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DRAFT FOR ATTORNEY REVIEW — NOT FINAL

Section 4-61dd

Citation
Section 4-61dd
Parent Document
Dept. of Public Health v. Estrada, 349 Conn. 223 (2024)
Jurisdiction
Connecticut (state)
Effective Date
2024-06-11

Other Sections in This Document (239)

Full Text

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reporting for purposes of the statutory presumption.
       First, as the department points out, the goal of § 4-
       61dd is to create a better functioning government by
       encouraging employees to disclose misconduct so that
       appropriate corrective action can be taken to remedy
       the problem. The statute’s protections are the means
       to the end of ‘‘root[ing] out waste and corruption in
       government . . . .’’ Hartford County Sheriffs Dept.
       Communities Charities Assn. v. Blumenthal, supra,
       47 Conn. Supp. 459; see 45 H.R. Proc., supra, p. 2857,
       remarks of Representative O’Rourke (statute’s protec-
       tions exist ‘‘in order to protect the public tax dollar and
       the proper running of our [state] government’’).
          Construing the two year statutory presumption to
       apply in this case would undermine the policy goal of
       the legislation. Such an interpretation would prevent
       an employer from taking corrective and deterrent action
       against the employee because the employer would always
       be subjected to an automatic presumption of retaliation.
       The effect would be that employers either would not
       take corrective action or would wait two years to take
       corrective action, thwarting the statutory policy of
       deterrence and accountability. It would be of little use
       if an employee reported his or her misconduct, but the
       employer could not take corrective action with respect
       to that misconduct. Indeed, it does not make practical
       sense to shift the burden to the employer to justify its
       action after an employee has admitted to his or her
       own misconduct. For example, if an employee admitted
       to stealing thousands of dollars from an employer, it
       would not be reasonable to infer that the employee
       was disciplined for the disclosure rather than for the
       theft itself.
          State agencies often, and should, take corrective
       action within two years of learning of malfeasance. That
       is precisely what § 4-61dd intends. Temporal proximity
       will always be present in these types of cases but will
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