Connecticut General Statutes
Chapter 168 - School Attendance and Employment of Children
Section 10-200. - Habitual truants.

Each city and town may adopt ordinances concerning habitual truants from school and children between the ages of five and eighteen years wandering about its streets or public places, having no lawful occupation and not attending school, and may make such ordinances respecting such children as shall conduce to their welfare and to public order, imposing penalties, not exceeding twenty dollars, for any one breach thereof. The police in any town, city or borough, bailiffs and constables in their respective precincts shall arrest all such children found anywhere beyond the proper control of their parents or guardians, during the usual school hours of the school terms, and may stop any child under eighteen years of age during such hours and ascertain whether such child is a truant from school, and, if such child is, shall send such child to school. For purposes of this section, “habitual truant” means a child age five to eighteen, inclusive, who is enrolled in a public or private school and has twenty unexcused absences within a school year.

(1949 Rev., S. 1461; 1957, P.A. 13, S. 61; P.A. 78-218, S. 127; P.A. 95-304, S. 3, 9; P.A. 98-243, S. 18, 25; P.A. 00-99, S. 38, 154; 00-157, S. 6, 8; P.A. 01-195, S. 77, 181.)
History: P.A. 78-218 replaced masculine personal pronouns with “such child”; P.A. 95-304 added new definition of “habitual truant”, formerly defined in Sec. 10-198a, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 98-243 lowered the age from 7 to 5, effective July 1, 1998; P.A. 00-99 deleted reference to sheriffs and deputy sheriffs, effective December 1, 2000; P.A. 00-157 changed the age from 16 to 18 in three places, effective July 1, 2001; P.A. 01-195 made technical changes, effective July 11, 2001.
Cited. 36 CS 357.

Structure Connecticut General Statutes

Connecticut General Statutes

Title 10 - Education and Culture

Chapter 168 - School Attendance and Employment of Children

Section 10-184. - Duties of parents. School attendance age requirements.

Section 10-184a. - Special education programs or services for children educated in a home or private school.

Section 10-184b. - Waiver provisions not applicable to equivalent instruction authority of parents.

Section 10-185. - Penalty.

Section 10-186. - Duties of local and regional boards of education re school attendance. Hearings. Appeals to state board. Establishment of hearing board. Readmission. Transfers.

Section 10-187. - Appeal from finding of hearing board.

Section 10-188. - Private schools and instruction.

Section 10-189 to 10-192. - Leaving certificate. Educationally retarded children, exception. Physical examination. Employer's duty upon receiving leaving certificate.

Section 10-193. - Certificate of age for minors in certain occupations.

Section 10-194. - Penalty.

Section 10-195. - Evidence of age.

Section 10-196. - Agents.

Section 10-197. - Penalty for employment of child under fourteen.

Section 10-198. - False statement as to age.

Section 10-198a. - Policies and procedures concerning truants.

Section 10-198b. - State Board of Education to define “excused absence”, “unexcused absence” and “disciplinary absence”.

Section 10-198c. - Attendance review teams.

Section 10-198d. - Chronic absenteeism prevention and intervention plan.

Section 10-198e. - Truancy intervention models.

Section 10-198f. - Mental health wellness days.

Section 10-199. - Attendance officers. Duties.

Section 10-200. - Habitual truants.

Section 10-201. - Fees for arresting truants.

Section 10-202. - Warrant and hearing.

Section 10-202a to 10-202d. - Dropout prevention pilot program; establishment. Attendance plan. Testing; inventory of skills and interests. Programs and services; assistance; report.

Section 10-202e. - Policy on dropout prevention.

Section 10-202f. - Dropout prevention grant program.