Major state tax increases may be in the cards next year given the massive deficit projections, but that doesn’t mean the General Assembly is ready to think about it now. A controversial bill to order a sweeping study of Connecticut’s state and municipal tax network died on the Senate calendar Wednesday as the 2010 session’s […]
Legislature abandons plan for thorough study of tax system
Time for openness in judicial selection process
I’ve been fortunate to have an involvement in various elements of government since 1957. My lifetime has included tenures as a newspaper reporter, radio newsman, state employee (health, judicial and legislative departments) and a ten-year tenure on a congressional staff. My early working days as a reporter (Norwich Bulletin, Hartford Times, New London Day) developed […]
House sends texting while driving bill to Rell
A bill forbidding texting while driving is headed for Gov. M. Jodi Rell’s signature. The measure also would crack down on talking on a cell phone while driving without using a hand-free device. It would end the policy of giving first-time violators a waiver if they buy a hands-free device, and instead imposes a $100 fine. […]
Senate passes $19 billion budget, heads to House
The Senate passed the budget 19-16, it now heads to the House for final passage. Gov. M. Jodi Rell has said she will sign the bill. Four Democrats voted against the budget — including Senators Edward Meyer, Joan Hartley, Donald DeFronzo and Andrew Maynard. Watch the House debate the bill live here and read an analysis […]
Officials take aim at Anthem rate increases
Attorney General Richard Blumenthal is calling for an independent investigation into the most recent double-digit rate increases approved for numerous Anthem Health Plans for Connecticut residents. Likewise, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius wrote Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell yesterday asking her to do the same. The move comes after Anthem proposed […]
Court rules Bysiewicz ‘engaged in active practice’
Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz has engaged in the “active practice” of law in her constitutional office for the last 11 years, qualifying her to be attorney general, a Superior Court judge ruled today. The case was filed to resolve whether she meets the minimum statutory qualifications for attorney general. If her tenure as the […]
After all-night session, House members to return at 1 p.m.
The House of Representatives won’t begin its final day of the 2010 session until 1 p.m. After staying until 6:01 a.m. to pass an energy bill, House Speaker Chris Donovan gave everyone the rest of the morning off. The Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee meets at 12:30 p.m. to adopt revenue estimates, then the House […]
Scenes from the Capitol: Bat removed, lawyers remain in pre-dawn session
At 2:55 a.m. today, a bat made its entrance in the House of Representatives, circling the ornate, high-ceilinged chamber to the amusement and discomfort of legislators. And then things got weird. House Republicans bitterly objected to the prospect of beginning a debate on a major energy bill at 2:55 a.m., a debate delayed by a […]
Spurred by the lure of federal aid, House approves major education reforms
A sweeping education bill that calls for tougher high school standards, a more demanding evaluation system for teachers and a greater voice for parents in school governance won approval in the state House of Representatives early today. After some political maneuvering, lawmakers combined elements of two separate education bills into a single landmark bill that […]
Democrats say they’ll pass budget; GOP minority is opposed
The Democrat-controlled General Assembly will attempt to wipe a $726 million deficit from the next state budget today as the 2010 legislative session approaches its midnight deadline. Despite House and Senate leaders’ assertions that rank-and-file Democrats grudgingly endorsed the $19 billion package, which avoids tax hikes but cuts nearly $172 million from current programs and relies on […]
Seat belt bill driven to Rell’s desk
A bill creating tax incentives to school systems that use buses with 3-point seat belts, paid for by increasing the fines to reinstate suspended licenses, has unanimously passed the Senate. It now heads for Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell‘s desk. “A lot of schools are going to take advantage of this,” said Rep. Antonio Guerrera, […]
Legislators hope to buy time with new borrowing scheme
State legislators got a crash course in budget high finance Tuesday, mixed with a dash of constitutional law. After more than 12 months of planning, securitization – that mysterious financial process that can close a $1 billion-plus budget gap without tax hikes or deep program cuts – was yanked unceremoniously off the budget table. In […]
Senate, House pass sweeping energy bill
The House gave final legislative approval at 6:01 a.m. today to a bill that subsidizes solar power, encourages energy efficiency and exerts influence over a deregulated electric industry that has given Connecticut the nation’s second-highest electric rates. The most heavily lobbied bill of year was passed 20 to 14 in the Senate on Tuesday night […]
Don’t put the state’s energy future at risk
Kermit the Frog was right all these years. Despite what Gov. M. Jodi Rell declared in her State of the State address in February, it’s not easy being green, at least not in Connecticut. Last week, Gov. Rell proposed hijacking $54.5 million of energy efficiency and renewable energy funds annually to help plug the deficit. […]
Running out of one-shot borrowing schemes
In these tight fiscal times, state legislatures across the nation are examining almost every imaginable creative financing scheme to avoid program cuts and broad based tax increases. One of the more troubling is Connecticut’s plan to borrow to plug a $1.3 billion revenue hole intentionally left in the $18.9 billion state budget that begins July […]
