRDA) to provide, by request, technical support to member municipalities (and joint member entities) on developing project criteria and local regulations to substantially increase housing production. (By law, unchanged by the bill, municipalities that opt to collaborate with MRDA must establish an area (a “housing growth zone”) in which zoning regulations facilitate substantial new housing development.) The bill also authorizes MRDA to set criteria to evaluate the potential impact of its projects. If it does so, these criteria must include the impact the project may have on the tax base of the municipality or municipalities involved. It additionally eliminates the requirement that MRDA’s member municipalities appoint a local development board to 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 44 5/7/24 serve as liaison to the authority. EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024 § 86 — INVESTMENT ADVISORY COUNCIL “GIFTS” Allows the IAC’s public members to receive travel expenses, lodging, food, beverages, and other benefits customarily provided in the course of employment The bill exempts certain items received by the Investment Advisory Council’s (IAC) public members from being considered “gifts” under the state code of ethics for public officials. More specifically, it exempts travel expenses, lodging, food, beverage, and other benefits customarily provided in the course of employment when given to these members. The bill’s exemption generally allows the members to receive these items without violating the code. By law, the IAC generally advises the state treasurer on investing the state’s pension and other trust funds, including reviewing the treasurer’s investment policy statement and trust fund investment. The 12-member council has five public members, all of whom must have investment experience. The governor, Senate president pro tempore and minority leader, and House speaker and minority leader each appoints one of the public members. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 87 — REPEAL OF STU DENT LOAN REIMBURSEM ENT AND RELATED PROGRAMS Repeals several student loan reimbursement, scholarship, and related programs The bill repeals the following programs that OHE administers: 1. the “Engineering Connecticut” student loan reimbursement program, which under current law requires the office to provide, within available appropriations, student loan reimbursement grants for people with undergraduate or graduate degrees in engineering and who are newly employed in the state as engineers; 2. the “You Belong” student loan reimbursement program, which under current law requires the office to provide, within available 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 45 5/7/24 appropriations, student loan reimbursement grants for people who (a) have been awarded a doctoral degree from any higher education institution, and (b) are newly employed in the state in an economically valuable field as the Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) determines, or by a company or higher education institution that registers with or has been qualified by DECD; 3. the Connecticut green technology, life science, and health information technology student loan reimbursement program, which under current law provides eligible residents who hold degrees in and work in these fields with student loan reimbursements; and 4. a program, which under current law requires the office to provide grants in FYs 23-25 to public and private colleges and universities for delivery of student mental health services on campus. The bill also repeals the information technology student loan reimbursement pilot program, administered by BOR. (This program was restricted to a cohort who received grants in FY 02.) The bill also repeals (1) a state scholarship program, which under current law forgives loans provided by the state to residents for nursing education if the resident remains in the nursing field in the state for five years; and (2) a scholarship program for Vietnam-era veterans, which under current law requires a scholarship fund to be established for these veterans who have been accepted for full-time admission in a degree granting program at any independent, nontheological college in the state as long as the veteran is a state resident at the time of acceptance. Lastly, the bill also repeals the Department of Public Health’s (DPH) primary care direct services program. Under current law, the program provides, within available resources, three-year grants to community- based primary care providers to expand health care access to the uninsured by (1) funding direct services, (2) recruiting and retaining primary care clinicians and registered nurses through salary subsidies 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 46 5/7/24 or a loan repayment program, and (3) funding capital expenditures. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 88 — REPEAL OF MUL TILINGUAL LEARNER ED UCATOR INCENTIVE PROGRAM Repeals the Multilingual Learner Educator Incentive Program The bill repeals the OHE-administered multilingual learner educator incentive program. Under current law, the program provides a grant, within available appropriations, to any student who (1) is in the last two years of a teacher preparation program leading to professional certification at any four-year higher education institution in the state, and (2) will pursue an endorsement in bilingual education or teaching English to speakers of other languages. Under the program, students receive a grant of up to $5,000 a year for up to two years, and after graduating are eligible for up to $2,500 of student loan reimbursement for up to four years if they teach at an in-state public school. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 89 — CONNECTICUT PORT AUTHORITY QUARTE RLY STATUS REPORT REVIEW Eliminates the requirement that DAS and OPM review and comment on the Port Authority’s quarterly report before it is submitted to the Transportation Committee Under existing law, the Connecticut Port Authority must submit a quarterly report to the Transportation Committee on the status of current and pending contacts, small harbor projects, and the State Pier project in New London. The bill eliminates the requirement that DAS and OPM review and comment on the report before it is submitted to the committee. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage §§ 90, 91, 137, 139-142, 145-183 & 185-242 — HEALTH STRATEGY AND HIGHER EDUCATION COMMISSIONERS Renames the title of OHS’s and OHE’s executive heads as “commissioners” rather than “executive directors” The bill renames the title of the Office of Health Strategy’s (OHS) head as a “commissioner” rather than an “executive director.” It makes 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 47 5/7/24 the same change to the title of the Office of Higher Education’s (OHE) head. The bill also makes numerous conforming changes. Under existing law, these two positions are already classified as statutory department heads, subject to the same nomination and appointment process, terms, and general qualifications, duties, and powers as other agency commissioners (see § 187 and CGS §§ 4-6 to 4- 8). EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 92 — TOBACCO AND HEALTH TRUST FUND TRANSFER Suspends the annual $12 million disbursement from the Tobacco Settlement Fund to the Tobacco and Health Trust Fund for FY 25 and redirects it to the General Fund For FY 25, the bill suspends the annual $12 million disbursement from the Tobacco Settlement Fund to the Tobacco and Health Trust Fund and instead redirects this amount to the General Fund. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 93 & 94 — DSS PHARMACY APPROVALS Increases, from 2 to 24 hours, how much time DSS has to grant or deny pharmacy requests for prior authorization or dispensing name brand drug products before they are deemed approved The bill increases the length of time, from two hours to 24 hours, during which the Department of Social Services (DSS) may approve or deny certain pharmacy requests before they are deemed approved under DSS’s medical assistance programs (e.g., Medicaid). This applies to a (1) physician’s or pharmacist’s prior authorization request for prescription drugs and (2) pharmacist’s request to dispense a name brand drug when a chemically equivalent generic drug product substation is available. