Families struggling to afford basic necessities are confronting another urgent need affecting Connecticut’s youngest residents: diapers.
CT families are struggling with the necessities, including diapers
What to know about Trump’s draft proposal to curtail state AI regulations
Trump and some Republicans say the limited regulations already enacted by states, and others that might follow, will hinder innovation.
Trump allows more foreign ag workers, eases off ICE raids on farms
To ease labor shortages on farms and ranches, the administration made changes to the H-2A visa program, which allows foreign workers for temporary agricultural jobs.
State officials never shared email warning of McCrory conflict
The DECD was alerted in 2023 of an alleged conflict of interest involving McCrory. But staff never shared it with anyone outside the agency.
An ocean wilderness that must remain protected
The Northeast Canyons and Seamounts are under threat of being harmed in ways from which they may never recover.
America — still unequal after 249 years
Addressing the U.S.’s cultural and economic inequalities effectively will require vastly different leadership than what we have elected to national, state, and local offices recently.
CT prisons offer college courses. Lack of space, resources is limiting enrollment
About 320 incarcerated people were enrolled in higher education as of Oct. 2024. That’s a fraction of the estimated 3,000 people eligible.
Coast Guard policy change to call swastikas and nooses ‘potentially divisive’
USCG stressed that the symbols will remain prohibited. Updated policy seen by the service as way to strengthen reporting, investigation and prosecution.
Lamont taps Jeffrey Beckham to become Superior Court judge
Gov. Ned Lamont announced he will nominate his departing budget director, Jeffrey Beckham of Tolland, to become a CT Superior Court judge.
Hartford HealthCare could add 2 Prospect CT hospitals to its system by year end
HHC pitched its case to buy Manchester and Rockville hospitals owned by Prospect Medical Holdings. CT must issue a decision by Dec. 30.
CT survey finds ties between financial stress, mental health issues
A survey of over 1,300 CT adults found residents are struggling more than they were in 2018 and are concerned about federal cuts to benefits.
Stock trading by members of Congress could be banned in bipartisan push
At least 25 bills have been introduced this Congress to further limit lawmakers and their family members from trading individual stocks.
Qué saber sobre el proyecto de ley de vivienda de CT aprobado en sesión extraordinaria
El objetivo del Proyecto de Ley 8002 es facilitar la construcción de más viviendas en Connecticut. Esto es lo que debe saber.
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.
