Update (June 17, 2026): This alert was originally published on June 5, 2026, and has been updated to reflect additional developments and analysis from the 2026 legislative session.
The 2026 regular session of the Connecticut General Assembly adjourned on May 6, 2026, closing out a "brief" election year session. True to recent form, the legislature continued its trend of enacting sweeping omnibus bills containing bundles of loosely related provisions — many of which addressed matters that had failed to pass in prior sessions. What follows is an overview of the most significant legislation to emerge from the session affecting Connecticut schools, spanning school safety, employment law, budgetary adjustments, and more. Please note: Further analysis of these and other bills will be forthcoming.
Public Act 26-1: The First "Big" Bill
Public Act 26-1, titled "An Act Concerning the Reallocation of Certain State Funds and Various Provisions Relating to Education, Public Safety, General Government, Elections, Intermediate Care Facilities and Warehouse Distribution Centers," was signed by the Governor on March 3, 2026, as an "emergency certification" bill. It contains diverse provisions, often addressing unrelated matters that died on the vine in previous sessions.
Connecticut State Seal of Civics Education and Engagement
The Act requires the State Department of Education (SDE) to establish criteria by which a board of education, or the governing board of any other school that awards diplomas, may — commencing with the class of 2027 — affix the Connecticut State Seal of Civics Education and Engagement on a diploma awarded to a student who has achieved a high level of proficiency in civics education and engagement.
PSIS and Bilingual Education
The Act expands the statewide public school information system (PSIS) to include data on the academic progress of students in bilingual education programs and the measures and data for the evaluation of these programs. It also amends the "bill of rights" for parents and guardians of multilingual learner students, ensuring their right to access publicly available data related to academic progress and quality of bilingual education programs via PSIS.
Islamic and Arab Studies
Effective July 1, 2026, the Act requires the State Board of Education to make curriculum materials and other resources available to assist boards of education (if they so choose) in developing instructional programs on Islamic and Arab studies.
Antisemitism Working Group
The Act creates a 15-member working group to address antisemitism in public schools, which will develop guidance and resources and submit its recommendations for legislation to the General Assembly's Education Committee by January 1, 2027.
Kindergarten Waivers
The Act provides closure on the evolving issue of the kindergarten waiver/early admission process for children who do not turn five by September 1st of the school year. For the 2026–2027 school year it will be optional for school districts to have an early admission policy. However, commencing with the 2027–2028 school year, early kindergarten admissions and waivers will no longer be permitted.
Budget Preparation and Line-Item Information
Commencing for the 2027–2028 fiscal year, the Act requires that during preparation of the education budget for the ensuing year, the superintendent must provide local board of education members with the original and actual amount of each line item for the two preceding fiscal years, and the original and current amounts of each line item for the current fiscal year. The same line-item information must also be included in the itemized estimate submitted to the board of finance or the municipality's fiscal authority. For regional school districts, this line item information must be provided at the district meeting/public hearing for presentation of the regional board of education’s proposed budget as well as the May annual district meeting. Please Note: The Act explicitly allows regional boards of education to deposit funds previously appropriated to a "reserve fund for capital and nonrecurring expenditures" into a "reserve fund for educational expenditures."
School Resource Officers and Memoranda of Understanding
The Act clarifies that by January 1, 2027, any memorandum of understanding (MOU) between a local or regional school district and local law enforcement regarding a school resource officer (SRO) must be posted on the district's website and maintained in a central location and at each school where an SRO is stationed. Such MOUs must include provisions addressing daily interactions between students and school personnel with SROs and a graduated response model for student discipline. The Act also requires that SRO MOUs must be updated every three years.
Student Discipline
Effective July 1, 2026, the Act restricts the use of out-of-school suspension for students in grades preschool through second to situations where the student's conduct on school grounds caused "serious physical harm" — a heightened standard from the prior threshold of mere "physical harm." The Act also requires school districts to offer an alternative education opportunity for students between the ages of 16 and 18 who are expelled for the first or second time, provided the student complies with conditions established by the board of education; previously this requirement only extended to students expelled for the first time. In addition, school districts will now be required to notify parents of a student placed in physical restraint or seclusion on the same day it occurs.
Crisis Response Drills
The Act requires that by April 1, 2027, the Connecticut Center for School Safety and Crisis Prevention at Western Connecticut State University, in collaboration with the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP), develop a clear definition for crisis response drills, standardized terminology for their administration and review, guidance on standardized responses to crises and debriefing protocols, an evaluation template, and a study of the impact of crisis response drills on the school community. The Center must submit its guidance, study report, and any recommendations to the General Assembly's Education Committee by January 1, 2027.