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 95-97 — BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH TRUST FUN D Eliminates the Biomedical Research Trust Fund and requires the state comptroller to transfer its remaining balance to the General Fund The bill eliminates the Biomedical Research Trust Fund and requires 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 48 5/7/24 the state comptroller to transfer its remaining balance to the General Fund by June 30, 2025. Under current law, the public health commissioner can make grants from this fund to Connecticut-based (1) nonprofit colleges and universities and (2) hospitals that do biomedical research in heart disease, cancer, and other tobacco-related diseases; Alzheimer’s disease; stroke; and diabetes. The fund is a separate, nonlapsing fund that can accept transfers from the Tobacco Settlement Fund and receive funds from public or private sources. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2025, except that the funds transfer is effective upon passage. § 98 — EMS REGIONAL COORDINATOR POSITIONS TO CLASSIFIED SERVICE Requires DAS to transition EMS regional coordinators and assistant regional coordinators to classified service The bill requires the Department of Administrative Services (DAS) commissioner to transition the regional emergency medical services (EMS) coordinator and assistant regional EMS coordinator positions and incumbents into the classified service. To the extent these employees are performing jobs that would normally be within a current executive branch bargaining unit, the bill requires (1) the jobs to be added to the bargaining unit’s descriptions and (2) employees in the jobs to be deemed part of the bargaining unit. The DAS commissioner must transition these employees beginning June 30, 2024, and do so in consultation with the Department of Public Health commissioner. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 99 — INFORMATION REQUESTS TO ORIGINATING AGENCIES Requires requests for certain information to be directed to the state agency where the information originated The bill requires anyone requesting data, records, or files that were shared between state agencies under a statute, regulation, data sharing agreement, memorandum of agreement or understanding, or court order, including requests under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 49 5/7/24 to direct the request to the state agency where the information originated. For this provision, a “state agency” is any office; department; board; council; commission; institution; constituent unit of the state system of higher education; technical education and career school; or other agency in the state’s executive, legislative, or judicial branch. Under the bill and regardless of FOIA, when a state agency receives one of these requests but is not the originating agency, it must (1) promptly refer the request to the state agency where the data, records, or files originated and (2) notify the requestor that the request has been referred to the originating agency. The notification must be in writing and include the originating agency’s name, address, and phone number, and the date the referral was made. Lastly, the bill specifies that this provision does not (1) require disclosure of any data, records, or files if the disclosure would not have been required had the request been made directly to the originating agency or (2) apply to certain requests for data in the criminal justice information system available to the public under FOIA (by law, this data must be obtained from the originating agency). EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 100 — AGREEMENTS O R SOLICITATIONS TO LO CATE UNCLAIMED PROPERTY Expands requirements and processes regarding agreements and solicitations to locate unclaimed property The bill establishes disclosure requirements for agreements to locate unclaimed property, beyond those in existing law. Under existing practice, people, businesses, and other entities assist property owners, for payment, in finding unclaimed property and reclaiming it on the owner’s behalf. Under current law, these agreements are only valid if they (1) are in writing, (2) are signed by the owner, (3) disclose the nature and value of the property, and (4) clearly stipulate the owner’s share after subtracting the fee or compensation. The bill establishes additional requirements for these agreements 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 50 5/7/24 entered into on or after January 1, 2025. In addition to the current requirements, these disclosures must also conspicuously and clearly disclose that the owner may file a claim directly with the treasurer at no cost and the method for doing so. The bill also requires the disclosure of the property’s nature and value and the owner’s share be clear and conspicuous. The bill also requires that any solicitation to locate unclaimed property clearly and conspicuously disclose in writing that anyone may search for and file a claim directly with the treasurer at no cost and how to do so. Under the bill, any claim for property filed with the treasurer under such an agreement or solicitation must include an unredacted version of the document to allow the treasurer to determine if the requirements under the bill and existing law have been met. The treasurer may withhold payment of a claim to anyone except an owner if the agreement or solicitation (1) is not provided or (2) fails to meet these requirements. As under existing law, nothing in these provisions may be construed to prevent an owner from asserting that an agreement to locate or obtain an interest in unclaimed property is based upon excessive or unjust consideration. By law, the maximum fee or compensation for a person helping to locate unclaimed property is 10% of its value. Under existing law, an agreement is invalid if it is entered into (1) within two years of the unclaimed property’s required reporting date or (2) in the period between when the report is required to be filed and when it is filed, whichever period is longer. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 101-104 — COPAYMENT-ONLY HEALTH PLANS Exempts copayment-only health plans from the insurance law’s copayment limitations for certain in-network imaging services and physical and occupational therapy services Existing law limits the copayments that certain fully insured individual and group health insurance policies can charge for in- network imaging services (i.e., MRIs, CAT or PET scans) and in-network physical and occupational therapy services. For the imaging services, 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 51 5/7/24 the law exempts high-deductible health plans from the copayment limitations. The bill exempts copayment-only health plans from the copayment limitations for in-network (1) MRIs and CAT or PET scans and (2) physical and occupational therapy services. Under the bill, a “copayment-only health plan” is a health plan that (1) imposes a specific dollar amount that the insured pays for a covered health care service or prescription drug and (2) does not include deductibles or coinsurance. For physical and occupational therapy services, the bill applies to individual and group health insurance policies delivered, issued, renewed, amended, or continued in Connecticut that cover (1) basic hospital expenses; (2) basic medical-surgical expenses; (3) major medical expenses; or (4) hospital or medical services, including those provided under an HMO plan. For MRIs and CAT or PET scans, the bill applies to all fully insured individual and group health insurance plans. Because of the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), state