2020 Legislative Proposals
Transcript of Governor Lamont's 2020 State of the State Address
Governor Lamont's FY 2021 Recommended Budget Adjustments
Budget Documents | Fact Sheet
Legislation implementing the FY 2021 budget recommendations includes:
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Governor Lamont's 2020 Legislative Proposals
Expanding Economic Opportunity
An Act Establishing the JobsCT Tax Rebate Program (SB 9)
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→ This proposal creates a simple, transparent, performance-based incentive program for businesses to expand in or relocate to Connecticut. Under the JobsCT program, businesses that create and maintain 25 or more full-time, good-paying jobs will earn 25 percent of the income taxes generated by those jobs for up to seven years. Employers located in one of Connecticut’s opportunity zones or distressed municipalities are eligible to earn 50 percent of the taxes over the same period. |
An Act Concerning the Small Business Express Program (HB 5007) |
→ This proposal expands access to capital for the small businesses at the heart of our economy. Under this new version of the Small Business Express program, the state will partner with lenders by partially guaranteeing certain loans. Now that banks have recovered from the Great Recession, our state should follow Massachusetts and Rhode Island in partnering with rather than competing against our community financial institutions to improve customer service and reduce taxpayer risk. The state will also fully fund the current Minority Business Initiative and redouble support for women, minority, veteran, and disabled business owners through targeted loan programs at community financial institutions. |
An Act Concerning Health Care Cost Growth in Connecticut (HB 5018) |
→ This proposal helps address the underlying cost of healthcare so that doctors’ visits, hospital stays, prescription drugs, and insurance premiums stop consuming more of our paychecks each year. It addresses costs throughout the healthcare sector by tasking the Office of Health Strategy with monitoring and publishing progress toward annual cost and quality benchmarks, including benchmarks that will increase the provision of primary care. Similar measures have saved patients and employers in Massachusetts at least $5.5 billion over the last six years. The Act also reduces drug prices by allowing the Department of Consumer Protection to propose, in accordance with new federal guidelines, a program for safely reimporting drugs from Canada and protects small businesses and their employees by codifying current safeguards on stop-loss policies. |
An Act Expanding Economic Opportunities in Licensed Occupations (SB 13) |
→ This proposal modernizes the state’s occupational licensing system. Although that system generally protects public health and safety, consumer confidence, and employee welfare, certain outmoded requirements increase consumer costs, frustrate professionals attempting to renew their licenses, prevent lower-income and other workers from entering promising fields, and discourage skilled workers, especially military spouses, from moving to Connecticut. A report from the Obama White House concluded licensed workers under 35 were more than 20% less likely to move to a new state than their peers in other professions. The Act makes life easier for our licensed professionals, aspiring Connecticut licensees, and aspiring Connecticut residents, especially military spouses, by transitioning additional licenses to an online renewal system, allowing all classroom training to be completed through online courses, expediting the process for recognizing licenses conferred by other states, expanding access to on-the-job training, and clarifying and limiting which criminal convictions can bar applicants from a license. |
An Act Concerning Fair Futures Following Erasure of Criminal Records (HB 5019) |
→ This proposal recognizes that no one should receive a life sentence for a misdemeanor offense. To expand access to employment and housing opportunities that are sometimes closed to those with criminal records, the Act erases drug possession convictions and most Class C and Class D misdemeanor convictions, except those involving family violence, sexual violence, DUIs, or bodily harm, after a person has gone seven years without another conviction. The Act also waives fees for indigent pardon applicants, trains members of the Board of Pardons and Paroles on the collateral consequences of a criminal record, codifies the Department of Corrections’ new director of reentry services, and establishes a Reentry Employment Advisory Committee to advise the Department on how best to align prison education and job training programs with the needs of employers in the community. |
The acts implementing Governor Lamont’s budget also: |
→ Reestablish the Office of Workforce Competitiveness (OWC) as an independent office led by its own executive director. The renewed OWC will ensure the state provides every resident the education and training he or she needs to secure a good job in a growing economy by establishing a unified state strategy, launching key initiatives, overseeing workforce data systems, and convening and aligning members of the workforce ecosystem. It will be housed for administrative purposes only within the Office of Policy and Management. |
Protecting Our Climate and Environment
An Act Concerning Certain Recommendations Regarding Climate Change (SB 10) |
→ This proposal recognizes the threat of climate change and takes proactive measures to mitigate it. The Act codifies the target, currently established by executive order, to achieve a statewide zero-carbon electric sector by 2040. It also provides authorizes the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection authority to procure up to 300,000 megawatt hours of energy storage, demand response, and energy efficiency and to review and, if appropriate, adopt California’s tailpipe emission standards applicable to new medium and heavy-duty vehicles. |