Effective for the 2027–2028 school year, each board of education that holds crisis response drills must ensure that such drills utilize the DESPP-developed definitions and standardized terminology, that school security and safety committees collaborate with school climate committees to plan drills prioritizing physical and psychological safety, and that drills are trauma-informed with mental health professionals' participation integrated throughout. Prior to conducting a drill, school personnel must provide age-appropriate education for students and training for school personnel, including a review of the purpose and procedures before the first drill of the school year and notification to students, school personnel, and parents one week in advance. At the commencement of each drill, students and school personnel must be informed that they are participating in a drill to avoid confusion with an actual emergency. Schools must ensure that during such drills accommodations for students with cognitive, physical or sensory disabilities are provided, to the extent practicable, to ensure the safety and participation of such students. Importantly, drills conducted with students may not include active assailant simulations or simulated violence with highly sensorial elements such as fake assailants, firearms, gunfire sounds, blood, or injuries; however, drills conducted outside the regular school day exclusively for school personnel, first responders, and other school volunteers may include such simulations.
Health Services
The Act explicitly permits — but does not require — school districts to offer vision screenings in preschool and second grade. It permits school nurses to reject health assessment forms that are not the form required by the State Board of Education and requires asthma action plans to be included in these forms if a student has asthma.
Additional Provisions of Public Act 26-1
The Act includes minor budgetary adjustments for the 2025–2026 fiscal year and provides exceptions and waivers from certain requirements for specified school construction projects.
It also effectively extends the pause on enforcement of the state's law on racial imbalance at public schools within a particular school district until July 1, 2030.
Beginning with the 2026–2027 school year, the Act adds Madison to the "Open Choice" program as a receiving and sending school district with New Haven.
The Act also explicitly requires at least one school board member to be present during teacher and administrator negotiations, while prohibiting school board members who are also members of the same teachers' union or administrators' union from attending.
The Act provides that school districts shall make any portion of their school security and safety plan that is not prohibited from disclosure under FOIA available to members of the school community upon request.
Finally, the Act also repeals a requirement that boards of education annually report information to the Commission for Educational Technology on their use of internet websites, online services, or mobile applications without a contract.
Public Act 26-12: Another “Big” Bill
Public Act 26-12, "An Act Concerning Workforce Development and Working Conditions in the State," was signed by the Governor on May 12, 2026. It contains diverse provisions with a primarily employment law focus. Many such provisions take effect on October 1, 2026.
Enhanced Workers' Compensation for School and Health Care Employees
The Act provides that certain school and health care employees shall receive enhanced workers' compensation benefits if unable to work due to being assaulted at work. Specifically, teachers and other employees (or members) of a board of education, the State Board of Education, the Board of Regents of Higher Education, or the Board of Trustees for the University of Connecticut (along with covered health care employees) who suffer an injury resulting in total or partial incapacity as a result of any physical or negligent assault while acting in the discharge of their duties shall be paid a weekly compensation equal to 100% of their average weekly earnings, with no cap — as opposed to the usual 75% with a cap. Such compensation also includes payment for expenses reasonably incurred for medical or other services, or lost wages due to a court appearance in connection with such assault.
Any covered person absent from employment as a result of such an assault or for a court appearance shall continue to receive their full salary (except that the amount of any workers' compensation award may be deducted from salary payments during such absence); the time of such absence shall not be charged against sick leave, vacation time, or personal leave days. While providing this enhanced workers’ compensation benefit, the Act repeals the current law under Conn. Gen. Stat. §10-236a requiring educational entities to "protect and save harmless" their teachers, board members, or other employees assaulted while performing their duties.
Wage Range and Postings
The Act amends the recent salary disclosure law by requiring all employers – including schools -- to disclose, in both public and internal postings for each job, promotion, transfer, or other employment opportunity, the wage or wage range and (now) a general description of benefits — including health benefits, retirement benefits, paid days off, tax-reportable benefits, and other compensation to be offered. If an employer does not use a posting to advertise an opportunity, the employer must provide such wage and benefit information upon the applicant's request or, if not so requested, prior to any offer or discussion of compensation. Employers are then required to provide this information to employees upon hiring, upon a change in the employee's position, or upon the employee's first request for a wage range.
The Act also revises the definition of "wage range" to constitute the range of wages for a position "set in good faith" by reference to an applicable pay scale, a previously determined wage range, actual wages for employees currently holding the position, actual wage ranges for employees in comparable positions, or the employer's budgeted amount for the position. The Act's provisions apply to remote positions held by out-of-state employees where they report to an in-state supervisor, office, or work site. PLEASE NOTE: The Act eliminates a court's ability to award punitive damages against employers in cases brought for wage disclosure violations.
