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State intervenes in Hartford’s treatment of students with disabilities

Concluding that Hartford Public Schools have failed to appropriately serve students with disabilities, the state Department of Education has ordered the city school system to evaluate students more quickly, implement the evaluations when they are completed, and assign staff to better track these students. “The system has failed on a systemic basis” to meet the […]

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Until McMahon arrives, no deep pockets here

WASHINGTON — If Connecticut’s last U.S. Senate contest was a battle between two of Fairfield County’s rich and famous, the financial wherewithal of the candidates vying for retiring Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman’s seat next year is not quite so eye-popping. Democratic hopeful Susan Bysiewicz owns some undeveloped property in Middletown, but it’s worth almost nothing […]

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Blumenthal on first congressional trip–to Pakistan

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., is on his first official congressionally-sponsored trip abroad. He and three other Democratic senators are in Pakistan, where they recently met with top political and military leaders. Blumenthal, who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a phone interview from Islamabad that the meetings focused on disrupting terrorist networks […]

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Overhaul of education financing formula likely to wait until 2013

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has promised to dedicate the 2012 legislative session to education reform, but fixing how the state finances public schools is likely to wait until 2013, the co-chairs of the task force responsible for making recommendations to Malloy said during their first meeting Thursday. “It’s not as though we have to come […]

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DPUC gave engineer pay, ‘almost no work’ for 6 years

The state’s utility regulatory agency kept an engineer on the payroll for six years with “almost no work” after a disciplinary incident that led to a brief suspension in 2003, followed by the employee’s repeated and fruitless requests for work after his reinstatement, according to documents obtained by The Mirror. A labor arbitrator concluded that […]

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After a five-month audition, Redeker is named DOT chief

Acting Transportation Commissioner James P. Redeker today gets to drop the word “acting” from his title. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy named him as his commissioner this morning, describing Redeker’s five months as interim chief as one long job interview. Malloy, who named Redeker as acting commissioner in March after the retirement of a predecessor, Jeffrey […]

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Advocates see few consumer voices on health exchange

Its first meeting isn’t until Monday, and its membership was not officially confirmed until Wednesday night. But already the board overseeing the state’s health insurance exchange is under fire from consumer advocates, who see it as too heavily weighted toward the insurance industry. The members of the new panel include three former insurance executives, the […]

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Welfare rates little changed during recession

While enrollment in government safety-net programs like food stamps and unemployment compensation has soared in the United States since the start of the recession, participation in Temporary Assistance for Needy Families has remained relatively flat, Emily Badger reports at Miller-McCune. In 13 states, including Connecticut, enrollment in TANF–commonly referred to as welfare–actually declined between 2007 […]

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Malloy talks “agri-tourism” and locally grown foods on jobs tour

LEBANON — After visits to Fortune 500 insurers and manufacturers, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s jobs tour took him Wednesday to Prides Corner Farm, where the former urban mayor talked with 40 farmers about farming as “agri-tourism” and the value of the “grown in Connecticut” label. “Farms are more and more becoming destinations, rather than just […]

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