An Act Concerning the Establishment of High Performance Green Building Standards for Voluntary Adoption by Municipalities (HB 5008) |
→ This proposal gives towns that want to join the fight against climate change an opportunity, already enjoyed by towns in neighboring states, to adopt a standardized high-performance building standard that lowers the environmental impact of buildings. The Department of Energy and Environmental Protection will develop that high-performance standard to be cost-effective and address the nearly 40 percent of greenhouse gas emissions that come from our buildings. |
An Act Concerning the Reliability, Sustainability, and Economic Vitality of the State’s Waste Management System (SB 11) |
→ This proposal brings the state’s recycling and material management into the 21st century. Key components of Connecticut’s waste system—recycling and waste-to-energy facilities—are experiencing increasing and unpredictable costs that place economic pressure on municipalities and businesses and undermine economic incentives to choose environmentally-preferable waste disposal options. The administration is committed to working with the towns and other stakeholders to develop a waste management system that works for them and respects our environment. To that end, the Act sets an achievable residential waste reduction target, authorizes the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection to request proposals for new, improved, or expanded waste facilities or waste reduction strategies, requires the Material Innovation and Recycling Authority to submit a five-year strategic plan, and collects better data on the state’s waste management system. |
The acts implementing Governor Lamont’s budget also: |
→ Act on the recommendations of the PFAS Task Force to utilize expert health scientists and other stakeholders to establish a maximum PFAS contaminant level in our drinking water, provide resources to sample and test surface water and sediment and remove the dangerous firefighting foam as well as test private wells and drinking water supply sources. |
Enhancing Public Health and Safety
An Act Concerning Adult-Use Cannabis (SB 16) |
→ This proposal offers a comprehensive framework for the cultivation, manufacture, sale, possession, and use of cannabis that prioritizes public health, public safety, and social justice. Prohibiting the possession and sale of cannabis has produced a thriving illicit market and staggering racial disparities in the dispensation of justice. Massachusetts, Maine, and Vermont already have some form of a market for adult-use recreational cannabis, and nearby states including New York, Rhode Island, and New Jersey are on track to legalize adult-use recreational cannabis in the near future. This Act, which was developed in careful partnership with those states, protects public health by providing access to safe products, preventing advertising and retail locations that would appeal to children, and proactively updating the state’s indoor clean air act to protect children and other individuals from secondhand smoke. It protects public safety by increasing the number of trained drug recognition experts in state and local police forces, updating traffic safety laws, reforming the administrative process that follows an impaired driving arrest, and freeing the state’s police, prosecutors, and other public safety officials to focus on more significant crimes. It promotes social justice by automatically erasing most cannabis possession convictions and empaneling an Equity Commission to develop proposals for how the individuals and communities that have borne the brunt of the War on Drugs can benefit from the creation of the legal cannabis market. Finally, it sets up a fair tax structure that will provide meaningful new state and municipal revenues. |
The acts implementing Governor Lamont’s budget also: |
→ Consistent with action in neighboring states, ban the sale of flavored vaping products, cap the amount of nicotine in such products, and increase the penalties for selling any nicotine products to people under 21. |
21st Century Governance
An Act Concerning Optimization of State Agency Operations and Services (HB 5012) |
→ This proposal streamlines state government to better serve customers and save taxpayer money. It allows state agencies to more easily contract with innovative local businesses, to replace snail mail and paper checks with e-mail and online payments, and to competitively procure services through the same reverse auction procedures currently used for goods and supplies. It also eliminates unnecessary bureaucracy in the procurement process without compromising the state’s high standards for fair and ethical contracting by folding 90,000 annual free-standing forms into contractual language. Finally, it updates the state’s set-aside laws to rely on the robust U.S. Small Business Administration certification process. |
An Act Permitting the Use of Citizens' Election Program Grant Funds to Offset a Participating Candidate's Childcare Costs (SB 14) |
→ This proposal recognizes that no one in Connecticut will have to choose between campaigning for public office and caring for their family. It allows candidates who qualify for the Citizens’ Election Program to have childcare costs, when incurred in order to campaign, reimbursed by that program. |
An Act Concerning Revisions to the Connecticut Port Authority Statute (HB 5021) |
→ This proposal ensures the CPA is transparent, accountable, and held to the highest fiscal and administrative standards so that it can better support the development of the state’s maritime economy, including the development of a transformative offshore wind sector. The act empowers the governor to appoint the board chair, mandates an annual independent audit, adds the mayor of New London to the board, and requires the board and its chosen executive director conform to additional protocols. |
The acts implementing Governor Lamont’s budget also: |
→ Fund a cybersecurity officer to ensure the integrity of our election system. |