Pay Differential Codes
Effective October 1, 2026, the Act requires all employers with more than 100 employees to create a guide for employees on pay codes for overtime and commonly used pay differentials, such as shift differentials, on-call pay, hazard pay, call-back pay, holiday or weekend pay, or geographical pay differentials. The guide must include at least ten pay codes and be posted on the employer's website in English, Spanish, and the other most common languages spoken by the employees, along with contact information of the designated office or individual who will handle employee disputes regarding calculations of hours and pay differentials. An employer must update the guide each time a new pay code for overtime or any pay differential is added and must provide the website address upon hire and on each record of hours furnished to employees; alternatively, an employer may simply provide a written copy of the guide upon hire. The Act does not require an employer to create a website if it does not have one, nor does it require establishing new pay codes simply to satisfy this law.
Employment Promissory Notes
Effective October 1, 2026, the Act extends the general prohibition on requiring employees to sign employment promissory notes — such as agreements requiring employees to repay the employer if they do not stay for a certain duration — to all employers, rather than only employers with 26 or more employees. Existing exceptions remain for agreements to repay salary or wage advances, to pay for property sold or leased, for educational personnel to comply with sabbatical leave terms, or as otherwise entered into as part of a collectively bargained program.
Teacher Tenure and Dismissal
Effective July 1, 2026, the Act revises the Teacher Tenure Act's termination provisions in several significant ways. First, it revises the permitted ground of termination from "other due and sufficient cause" to "other due and sufficient reason." Second, it provides that the standard of review for all reasons for termination shall be the same standard applied in other disciplinary actions under the terms of the teacher's collective bargaining agreement, which is generally "just cause." Third, it mandates that any teacher termination proceeding for a tenured teacher be conducted before an impartial hearing officer, eliminating the ability of the parties to have the hearing before the employing board of education. Fourth, it makes the hearing officer's decision binding on the parties, rather than consisting of findings with a recommendation. Fifth, it allows both the teacher and the employing board of education to appeal the hearing officer's decision to the Superior Court, but such an appeal must be by way of — and subject to the same standards as — an application to vacate an arbitration award, instead of an administrative appeal. However the Act appears to continue to provide a non-tenured teacher terminated for "moral misconduct" or "disability as shown by competent medical evidence" with a right of appeal to the Superior Court via an administrative appeal.
Teachers’ Unions and "Service Fees"
The Act conforms the state's collective bargaining law for public school teachers (the Teacher Negotiation Act) to the 2018 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Janus v. AFSCME by removing provisions requiring teachers covered by a collective bargaining agreement who were not dues-paying union members to pay "service fees" instead of union dues. Instead, the Act specifies that the parties may negotiate CBA provisions allowing teachers to choose to have their dues, initiation fees, and service fees paid through payroll deductions.
Educator Externships
The Act requires the Commissioner of Education, in consultation with the Office of Workforce Strategy, to create by January 1, 2028 a two-year pilot program for educator externships for certified teachers, enabling educators to participate in experiential learning with private sector employers to align classroom instruction with current industry standards and workforce needs. Priority placement is to be given to educators employed in "alliance school districts" or who teach science, technology, engineering and mathematics, manufacturing, or health care.
Paraeducators and Unemployment Compensation
Effective July 1, 2026, the Act requires school districts, RESCs, charter schools, and endowed or incorporated academies to provide the Department of Labor with a listing — ten days prior to the last day of the school year — that identifies which of their paraeducators have and do not have a "reasonable assurance" of returning to work for the next academic term, along with information on how such assurance was communicated. The Department of Labor may consider this information when determining eligibility for unemployment compensation, though it shall not be conclusive evidence of reasonable assurance. The Act also increases paraeducator representation on the School Paraeducator Advisory Council from one to five members.
Co-Instruction Teaching Models
The Act creates a working group to study the effectiveness and benefits of co-instruction teaching models used by public schools, including models that allow individuals without professional certification to teach collaboratively with a certified teacher. The group must report its results by January 1, 2027, to the General Assembly's Education Committee.
ADA Posting Requirements
Effective October 1, 2026, the Act requires the Commissioner of Labor to post information on the Department of Labor (DOL) website about the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), including information on the definition of a disability under the ADA and how it relates to reasonable accommodations in the workplace. Such information must be in a form available for downloading and displaying in both English and Spanish. Employers must provide written notice of an employee's rights to reasonable accommodations to new employees, existing employees within 120 days of the effective date, and employees who notify the employer of their disability within 10 days of such notice. Employers may comply by displaying the DOL-created poster in a conspicuous and accessible place.
