Sec. 31-51ii. Meal periods. Exemptions. Regulations.
Sec. 31-51ii. Meal periods. Exemptions. Regulations. (a) No person shall be required to work for seven and one-half or more consecutive hours without a period of at
least thirty consecutive minutes for a meal. Such period shall be given at some time
after the first two hours of work and before the last two hours.
(b) The provisions of this section shall not be construed to alter or impair the provisions of any collective bargaining agreement in effect on July 1, 1990.
(c) The Labor Commissioner shall exempt any employer from the requirements of
this section if he finds that (1) requiring compliance would be adverse to public safety,
(2) the duties of a position may only be performed by one employee, (3) the employer
employs less than five employees on a shift at a single place of business provided the
exemption shall only apply to the employees on such shift or (4) the continuous nature of
an employer's operations, such as chemical production or research experiments, requires
that employees be available to respond to urgent or unusual conditions at all times and
such employees are compensated for break and meal periods. The commissioner shall
adopt regulations, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54, to establish the procedures and requirements for the granting of such exemptions.
(d) The provisions of this section shall not apply to any professional employee
certified by the State Board of Education and employed by a local or regional board of
education of any town or regional school district to work directly with children.
(e) The provisions of this section shall not prevent any employer and employee
from entering into a written agreement providing for a different schedule of meal periods
than the schedule required by subsection (a) of this section.
(f) The provisions of this section shall not apply to any employer who provides
thirty or more total minutes of paid rest or meal periods to employees within each seven
and one-half hour work period.
(g) Any employer who violates the provisions of this section may be subject to civil
penalties in accordance with section 31-69a.
(P.A. 89-71, S. 1, 2; P.A. 90-37, S. 1, 2; P.A. 96-122.)
History: P.A. 89-71 effective July 1, 1990; P.A. 90-37 added Subsec. (e) concerning written agreements for different
schedules and Subsec. (f) concerning employers who provide 30 or more total minutes of paid rest or meal periods within
seven-and-one-half-hour work periods; P.A. 96-122 added Subsec. (g) making employers who violate the section subject
to civil penalties.