CT Bills That Didn’t Pass in 2024: EV Study, Eviction Reform, More
by Gabby DeBenedictis, CT Mirror, May 13, 2024
Connecticut’s 2024 legislative session ended on Wednesday night [May 8] with lawmakers passing a bevy of bills concerning housing, elder care, K-12 education and more.
But a large number of bills never made it out of their committees, and many of those that did were never voted on by the full legislature. …
Here…[are] some of the bills that didn’t come up for a full vote this year, but that legislators will likely revisit next year.
Electric vehicles
After efforts to phase out the sale of new gas-powered cars in Connecticut by 2035 failed, the legislature considered a bill that would have created a 40-person group to assess a transition to electric vehicles in the state.
That bill — part of an effort to reduce motor vehicle emissions, Connecticut’s largest source of pollution — never came up for a vote in the House.
‘Just cause’ evictions
A bill that would have required landlords to provide a reason, or “just cause,” when they evict tenants at the end of their leases passed out of the Housing Committee but was never voted on in the full House or Senate.
Connecticut already protects against evictions without cause for senior citizens and people with disabilities. The bill would have expanded those protections to most tenants who live in apartments with five or more units.
Falsified traffic tickets
Proposed by Gov. Ned Lamont, House Bill 5055 would have made it a Class D felony for any person acting in a law enforcement capacity to knowingly make false written statements or enter false information into a law enforcement record and explicitly make those acts a basis for decertification of an officer’s policing license. …
Though it passed the House unanimously, it was not voted on in the Senate.
Tipped minimum wage
A proposal to eliminate Connecticut’s tipped minimum wage — currently $6.38 for wait staff and $8.23 for bartenders — passed the Labor and Public Employees Committee but was not voted on by the full House or Senate.
The bill would have brought wages for tipped workers in line with the state’s minimum wage, which is currently $15.69 per hour.
[See entire article here: ctmirror.org/2024/05/13/ct-2024-legislative-session-failed-bills]