Certain CT Businesses Permitted to Open May 20 with Restrictions
Open Business

PLEASE NOTE: Since this May 11 post, Governor Lamont has delayed the opening of hair salons and barbershops until early June. According to a press release issued on May 18, 2020, Connecticut will align the reopening date for these businesses with the state of Rhode Island.

On May 9, 2020, Governor Lamont announced rules for the reopening of certain non-essential businesses in the state on May 20. This first phase of Connecticut’s reopening plans amid the COVID-19 pandemic includes outdoor restaurants, offices, hair salons and barbershops, retail stores,and outdoor museums and zoos. The rules for each of these types of businesses are available here.

These businesses will be subject to the state’s strictest controls on operations including, among other measures:

  • Appointment of a program administrator accountable for implementing the rules;
  • Limiting occupancy to 50% of capacity;
  • Provision of personal protection to employees (though employees may choose to utilize their own cloth face coverings);
  • Employee training on the rules, with weekly refreshers;
  • Installation of social distancing markers; and
  • Strict cleaning and disinfection protocols.

The rules also emphasize that those who can work from home should continue to do so.

Each set of rules warns that businesses should take the rules as the minimum baseline of precautions needed to protect public health and that individual businesses should take additional measures as recommended by industry guidelines or by common sense applied to their particular situation. The Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) has stated that it will launch an ad hoc task force that will provide support to small businesses on how to implement the rules.

These businesses are not required to reopen on May 20; the decision rests with the business owner. Those businesses that do choose to reopen must self-certify before opening. The certification system is expected sometime this week and a link to the system will be added to this page on the DECD website.

No details have been announced with respect to reopen dates for other types of businesses or further relaxation of restrictions, but the administration says that it will gradually loosen safeguards as it sees progress on public health metrics. This will allow for the next set of businesses to open, and potentially for businesses already open to operate with additional leeway. This is expected to occur over the coming months through September 2020.  It will be important to check the DECD’s coronavirus information webpage regularly for additional guidance. For more information, please contact a Pullman & Comley employment law attorney.

Posted in COVID-19

This blog/web site presents general information only. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice, and you should not consider or rely on it as such. You should consult an attorney for individual advice regarding your own situation. This website is not an offer to represent you. You should not act, or refrain from acting, based upon any information at this website. Neither our presentation of such information nor your receipt of it creates nor will create an attorney-client relationship with any reader of this blog. Any links from another site to the blog are beyond the control of Pullman & Comley, LLC and do not convey their approval, support or any relationship to any site or organization. Any description of a result obtained for a client in the past is not intended to be, and is not, a guarantee or promise the firm can or will achieve a similar outcome.

PDF
Subscribe to Updates

About Our Labor, Employment and Employee Benefits Law Blog

Alerts, commentary, and insights from the attorneys of Pullman & Comley’s Labor, Employment Law and Employee Benefits practice on such workplace topics as labor and employment law, counseling and training, litigation, union issues, as well as employee benefits and ERISA matters.

Other Blogs by Pullman & Comley

Connecticut Health Law Blog

Education Law Notes

For What It May Be Worth

Recent Posts

Archives

Jump to Page