The Malloy administration and Democratic legislative leaders have reached an agreement on the proposed SustiNet state-run health plan, with a deal that calls for opening the state employee health plan to municipalities and some nonprofits, but not for offering insurance to the public. The agreement would also establish a “SustiNet cabinet” advisory panel within the […]
SustiNet deal reached, but without a ‘public option’
Legislature may approve budget before concessions finalized
With a budget agreement in hand, legislative leaders are considering having the General Assembly vote on the tax-and-spending plan without waiting to see if Gov. Dannel P. Malloy succeeds in obtaining the $1 billion in labor savings he is seeking from state employees. A quick vote would leave Malloy with the responsibility for obtaining sufficient […]
Advocates for elderly oppose Malloy move on assets
Advocates for seniors are fighting a proposal by the Malloy administration that aims to save close to $30 million a year by reducing the amount of assets a person can keep if his or her spouse is in a nursing home and receiving Medicaid coverage. They say the proposal, which would reverse a change made […]
Malloy: managerial cuts sought by GOP, labor won’t come immediately
MERIDEN — It is one area where state employee unions and Republicans agree: The ranks of state managers need to be sharply cut. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said today those reductions are coming, but they will not be reflected until the second year of his two-year budget. “There are lots of assumptions built into the […]
Incoming DSS commissioner: ‘We have a complete system to overhaul’
The barriers state residents face in reaching the state Department of Social Services are unacceptable, and the options they have for accessing services are “woefully inadequate,” incoming commissioner Roderick L. Bremby told lawmakers at his confirmation hearing. Department workers want to improve the situation, he said, but they’re limited by an obsolete phone system and […]
Courtney pushes bill to fix Medicare quirk that has cost patients dearly
Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, has renewed his push to fix a quirk in the Medicare rules–one that has cost elderly patients thousands of dollars, not to mention considerable stress. Courtney’s efforts began after he was approached by a constituent, Nancy Renshaw, who got stuck with a nearly $10,000 nursing home bill for her father-in-law […]
Support for same-sex marriages accelerating
Support for same-sex marriage seems to have been increasing at an accelerated pace over the past few years, Nate Silver says at the NY Time’s FiveThirtyEight.com, with opponents now in the minority. Tracking dozens of polls going back to 1988–when less than 15 percent said they supported gay marriage–Silver estimates that 50 percent of Americans […]
House GOP agrees to pay $500,000 to defend DOMA
House Republicans are willing to shell out as much as $500,000 to defend the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act, a federal law that denies key benefits to same-sex couples by defining marriage as between a man and a woman. The law, known as DOMA, is being challenged by a Connecticut couple and other […]
Cam Staples to head college accreditation agency
Former longtime state Rep. Cameron Staples has been hired as the executive director of The New England Association of Schools and Colleges. The association is responsible for accrediting public and private school and college programs recognized by the U.S. Department of Education. Staples was a state representative for more than 15 years, and was co-chairman […]
Malloy seeks delay in deportation of college student
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has asked the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Citizenship & Immigration Services to delay the deportation of Mariano Cardoso, a 22-year-old New Britain resident who is one month from finishing his degree at Capitol Community College. Cardoso’s parents entered the United States illegally from Mexico when he was 22 months old, […]
Malloy has no answer on hold-over commissioners getting longevity payments
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy had no explanation today for why commissioners held over from the administration of his predecessor received longevity payments — the retention bonuses received by many state employees, including those who were work for the General Assembly. “Actually, I will look into it,” Malloy said after a speech to the chamber of […]
Disparity called the greatest health risk
One prominent doctor called it the greatest risk to health. Another called it a threat to national security. U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal called it a scandal. The topic at a town hall meeting in Hartford Tuesday wasn’t cancer, radiation or any other medical concern that frequently makes headlines. It was health disparities, the well–documented but […]
GOP offers a no-tax alternative to Malloy’s budget
The legislature’s Republican minority offered a no-tax alternative to Gov. Dannel Malloy’s budget today in which the goodies are obvious and served in big portions, but most of the bitter medicine comes in smaller doses spread throughout their spending plan. The GOP says its plan would eliminate the state’s projected $3.2 billion deficit without a […]
Supreme Court justices question states’ global warming lawsuit
WASHINGTON–The Supreme Court waded into the political and environmental thicket of global warming Tuesday, in a case that will determine whether Connecticut and other states can force power plants to reduce their heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions. The line of questioning from the justices did not point to any easy conclusions about how they might rule […]
Strange bedfellows: How about Simmons and Blumenthal?
Even for a small state, where politicians understand that yesterday’s opponent might be tomorrow’s ally, this one is a bit of a head-scratcher: Rob Simmons is volunteering to help U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal reach out to Vietnam veterans. Simmons, a Republican former congressman and Vietnam veteran who ran for the U.S. Senate last year, says […]

