LCO 1 of 10 General Assembly Substitute Bill No. 1220 January Session, 2025 AN ACT CONCERNING HEALTH BENEFITS FOR STATE MARSHALS. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened: Section 1. Subsections (a) to (l), inclusive, of section 5-259 of the 1 general statutes are repealed and the following is substituted in lieu 2 thereof (Effective October 1, 2025): 3 (a) The Comptroller, with the approval of the Attorney General and 4 of the Insurance Commissioner, shall arrange and procure a group 5 hospitalization and medical and surgical insurance plan or plans for (1) 6 state employees, (2) members of the General Assembly who elect 7 coverage under such plan or plans, (3) participants in an alternate 8 retirement program who meet the service requirements of section 5-162 9 or subsection (a) of section 5-166, (4) anyone receiving benefits under 10 section 5-144 or from any state-sponsored retirement system, except the 11 teachers' retirement system and the municipal employees retirement 12 system, (5) judges of probate and Probate Court employees, (6) the 13 surviving spouse, and any dependent children of a state police officer, a 14 member of an organized local police department, a firefighter or a 15 constable who performs criminal law enforcement duties who dies 16 before, on or after June 26, 2003, as the result of injuries received while 17 acting within the scope of such officer's or firefighter's or constable's 18 employment and not as the result of illness or natural causes, and whose 19 surviving spouse and dependent children are not otherwise eligible for 20 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 2 of 10 a group hospitalization and medical and surgical insurance plan. 21 Coverage for a dependent child pursuant to this subdivision shall 22 terminate no earlier than the end of the calendar year during whichever 23 of the following occurs first, the date on which the child: Becomes 24 covered under a group health plan through the dependent's own 25 employment; or attains the age of twenty-six, (7) employees of the 26 Capital Region Development Authority established by section 32-601, 27 [and] (8) the surviving spouse and dependent children of any employee 28 of a municipality who dies on or after October 1, 2000, as the result of 29 injuries received while acting within the scope of such employee's 30 employment and not as the result of illness or natural causes, and whose 31 surviving spouse and dependent children are not otherwise eligible for 32 a group hospitalization and medical and surgical insurance plan, and 33 (9) state marshals. For purposes of [this] subdivision (8) of this 34 subsection, "employee" means any regular employee or elective officer 35 receiving pay from a municipality, "municipality" means any town, city, 36 borough, school district, taxing district, fire district, district department 37 of health, probate district, housing authority, regional workforce 38 development board established under section 31-3k, flood commission 39 or authority established by special act or regional council of 40 governments. For purposes of subdivision (6) of this subsection, 41 "firefighter" means any person who is regularly employed and paid by 42 any municipality for the purpose of performing firefighting duties for a 43 municipality on average of not less than thirty-five hours per week. The 44 minimum benefits to be provided by such plan or plans shall be 45 substantially equal in value to the benefits that each such employee or 46 member of the General Assembly could secure in such plan or plans on 47 an individual basis on the preceding first day of July. The state shall pay 48 for each such employee and each member of the General Assembly 49 covered by such plan or plans the portion of the premium charged for 50 such member's or employee's individual coverage and seventy per cent 51 of the additional cost of the form of coverage and such amount shall be 52 credited to the total premiums owed by such employee or member of 53 the General Assembly for the form of such member's or employee's 54 coverage under such plan or plans. On and after January 1, 1989, the 55 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 3 of 10 state shall pay for anyone receiving benefits from any such state-56 sponsored retirement system one hundred per cent of the portion of the 57 premium charged for such member's or employee's individual coverage 58 and one hundred per cent of any additional cost for the form of 59 coverage. The balance of any premiums payable by an individual 60 employee or by a member of the General Assembly for the form of 61 coverage shall be deducted from the payroll by the State Comptroller. 62 The total premiums payable shall be remitted by the Comptroller to the 63 insurance company or companies or nonprofit organization or 64 organizations providing the coverage. The amount of the state's 65 contribution per employee for a health maintenance organization option 66 shall be equal, in terms of dollars and cents, to the largest amount of the 67 contribution per employee paid for any other option that is available to 68 all eligible state employees included in the health benefits plan, but shall 69 not be required to exceed the amount of the health maintenance 70 organization premium. 