Breastfeeding in the Workplace
The Act aligns the state's breastfeeding statute with the federal “PUMP Act.” Effective October 1, 2026, an employer must provide reasonable break time for an employee to express breast milk or breastfeed on site each time the employee has the need to do so, in addition to the employee's scheduled breaks, thus removing the prior tie-in to meal or break periods.
Public Act 26-68: The Budget Implementer
Public Act 26-68, originally dubbed Senate Bill 1 ("An Act Concerning Affordability"), evolved into a 745-page "budget implementer." The Governor signed this Act on May 26, 2026. As is customary, some of its provisions are not strictly budget-related.
Pre- and Post-Shift Hours
Effective October 1, 2026 the Act modifies the definition of "hours worked" for purposes of the state's wage and hour laws to include the time an employee spends in security screenings required by an employer.
Workplace Heat Safety
The Act also establishes a task force to study heat safety, including examining best practices to prevent employees' exposure to heat illness risk and other states' laws and regulations on heat safety standards, with a report due to the General Assembly's Labor and Public Employees Committee by January 1, 2027.
Supplemental and Temporary Educational Aid Grants
The General Assembly appropriated $162 million for "supplemental" education grants to towns for 2026–2027, above and beyond ECS grants, along with an additional $5 million for Hartford for 2025–2026. The Act also provides $10.9 million in "temporary aid" for "district relief and compensatory use learning aid grants." All supplemental and temporary aid shall be expended for educational purposes only upon the authorization of the local or regional board of education and shall not be considered part of the budgeted appropriation for education for purposes of calculating the minimum budget requirement (MBR) for the 2027–2028 fiscal year.
Originally, the bill provided that the supplemental and temporary grants could not be used to supplant local funding for educational purposes; however, at the last minute, the General Assembly passed "Senate Amendment A" to a totally unrelated act concerning various criminal law proposals, removing this "non-supplanting" language. So, what is to be done with this new money?
Under Section 178 of the implementer, if a municipality or regional board of education adopted a budget or levied taxes for 2026–2027 prior to the adoption of the state budget and receives more state aid than projected, the municipality (by vote of its legislative body) or regional board of education may amend its budget and, not later than July 1, 2026, adjust the tax levy and remaining installments — but only in an amount not exceeding the increase in state aid. A new guardrail from "Senate Amendment A" provides that the amended budget shall not reduce the amount provided by the municipality to the local or regional board of education below the greater of the amount of local funding under the adopted budget, or the MBR for 2026–2027 plus the amount of supplemental and temporary educational grants.
Revised and Additional Grants
The Act provides $8.7 million to supplement the prior year's appropriation for charter schools, along with charter school planning grants of $75,000 each for OLAM Public Charter School in Stamford, PROUD Academy in Ansonia, and Taino CoLAB Academy in Waterbury. It also provides $800,000 to supplement the appropriation for Vocational Agriculture, $2.75 million for Magnet Schools, and reduces interdistrict magnet school grants from $12 million to $6.25 million for regional educational service centers and other non-board of education operators for 2026–2027. The Act requires SDE, commencing in 2026–2027, to administer a teacher apprenticeship program within available appropriations. The Act extends through 2026–2027 a provision that proportionately reduces grants payable to school boards for providing health and nursing services to private school students if the total of grants exceeds the amount appropriated.
School Breakfast
The budget includes an additional $12 million ostensibly for universal free school breakfast for 2026–2027, though the bill provides no additional detail on the program beyond adding the money to the school breakfast program line item.
Parent Training and Information Centers
The Act repeals the 2025 law creating the Office of the Educational Ombudsperson and instead authorizes the SDE to enter into cooperation agreements with and provide grants to parent organizations to establish parent training and information centers. A "parent organization" is defined as a nonprofit whose mission is to serve families of children with disabilities and whose governing board includes a majority of parents of children with disabilities, professionals in fields related to special education and early intervention, and individuals with disabilities. Each center is required to receive and attempt to resolve special education complaints, provide information to the public regarding students receiving special education, provide training to assist parents of children with disabilities, and to assist parents in communicating with school personnel.
Fiscal Intervention and MARB
The Act creates a process by which a local or regional board of education may request that the SDE create a fiscal intervention and oversight plan. The plan must account for legal mandates, orders, or settlements affecting the board's costs and is reviewed by the Municipal Accountability Review Board (MARB), then must be approved by OPM and the SBE before the board can implement it. Plan requirements include ensuring accuracy in accounting, improving financial reporting systems, establishing transparency in fiscal operations, requiring notification to the SDE of contracts exceeding $100,000, requiring "LEAN" practices and principles, and including a comprehensive school facilities and administrative optimization initiative. The Act also adds the Commissioner of Education to MARB.
