These Connecticut laws take effect in 2025

Several new laws in Connecticut are taking effect in 2025, from expanded paid sick days to minimum wage increases.

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Here's a look at some of them that could impact your life.

Minimum wage increase

Connecticut’s minimum wage will increase on Jan. 1, 2025 from $15.69 per hour to $16.35 per hour.

CT Gov. Ned Lamont signed Public Act 19-4 back in 2019, which implemented five incremental increases in the minimum wage between 2019 and 2023, followed by future adjustments tied to the percentage change in the federal employment cost index.

Back in May, Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont signed legislation "strengthening the state’s laws regarding paid sick days protections by expanding them to ensure that more workers are covered and have access to them."

The state's existing laws require employers with over 50 employees that are mostly in specific retail and service occupations to provide their employees with up to 40 hours of paid sick leave annually. Beginning Jan. 1, 2025, the laws will apply to workers of nearly every occupation.

"Our existing paid sick days laws include important protections for certain workers, however there are broad categories left unprotected, and this update will expand this coverage to help ensure that people do not have to choose between going to work sick and sacrificing a day’s wage," Lamont said.

Mail-in voting restrictions

On Election Day, Connecticut voters approved an amendment to the state’s constitution that could make it easier to cast ballots by mail or through drop boxes in future elections.

The amendment lifts long-standing restrictions that only allowed people in the state to vote by absentee ballot if they were going to be out of town, are sick or disabled, or couldn’t get to a polling location because of religious restrictions.

Coerced debt act

Beginning Jan. 1 2025, the act prohibits anyone from knowingly making another individual liable for "coerced debt" (i.e., generally, certain credit card debt incurred by a domestic violence victim who was coerced into incurring it).

"Specifically, if a victim gives a claimant certain information and documentation that a debt is coerced debt, the claimant must pause all collection activities on the debt for at least 60 days, review the victim’s submission and other available information it has, and then continue or end its collection based on the review," the bill said.

Student loan repayment assistance

PA 24-52—sSB 13 "expands the student loan payment tax credit for qualified employers that make eligible student loan payments on a qualified employee’s behalf." 

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