El objetivo del Proyecto de Ley 8002 es facilitar la construcción de más viviendas en Connecticut. Esto es lo que debe saber.
Qué saber sobre el proyecto de ley de vivienda de CT aprobado en sesión extraordinaria
Fiscal guardrails mask CT’s revenue needs
CT has been disinvesting in housing, education and other core programs because the state has an $88 billion pension liability to pay off.
Judge remands gas rate case to PURA, refers state attorneys to ethics committee
New Britain Superior Court judge referred two attorneys representing PURA to the Statewide Grievance Committee to assess whether they misled the court.
Jeffrey Beckham, who stabilized CT budget office, to step down next month
Gov. Ned Lamont to tap Josh Wojcik, key health policy leader in the state comptroller’s office, to lead the Office of Policy and Management.
Alfredo Castillo, Bridgeport councilman, arrested for fourth time
Bridgeport councilman Alfredo Castillo was arrested for the fourth time on a charge of illegally possessing a woman’s absentee ballot.
CT United Way seeks donations for homelessness prevention fund
The United Way of Central and Northeastern CT is seeking donations for a cash assistance fund to prevent people from becoming homeless.
Does Connecticut have the third-highest residential electricity rates in the U.S.?
Customers in CT pay more than $200 per month for electricity, or more than twice as much as customers in states such as New Mexico and Utah.
PURA blocks sale of Aquarion Water following rate hike concerns
The unanimous vote followed months of criticism from opponents who said the deal could raise water rates for nearly 250,000 customers.
ICE courthouse arrests meet resistance from CT, other Democratic states
Officials worry raids risk keeping people from testifying in trials, fighting evictions or seeking restraining orders against domestic abusers.
CT receives $64 million in Purdue Pharma bankruptcy settlement
The funds are part of a $7.4B settlement. They will be used for opioid treatment and prevention and to support victims and their families.
CT 211 Infoline seeks first funding hike in 15 years
The human services 211 lifeline fields thousands of inquiries a day on average, and demand is expected to grow with federal cutbacks.
Stamford’s transit plan — a half measure
Stamford needs an overall transit plan that includes an orbital bus system and street cars like it had before.
How do we keep the lights on in a changing climate?
CT’s utility planning and design practices need to catch up with rising temperatures, heavier rainfall, and the realities of climate change.
CT wake surfers seek statewide regulation in effort to limit local bans
A recent ban on wake surfing in a northwestern Connecticut lake has prompted advocates of the sport to ask the state to create uniform rules.
Attorney: AG’s office is ‘victim-blaming’ in prison sex assault case
Lashanda Gregory’s attorney claimed the AG’s office had engaged in ‘victim-blaming’ after she sued for being sexually assaulted in prison.
