Shortly after the bill they endorsed got pulled “out of the legislative graveyard,” the grass-roots network of advocates pushing for labels on genetically engineered food gathered to cheer about it Monday. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy showed up and congratulated them. But, characteristically, he pointed to the next thing on the agenda. “You better go win […]
GMO labeling advocates celebrate, and turn focus to other states
U.S. Court of Appeals rebukes Rowland, rules that ’03 layoffs were punitive
In a decision with far-reaching political and legal implications, a federal appeals court has concluded that former Gov. John G. Rowland illegally discriminated against union employees when ordering 2,800 layoffs soon after his election to a third term in 2002. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit faulted Rowland for exclusively eliminating union […]
Keno not enough? Lawmakers want slot machines in their cities
Tired of watching neighboring states expanding gambling while Connecticut’s revenue from the casinos steadily declines, a handful of Democratic legislators Monday threw their support behind allowing 7,500 slot machines to open in Bridgeport, New Haven and Windsor Locks. “The tide of competition has just begun to rise,” said Sen. Andres Ayala Jr., D-Bridgeport, the vice chairman […]
Provoked by Newtown, Obama pushes for mental health reforms
Washington -– Having stumbled on gun control, President Barack Obama on Monday called for a national dialogue on mental illness — a campaign touched off by last year’s massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown. Speaking at the beginning of a day-long White House conference on the issue, Obama said the time has come […]
House adopts $37.6 billion budget for next biennium — or is it $44 billion?
The Connecticut House voted at sunrise Sunday to adopt a $37.6 billion, two-year budget that preserves municipal aid and meets a rising demand for social services, while relying on one-time revenues and the exemption of an unprecedented $6 billion from the spending cap. The Democrat-controlled House began debate minutes after midnight and passed the budget 95-48 […]
Pols react as a grass-roots movement comes of age to force GMO labeling
With a deal that revives a bill requiring the labeling of genetically engineered foods, Connecticut’s legislative leaders Saturday acknowledged a movement that has muscled its way from the scientific fringe to political mainstream. Senate and House leaders announced a bipartisan compromise that is expected to make Connecticut the first state to require labeling of foods […]
Let us answer your Obamacare questions
Our health care reporter Arielle Levin Becker will entertain your questions about how Obamacare will affect you and your family. You may email them to her at alevinbecker@ctmirror.org.
House tightens disclosure, loosens spending rules for campaigns
The Connecticut House voted 71-59 early Saturday to revise sweeping campaign finance reforms adopted in 2005 after scandal toppled a governor, with Democrats and Republicans arguing whether the changes represented progress or backsliding. The legislation is a double-barreled reaction to the U.S. Supreme Court Citizens United ruling that permits unlimited independent expenditures: It requires greater […]
House drops energy auction from budget
The Connecticut General Assembly staggered into the final weekend of the 2013 session Saturday, trying to close an elusive budget deal among majority Democrats, who forced the Malloy administration to give up on a plan to raise $80 million through an energy auction. Sources in the House and Senate Democratic caucuses said the tentative budget […]
Group of city legislators to throw support behind expanding gambling
It is widely accepted that the casinos that will soon begin popping up in Massachusetts will cause a major cut in revenue the state receives from its casinos — and now a group of legislators from Bridgeport, New Haven and Windsor Locks are planning to announce Monday they support expanding gambling in their municipalities.
Will energy efficiency investment fall victim to Canadian hydropower?
Energy policymaking in Connecticut has lately been consumed by the struggle over large-scale hydropower, and that is unfortunate, because the energy policy we actually need in Connecticut has little to do with remote Canadian dams and a lot to do with a low-cost, consumer-friendly energy resource much closer to home – energy efficiency.
Will energy efficiency investment fall victim to Canadian hydropower?
Energy policymaking in Connecticut has lately been consumed by the struggle over large-scale hydropower, and that is unfortunate, because the energy policy we actually need in Connecticut has little to do with remote Canadian dams and a lot to do with a low-cost, consumer-friendly energy resource much closer to home – energy efficiency.
Legislators push transparency at state Education Department
To craft and implement controversial education reforms, the state Education Department has routinely turned to an organization not bound by public disclosure or competitive bidding requirements to do its work — an approach state legislators are poised to change. “There were some very alarming issues,” said Sen. Andrea Stillman, the co-chairman of the Education Committee. […]
Mexicans: State’s fastest-growing Latino group
This story is posted on the website of Mirror partner CtLatinoNews.com Jesse Suarez was 16 years old when when he left Mexico to work in California’s vegetable fields. Soon after moving to the United States, he was approached by a man from Argentina who offered him a job in Connecticut. Little did he know that the […]
Blame game begins in Metro-North crash
Washington –- The National Transportation Safety Board is months away from a final determination on what caused the Metro-North crash earlier this month that injured dozens of commuters, some of them severely. The NTSB is focusing on a section of the track at the derailment site that had been held together by joint bars — […]

