Connecticut Workplace Harassment Law: The 2026 Employer Guide
What Connecticut employers must know in 2026: the Time’s Up Act training mandate, CFEPA and the CHRO, out-of-state reach — and, the part other guides skip, exactly what to do with a problem employee.
Connecticut mandates sexual harassment training: under the Time’s Up Act, employers with three or more employees must provide two hours of training to all employees, and the obligation reaches out-of-state employers with staff working in Connecticut. Smaller employers must train supervisors. On top of the mandate, Connecticut law rewards employers who can prove prompt, documented correction of a problem.
Connecticut sits between two of the most employer-tough harassment regimes in the country — New York and Massachusetts’s neighbors — and its own Time’s Up Act made compliance a hard requirement rather than a best practice. This guide covers what Connecticut requires today, and — the part almost every other resource skips — what to actually do when the problem is a specific employee already on your payroll.
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CFEPA: Connecticut’s Core Harassment Law
Connecticut’s central anti-discrimination statute is the Connecticut Fair Employment Practices Act (CFEPA), enforced by the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities (CHRO). CFEPA prohibits discrimination and harassment on the basis of a broad range of protected characteristics and prohibits retaliation. Its core protections apply to employers with three or more employees, and a person alleging a violation generally has 300 days to file a complaint with the CHRO — a window Connecticut extended as part of the Time’s Up Act.
Sexual harassment under CFEPA takes the familiar forms — quid pro quo and hostile work environment — and Connecticut employers with three or more employees must also post and distribute information about the illegality of sexual harassment and the remedies available.
Does Connecticut Require Sexual Harassment Training?
Yes. The Time’s Up Act, effective in 2019, significantly expanded Connecticut’s training requirements. The essentials:
- Employers with three or more employees must provide two hours of sexual harassment prevention training to all employees, generally within six months of hire;
- Employers with fewer than three employees must provide the two-hour training to supervisory employees;
- Periodic supplemental training is required — at least once every ten years — and many employers refresh more often as a best practice;
- The obligation reaches employees who work in Connecticut, including those of out-of-state employers with Connecticut staff.
Connecticut makes compliance unusually accessible: the CHRO provides a free online training that satisfies the requirement. There is little excuse for a covered Connecticut employer to be out of compliance — and little sympathy for one that is.
Hostile Work Environment Under Connecticut Law
To establish a hostile work environment under CFEPA, conduct generally must be based on a protected characteristic and be severe or pervasive enough that a reasonable person would find the environment hostile or abusive. As elsewhere, a single sufficiently severe incident can suffice, and the contributing conduct is not limited to sexual advances: aggression, threats, intimidation, and bullying tied to a protected characteristic can be part of a hostile-environment claim. The volatile employee and the harassing employee are, again, frequently the same exposure in two forms.
Why Documented Correction Protects Connecticut Employers
Connecticut employers can still draw on the familiar affirmative-defense logic: an employer that maintains an effective anti-harassment policy, delivers the required training, provides a real complaint process, and takes prompt, documented corrective action is in a far stronger position than one that cannot show those things. As with the federal Faragher-Ellerth framework, your defense is built out of what you did and can prove. Training satisfies the mandate and supports the ‘prevent’ side; documented correction supports the ‘correct’ side.
Beyond Training: What Else the Time’s Up Act Changed
The Time’s Up Act was broader than its training headline. It also extended the time to file a discrimination complaint with the CHRO from 180 days to 300 days, expanded the remedies available to victims of discrimination, and strengthened notice obligations — employers with three or more employees must provide employees with information about the illegality of sexual harassment and the remedies available, within a set period after hire. It also reinforced the CHRO’s authority to ensure compliance with the training and posting requirements. The practical message to employers was unmistakable: Connecticut moved harassment prevention from “encouraged” to “required and enforced.”
That shift actually cuts in a compliant employer’s favor in one respect. A Connecticut business that does everything right — trains on schedule, posts the required notices, maintains a real policy and complaint process, and documents its corrective action — can point to a clear, state-defined standard of reasonable care that it demonstrably met. In Connecticut, full compliance is not just risk avoidance; it is affirmative evidence of good faith if a claim ever arises.
The Employer’s Two Duties: Prevent AND Correct
Connecticut’s training mandate handles prevention for the many — but company-wide training does nothing about the specific employee whose conduct is already a problem. Training is prevention; it is not remediation for the one. For that person, you need a corrective tool that changes the behavior and documents that you acted. That is the half of the equation the training vendors leave out, and it is where we come in.
The Correction Playbook: What To Do With a Problem Employee
When you have identified a specific employee whose conduct has become a liability — and you would rather correct and retain a valuable person than reflexively terminate — a disciplined, documented process protects both the workplace and the company. A practical sequence:
- Act promptly and document from the first moment. The clock and the paper trail both start when you know or should have known.
- Investigate proportionately and reach a documented conclusion.
- Choose a proportionate response. Termination is warranted for violence, threats, or illegality; for serious-but-correctable conduct by a valued employee, a documented corrective intervention is frequently the stronger, more defensible choice — see our framework on anger management vs. termination.
- Put the corrective step in writing — a performance improvement plan or last-chance agreement requiring a specific, documented intervention with a defined consent and reporting structure.
- Use a real, documented intervention — and keep the record. Enrollment verification, ongoing progress reporting, and a completion record are exactly the corrective-action evidence a court and the CHRO look to when assessing your good-faith corrective response.
- Follow through consistently. Apply the same standards to comparable conduct; inconsistency is its own liability.