School Construction
The Act authorizes school construction state grant commitments totaling $150.6 million and caps the total reimbursement percentage a board of education may receive for school construction grants at 95% of eligible costs. It creates a bonus of an additional 20% reimbursement for any school district that has increased enrollment by 20% or more over the 10-year period preceding its application, subject to the 95% cap. The Act renames the School Building Projects Advisory Council as the School Safety and Security Infrastructure Advisory Council and revises its composition and responsibilities. It also exempts school construction projects in 26 towns and 3 regional school districts from various statutory and regulatory requirements.
Miscellaneous Provisions
The Act explicitly authorizes superintendents to disseminate written notice through schools informing parents of an upcoming referendum, limited to the time and location of the referendum, a statement of the ballot question, and any applicable explanatory text — without advocating approval or disapproval. It also permits the Waterbury Public Schools to reduce the number of actual school sessions held to 176 days for the 2025–2026 school year.
“Smaller” Bills of Note
Omnibus/Miscellaneous Education Law Revisions
Public Act 26-139: An Act Concerning Various Revisions to the Education Statutes
This Act allows retired parole officers to provide armed security services in public schools, while prohibiting officers whose employment was terminated due to disciplinary action — or who left during an investigation — from doing so. It also requires the Advisory Council for School Administrator Professional Standards, in consultation with CAS, to create a new school administrator mentorship pilot program for 2027–2028.
Commencing July 1, 2027, the Act prohibits school districts from requiring high school students who participate in interscholastic athletics to meet academic eligibility standards higher than those set by CIAC. The Act revises the laws on disclosure of certain misconduct-related information during the hiring process of prospective school employees, additionally requiring disclosure of whether an allegation involving injury or risk of injury to a child is pending or under investigation, and removing a provision exempting disclosure of investigations that resulted in a finding that all allegations were unsubstantiated.
Additional provisions include a grant program for a therapeutic arts program in public schools commencing with the 2027–2028 school year, a delay in the effective date of the repeal of various educator preparation regulations from July 1, 2026, to July 1, 2027, and requirements for the SDE to establish incentive programs for districts that limit local board assessments and integrate state-provided assessment tools. The Act also requires the SDE by January 1, 2027, to redesign the state's high school mathematics pathways, develop a list of professional development providers for high-quality mathematics instruction, explore the feasibility of launching MathConn, and develop mathematics specialist guidelines.
Public Act 26-106: An Act Implementing the Recommendations of the Department of Education
This Act requires the SDE to ensure the initial certificate of approval process for new charter schools coincides with the biennial budget preparation process (as opposed to the current theoretical annual process). It revises the required contents of a regional school study committee's report to include consideration of transportation costs and to require auditing of the budget plan. The Act also eliminates various reporting obligations for the SDE, including reports on the uniform regional school calendar, the surrogate parent program, certain commissioner's network of schools program reports, and the status of educational technology in public schools.
Public Act 26-13: An Act Concerning Various Revisions to the Public Health Statutes
Commencing July 1, 2027, the Act amends the health assessment requirement so that before playing interscholastic sports, public high school students shall have an annual athletics health assessment that includes a screen for serious cardiac conditions. Similar to other health assessments, this new assessment will be provided free of charge to students whose parents meet eligibility requirements for free and reduced-price meals.
Commencing April 1, 2027, the Act requires health care providers that prepare safety plans for minor patients who received at least 12 consecutive days of inpatient behavioral health care treatment to review the plan with the minor (if medically appropriate) and ask whether the minor or parent consents to sharing the safety plan with the minor's school. If consent is given, the provider must obtain written consent and send the plan using a secure messaging system or in HIPAA-compliant fashion. School districts and schools must sign up for an organizational account on a secure messaging system by January 1, 2027, and provide the SDE with their secure messaging addresses by April 1, 2027.
Public Act 26-52: An Act Concerning the Legislative Commissioners' Recommendations for Technical Revisions to the Education and Early Childhood Statutes. As the title strongly suggests, this Act makes technical changes to the education and early childhood statutes.
Public Act 26-149: An Act Concerning Student Literacy
The Act requires the SDE to create guidance for school districts regarding the implementation of multitiered systems of support or response to intervention frameworks for students identified as struggling in reading, based on data from approved reading assessments. It makes permanent two health care subsidy programs for paraeducators employed by local or regional boards of education — covering HSA deductible funding and premium cost sharing for Partnership 2.0 plans — and expands these programs to include paraeducators at charter schools. The Act modifies the aspiring educators diversity scholarship program by making "aspiring educators," rather than "diverse educators," eligible, and allows the Commissioner of Education to transfer up to $300,000 of unspent scholarship funds into the afore-mentioned paraeducator health care subsidy programs. Finally, it requires SDE to establish an American Sign Language (ASL) education working group, with guidance to be issued by July 1, 2030, to ensure consistent implementation of the ASL portion of the world languages curriculum.
