Qué saber sobre los que se entregaron a la policía luego de una investigación que terminó en acusaciones de fraude en el voto en ausencia.
¿Quiénes son los acusados de delitos electorales en Bridgeport?
Trump administration’s ‘irreparable’ cut in NIH research funds blocked by judge
A federal judge in Mass. granted a nationwide preliminary injunction, blocking a proposed 15% cap on Facilities and Administrative fees.
CSCU Chancellor Cheng’s misspending and the public’s right to know
In a hearing before state legislators last month, Terrence Cheng, chancellor of the Connecticut State Colleges and Universities (CSCU) system, apologized again and again. He apologized for inappropriate spending and misuse of a state credit card during his three-year tenure. He apologized for indiscretions that included acceptance of a hefty moving allowance without having moved. […]
Ratepayers deserve answers on PURA changes
Critical questions need thoughtful consideration before state leaders move forward with changes to the regulatory framework for utility services.
Fostering antisemitism in Connecticut
In Connecticut, antisemitism reached a new high in 2023.
Senator seeking PURA nomination owns business probed by PURA
A company owned by state Sen. John Fonfara was probed by PURA last year to determine whether it needed a license to operate.
William H. Bright Jr. confirmed as justice of CT Supreme Court
Former Rep. Michael D’Agostino, D-Hamden, and former Senate Minority Leader Kevin C. Kelly, R-Stratford, were among the new judges.
Lamont to sign new bills that provide same funding as vetoed bills
The bills avoid a veto override fight by providing funding for special education and nonprofits from money outside the spending cap.
Report: State failed to protect child from a decade of sexual abuse
The Child Advocate’s report says the state failed to investigate despite repeated concerns around the treatment of children at the home.
CT lawmakers approve 5-year plan focused on climate change, housing
The Plan of Conservation and Development says climate change should be a central tenet in discussions about where and how CT builds.
CTECS violated state, federal law in denying admission to students with disabilities
Investigation found tech schools denied admission to students who’d received disciplinary infractions, excluded students with disabilities
There’s still time to talk about reasonable Medicaid rates…
For every dollar it costs to care for a Medicaid patient, the state pays hospitals 87 cents.
Some serve, others help just themselves
Taking pensions, benefits, services and jobs from veterans is abhorrent.
Let’s protect CT’s men and women who keep the lights on
A failure to improve regulatory certainty will continue to have a detrimental impact on Connecticut’s union workers and residents who rely on utility services.
Fired federal workers from CT come to Congress for Trump speech
CT lawmakers invited guests fired from federal jobs or those in professions worried about funding cuts. Sen. Chris Murphy gave a prebuttal.

