A 28-year veteran of the Connecticut state police, Brian F. Meraviglia has been named to replace retiring Col. Danny Stebbins as commander of the division. Dora Shriro, commissioner of the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, announced the appointment Friday. She also named Maj. Warren “Butch” Hyatt Jr. to succeed Meraviglia as lieutenant colonel of the state police division.
Meraviglia tapped to succeed Stebbins at CT state police commander
CT lawmakers have little appetite for U.S. involvement in Iraq
WASHINGTON – Most lawmakers are urging caution on how the United States should react to an insurgency by Muslim radicals in Iraq, and members of Connecticut’s congressional delegation are no exception.
Neglected bridge makes deferred maintenance a losing bet
By making replacement of an 118-year-old rail bridge a second-term funding priority, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy took a gamble won by other governors, but not him. The odds of winning federal funding to fix the malfunctioning bridge are slim, which makes deferred maintenance — a quiet crisis plaguing the length of the Boston-Washington rail corridor — into an urgent election-year issue in Connecticut.
AFT looks past tenure flap, endorses Malloy
AFT-Connecticut, one of the state’s two major public employee unions that represents teachers, has formally endorsed the re-election of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a first-term Democrat whose relationship with teachers has been rocky.
McKinney vs. Barnes: Apples & oranges, busway & bridges
Sen. John P. McKinney, a Republican candidate for governor, linked the state’s failure to maintain a Norwalk rail bridge Thursday to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s decision to greenlight construction of the Hartford to New Britain busway.
The governor’s secretary of the policy and management, Ben Barnes, said the Senate minority leader was comparing apples to oranges.
CT victim advocate to return to Illinois
The state’s victim advocate, Garvin G. Ambrose, will resign next month, just five months after taking the job. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s office announced the move Thursday, noting that Ambrose “intends on relocating to his hometown of Chicago to accept a new professional opportunity.”
Malloy vetoes inadvertent ban on chocolate milk in schools
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy vetoed three more bills Thursday, including a measure that likely would have barred the sale of chocolate milk in Connecticut schools.
Norwalk bridge to remain closed? Depends who’s talking
U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., surprised the Malloy administration by announcing Thursday that a mechanical swing bridge in Norwalk would remain in the closed position during repairs, providing reliable passage for Metro-North commuter trains while interrupting marine traffic on the Norwalk River.
DeLauro, Esty seek to stop U.S. trade with Brunei
Washington – Saying Brunei’s newly adopted penal code violates the rights of women and minorities, including gay, lesbian and transgendered people, Reps. Rosa DeLauro, D-3rd District and Elizabeth Esty, D-5th District, joined a group of lawmakers Thursday who are insisting the United States drop all trade with that country.
Reporting live from Church Street … Tom Foley?
Yep, that was Tom Foley, Gov. Dannel Malloy’s biggest Republican headache, on the streets of downtown New Haven Wednesday with a microphone in hand and video camera in tow.
Pelto commits to third-party run, promises ‘profound impact’
Jonathan Pelto, the one-time Democratic legislator and strategist who has recast himself as a critic of Connecticut’s first Democratic governor in a generation, says he is all-in as a third-party candidate for governor.
Defense slowdown hurts all of Connecticut
WASHINGTON– There’s not one corner of Connecticut that doesn’t benefit from Pentagon spending, but the go-go years for the state’s defense contractors may be over. That’s bad news for what was one of the state’s hottest, growing industries, especially for Connecticut’s smaller defense contractors.
Op-Ed: The need for a trauma-informed ministry
Society can benefit from a trauma-informed ministry that brings to bear upon those suffering from trauma the wisdom, insights and resources of their religious faith and uses these cultural attributes for the sufferer’s benefit.
Op-Ed: The need for a trauma-informed ministry
Society can benefit from a trauma-informed ministry that brings to bear upon those suffering from trauma the wisdom, insights and resources of their religious faith and uses these cultural attributes for the sufferer’s benefit.
A GOP talking point dims: CT economy didn’t shrink in ’12
Republicans were gleeful a year ago when a federal agency reported that Connecticut was the only state whose economy shrank in 2012, a dismal mid-term report card for Gov. Dannel P. Malloy. It turns out the state’s economy actually grew by one percent.