insurance benefit mandates do not apply to self-insured benefit plans. EFFECTIVE DATE: January 1, 2025 § 105 — PRESUMPTIVE MEDICAID ELIGIBILITY FOR HOMECARE Eliminates Section 10 of sHB 5001, as amended by House Amendment “A,” and replaces it with generally similar provisions; requires the DSS commissioner to establish a presumptive Medicaid eligibility system for people applying to the Medicaid-funded portion of CHCPE; requires the state to pay for up to 90 days of home care applicants determined to be presumptively Medicaid eligible The bill eliminates Section 10 of sHB 5001, as amended by House Amendment “A,” and replaces it with generally similar provisions. It requires the DSS commissioner to establish a presumptive Medicaid eligibility system for people applying to the Medicaid-funded portion of the Connecticut Home Care Program for Elders (CHCPE). It requires the commissioner to adopt regulations to implement and administer the system. A presumptive eligibility determination deems an applicant immediately eligible for CHCPE services prior to a full Medicaid- 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 52 5/7/24 eligibility determination. Under the bill, the state will pay for up to 90 days of care for applicants who (1) require a skilled level of nursing care and (2) are determined presumptively eligible for Medicaid. The bill requires the commissioner, to the extent federal law allows, to seek a federal Medicaid waiver or state plan amendment needed to try to get federal reimbursement for the costs of providing coverage to those determined presumptively eligible for Medicaid. Under the bill, the presumptive eligibility system does not take effect until the commissioner gets the federal reimbursement. The bill allows the commissioner, in her discretion, to discontinue the system if (1) it has been operational for at least two years and (2) she determines it is not cost effective. The bill also makes related minor, technical, and conforming changes. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 Eligibility Determinations By law, DSS contracts with “access” agencies to determine CHCPE participants’ service needs and develop individualized care plans. The bill requires the commissioner to develop a screening tool for these agencies to use to determine if a presumptive eligibility applicant is (1) functionally able to live in a home or community setting (“functionally eligible”) and (2) likely to be financially eligible for Medicaid. Under the bill, applicants must complete a Medicaid application on the day they are screened for functional eligibility or within 10 days after. If the applicant meets the two criteria, DSS must make a presumptive eligibility determination and approve a care plan authorizing home care services within 10 days. The bill requires DSS to make a final Medicaid- eligibility determination by the end of the 90-day presumptive eligibility period, and may do so before then if the department receives information that the applicant is ineligible for Medicaid. 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 53 5/7/24 For a person determined presumptively eligible for Medicaid, the commissioner must, in keeping with federal law, determine the person retroactively eligible for Medicaid for up to 90 days before the date of his or her Medicaid application. Written Agreement The bill requires applicants to sign a written agreement attesting to the accuracy of the information they provide. The agreement must also (1) acknowledge that applicants will receive state-funded services up to 90 days after the home care services begin and (2) waive applicants’ right to receive continued coverage while waiting for a hearing they request in response to the department’s determination, during or at the end of the presumptive eligibility period, that they are either ineligible for Medicaid or did not provide information necessary for DSS to make the determination. Reporting Requirements By law, the commissioner must annually report certain CHCPE information to the Human Services Committee. The bill adds the following to this required information: 1. the number of people determined presumptively eligible for Medicaid, 2. state savings based on institutional care costs that were averted by correctly determining people presumptively eligible, and 3. the number of people incorrectly determined presumptively eligible and the costs to provide them with the home care services before the final eligibility determination. § 106 — MEN’S HEALTH PUBLIC AWARENESS AN D EDUCATION CAMPAIGN Requires the DPH commissioner to create a campaign promoting community-based screening and education for common diseases affecting high-risk male populations The bill requires the public health commissioner to create a public awareness and educational campaign promoting community-based screening and education for common diseases (e.g., colorectal or 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 54 5/7/24 prostate cancer, hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, infectious diseases, depression, and anxiety) affecting high-risk male populations. She must annually report on the campaign to the Public Health Committee, starting by January 1, 2025. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 107 — HIGHER EDUCA TION FINANCIAL SUSTA INABILITY ADVISORY BOARD Establishes the Higher Education Financial Sustainability Advisory Board, designates its members, assigns the board powers and duties, and requires public higher education institutions and the UConn Health Center to submit certain information to the board at the chairpersons’ request The bill establishes, within the legislative department, the Higher Education Financial Sustainability Advisory Board. Membership and Administration The advisory board must consist of the following members: 1. the chairpersons and ranking members of the Appropriations Committee, 2. the chairpersons and ranking members of the Appropriations Higher Education subcommittee, 3. the chairpersons and ranking members of the Higher Education and Employment Advancement Committee, and 4. the Office of Policy and Management (OPM) secretary. The Appropriations Committee chairpersons and the OPM secretary must jointly serve as board chairpersons and schedule the first board meeting by September 1, 2024. The board must meet at least quarterly, and a majority of its members constitutes a quorum. The Appropriations Committee’s administrative staff must serve in that capacity for the board. Board Powers and Duties 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 55 5/7/24 Under the bill, the board has the following powers and duties: 1. meet with public higher education institution and UConn Health Center administrators to accept and review financial and related reports (see below) and to discuss (a) barriers to meeting state workforce needs, (b) developing economic growth, and (c) achieving or maintaining affordable tuition; 2. obtain from any executive department, board, commission, or other state agency the assistance and data needed to carry out board powers and duties; and 3. perform other acts that may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the board’s duties. Reporting Requirements The bill requires each public higher education institution and the UConn Health Center to submit to the board, at the request of the board chairpersons, the following information: 1. a detailed financial report for the current fiscal year, subsequent fiscal year, and five preceding fiscal years, that identifies each revenue source, expense category, and any assumptions upon which the reports are based; 2. a detailed plan that eliminates a deficiency if the current or subsequent year’s financial report projects one; 3. a summary and general ledger account code analysis of the institution’s unrestricted net position for the most recently completed fiscal year; 4. the number of full- and part-time enrolled students disaggregated by in-state and out-of-state; 5. the number of vacant and filled employment positions disaggregated by bargaining unit and management confidential type with corresponding average salaries from the first payroll in October of the most recently completed fiscal year; 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 56 5/7/24 6. a summary of the institution’s cost drivers; 7. a summary of budget constraints affecting (a) workforce developments, economic development efforts, and student quality of life, including time required for degree completion, and (b) research productivity and faculty retention and recruitment; and 8. any other financial, operational, performance, or other outcome information, metrics, or data the board requests. Under the bill, the board may require an institution to submit the above information on a disaggregated basis. