Lawmakers on the Appropriations Committee passed the bill Monday. A section that would regulate homeschooling was removed before they voted.
Legislative committee quietly strips homeschool language from priority bill
House GOP budget offers big relief but works around spending cap
The CT GOP plan relies on shifting millions in hospital payments outside the spending cap and on CT winning a legal battle against New York.
U.S. Justice Dept. sues CT, New Haven over ‘sanctuary policies’
The lawsuit argues CT’s Trust Act violates the Supremacy Clause, which says when state and federal laws clash, federal law takes precedence.
Local groups urge CT delegation to back surveillance law reforms
Groups such as Make the Road CT and Indivisible want changes to Section 702 of FISA. The House will try to reauthorize it this week.
After tragedies, CT lawmakers seek DCF reforms
House Bill 5004 would make changes to the CT Department of Children and Families, some intended to address issues raised by recent tragedies.
Veterans’ service leaves survivors with needs
More than recognition, veteransā survivors in Connecticut deserve enhanced benefits and services.
Specialized care for girls in juvenile justice system has faltered, experts say
Connecticut was once a leader in gender-responsive strategies for incarcerated young women. Experts and advocates say it’s falling behind.
John Larson endorsed by Rep. Jamie Raskin, advocate for change
Jamie Raskin became a symbol of generational change when he sought U.S. Rep. Jerry Nadler’s post on the Judiciary Committee.
Senate confirms nomination of CT insurance commissioner
Josh Hershman has been serving as interim insurance commissioner since December. Senators unanimously approved his appointment last week.
PODCAST: How Josh Elliott is challenging Lamont from the left
WSHU and CT Mirror’s Mark Pazniokas discussed the gubernatorial campaign of Josh Elliott, a self-described economic populist.
Lamont delivers pledged raises to CT state employees
Gov. Ned Lamont has now reached tentative deals with unions and can ask lawmakers to approve raises for the bulk of CT’s unionized workforce.
New food pyramid gives meat a starring role. What happens to school lunches?
The Trump admin. loves red meat and could soon change what kids eat in schools. But some key constituents don’t want kids on a carnivore diet
Why is CT bottle redemption up for debate again in 2026?
The bottle deposit rose to 10 cents two years ago. CT lawmakers are now questioning that move after the redemption rate rose to 97% in 2025.
Checklists, not support for family child care providers
By failing to provide a robust support system and instead relying on intimidating surveillance, the OEC is effectively pushing family child care providers out of the industry.
From the left, Josh Elliott pumps up his challenge to Ned Lamont
Democrat Josh Elliott’s campaign for governor began with modest aspirations. It has since evolved into a ‘we’re in it to win it’ effort.

