Hartford Courant

Lamont vetoes first bill of 2022

Said measure limiting immunity in police chases was too broad

- By Mark Pazniokas CT Mirror Mark Pazniokas is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (ctmirror.org). Copyright 2022 © The Connecticu­t Mirror.

Gov. Ned Lamont vetoed a bill that was passed in response to a Connecticu­t Supreme Court case affirming that a Shelton police officer’s decision to pursue a fleeing vehicle was entitled to government immunity.

In his first veto of 2022, Lamont sided with municipali­ties who feared that Senate Bill 204, which limited immunity in negligence cases involving a police cruiser or other municipal vehicles, was overly broad, exposing taxpayers to increased liability and creating a chilling effect on emergency responders.

“I respect that it is a policy decision well within the purview and authority of the legislatur­e to reject the Supreme Court’s recent statutory interpreta­tion,” Lamont wrote. “However, as written, SB 204 seems broader: It eliminates completely the doctrine of government­al immunity for a municipali­ty in operation of a town-owned vehicle.”

The bill was drafted in response to the court’s 2020 decision in Borelli v. Renaldi, a lawsuit filed by the family of a 15-yearold passenger in a Mustang that crashed and turned over after a brief pursuit by a police officer in 2012.

Municipal employees do not have the discretion to disregard motor vehicles laws, and municipali­ties

can be liable for their negligence. Emergency responders are permitted to disregard certain traffic laws, but still have a duty to drive “with due regard for the safety of all persons and property.”

An issue in Borrelli was whether state law required police officers to weigh the dangerousn­ess of a pursuit before deciding to give chase, as opposed to deciding whether to end a pursuit based on conditions. The law, the court concluded, intended greater latitude for discretion­ary decisions made by emergency responders.

Supporters of the bill, including the Connecticu­t Trial Lawyers Associatio­n, said it would conform the standards for municipal liability in motor vehicle crashes with state liability. The lawyers said municipal government­s currently enjoy greater immunity than the state.

“There is no valid reason or justificat­ion for failing to mirror this exception for municipall­y owned and operated motor vehicles,”

the trial lawyers said in public hearing testimony.

Lamont acknowledg­ed the difference of opinion over what the bill would do, but said his fear was the measure had gone too far.

“This is a significan­t and complex area of the law,” Lamont said. “Before making changes in this area of the law, I suggest that legislator­s meet with the municipal officials and other interested parties to discuss more fully the purpose and the impact of this legislatio­n.”

The bill passed on a vote of 140-1 in the House and 32-0 in the Senate, but the legislatur­e typically does not attempt overrides when governors raise issues of potential flaws and essentiall­y invite the legislatur­e to try again.

As of Thursday night, the governor had signed 125 bills and vetoed one.

 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP ?? In his first veto of 2022, Gov. Ned Lamont sided with municipali­ties who feared that Senate Bill 204 would expose taxpayers to increased liability and create a chilling effect on emergency responders.
JESSICA HILL/AP In his first veto of 2022, Gov. Ned Lamont sided with municipali­ties who feared that Senate Bill 204 would expose taxpayers to increased liability and create a chilling effect on emergency responders.

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