Home Schooling
Public Act 26-37: An Act Concerning the Provision of Equivalent Instruction
Commencing with the 2028–2029 school year, this Act requires parents or guardians of school-age children to annually complete an intent to educate form indicating whether their child will enroll in a public school, attend a nonpublic school, or be instructed through "parent-managed learning" (i.e., homeschooling). The forms must be submitted to the school district where the parent resides by October 1 and may be submitted electronically.
Starting with the 2027–2028 school year, parents who withdraw a child from public school — whether for a nonpublic school or parent-managed learning — must go in person to the school district's office and sign a withdrawal form. Effective July 1, 2027, parents are prohibited from withdrawing their child for parent-managed learning if any adult living with the child is on the DCF child abuse and neglect registry or currently under investigation for child abuse or neglect, and additionally the superintendent is required to conduct a records check with DCF before such child’s withdrawal.
Commencing July 1, 2027, school boards must report to SDE the number of children being instructed through parent-managed learning for whom an intent to educate form was completed. Commencing July 1, 2028, any school board that does not receive a completed form by November 1st must make at least three attempts to contact the parent or guardian and, if unable to do so, must notify the SDE.
Intellectual Disability Definition Changes
Public Act 26-151: An Act Concerning a Plan to Revise the Definition of Intellectual Disability
The Act requires the Commissioner of the Department of Developmental Services (DDS) to produce a plan with recommendations on developing a standard definition of intellectual disability that originates before an individual attains 18 years of age and is characterized by significant limitations in both intellectual functioning and adaptive behavior. The definition must be consistent with generally accepted professional standards, including those of the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, and must ensure that no single test score or measure is determinative. The plan must include a recommendation for a timeline for transitioning to the new definition, any required federal government approvals, and estimates of one-time and recurring costs to the DDS, other state agencies, and school districts. A report on the plan is due to the General Assembly by July 1, 2027.
The Brave New World: Artificial Intelligence
Public Act 26-15: An Act Concerning Online Safety
Public Act 26-15 is a comprehensive online safety and artificial intelligence law with several labor and employment and educational implications.
Automated Employment Decision Technology. The Act regulates “automated employment-related decision technology”—technology that processes personal data and uses computation to generate outputs serving as a “substantial factor” in employment decisions. Deployers of such technology must disclose to employees and applicants that they are interacting with such technology and must provide pre-decision written notice including the technology’s purpose, trade name, categories and sources of personal data analyzed, and deployer contact information. Developers must provide deployers with all information necessary to fulfill compliance obligations. Trade secret protections apply, but parties must disclose that information is being withheld. Violations are enforceable solely by the Attorney General as unfair or deceptive trade practices, with a 60-day cure period for violations before December 31, 2027. There is no private right of action.
Anti-Discrimination Law Amendments. The Act amends Connecticut’s anti-discrimination statutes to clarify that the use of automated employment-related decision technology is not a defense against a discrimination complaint. Courts and the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities may, however, consider evidence of anti-bias testing or proactive measures when evaluating claims.
Teacher Certification. The Act provides that effective July 1, 2026, the teacher certification preparation program requirement of instruction in computer science “may include instruction in topics such as the responsible use of emerging technologies.”
Computer Science Instruction. Effective July 1, 2026, the Act adds “computer science” to the listing of instruction required to be taught in the public schools; the Act further provides that such instruction shall include, but not be limited to, computer programming instruction, artificial intelligence and emerging technologies.
Electronic Monitoring in the Workplace
Public Act 26-73: An Act Concerning The Electronic Surveillance of Employees, which takes effect on October 1, 2026, requires employers engaging in electronic monitoring to include in their required written notices the specific workplace locations where monitoring may occur, to post notices at those specific locations, and to provide new employees with a plain-language statement of prohibited activities subject to monitoring without prior notice (as per the current exceptions in the electronic monitoring statutes for providing such notice). The Act further provides that an employer is not required to disclose the specific locations that it is electronically monitoring their employees if the employer has reasonable grounds to conduct such monitoring for security and employee safety.
Public Act 26-89: An Act Concerning Electronic Surveillance Devices and Systems and Self-service Kiosks in Employee Lounges, which takes effect on October 1, 2026, creates an exception to electronic monitoring/surveillance restrictions for self-service kiosks operated by third-party vendors in employee lounges, provided that such monitoring systems do not record sound and only capture the checkout and display areas. The Act defines a "self-service kiosk" as an interactive, stand-alone terminal that allows individuals to independently scan and purchase items for sale. Any third-party vendors 1) shall maintain sole custody of any video collected by such surveillance and 2) may not release or provide access to any portion of such video except where otherwise required by law (or permitted by the Act). In this regard, the Act provides that no employer shall request to view any such video or use any such video in a disciplinary action, except where there has been an alleged theft by an employee reported by a third-party vendor.
