Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00220 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/08/2024

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sSB 220  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING CLARIFYING THE APPEALS PROCESS 
UNDER THE PAID FAMILY AND MEDICAL LEAVE STATUTES.  
 
SUMMARY 
By law, anyone aggrieved by the Paid Family Medical Leave 
Authority’s denial of program benefits or by the imposition of penalties 
for certain program-related fraud may appeal to the labor 
commissioner. The commissioner or her designee (collectively referred 
to as the Department of Labor (DOL) below) must decide the appeal, 
and a party aggrieved by DOL’s decision may then appeal, within 31 
days, to the Superior Court for the Hartford Judicial District or the 
judicial district where they live.  
This bill specifies certain procedural steps and other criteria that must 
be followed in these appeals to the court. Among other things, the bill: 
1. requires the appealing party to also file the appeal with DOL, 
2. specifies what must be included in the record and requires DOL 
to certify it, 
3. sets a process for the appealing party to request corrections for 
findings in the record, 
4. generally limits what the court considers in the appeal to certain 
factors (e.g., whether DOL incorrectly applied the law to the facts 
it found), and  
5. specifies what actions the court may take in deciding the appeal. 
Lastly, the bill requires DOL to adopt regulations on procedural rules 
for the disposition of the appeals.  2024SB-00220-R000304-BA.DOCX 
 
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EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 
APPEALS PROCESS 
Filing the Appeal 
The bill specifies that DOL’s initial decision becomes final on the 31st 
calendar day after DOL sends a written copy of it to each party. For 
timely appeals before then, the appealing party must file the original 
appeal with DOL and state the grounds for seeking the review. Within 
14 calendar days after that, DOL must mail the original appeal to the 
Superior Court clerk and send a copy to each party listed in the appealed 
decision by mail or electronically through the department’s Leave 
Complaint and Appeal Portal. The clerk must docket the appeal as 
returned to the next return day after receiving it. 
For these appeals, the bill requires DOL to certify the record to the 
court. The record must include (1) the notice of appeal to DOL, (2) the 
file record, (3) DOL’s findings of fact and decision, and (4) any 
documents submitted to DOL before the appeal was filed. If the court 
requests it, DOL must also prepare and verify a transcript of the DOL 
hearing (if one was held). 
The bill requires the appealing party to claim the appeal for the 
court’s short calendar unless the court orders it to be placed on the trial 
list. For these proceedings, exceptions to DOL’s rulings do not have to 
have been made or entered, and no bond may be required for entering 
an appeal to the Superior Court. If one of the parties is not represented 
by counsel and the appealing party does not claim the case for the short 
calendar or trial within a reasonable time after the return day, the court 
may dismiss the appeal on its own motion, or the party ready to proceed 
may move for nonsuit or default. 
Court Guidelines 
Under the bill,  the court must hear the appeal upon the certified copy 
of the record DOL filed. The court cannot retry the facts or hear any 
evidence other than DOL’s certified record. The court’s review must be 
limited to determining whether (1) DOL’s findings should be corrected 
or (2) there is any evidence in the record to support in law the  2024SB-00220-R000304-BA.DOCX 
 
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conclusions reached. The court cannot substitute its judgment for DOL’s 
about the weight of the evidence on questions of fact. It may only 
determine whether DOL’s decision incorrectly applied the law to the 
facts found or if the decision is clearly erroneous and could not have 
reasonably or logically followed from the evidence in DOL’s certified 
record. The court may only correct DOL’s findings if (1) DOL refused to 
find a material fact that was an admitted or undisputed fact, (2) the 
finding of a fact is in language of doubtful meaning so that its real 
significance may be unclear, or (3) DOL found a material fact without 
evidence. 
Motions to Correct Findings 
The bill allows an appealing party to request that a DOL finding be 
corrected on appeal by filing a motion for the correction with DOL 
within 14 calendar days after the record has been filed in the Superior 
Court, unless DOL extends the deadline for cause. The motion must 
include portions of the evidence the appealing party deems relevant and 
material to the corrections requested. DOL must file the motion and its 
decision with the court within a reasonable time upon receiving it. If the 
court denies the motion in whole or in part, and the denial is appealed, 
DOL must, within a reasonable time, file copies of evidence filed by the 
appealing party, and any additional evidence that may have been 
brought before DOL. 
Court Decisions 
Unless the court orders otherwise after a motion and hearing, the 
court’s final decision must be the decision for all parties to the original 
proceeding before DOL. When an appeal is taken to the Superior Court, 
the court clerk must (1) notify DOL in writing about any action the court 
takes on it and the disposition of the appeal whether by judgment, 
remand, withdrawal, or otherwise, and (2) give DOL a copy of the 
decision when the appeal is decided. 
The bill allows the court to remand the case to DOL for (1) 
proceedings de novo (from the beginning), (2) further proceedings on 
the record, or (3) any limited purposes the court may set. The court may 
keep jurisdiction by ordering that the proceedings conducted under the  2024SB-00220-R000304-BA.DOCX 
 
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court’s order be returned to the court, or it may order final disposition. 
A party aggrieved by a final disposition made in compliance with a 
Superior Court order may ask the court to review the case’s disposition 
by filing an appropriate motion. 
Any party aggrieved by the Superior Court’s decision may appeal it 
to the Appellate Court in the same way the law allows for 
administrative appeals. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Labor and Public Employees Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 12 Nay 0 (03/19/2024)