Accountability must be at the core of climate action, shifting the burden off everyday people and onto the biggest polluters.
This Earth Day make polluters pay
The key to lower energy bills? More solar, now
Solar power is uniquely positioned to meet this moment, if state lawmakers let it.
We are training CT’s kids for jobs
Even in the programs genuinely building workforce skills, what kind of workforce readiness are we actually producing?
Amended AI bill passed by CT Senate after extensive questioning
With Tuesday’s vote, the artificial intelligence bill now moves to the House, which last year opted to not take up that session’s AI measure.
Ban on releasing balloons passes CT Senate
Senate Bill 452 would ban the intentional release of balloons and require CT retailers to attach weights to balloons sold.
Lamont’s vaccine bill HB 5044 passes after heated debate in CT House
Gov. Ned Lamont’s bill expanding Connecticut’s authority over immunizations was poised to pass the House Tuesday, following a lengthy debate.
Federal judge strikes down Trump actions that slowed clean energy projects
A federal judge struck down several actions, including a requirement that solar, wind projects be personally approved by Interior Sec. Burgum
PODCAST: CT doctors now sue patients more than hospitals do over medical bills
WSHU and KFF Health News’ Noam N. Levey discussed the investigation he worked on with CT Mirror about medical debt in Connecticut.
Lamont meets with Brookfield first selectman about Iroquois project
Steve Dunn, a Democrat, is part of a group of local officials campaigning against a project to expand the Iroquois pipeline’s daily capacity.
What CT voting registrars are saying about SAVE Act
Efforts by the federal government to gain more oversight over state elections have led to widespread confusion among voters, especially women
Trump’s environmental policies mean dirtier air for CT
CT’s air quality had improved over 50 years of increasingly rigorous federal regulations and enforcement. That progress is now under assault.
Twice punished: CT’s survivors justice act
HB5306 is not only about the individuals it would directly affect. but what message CT’s system sends to the people living inside abusive relationships.
The subject of the debate, but silenced in the room
The people with the most direct knowledge of incarceration —those who have lived through it — are frequently absent from the deeper policy discussions that shape it.
The healthcare subsidy paradox
This catastrophic-only coverage makes routine “maintenance care” unaffordable for the average American.