Our Workplace Conduct Intervention Program was built to be step five — a confidential, one-on-one program combining anger management and harassment prevention for a specific employee, with same-day enrollment verification, weekly progress reporting, and an attorney-signed completion record. It is not company-wide statutory training, and it is not a substitute for it; it is the remediation piece that training cannot provide.
Training Requirements at a Glance: Connecticut vs. Neighboring States
If you employ people across state lines, your obligations change at the border. Here is how Connecticut compares, as of 2026 (confirm current specifics with counsel):
| Jurisdiction | Training mandated? | Who must be trained | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York State | Yes | All employers, all employees | Annual | Interactive; must meet or exceed the state model; written policy required |
| New York City | Yes | Employers with 15+ employees | Annual | On top of NY State; includes bystander intervention; interns covered |
| Connecticut | Yes | Employers with 3+ (supervisors if fewer) | 2 hours; periodic refresh | “Time’s Up Act”; reaches employees working in CT |
| New Jersey | Not yet (private sector) | State employees; broad mandate pending | Pending | LAD is highly protective; mandate + negligence standard proposed |
| Pennsylvania | No (private sector) | Some public-sector contexts | — | PHRA covers 4+ employees; Philadelphia & Pittsburgh have local ordinances |
| California | Yes | Employers with 5+ employees | Every 2 years | 2 hrs supervisors / 1 hr staff; within 6 months |
Penalties & Enforcement
The CHRO enforces both the training mandate and the underlying prohibitions. Employers who fail to provide the required training or the required notices can face orders and penalties, and a substantiated harassment claim can lead to compensatory damages, and in appropriate cases other relief, through the CHRO or the courts. Beyond the direct penalties, a failure to train badly undercuts any argument that the employer exercised reasonable care.
Remote & Out-of-State Employees
Connecticut’s training obligation follows the work location: if you have employees working in Connecticut — including remote employees based there — the Time’s Up Act generally reaches them, even if your company is headquartered elsewhere. Conversely, your Connecticut company may owe obligations to workers based in New York or other states under those states’ laws. Map obligations employee-by-employee with counsel.
Common Scenarios: How This Plays Out in Practice
Abstract rules get real when you hold them against the situations HR actually faces. Consider three that recur in almost every workplace:
The Volatile Top Producer
Your best salesperson berates a junior colleague in front of the team after a lost deal. The revenue is real — and so is the risk that your strongest junior people quietly start job-hunting, and that the outburst, if tied to a protected characteristic or repeated into a pattern, feeds a hostile-environment claim. Termination costs you the production; ignoring it costs you the team and the exposure. A documented corrective intervention lets you keep the producer while addressing the behavior and building a record that you acted.
The Substantiated Complaint
An investigation confirms that a long-tenured manager crossed a line. You are not going to fire a decade-long employee over a first substantiated incident, but doing nothing is indefensible — and, in Connecticut, could be costly. A corrective intervention, required in writing and fully documented, is the proportionate middle path that demonstrates prompt correction without discarding a valuable person.
The Pattern You Can No Longer Ignore
Complaints about the same employee have accumulated. Each seemed minor in isolation; together they are a serious problem — and where the harassment standard has been lowered, “minor” is often exactly what is now actionable. Documented correction, escalating to separation if it fails, is how you respond defensibly rather than reactively.
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The Real Cost of Getting It Wrong
The business case for correction is not sentimental. Replacing an employee commonly runs from half to twice their annual salary once recruiting, onboarding, lost productivity, and ramp time are counted — and far more for a specialized or revenue-generating role. Defending even a single harassment claim can run into the tens of thousands before any settlement or award, and in states with uncapped compensatory damages, punitive damages, and fee-shifting, the tail risk is large. Against those numbers, a documented corrective intervention for a valued, correctable employee is inexpensive insurance: it addresses the behavior, retains the value, and builds the record that limits exposure. Reflexive termination, by contrast, spends the value and can invite its own wrongful-termination or inconsistency claims.
Third-Party Harassment, Retaliation & Other Traps
Two traps deserve special mention because they routinely convert a manageable situation into a serious one. First, retaliation is frequently a larger risk than the underlying harassment: penalizing someone for complaining, reporting, or participating in an investigation is independently unlawful, and corrective action must never look like punishment of the person who raised the concern. Second, third-party and customer harassment counts: an employer can be liable where it knew or should have known that a customer, vendor, patient, or other non-employee was harassing a worker and failed to take reasonable action. The duty to prevent and correct is not limited to conduct between employees — it extends to the environment you control.
What to Look for in a Corrective Intervention Provider
If you decide a corrective intervention is the right response, the provider matters — the documentation is only as valuable as its credibility. Look for a genuine, one-on-one program rather than a self-paced video; same-day enrollment verification and ongoing progress reporting, not just a certificate at the very end; a consent-and-release process that governs exactly what is shared with you; a clear scope boundary (a behavioral, educational assessment, not a clinical diagnosis or a fitness-for-duty evaluation); and an attorney-informed understanding of what a personnel file and reviewing counsel actually need. A program built for HR and counsel produces documentation that holds up. A generic class does not.
A Practical Compliance Checklist
- Maintain a clear, written anti-harassment policy, distributed and acknowledged;
- Provide interactive harassment-prevention training on the required schedule (or now, if not yet required), and keep records;
- Maintain an accessible complaint channel with more than one reporting path;
- Investigate promptly and proportionately, and document every step;
- Take prompt, proportionate corrective action — and document it;
- For a correctable problem employee, use a real, documented intervention rather than reflexive termination;
- Apply standards consistently, and never retaliate against a complainant or participant;
- Review your approach with employment counsel as the law changes.
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