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 108 — EDUCATION MANDATE REVIEW ADVISOR Y COUNCIL Modifies criteria for two of the council’s 10 appointees sHB 5437, § 1 (as amended by House “A”), establishes an Education Mandate Review Advisory Council to advise and provide annual reports to the Education Committee on the (1) cost and implementation of existing education mandates on local and regional boards of education and (2) impact of proposals to add to or revise these mandates. The council consists of 10 legislative appointees (six by the legislative leaders and four by the Education Committee’s leadership). This bill modifies the criteria for the Education Committee’s Senate chairperson’s and ranking member’s appointments. sHB 5437 requires them to each appoint a public school teacher in Connecticut. This bill instead requires the (1) chairperson to appoint a representative of the Connecticut Education Association and (2) ranking member to appoint a representative of the American Federation of Teachers-Connecticut. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 109 — POPULATION CENSUS USED FOR MUNIC IPAL GRANTS For FY 25, requires OPM to use DPH’s 2021 population estimates to calculate municipal grants For FY 25, the bill requires OPM to use DPH’s 2021 population 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 57 5/7/24 estimates when calculating municipal grants that are based, at least in part, on a municipality’s current population. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 110 — BOARD OF REG ENTS FOR HIGHER EDUC ATION EXPANSION Expands the Board of Regents for Higher Education (BOR) to include the Office of Policy and Management (OPM) secretary as an ex-officio, nonvoting member By law, BOR is the governing body for CT State (i.e., the recent consolidation of the state’s 12 regional community-technical colleges), the Connecticut State Universities, and Charter Oak State College. This bill expands BOR ’s membership by requiring the OPM secretary, or his designee, to serve as an ex-officio, nonvoting member. Under existing law, unchanged by the bill, the chief workforce officer and the commissioners of the Education, Economic and Community Development, Labor, and Public Health departments must serve as ex- officio, nonvoting members. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 111 — TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS DURING COD IFICATION Requires LCO to make necessary technical, grammatical, and punctuation changes when codifying the bill and related public acts The bill requires the Legislative Commissioners’ Office (LCO) to make technical, grammatical, and punctuation changes as necessary to codify the bill, including internal reference corrections. It also requires LCO, when codifying any 2024 public act, to make any necessary technical, grammatical, and punctuation changes to those acts in order to rename the executive directors of the offices of health strategy and higher education as commissioners as authorized in this bill. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage §§ 112-120 — REVISIONS TO MAGNET SCHOOL AND VO-AG CENTER FUNDING PROGR AMS; CREATION OF NEW CHOICE PROGRAM GRANT Makes significant changes to education funding grant programs for (1) interdistrict magnet schools, and (2) regional agricultural science and technology centers (i.e., “vo-ag 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 58 5/7/24 centers”); eliminates, for FY 25, the existing magnet school and vo-ag center grants, and replaces them with new grants under the choice program The bill makes significant changes to education funding grant programs for (1) interdistrict magnet schools, and (2) regional agricultural science and technology centers (i.e., “vo-ag centers”). The bill eliminates, for FY 25, the existing magnet school and vo-ag center grants and replaces them with new grants under the choice program, which the bill creates. Under the bill, the choice program grant provides funding for local or regional boards of education (i.e., “school boards”) that operate a magnet school or a vo-ag center. It also creates a grant for any magnet school operated by an entity that is not a board of education, such as an independent institution of higher education. The bill uses student need weightings in the choice program grants that mirror existing law’s weighting for education cost sharing (ECS) grants and charter school grants. This gives additional weight for students eligible for free or reduced-priced meals or free milk (FRPM) or designated as an English language learner. By doing this, these grants give added funding for students that meet those criteria. Finally, the bill requires the State Department of Education (SDE), by June 30, 2024, and again on February 1, 2025, to calculate and give estimates to the relevant operators or towns for the new grants. It creates a similar estimate requirement for SDE regarding ECS and state charter school grants. New Choice Program Grants (§ 112) For FY 25, the bill provides choice program grants for vo-ag centers and two different interdistrict magnet school grants, based on who operates the magnet school. The state’s vo-ag centers serve high school students from multiple sending towns and provide an agricultural career education in addition to the comprehensive high school education. Under the bill, one magnet school grant is for school board-operated magnets and the other is for operators that are not school boards, such 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 59 5/7/24 as an independent institution of higher education. By law, an inter- district magnet school (i.e., magnet school) must (1) enroll no more than 75% of its students from the same district with at least 25% coming from other districts; (2) maintain an enrollment that meets state standards for a reduced-isolation setting; (3) support racial, ethnic, and economic diversity; and (4) enroll students who are at least half time. Grant Student Weights. For choice program grants, the bill creates a grant formula that applies weights for certain students, such as whether the students are (1) from families that qualify for FRPM or (2) English language learners. The weights increase the grant amounts for those students because the grant amount is produced by multiplying the need student number by the foundation number (see below). For example, the bill uses a 30% weighting for student poverty (i.e., students that qualify for FRPM) for each of these grants. If 100 students from a district qualify, then those students count as 130 students for grant purposes. This increases the grant as the weighted number becomes the new student number that is multiplied by the foundation amount. Foundation. Under the bill, the foundation amount is $11,525 per pupil, which is the same as in the ECS law. Host Magnet and Vo-Ag Grants. Under the bill, grants for the magnets operated by a school board (i.e., a host magnet) and vo-ag center use similar factors. For FY 25, the new amount the magnet operator or vo-ag center receives must be (1) the grant they would receive with the FY 24 grant method (current law) using FY 25 enrollment plus (2) 42% of the difference between the new grant calculation component (see below) and the amount they would