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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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Dept. of Public Health v. Estrada, 211 Conn. App. 223,
         226, 271 A.3d 1042 (2022). It also concluded, however,
         that the trial court correctly decided that Estrada did
         not make a protected whistleblower disclosure within
         the meaning of § 4-61dd. See id.
           Estrada began working for the department in 1995
         as an epidemiologist, and, by 2010, she had been pro-
         moted to epidemiologist 4. Since at least 2014, Estrada
         has had performance issues at the department. Estra-
         da’s supervisor, Ellen Blaschinski, downgraded her in
         some categories on her 2014 performance evaluation
         because she did not have a strong knowledge of the
         department’s regulations and had not moved the depart-
         ment’s Office of Local Health Administration (OLHA)
         in the regulatory direction that was expected. Shortly
         thereafter, Estrada mishandled a case involving the
         removal of a local health director, which required
         Blaschinski to relieve Estrada and take over the investi-
         gation herself. Estrada was then placed on a perfor-
         mance improvement plan.
            Estrada’s responsibilities as an epidemiologist 4
         included, among other things, reviewing an applicant’s
         qualifications to serve as director or acting director of
         health for a municipality. General Statutes (Rev. to
         2015) § 19a-2002 prescribes the minimum qualifications
         that a municipality’s director of health must possess.
         At the time of the underlying events, that statute pro-
         vided that the director of health for a municipality must
         be either a licensed physician and hold a degree in
         public health from an accredited institution or hold a
         graduate degree in public health from an accredited
         institution. General Statutes (Rev. to 2015) § 19a-200
         (a). Section 19a-200 (a) also provides in relevant part:
         ‘‘In case of the absence or inability to act of a city, town
           2
             Hereinafter, all references to § 19a-200 are to the 2015 revision of the
         statute.
Page 10                        CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL                             June 11, 2024