Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00394 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/11/2024

                     
Researcher: LRH 	Page 1 	4/11/24 
 
 
 
 
OLR Bill Analysis 
SB 394  
 
AN ACT ESTABLISHING AN EXEMPTION FROM DISCLOSURE FOR 
CERTAIN HIGHER EDUCATION RECORDS PERTAINING TO 
TEACHING OR RESEARCH UNDER THE FREEDOM OF 
INFORMATION ACT.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill exempts from disclosure under the Freedom of Information 
Act (FOIA) records maintained or kept on file by or for public higher 
education institution faculty or staff arising out of teaching or research 
on medical, artistic, scientific, legal, or other scholarly issues, including 
legal clinic or center records. However, it also explicitly excludes the 
institutions’ financial records from the exemption. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2024 
BACKGROUND 
Related Bills 
sSB 234, favorably reported by the Public Safety and Security 
Committee, among other things expands the FOIA disclosure 
exemption for law enforcement agency records created in detecting or 
investigating crime that are not otherwise available to the public when 
disclosure would not be in the public interest, to include (1) the identity 
of mandated reporters not otherwise known and (2) sworn witness 
statements. 
SB 436, favorably reported by the Government Administration and 
Elections Committee, generally expands the FOIA limitation on home 
address disclosure to include all public agency employees, rather than 
just specified groups of employees and individuals. It also broadens the 
limitation to apply to an agency’s personnel, medical, or similar files for 
any covered individual (rather than applying only to those records for 
an agency’s own employees).  2024SB-00394-R000432-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: LRH 	Page 2 	4/11/24 
 
sHB 5410, favorably reported by the Government Administration 
and Elections Committee, exempts from disclosure under FOIA (1) 
public agency records on investigations into the agency’s employee’s 
alleged sexual harassment or discriminatory practice, including the 
name of anyone providing information about it, and (2) Department of 
Emergency Services and Public Protection records in the registry of state 
residents with cognitive challenges to help recover missing or 
wandering persons (i.e., the Bring Me Back Home registry). 
sHB 5447, favorably reported by the Government Administration 
and Elections Committee, adds Office of the Attorney General (OAG) 
employees to the list of individuals covered by the FOIA’s limitation on 
disclosing home addresses and allows OAG employees to request 
address confidentiality from other public agencies. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Government Administration and Elections Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 13 Nay 6 (03/26/2024)