have received if using the FY 24 method. Grant Calculation Component. For FY 25, the new grant component is the sum of the (1) sending town adjustment factors for each sending town added together and (2) number of in-district students for the choice program multiplied by the applicable per-student grant (magnet 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 60 5/7/24 or vo-ag). The sending town is the student’s town of residence that would otherwise be responsible for educating the student. Sending Town Adjustment Factor. The “sending town adjustment factor” is the number of the town’s resident choice program students multiplied by the greater of the sending town’s (1) weighted funding amount per pupil or (2) total revenue per pupil. The “weighted funding amount per pupil” is the (1) foundation amount multiplied by a town’s total need students for the fiscal year before the grant payment year and (2) resulting product divided by the number of a town’s resident students. The “total revenue per pupil” is the sum of the (1) per-pupil amount of state grants for FY 24; (2) tuition received for choice students for FY 24; and (3) where appropriate, tuition received for children in a regional educational service center (RESC)-operated preschool program at a magnet school for FY 24. This means the FY 24 amounts become the hold-harmless minimum for these grants. Additional Definitions. Additionally, the bill defines the following terms for the new grants: 1. “total need students” is a student poverty weighting (as under ECS law) of (a) 30% of students eligible for FRPM plus 15% of any FRPM-eligible students above 60% of the total number of resident students and (b) 25% of the number of students identified as English language learners; 2. “resident students” is generally the number of students in a town enrolled in its public schools at the town’s expense as of October 1 of each year (as under the ECS law); 3. “resident choice program students” is the number of part-time and full-time students of a town enrolled or participating in a particular choice program; and 4. “out-of-district student” is a student (a) enrolled or participating in a choice program operated or maintained by a local or regional board of education and (b) who does not reside in the town or a member town of the local or regional board. 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 61 5/7/24 Non-Board of Education Magnet Schools. For this FY 25 grant, a magnet school operator is an entity that is (1) not a board of education (presumably, this includes RESCs); (2) a nonprofit private institution of higher education that has its main campus in the state; or (3) a third- party nonprofit corporation that the education commissioner approves. Under the bill, a magnet school operator that is not a board of education is entitled to a grant for FY 25 that is (1) the grant amount they would receive with the FY 24 grant method (current law) using FY 25 student enrollment plus (2) 42% of the difference between the non-board of education calculation component (see below) and the amount they would have received using the FY 24 method with the FY 25 enrollment. Non-Board of Education Calculation Component. This grant calculation component equals the product of the foundation and its total magnet school program need students. Hold Harmless Provision. The bill includes a specific hold harmless provision for FY 25 grants for operators that are not boards of education. This hold harmless grant is triggered when the revenue per student for FY 24 is greater than the per student revenue for FY 25. The first measure for the comparison to make this determination is the sum of the total revenue per pupil during FY 24, divided by the total number of students enrolled in the same program during FY 24. The second measure is the sum of the adjusted total revenue per pupil divided by the number of students enrolled in the same program during FY 25. If the first measure is greater than the second, then the operator receives a hold harmless grant that is the sum of the (1) new grant as calculated above and (2) product of the (a) difference between total revenue per pupil for FY 24 and the new grant plus tuition for FY 25 (i.e., the adjusted total revenue per pupil) and (b) total number of students enrolled in the program during FY 25. Under the bill, the “adjusted total revenue per pupil” is the sum of the following three things: 1. per student grant amount for a choice program student for FY 25, 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 62 5/7/24 2. per student amount of any general education tuition for a student in the choice program for FY 25, and 3. per child amount of any tuition charged for a child enrolled in a preschool program offered by a RESC operating an interdistrict magnet school preschool program for FY 25. The bill creates a formula for calculating total magnet school program need students that (1) counts full- and part-time students at the magnet schools, (2) generally uses the ECS student weighting percentages, and (3) includes a Sheff region additional student weighting (see Background — Sheff Region). The foundation component for this grant also has an annual cost-of-living factor that potentially increases the foundation from one year to the next. Student Weighting. The student need weighting reflects the ECS formula weighting as follows: (1) student poverty weighting is 30% of students eligible for FRPM plus 15% of any FRPM-eligible students above 60% of the total number of resident students and (2) a 25% weighting for the number of students identified as English language learners. For FY 25, the bill includes a 30% additional student weighting for magnet schools that help the state meet its obligations under the Sheff v. O’Neill desegregation decision and related agreements or orders (see Background — Sheff v. O’Neill State Supreme Court Decision). EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 Choice Program, ECS, and Charter School Grant Estimates (§ 113) The bill requires SDE, by June 30, 2024, to calculate and give the relevant operators or towns estimates for the following grants for the next fiscal year (FY 25): 1. each choice program grant the bill establishes (SDE must notify each local and regional board of education and inter-district magnet school program operator that is not a local or regional 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 63 5/7/24 board of education), 2. ECS grants (SDE must notify each town), and 3. charter school grants (SDE must notify the fiscal authority for each school). The bill also requires SDE to annually prepare the estimates by February 1, 2025, for the charter school grants, and by December 31, 2024, for the ECS grants. For each of these calculations, SDE must calculate the estimates for the next fiscal year using data collected during the current one. