The U.S. war on Iran will continue unabated, with more troops on the way and more casualties expected, Defense Sec. Pete Hegseth said Monday.
Death toll for US service members at 4 as Hegseth refuses to specify timeline
What to know about Lamont’s “CT option” plan for health care
Gov. Ned Lamont wants a bill passed to study the feasibility of a “Connecticut option” — a new health plan for universal, affordable care.
CT towns grapple with whether to dump snow in rivers and lakes
Nearly a dozen Connecticut towns are notifying state environmental officials that they may need to dump tons of snow into nearby rivers and lakes.
Restore Shore Line East for economy, equity, and climate
Investing in Shore Line East is not a luxury, it’s a practical strategy to reduce emissions in a corridor where widening the highway is neither feasible nor sustainable.
Fully fund CT’s schools.
CT is among the most economically and racially segregated states in the country, and that segregation is written directly into how we fund public education.
Whitewashing race out of ‘equity’ — here’s how
Connecticut’s education inequities are measurable, repeatable, and racial. Yet state policy too often substitutes platitudes for accountability.
More nips are being bought in CT — some advocates are worried
About 94 million ‘nip’ bottles of alcohol are sold in CT each year, but some say the environmental and social costs aren’t worth the revenue.
The real winter warriors: CDOT vs. Mother Nature
Thanks to the teams of plow operators and salters who worked night and day reopening CT’s interstates as quickly as possible.
One POTUS speech: two different heard
Here are two widely different perspectives on President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address.
US, Israel launch major attack on Iran. CT delegation condemns the action
The strikes came after rising tensions as American warships moved into the region, and Trump said he wanted a deal on Iran’s nuclear program.
Caregiver tax credit, athlete exemption from PE: CT politics news
Plus: Proposals for a bigger Correction Ombuds office, a life jacket requirement for children and more Office of the Child Advocate staff.
CT lawmakers pitch ‘superfund’ bill targeting fossil fuel industry
CT’s climate ‘superfund’ bill is modeled after a successful federal program to force polluters to pay for the cleanup of toxic waste sites.
CT Correction Commissioner Angel Quiros to retire in May
CT Correction Commissioner Angel Quiros, who was appointed as COVID was upending the correction system in 2020, will retire on May 1.
CT homelessness is up, and federal support remains uncertain
The federal government tried to take money away from programs supporting housing in CT. The state would have lost up to $98 million per year.

