Comptroller Nancy S. Wyman was introduced as Dan Malloy’s running mate Tuesday, the culmination of nearly a two-year courtship by Malloy and weeks of deliberation by Wyman. After 16 years in a post that makes her a fiscal watchdog and critic, Wyman is risking a relatively safe re-election for what she says is a chance […]
Wyman attracted by a chance to set fiscal policy
Missing candidates take heat at forum
MANCHESTER – A leading Democratic candidate for governor, Ned Lamont, took heat on and off stage Monday night for missing a forum sponsored by a coalition of social-service and anti-poverty groups. On stage, Democrat Dan Malloy was rewarded with laughter and applause after referring to two missing Greenwich entrepreneurs, Lamont and Republican Tom Foley, as […]
New state budget balanced on some risky assumptions
The newly adopted state budget counts on a $100 million cut to the employee pension fund contribution, a savings that’s allowed if revenues slip by $300 million. There’s only one problem: That same budget doesn’t project any revenue loss. In fact, it expects revenues to run nearly $72 million higher than the level assumed in the preliminary 2010-11 budget […]
A rare accord on streamlining DEP
It’s an unexpected conclusion to what had been expected to be a showdown: Environmentalists and the business community both are endorsing a bill intended to streamline issuance of state permits and licenses. When the legislative session began just three months ago, such a resolution seemed unlikely. Business lobbyists were demanding an end to lengthy delays […]
Get ready to face next year’s budget challenge
When a professional football team punts, they run downfield to get ready for the next play. The governor and the General Assembly punted with this year’s budget but then inexplicably headed to the locker room. Through a combination of gimmicks and wishful thinking, lawmakers technically eliminated the budget deficit for fiscal year 2011. But the […]
Reynolds will run for comptroller if Wyman joins the Malloy ticket
Democratic State Rep. Tom Reynolds of Ledyard announced late today that he would seek his party’s nomination for state comptroller if incumbent Nancy Wyman opts to become the running mate of Democratic gubernatorial contender Dan Malloy. Reynolds, 43, said he would confirm his plans after Malloy’s 11 a.m. press conference Tuesday at the Capitol, at […]
Nancy Wyman expected to be Dan Malloy’s running mate
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Dan Malloy is expected to name Comptroller Nancy S. Wyman as his choice for lieutenant governor Tuesday in Hartford, giving him a running mate popular with Democratic activists and knowledgeable on state fiscal issues. She acknowledged to The Mirror having talked to Malloy last week about joining his ticket, but she said Friday, […]
Brenda Sisco takes over at OPM
Brenda Sisco, the commissioner of administrative services, was named today to succeed Robert L. Genuario as secretary of the Office of Policy and Management. Genuario left the state’s budget office today to begin his orientation as a new judge of the Superior Court. Martin Anderson, the deputy commissioner of administrative services, will succeed Sisco at […]
Global warming concerns force local environmental trade-offs
For 23 years, Eva Villanova has lived the idyllic country life. She raised a family and made a name for herself as an artist. Her home on leafy Flagg Hill Road in the northwest Connecticut town of Colebrook was a perfect place to turn ordinary clumps of clay into extraordinary works of art-or so Villanova […]
Hartford presses state for action on teacher seniority rule change
By limiting teacher seniority rights in Hartford, state education officials could bolster Connecticut’s chances of winning millions of dollars in federal school reform funds, according to Hartford’s superintendent of schools. Steven J. Adamowski makes that argument in his latest effort to persuade the State Board of Education and Education Commissioner Mark McQuillan to issue an […]
Legislators patch one deficit but fail to guard against future shortfalls
The state legislature balanced the next budget before it adjourned, but some major proposals to build new fiscal safeguards into the appropriations processed died when the session ended last week. Lawmakers declined to act on proposals to increase by 50 percent the maximum budget reserve – commonly known as the Rainy Day Fund – that […]
General Assembly sends bills to the governor
Among the bills passed by the General Assembly and sent to Gov. M. Jodi Rell: Expediting State Permits A bill passed by both the House and Senate establishes a procedure for expediting issuance of state permits for projects that create jobs or provide other economic benefits. If signed into law, the bill would require creation […]
Involve school nurses in anti-bullying efforts
In the current discussion on bullying and its tragic consequences, the strategic role that school nurses can play is overlooked. Research has shown that students who are bullied are likely to present to the school nurse with multiple health symptoms–difficulty sleeping, wetting, headaches, stomach aches, nervousness, and depression to name a few. In a 28-country […]
Figueroa drops out of governor race; cites difficulty raising money
Last week’s five-way race for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination race is down to three with Friday’s withdrawal of Juan Figueroa. Figueroa, who was trying to become the first Latino to hold statewide office in Connecticut, said he could not raise the money to compete with businessman Ned Lamont or Dan Malloy, the former Stamford mayor […]
$19.01 billion budget signed into law
Gov. M. Jodi Rell signed the state’s $19.01 billion budget Friday that avoids official tax hikes but does place a new surcharge on consumer’s electric bills. The budget — passed Wednesday in the Senate 19-16 and the House 93-57 — also borrows nearly $1 billion, raids $100 million from the state workers’ pension fund and […]