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage Magnet School Grant Programs and Tuition (§§ 114 & 115) For FY 25, the bill eliminates the current per-student magnet school grants and replaces them with the new choice program grants the bill creates. Under current law, a magnet school generally receives a $3,060 state grant for each student from the district that hosts the school (home district) and, depending on the type of magnet school, one of the grants listed in the table below for students from sending towns. In 2023, the legislature added a provision, beginning in FY 25, that instead sets these amounts as the minimum per-student grant amounts, which allows SDE to increase the grants within available appropriations. In addition to repealing the $3,060 grant for host district students, the bill repeals all the magnet school grants shown in the following table for students from sending districts. Table: Magnet School Grants Repealed Under the Bill Type of Magnet Bill § Current Law Minimum Amount for Sending Students Non-Sheff host magnet 114(c)(1) $7,227 Non-Sheff RESC magnet with less than 55% enrollment from one town 114(c)(3)(A) 8,058 Non-Sheff RESC magnet with 55% or more of enrollment from one town 114(c)(3)(B) 7,227 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 64 5/7/24 Type of Magnet Bill § Current Law Minimum Amount for Sending Students Sheff host magnet 114(c)(3)(F) 13,315 RESC magnet enrolling less than 60% of its students from Hartford (i.e., Sheff magnet) 114(c)(3)(D)(i) 10,652 RESC magnet enrolling less than 50% of its students from Hartford (i.e., Sheff magnet) 114(c)(3)(D)(ii) 8,058 (for half of the non-Hartford students enrolled over 50% of total enrollment) 10,652 (for all the other students) Magnet operated by independent institution of higher education and that meets certain criteria (Goodwin University) 114(c)(3)(E) 65% of the 10,652 grant for students enrolled in both semesters each year 32.5% of 10,652 for those enrolled in one semester a year Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts 114(c)(3)(H) 65% of 8,058 (the grant for RESC magnets with less than 55% from a single town) The bill eliminates the requirement that magnet school programs operating at least half-time, but at less than full-time, receive a grant equal to 65% of what a full-time program would receive. (The bill’s provisions on choice grants treat half-time students the same as full-time students.) By law and unchanged by the bill, the total grant SDE pays to a magnet school operator must not exceed the aggregate of the operator’s reasonable operating budget, less revenue from other sources, and SDE must make these grants within available appropriations. Magnet Preschool Tuition Charged to Parents. Currently, RESC magnets (both in and outside the Sheff region) may charge FY 24 tuition of up to $4,053 to parents or guardians of children attending preschool, but they cannot charge tuition to any parent or guardian with a family income at or below 75% of the state median income. Beginning in FY 25, current law limits the tuition amount to no more than 58% of the tuition charged during FY 24. The bill creates the same tuition provisions mentioned above (58% 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 65 5/7/24 tuition limit for FY 25 and the following years and a ban on charging tuition to any family below 75% of the state median income,) for an independent higher education institution or an approved nonprofit operating a preschool as part of a magnet school. Under the bill, SDE is responsible for any unpaid tuition charged to a parent or guardian with a family income at or below 75% of the state median. The commissioner may conduct a comprehensive financial review of the operating budget of any magnet school charging tuition to verify the tuition rate. Magnet Students and ECS Count. Under the bill, magnet school students are counted in the town where they reside for the student count for ECS grants, which codifies current practice. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 Background — Sheff v. O’Neill State Supreme Court Decision In this 1996 decision, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that the state had a constitutional obligation to remedy the educational inequities in the Hartford schools caused by racial and ethnic isolation (Sheff v. O’Neill, 238 Conn. 1 (1996)). The court ordered the state legislature and the governor to craft a solution and legislation was passed to create voluntary desegregation in Hartford by creating magnet schools and using other programs, such as Open Choice. Background — Sheff Region This region includes the school districts for the towns of Avon, Bloomfield, Canton, East Granby, East Hartford, East Windsor, Ellington, Farmington, Glastonbury, Granby, Hartford, Manchester, Newington, Rocky Hill, Simsbury, South Windsor, Suffield, Vernon, West Hartford, Wethersfield, Windsor, and Windsor Locks. Charter School Grant (§116) — Struck by Amendment Vo-Ag Center Grants and Tuition (§§ 117-120) For FY 25, the bill repeals the current $5,200 per-student state grant 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 66 5/7/24 minimum for vo-ag centers and replaces it with the vo-ag choice grant the bill creates. It sunsets the new grant at the end of FY 25. It also repeals related supplementary grants for vo-ag centers ranging from $60 to $500 per student. The bill repeals the requirement that a sending district provide students in their district an equivalent number of seats from one year to the next to enroll in the vo-ag program. Current law requires the districts to make available (1) at least the same number of seats as in any written agreement or, in the absence of one, the average number enrolled over the last three years and (2) specifically for each ninth- grade class, either the agreement number or the average number who enrolled in ninth grade in the last three years. The bill also specifies that for a town’s student count for the ECS grant, a student enrolled in a vo-ag center is counted in the town where the student resides, which codifies current practice. For vo-ag grants under current law, the bill removes the requirement that they be within available appropriations for FY 24. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 121 — SUPPLEMENTAL FUNDING AMOUNTS FOR ECS, CHARTER SCHOOL, MAGN ET SCHOOL, OPEN CHOI CE, AND VO- AG CENTER GRANTS Requires SDE to apportion the $150 million appropriated for FY 25 for “Education Finance Reform” in specific amounts for (1) supplemental funds for the following grants: ECS, charter schools, interdistrict magnet schools, Open Choice Program, and agriscience and technology centers, and (2) grants for specific projects, programs, towns, and agencies Last year’s budget act required SDE to apportion the $150 million appropriated for “Education Finance Reform” for FY 25 to five major education grants: ECS, charter schools, magnet schools, Open Choice, and vo-ag centers. The bill modifies how the money is allocated including providing funds for new projects or programs. The bill allocates $139,626,522 to (1) supplement ECS grants and charter school grants and (2) provide the choice program grants (magnet schools, Open Choice, and vo-ag) the bill establishes (see above). 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 67 5/7/24 The bill specifically provides $1,473,478 to supplement the amount appropriated to SDE’s charter schools account and to be used for grants for the following charter school seat expansion: 1. Brass City Charter School, 40 seats; 2. Odyssey Community School, 36 seats; 3. Interdistrict School for the Arts and Communication, 52 seats; and 4. Integrated Day Charter School, 22 seats. 5. This charter school supplement must take into account reducing the funds for Booker T. Washington Academy by 40 seats. Funds for Plan, Database, and Mapping Project The bill allocates the following funds for certain plans, a database, and a mapping project and requires SDE to make all payments below no later than September 30, 2024: 1. $50,000 to be used by the education commissioner to develop a plan to convert the State Board of Education (SBE) into an advisory board and make the education commissioner the department head (see § 122 below); 2. $400,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the Connecticut Association of Boards of Education to develop a new or expand an existing database to collect and retain educator professional development records; and 3. $100,000 for SDE to enter into a memorandum of understanding (MOU) (under a statute that allows one agency to designate another through an MOU to use funds for a purpose) with UConn to provide the funds to the UConn School of Public Policy to conduct a study and comprehensive asset and capacity mapping for nonprofit organizations (see § 123 below). Funds for Program, Municipalities, and Organizations 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 68 5/7/24 The bill allocates the following funds for certain programs, municipalities, or organizations and requires SDE to make all the payments below no later than September 30, 2024: 1. $175,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the New Haven Board of