The head of the state’s largest teachers’ union issued a call Wednesday to “upgrade the status” of Connecticut educators and address slipping wages and benefits–a call greeted with some skepticism by state and municipal leaders grappling with long-term budget problems. After acknowledging some of the problems facing the state education system–including a wide achievement gap […]
Union leader: To tackle education problems, raise teachers’ pay
Jepsen creates Internet privacy task force
Attorney General George Jepsen Wednesday announced the creation of a task force to investigate Internet privacy and data breaches while educating the public and businesses about data protection, an issue he said his office deals with on a monthly basis. “If you asked me a year ago where Internet privacy considerations rank in my office […]
Report says state could regain small businesses by easing regulation
Connecticut could reverse most of its small business losses from the decade just prior to the last recession by easing the burdens that make it one of the most regulated states in the nation, according to the University of Connecticut’s new latest quarterly economic journal released today. The fall issue of The Connecticut Economy, released […]
Shellfish farmers cut off from agriculture disaster aid
WASHINGTON–While many Connecticut farmers are scrambling to salvage their crops and repair the damage wrought by Tropical Storm Irene, one segment of the state’s agriculture community is still at a standstill: shellfish farmers. And even if state officials succeed in getting a federal disaster declaration to help other Connecticut farmers recover, the U.S. Department of […]
A disastrous year for states
As Congress continues to bicker over funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the nation is on track for a record year for major disaster declarations. And counting all forms of emergency aid, only two states have not had a declaration of some kind in 2011, Mark Memmott notes at NPR. FEMA lists three types […]
State has 205 rape kits waiting to be tested
The state has a backlog of 205 rape kits waiting to be processed, something that is expected to take more than six months to complete, according to a report by the legislature’s nonpartisan Office of Legislative Research. Another 40 cases that have been processed are awaiting DNA analysis, which could take an estimated five months, […]
Wanted: Elder statesman; must like puzzles
The legislature’s bipartisan Reapportionment Committee formally acknowledged today what was made clear last week: its deadline of Sept. 15 will come and go without any new maps for legislative or congressional districts. As a result, they need to find a ninth member acceptable to Democrats and Republicans. Under the law, the bipartisan committee of eight […]
DEEP picks head of greenhouse gas agency for key position
The head of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, the nation’s first carbon emissions trading and reduction program, has been named to a key position in the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. Jonathan Schrag will become deputy commissioner in charge of DEEP’s energy division, a key component of the newly-constituted agency and one with […]
Unsentenced inmate population bucks the declining trend
Although Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s administration is counting on a continuing decline in the state’s prison population–having closed two institutions in the past four months, laid off 21 front-line correction supervisors, and planning to close another facility soon–one group of inmates is bucking the trend. Numbers of accused but unsentenced inmates have risen each of […]
Dissatisfaction with farm disaster benefits floats up with Irene
Shelly Oechsler managed a touch of humor offering a photo of fields on her family’s 400-acre Botticello Farms two days after tropical storm Irene struck. “What you are looking at is some of our peppers,” she said in an email. “If you were a scuba diver, that is.” Just about all 400 acres, most of […]
Malloy hits trifecta in mayoral primaries
All three candidates endorsed by Gov. Dannel P. Malloy appeared to win their Democratic mayoral primaries tonight: Pedro Segarra of Hartford, Tim O’Brien of New Britain and Dan Drew of Middletown. John DeStefano of New Haven managed to win without the gubernatorial stamp of approval.
Weicker gives Mary-Jane Foster a hand in Bridgeport
Some interesting names are being drawn into the Democratic mayoral primary in Bridgeport on the side of Mary-Jane Foster, who is challenging Mayor Bill Finch. Lowell P. Weicker Jr., the former governor and U.S. senator, is the honorary chairman of a legal defense fund Foster announced Tuesday. David E. A. Carson, the former People’s bank […]
Malloy names Engine Alliance chief to lead new airport authority
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy named the head of a joint venture between Pratt & Whitney and General Electric to lead the new authority charged with overseeing operation of all state-owned airports. Mary Ellen S. Jones of Glastonbury, who will chair the eleven-member Connecticut Airport Authority, was one of four members appointed Tuesday by Malloy. All […]
Slight increase in uninsured in 2010
The number of people in the U.S. without health insurance increased slightly in 2010, while the share of Americans with private insurance continued to fall and more relied on government coverage, according to figures released by the U.S. Census Bureau Tuesday. In 2010, 256.2 million people has health insurance and 49.9 million did not; both […]
With S.T.O.R.M. on the case, will CL&P, UI cry uncle?
Somewhere deep in the Malloy Administration there must be a secret fan of that 1960s spy classic, “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.” The name of the review panel to examine the response to Irene is one of those corny/cool retro acronyms. Connecticut, I give you “S.T.O.R.M. Irene, the State Team Organized for the Review of Management […]