Homeless Student Protections Codified
Public Act 26-125: An Act Concerning the Education of Homeless Children and Youth, which takes effect on October 1, 2026, essentially codifies the protections of the McKinney Vento Homeless Assistance Act (as it existed as of December 23, 2022) into the state statutes requiring the provision of school accommodations to students.
Zero Emissions Bus Requirements Delayed
Public Act 26-63: An Act Implementing Recommendations from the Department of Transportation and Concerning Vegetation Management Guidelines, Transportation Network Companies and Rider Safety, Traffic Signal Modernization Grant Program, Encampments, Marine Pilot License Fees, Motor Vehicle Mechanical Equipment, Distracted Driving, a Task Force To Study Access to Parking for Home Health Agencies and a Working Group to Study Use of Alternative Fuels and Technologies in School Bus Fleets. Among other things, this Act extends the deadlines for school districts to have zero emissions school buses. Under current law, 100% of school buses that provide transportation for school districts in the state must be 1) either zero-emission or alternative-fuel powered (e.g., natural gas or propane) by January 1, 2035, and 2) zero-emission only by January 1, 2040. The Act eliminates this interim 2035 requirement and provides that the percentage of buses in each district that must be zero emission as of July 1, 2040 must “only” be 90%. The Act also eliminates a separate provision for “distressed municipalities” that required zero emission buses for such school districts containing at least one “environmental justice community” and instead 1) changes the definition of distressed municipalities, 2) requires that buses providing transportation in a district within a distressed municipality must be 50% zero emission by July 1, 2025, and 3) subjects such districts within a distressed municipality to the same 90% zero emission bus deadline as with other school districts (July 1, 2040). Each distressed municipality shall submit to the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) a plan as to how it intends to comply with these zero emission bus requirements by July 1, 2029; all other municipalities must submit such reports by July 1, 2035. The Act also makes revisions to the grant program that will assist in the purchase of such buses. The Act requires that prior to the purchase and use of a zero-emission school bus, each local and regional school district shall develop and implement safety plans that 1) consider the ages and developmental needs of the students transported on such buses, and 2) include procedures for the evacuation of such buses in the event of a fire. Finally, the Act requires DEEP to create a working group to evaluate and make recommendations regarding the increased use of alternative fuels and technologies, including, but not limited to, biodiesel, propane and electric school buses, for use in school bus fleets in the state, with the working group to provide a report with its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly by February 1, 2027.
Dual Enrollment
Public Act 26-18: An Act Concerning Dual Enrollment Programs, requires the Commissioner of Education (by January 1, 2027) to appoint a dual and concurrent enrollment course coordinator to track the establishment of such courses throughout the state and student outcomes from such courses, including, but not limited to, completion rates and average grades, by school district.
Opioid Antagonists in the Schools
Public Act 26-38: An Act Concerning the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services' Recommendations Regarding Access to Opioid Overdose Reversal Medication and Various Revisions to Mental Health and Addiction Statutes. Among other things, this Act revises laws addressing the administration of opioid antagonists in the schools. The Act distinguishes between “legend” antagonists (i.e., prescription) and regular or “non-legend” antagonists (e.g., naloxone hydrochloride or any other similar drug approved by the FDA). The Act allows both a school nurse and a qualified school employee (even when the nurse is not absent) to administer a “non-legend” opioid antagonist to a student experiencing an opioid related drug overdose, regardless of if there is any prior authorization by a parent or a prescription. Both a school nurse and a qualified school employee (even when the nurse is not absent) may administer a legend opioid antagonist 1) in accordance with the school’s administration of medication policies and 2) if they are trained in accordance with a state created program The Act removes the option for a student’s parent or guardian to request in writing that the student not be given an opioid antagonist. If that was not enough, the Act also provides that nothing in the law should prevent a school nurse, qualified school employee or any other person in a school setting from administering a non-legend opioid antagonist to any person at a school who experiences an opioid-related drug overdose. Any person who administers such a non-legend opioid antagonist shall not be liable to any such persons administered the antagonist (or their parents, guardians or family members) for damages for any personal injuries that result from acts or omissions arising from such administration that may constitute ordinary negligence. This immunity shall not apply to acts or omissions constituting gross, willful or wanton negligence.