Education to purchase bus passes for state-owned or state- controlled bus public transportation service for students who are enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive, in New Haven public schools; 2. $175,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the Hartford Board of Education to purchase bus passes for state-owned or state- controlled bus public transportation service for students who are enrolled in grades 9 to 12, inclusive, in Hartford public schools; 3. $5,000,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the Hartford board of education for magnet school tuition assistance; 4. $1,200,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the Goodwin University Magnet Schools, Inc. for student enrollment expansion and compliance with the Sheff decision and settlement, as determined by the education commissioner; 5. $650,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to InterCommunity Health Care to provide mental health services to students at the school- based health centers in the East Hartford school district; 6. $200,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the Connecticut Association of Schools for operating and personnel expenses, including hiring an assistant director of leadership and development; 7. $150,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the Artist Collective for arts enrichment for students in grades kindergarten to 12, inclusive; and 8. $800,000 to provide a grant-in-aid to the Brother Carl Institute for tutoring and mentoring services for students in grades 4 to 12, inclusive, and developing a summer college preparation program. 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 69 5/7/24 Under the current budget act, the funds are allocated as shown below: 1. $68,499,497 to the ECS grants account in SDE to provide ECS grants; 2. $9,378,313 to SDE’s Charter Schools account to provide charter school operating grants; 3. $40,188,429 to SDE’s Magnet Schools account to increase per- student grant amounts to magnet school operators that are not local or regional school boards (including magnets operated by RESCs, independent institutions of higher education, or other approved operators); 4. $13,254,358 to SDE’s Magnet Schools account to increase per- student grant amounts to local and regional school boards that operate magnet schools; 5. $11,430,343 to SDE’s Open Choice Program account to increase per-student grant amounts to local and regional school boards that are receiving districts under the Open Choice program; and 6. $7,249,060 to school boards of education that operate vo-ag centers. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 122 — PLAN TO CONVERT STATE BOARD OF E DUCATION INTO AN ADVISORY BOARD Requires the education commissioner to develop a plan to convert SBE into an advisory board and make the education commissioner the department head The bill requires the education commissioner to develop a plan to (1) convert SBE from its legal status as the agency department head to an advisory board within the department and (2) empower the education commissioner to become the department head. By January 1, 2026, the commissioner must submit the plan and any legislative recommendations to the Education Committee. 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 70 5/7/24 EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage § 123 — ASSET AND CAPACITY MAPPING FOR NONPROFIT S Requires UConn’s School of Public Policy to conduct a study and comprehensive asset and capacity mapping for nonprofit organizations to support information-sharing and collaboration between nonprofits and communities; requires the school to provide an interim report and a final report to the Education Committee The bill requires UConn’s School of Public Policy to conduct a study and comprehensive asset and capacity mapping for nonprofit organizations in Connecticut to support information-sharing and collaboration between the nonprofits and the communities they serve. The School of Public Policy must consult with state agencies, nonprofit organizations, and philanthropic associations while conducting the study. Under the bill, the study and mapping must do the following: 1. assess the nonprofit organizations’ capacity to assist the state in addressing public needs and identifying assets’ availability and strength and services’ gaps or weaknesses; 2. provide an effective tool for sharing data, documents, and communication among the nonprofit organizations to strengthen their capacity to serve state residents; 3. provide a resource for policymakers to determine gaps in services and capacity and enhance collaboration among different nonprofit organizations working in the same geographic areas and serving the same target population; 4. provide information to policymakers on ways to ensure that resources are invested in areas and populations with the greatest need; and 5. present data by town, by county, and statewide, as well as by each regional council of government, and include a summary of available resources, including nonprofit organizations and state agencies, to create a database of the state’s nonprofit organizations by target service population, mission, and 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 71 5/7/24 geography. The bill requires OPM, the Department of Consumer Protection, the secretary of the state, and any other state agency that contracts with nonprofits to provide the School of Public Policy, upon its request, with any data needed to conduct the study and mapping. The school must submit to the Education Committee a preliminary report by October 1, 2024, and a final report by June 30, 2025. The final report must include (1) the comprehensive asset and capacity mapping for nonprofit organizations in Connecticut; (2) a model to enhance collaboration among nonprofit organizations to ensure that state investments are addressing service gaps and not contributing to duplicative efforts or competition among the organizations, and the extent that the lack of resources, including budget deficits or other fiscal shortfalls, or state agency policies or regulations impede collaboration and lead to duplicative efforts and services; and (3) guidance on how to use the comprehensive asset and capacity mapping to create a continuum of care document. The bill also requires the School of Public Policy to make the final report and the comprehensive asset and capacity mapping available on its website by June 30, 2025. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 § 124 — DELETED BY HOUSE AMENDMENT “A” § 125 — SDE DISTRIBUTION OF PARAEDUCATOR FUNDING Sets a September 1, 2024, deadline for SDE to distribute to school boards the FY 23 amount allocated to the department from ARPA funding for paraeducator professional development The bill requires the State Department of Education (SDE), by September 1, 2024, to distribute to local and regional boards of education the amount allocated to the department for paraeducator professional development for FY 23 from ARPA funding. SDE must distribute the funds to school boards, proportionately based on the number of paraeducators each board employs, to cover the cost of 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 72 5/7/24 providing them professional development and in-service training. EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage §§ 126 & 128 — PARAEDUCATOR HEALTH INSUR ANCE PROGRAMS Extends by one year an HSA subsidy program for paraeducators and expands it to cover high deductible health plans for Medicare-eligible paraeducators; requires the comptroller to establish a one-year premium subsidy program for school boards that provide paraeducators with certain health plans; requires the comptroller and SDE commissioner to enter into an MOU related to these programs; repeals a program providing stipends to paraeducators to purchase a qualified health plan through Access Health CT HSA and High-Deductible Health Plan Subsidy Program PA 23-204, § 203, required the comptroller to establish a program for FY 24, within