CT Lawmakers Advance 4 Bills Regulating AI Hiring, Noncompetes, Scheduling

Published
Score
9

Why it matters

Connecticut lawmakers are advancing four employment bills in the 2026 legislative session that would reshape employer compliance obligations. SB00435 would require bias audits for automated decision systems, HB5492 would restrict noncompete agreements, and companion measures would mandate predictive scheduling with advance notice and premium pay, plus limits on required work hours. The Connecticut General Assembly's Labor and Public Employees Committee is sponsoring the package. The state Labor Commissioner would oversee bias audit reports and corrective actions under the proposed framework.

The bills remain in committee with the legislative session adjourning May 6. Specific language on compliance timelines, audit standards, and enforcement mechanisms has not yet been finalized. The Connecticut Business & Industry Association has signaled opposition, citing compliance costs and litigation exposure for small employers, but the trajectory of each bill through committee remains unclear.

Connecticut employers should monitor these proposals closely. The state has already implemented significant labor law changes in 2026—including a minimum wage increase to $16.94 per hour and expanded paid sick leave covering employers with 11 or more employees. If passed, these four bills would layer additional operational requirements on top of recent mandates. Employment counsel should track committee votes and markup sessions through early May and prepare compliance assessments now, particularly around the bias audit framework in SB00435, which would represent a novel regulatory obligation in Connecticut.

mail

Get notified about new Employment Law developments

Primary sources. No fluff. Straight to your inbox.

See more entries tagged Employment Law.

Also on LawSnap