Eating Disorders
Public Act 26-62: An Act Implementing Recommendations of the Transforming Children's Behavioral Health Policy and Planning Committee. The Act requires the executive director of the Commission on Women, Children, Seniors, Equity and Opportunity (CWCSEO) to establish a working group concerning the treatment of eating disorders and a working group to develop a state-wide food education roadmap and a model school nutrition curriculum. The executive director will report the results of the working group studies to the General Assembly by January 1, 2028. On and after January 1, 2027, each school-based health center shall 1) use an evidence-based screening tool for early identification of disordered eating behaviors, as a supplement to existing methods used to diagnose disordered eating behaviors, and 2) provide such screening tool to each patient who is in grades six to twelve during such patient's annual health assessment, including, but not limited to, the required school health assessments.
Detentions By Law Enforcement In “Protected Areas”
Public Act 26-14: An Act Concerning Democracy and Government Accountability and The Use and Retention of Data Derived from Automated License Plate Reader Systems, among other things, prohibits “peace officers” from detaining, arresting or otherwise taking an individual in a “protected area”, state facility, or municipal facility (including such facility’s grounds and any garages or parking lots utilized in its operation) into custody on the basis of a civil offense unless 1) the peace officer is acting in their official capacity, and 2) the individual to be detained, arrested or otherwise taken into custody is the subject of a judicial warrant. Among the protected areas are schools, including, but not limited to, any preschool, primary or secondary school, vocational school or college or university.
Incorporating ADA Standards
Public Act 26-150: An Act Adopting the Integrated Setting Standard of the Americans with Disabilities Act for Public Entities. The Act requires any “public entity” (defined as any state agency or a local government or department, agency, special purpose district or other instrumentality of a local government located within the state) to administer services, programs and activities in the most integrated setting appropriate to the needs of persons with disabilities who meet any applicable eligibility requirements for such services, programs or activities. In essentially incorporating the ADA integration standards, the Act makes any violation of this new provision a discriminatory practice, allowing any person aggrieved by an alleged violation to file a complaint with the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities.
School Mapping Data Grants
Public Act 26-116: An Act Concerning School Mapping Data Services, which takes effect on July 1, 2026, permits the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection “within available appropriations” to administer a program providing grants to municipalities and municipal police departments for "school mapping" data services.
Grant Program for Public Transportation and Students
Public Act 26-21: An Act Supporting Commuters and Microtransit Services and Concerning Public Transportation. Among other things, the Act requires the SDE (effective July 1, 2027) to administer a program to provide grants to local and regional boards of education for the purchase of passes for the use of state-owned or state-controlled bus public transportation services and distribution of such passes, without cost, to students who are enrolled in grades nine to twelve. The SDE will develop timelines for the applications and may also develop guidelines and grant criteria. Any board of education receiving a grant award shall submit any reports and financial statements required by the SDE; if the SDE finds that any grant is being used for purposes not in conformity with the purposes of this Act, the SDE may require the repayment of the grant to the state. By July 1, 2027, and annually thereafter, the SDE shall submit a report to the General Assembly’s Education and Transportation Committees on the amount of grants awarded during the prior year and an assessment of the impact of the grant program on student outcomes.
Indigenous Peoples’ Day
Public Act 26-19: An Act Designating Various Days and Months. While much of this Act does not directly concern the schools (for example, the Act changes the date of celebration of Lobster Roll Day), the Act does rename “Indian Day” to “Indigenous Peoples’ Day”; this renamed day will still be celebrated the last Friday in September and shall still be suitably observed in the public schools as a day of commemoration of Native Americans and their contribution to American life and civilization. This Act took effect upon passage.
Municipal Employees Serving on Boards of Finance
Public Act 26-136 An Act Authorizing Certain Municipal Employees to Serve on Municipal Boards of Finance, which takes on October 1, 2026, will permit municipal employees to serve on a board of finance if the employee 1) is permitted to serve pursuant to the provisions of a municipal charter or ordinance, 2) serves because of membership on the legislative body of the municipality, or 3) (new) earned a stipend for such municipal employment totaling less than $10,000 in the previous 12-month period.
And, Finally, DRIP Grant Notifications
Public Act 26-137: An Act Concerning The Recommendations of the Intergovernmental Policy and Planning Division Within the Office of Policy and Management, among other things, delays from March 1st until April 1st the deadline for the Office of Policy and Management to notify each public school operator of (and post online) the amount of its District Repair and Improvement Project (DRIP) grant.
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About Our School Law Blog
Alerts, commentary, and insights from the attorneys of Pullman & Comley’s School Law practice on federal and Connecticut law as it pertains to educational institutions, whether those institutions be public school districts, private K-12 schools, or post-secondary colleges and universities.