71 (b) The insurance coverage procured under subsection (a) of this 72 section for active state employees, employees of the Connecticut 73 Institute for Municipal Studies, anyone receiving benefits from any such 74 state-sponsored retirement system, [and] members of the General 75 Assembly and state marshals, who are over sixty-five years of age, may 76 be modified to reflect benefits available to such employees or members 77 pursuant to Social Security and medical benefits programs administered 78 by the federal government, provided any payments required to secure 79 such benefits administered by the federal government shall be paid by 80 the Comptroller either directly to the employee or members or to the 81 agency of the federal government authorized to collect such payments. 82 (c) On October 1, 1972, the Comptroller shall continue to afford 83 payroll deduction services for employees participating in existing 84 authorized plans covering state employees until such time as the 85 employee elects in writing to be covered by the plan authorized by 86 subsection (a) of this section. 87 (d) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, 88 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 4 of 10 the state shall pay for a member of any such state-sponsored retirement 89 system, or a participant in an alternate retirement program who meets 90 the service requirements of section 5-162 or subsection (a) of section 5-91 166, and who begins receiving benefits from such system or program on 92 or after November 1, 1989, eighty per cent of the portion of the premium 93 charged for his individual coverage and eighty per cent of any 94 additional cost for his form of coverage. Upon the death of any such 95 member, any surviving spouse of such member who begins receiving 96 benefits from such system shall be eligible for coverage under this 97 section and the state shall pay for any such spouse eighty per cent of the 98 portion of the premium charged for his individual coverage and eighty 99 per cent of any additional cost for his form of coverage. 100 (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, 101 vending stand operators eligible for membership in the state employees 102 retirement system pursuant to section 5-175a shall be eligible for 103 coverage under the group hospitalization and medical and surgical 104 insurance plans procured under this section, provided the cost for such 105 operators' insurance coverage shall be paid by the Department of Aging 106 and Disability Services from vending machine income pursuant to 107 section 17a-818. 108 (f) The Comptroller, with the approval of the Attorney General and 109 of the Insurance Commissioner, shall arrange and procure a group 110 hospitalization and medical and surgical insurance plan or plans for any 111 person who adopts a child from the state foster care system, any person 112 who has been a foster parent for the Department of Children and 113 Families for six months or more, and any dependent of such adoptive 114 parent or foster parent who elects coverage under such plan or plans. 115 The Comptroller may also arrange for inclusion of such person and any 116 such dependent in an existing group hospitalization and medical and 117 surgical insurance plan offered by the state. Any adoptive parent or 118 foster parent and any dependent who elects coverage shall pay one 119 hundred per cent of the premium charged for such coverage directly to 120 the insurer, provided such adoptive parent or foster parent and all such 121 dependents shall be included in such group hospitalization and medical 122 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 5 of 10 and surgical insurance plan. A person and his dependents electing 123 coverage pursuant to this subsection shall be eligible for such coverage 124 until no longer an adoptive parent or a foster parent. An adoptive parent 125 shall be eligible for such coverage until the coverage anniversary date 126 on or after whichever of the following occurs first, the date on which the 127 child: Becomes covered under a group health plan through the 128 dependent's own employment; or attains the age of twenty-six. As used 129 in this section "dependent" means a spouse or natural or adopted child 130 if such child is wholly or partially dependent for support upon the 131 adoptive parent or foster parent. 132 (g) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, 133 the Probate Court Administration Fund established in accordance with 134 section 45a-82, shall pay for each probate judge and each probate court 135 employee not more than one hundred per cent of the portion of the 136 premium charged for the judge's or employee's individual coverage and 137 not more than seventy per cent of any additional cost for the judge's or 138 employee's form of coverage. The remainder of the premium for such 139 coverage shall be paid by the probate judge or probate court employee 140 to the State Treasurer. Payment shall be credited by the State Treasurer 141 to the fund established by section 45a-82. The total premiums payable 142 shall be remitted by the Probate Court Administrator directly to the 143 insurance company or companies or nonprofit organization or 144 organizations providing the coverage. The Probate Court Administrator 145 shall issue regulations governing group hospitalization and medical 146 and surgical insurance pursuant to subsection (b) of section 45a-77. 