available appropriations, providing subsidies to paraeducators who (1) open a health savings account (HSA) and (2) are employed by a local or regional board of education. The bill extends the program to FY 25 and expands it to also provide subsidies to paraeducators, employed by boards of education, who are eligible for Medicare and enroll in a high deductible health plan (HDHP). Under current law, the subsidy is a percentage of the initial investment made to open the account. The bill instead sets the subsidy as a percentage of the deductible for the paraeducator’s health plan, minus the amount of any employer contributions to an HSA or health reimbursement account. As under current law, (1) the comptroller specifies the percentage and maximum subsidy and (2) no paraeducator may receive more than one subsidy. The bill (1) allows the comptroller to work with boards of education to distribute the subsidies and (2) eliminates the requirement for paraeducators to apply to the comptroller to participate in the program. Premium Subsidy Program for School Boards The bill requires the comptroller, for FY 25, to set up a program providing subsidies to boards of education that provide coverage to paraeducators and their dependents under a health benefit plan 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 73 5/7/24 (generally, a health insurance plan) or partnership plan (a health benefit plan the comptroller offers to nonstate public employers and certain others), but not under an HDHP. The subsidies must be given from any funds appropriated for this purpose. Under this program, the subsidy must be no more than 10% of the aggregate premium cost, including the employee and employer shares, the board paid for coverage under the plan, divided by the number of paraeducators employed by the board and enrolled in health coverage. The subsidy must be used to offset the employee’s share of the premium that is deducted from the paychecks of each paraeducator the board employed during any pay period in FY 25. MOU The bill requires the comptroller and SDE commissioner to enter into a memorandum of understanding, under existing procedures, to allow the comptroller to use the $5 million appropriated to SDE for assistance to paraeducators under the FY 24-25 budget act, to implement these two subsidy programs. Repealer The bill also repeals a program that, under current law, gives stipends to eligible paraeducators to buy silver-level health insurance plans through Access Health CT. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024, except the repealer is effective upon passage. § 127 — SERC FUNDING ALLOCATION Requires, rather than allows, the SDE commissioner to allocate funds to the State Education Resource Center Current law allows the SDE commissioner to allocate funds to the State Education Resource Center (SERC) so that it may provide professional development services, technical assistance and evaluation activities, policy analysis, and other forms of assistance to the following entities: (1) local and regional boards of education, (2) SDE, (3) state and local charter schools, (4) the Technical Education and Career System, (5) school readiness program providers, and (6) other education entities 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 74 5/7/24 and providers. The bill makes the commissioner’s fund allocation to SERC required rather than optional. Under existing law, SERC must spend these funds in line with procedures and conditions set by the SDE commissioner. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 §§ 129-132 — DEEP PUBLIC HEARINGS FOR TR ANSPORTATION CAPITAL PROJECTS For certain transportation capital projects, requires certain information to be included in a petition for a DEEP public hearing on an application for a (1) structures, dredging, and fill permit; (2) tidal or inland wetland activity permit; or (3) certification to conduct certain work in a floodplain Under certain circumstances, existing law requires the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) commissioner to hold a public hearing on an application for authorization to: 1. conduct a regulated activity in a tidal or inland wetland (e.g., draining, dredging, excavating, removing soil, depositing material); 2. perform certain work in the tidal, coastal, or navigable waters of the state waterward of the coastal jurisdiction line (e.g., dredge, erect structures, place fill); or 3. undertake activities or critical activities (i.e., those with a certain chance of flooding) by a state agency in or affecting a floodplain (generally, a “regulated activity”). One of these circumstances is when the commissioner receives a petition signed by at least 25 people asking for a hearing. The bill, however, requires the inclusion of specified information in public hearing petitions about certain transportation capital projects. Under the bill, the additional information is required if the: 1. project is not at an airport; 2. federal government requires public participation on the activity; 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 75 5/7/24 and 3. person proposing to do the activity (a) sought public input on it by implementing a plan a federal agency approved and (b) gave the commissioner a copy of the plan, a written summary of the public participation opportunities involved, and a copy or record of the comments received and how they were responded to or addressed. In this case, the bill only requires the commissioner to hold the hearing if the petition alleges aggrievement or unreasonable pollution or destruction of the public trust, which must include specific facts to show either that: 1. the legal rights, duties, or privileges of at least one signatory will or may reasonably be expected to be affected by the regulated activity or 2. the regulated activity involves conduct that has or is reasonably likely to unreasonably pollute, impair, or destroy the public trust in the state’s air, water, or other natural resources. In the above cases, the petition must identify the relevant law or regulation that the proposed regulated activity is alleged to not meet. The commissioner must give a copy of the petition to the person proposing the activity, who then has seven business days to object to it for failing to have the specific facts required above. Under the bill, the commissioner must (1) determine if the petition meets the above requirements and (2) give written notice of her decision to the person who submitted the petition and the person who proposed the regulated activity. (It does not specify a timeframe for her to do this.) Lastly, the bill specifies that its public hearing petition requirements for transportation capital projects do not change or limit requirements for public scoping (i.e., soliciting public input), a public hearing, or public participation under the Connecticut Environmental Policy Act. EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 2024HB-05523-R01-BA.docx Researcher: HP Page 76 5/7/24 §§ 133-136 — DELETED BY HOUSE AMENDMENT “A” §§ 138, 143, 144 & 184 — DELETED BY HOUSE AMENDMENT “A” §§ 243-249 — DEFICIENCY APPROPRIATIONS Please refer to the fiscal note for a summary of these sections § 504 — MRDA REQUIREMENT REPEALED Repeals the requirement that MRDA review and approve a member municipality’s economic development master plan before executing an MOA with it, as well as related provisions Under existing law, member municipalities that opt to join the Connecticut Municipal Redevelopment Authority (MRDA) must enter into a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with MRDA to establish at least one development district (CGS § 8-169ll). The bill eliminates requirements that member municipalities develop an “economic development master plan” (i.e., generally a plan designed to increase the municipality’s tax base to a level allowing it to provide an adequate level of municipal services) and submit it for the authority’s review and approval before executing the MOA. EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2024