147 (h) For the purpose of subsection (g) of this section, "probate judge" 148 or "judge" means a duly elected probate judge who works in such 149 judge's capacity as a probate judge at least twenty hours per week, on 150 average, on a quarterly basis and certifies to that fact on forms provided 151 by and filed with the Probate Court Administrator, on or before the 152 fifteenth day of April, July, October and January, for the preceding 153 calendar quarter; and "probate court employee" or "employee" means a 154 person employed by a probate court for at least twenty hours per week. 155 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 6 of 10 (i) The Comptroller may provide for coverage of employees of 156 municipalities, nonprofit corporations, community action agencies and 157 small employers and individuals eligible for a health coverage tax 158 credit, retired members or members of an association for personal care 159 assistants under the plan or plans procured under subsection (a) of this 160 section, provided: (1) Participation by each municipality, nonprofit 161 corporation, community action agency, small employer, eligible 162 individual, retired member or association for personal care assistants 163 shall be on a voluntary basis; (2) where an employee organization 164 represents employees of a municipality, nonprofit corporation, 165 community action agency or small employer, participation in a plan or 166 plans to be procured under subsection (a) of this section shall be by 167 mutual agreement of the municipality, nonprofit corporation, 168 community action agency or small employer and the employee 169 organization only and neither party may submit the issue of 170 participation to binding arbitration except by mutual agreement if such 171 binding arbitration is available; (3) no group of employees shall be 172 refused entry into the plan by reason of past or future health care costs 173 or claim experience; (4) rates paid by the state for its employees under 174 subsection (a) of this section are not adversely affected by this 175 subsection; (5) administrative costs to the plan or plans provided under 176 this subsection shall not be paid by the state; (6) participation in the plan 177 or plans in an amount determined by the state shall be for the duration 178 of the period of the plan or plans, or for such other period as mutually 179 agreed by the municipality, nonprofit corporation, community action 180 agency, small employer, retired member or association for personal care 181 assistants and the Comptroller; and (7) nothing in this section or section 182 12-202a, 38a-551 or 38a-556 shall be construed as requiring a 183 participating insurer or health care center to issue individual policies to 184 individuals eligible for a health coverage tax credit. The coverage 185 provided under this section may be referred to as the "Municipal 186 Employee Health Insurance Plan". The Comptroller may arrange and 187 procure for the employees and eligible individuals under this subsection 188 health benefit plans that vary from the plan or plans procured under 189 subsection (a) of this section. Notwithstanding any provision of part V 190 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 7 of 10 of chapter 700c, the coverage provided under this subsection may be 191 offered on either a fully underwritten or risk-pooled basis at the 192 discretion of the Comptroller. For the purposes of this subsection, (A) 193 "municipality" means any town, city, borough, school district, taxing 194 district, fire district, district department of health, probate district, 195 housing authority, regional workforce development board established 196 under section 31-3k, regional emergency telecommunications center, 197 tourism district established under section 32-302, flood commission or 198 authority established by special act, regional council of governments, 199 transit district formed under chapter 103a, or the Children's Center 200 established by number 571 of the public acts of 1969; (B) "nonprofit 201 corporation" means (i) a nonprofit corporation organized under 26 USC 202 501 that has a contract with the state or receives a portion of its funding 203 from a municipality, the state or the federal government, or (ii) an 204 organization that is tax exempt pursuant to 26 USC 501(c)(5); (C) 205 "community action agency" means a community action agency, as 206 defined in section 17b-885; (D) "small employer" means a small 207 employer, as defined in section 38a-564; (E) "eligible individuals" or 208 "individuals eligible for a health coverage tax credit" means individuals 209 who are eligible for the credit for health insurance costs under Section 210 35 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or any subsequent 211 corresponding internal revenue code of the United States, as from time 212 to time amended, in accordance with the Pension Benefit Guaranty 213 Corporation; (F) "association for personal care assistants" means an 214 organization composed of personal care attendants who are employed 215 by recipients of service (i) under the home-care program for the elderly 216 under section 17b-342, (ii) under the personal care assistance program 217 under section 17b-605a, (iii) in an independent living center pursuant to 218 sections 17a-792 to 17a-794, inclusive, or (iv) under the program for 219 individuals with acquired brain injury as described in section 17b-260a; 220 and (G) "retired members" means individuals eligible for a retirement 221 benefit from the Connecticut municipal employees' retirement system. 222 (j) (1) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the 223 existing rights and obligations of state employee organizations and the 224 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 8 of 10 state employer under current law and contract shall not be impaired by 225 the provisions of this section. (2) Other conditions of entry for any group 226 into the plan or plans procured under subsection (a) of this section shall 227 be determined by the Comptroller upon the recommendation of a 228 coalition committee established pursuant to subsection (f) of section 5-229 278, except for such conditions referenced in subsection (g) of this 230 section. (3) Additional determinations by the Comptroller on (A) issues 231 generated by any group's actual or contemplated participation in the 232 plan or plans, (B) modifications to the terms and conditions of any 233 group's continued participation, (C) related matters shall be made upon 234 the recommendation of such committee. (4) Notwithstanding any 235 provision of law to the contrary, a municipal employer and an employee 236 organization may upon mutual agreement reopen a collective 237 bargaining agreement for the exclusive purpose of negotiating on the 238 participation by such municipal employer or employee organization in 239 the plan or plans offered under the provisions of this section. 240 (k) The Comptroller shall submit annually to the General Assembly a 241 review of the coverage of employees of municipalities, nonprofit 242 corporations, community action agencies, small employers under 243 subsection (i) of this section and eligible individuals under subsection 244 (i) of this section beginning February 1, 2004. 245 (l) (1) Effective July 1, 1996, any deputies or special deputies 246 appointed pursuant to section 6-37 of the general statutes, revision of 247 1958, revised to 1999, or section 6-43, shall be allowed to participate in 248 the plan or plans procured by the Comptroller pursuant to subsection 249 (a) of this section. Such participation shall be voluntary and the 250 participant shall pay the full cost of the coverage under such plan. 251 (2) (A) Effective [December 1, 2000] October 1, 2025, any state marshal 252 who works as a state marshal for fewer than twenty hours per week, on 253 average, shall be allowed to participate in the plan or plans procured by 254 the Comptroller pursuant to subsection (a) of this section. Such 255 participation shall be voluntary and the participant shall pay the full 256 cost of the coverage under such plan. 257 Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 9 of 10 (B) Effective October 1, 2025, any state marshal who (i) works as a 258 state marshal at least twenty hours per week, on average, on a quarterly 259 basis, (ii) is actively engaged in either (I) service of process under a 260 waiver of fees issued pursuant to section 52-259b, (II) service of process 261 of orders of protection issued pursuant to section 46b-15 or 46b-16a, or 262 (III) service of capias mittimus orders issued by a family support 263 magistrate pursuant to section 46b-231, (iii) certifies to those facts in 264 clauses (i) and (ii) of this subparagraph on forms provided by and filed 265 with the State Marshal Commission on or before the fifteenth day of 266 April, July, October and January for the preceding calendar quarter, and 267 (iv) does not have access to coverage under a health benefit plan that is 268 available (I) through the employer of such state marshal's spouse and 269 has an actuarial value that is equivalent to the actuarial value of the plan 270 or plans procured by the Comptroller pursuant to subsection (a) of this 271 section, or (II) through the municipal employees' retirement system 272 established by part II of chapter 113 shall be allowed to participate in 273 the plan or plans procured by the Comptroller pursuant to subsection 274 (a) of this section. Such participation shall be voluntary and the 275 participant shall pay the same amount for the coverage under such plan 276 under the same terms and conditions as active state employees in 277 accordance with the provisions of the State Employees Bargaining 278 Agent Coalition agreement. 279 (3) Effective December 1, 2000, any judicial marshal shall be allowed 280 to participate in the plan or plans procured by the Comptroller pursuant 281 to subsection (a) of this section. Such participation shall be voluntary 282 and the participant shall pay the full cost of the coverage under such 283 plan unless and until the judicial marshals participate in the plan or 284 plans procured by the Comptroller under this section through collective 285 bargaining negotiations pursuant to subsection (f) of section 5-278. 286 This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following sections: Section 1 October 1, 2025 5-259(a) to (l) Substitute Bill No. 1220 LCO 10 of 10 Statement of Legislative Commissioners: Subsec. (l)(2)(A) and (B) were rewritten for clarity and accuracy. LAB Joint Favorable Subst. -LCO