In the wake of the spate of gun violence massacres, resuming again with deadly consequences, we are at a familiar crossroads: Do we revert to our usual, American individualized ‘othering,’, or do we reconcile that there is no ‘them’- only ‘us,’ that we refuse to claim? I’m campaigning to reframe the American ‘us’ from some of y’all to “ALL of us all!”
Everybody in, especially those left out
New Haven at a zoning crossroads
Unbeknown to many, most Connecticut zoning (and that of many other states) designates people of color to segregated areas. For that reason, zoning won the moniker, Exclusionary Zoning. Although there’s no mention of race or color in zoning regulations, clever dimensional requirements, put together in the 1950s, achieve exclusion.
My father should have had options
Max Fey, a Farmington resident whose father Mark lost a battle with pancreatic cancer, shares why it is critical to pass HB 6425 ASAP. This bill would authorize medical aid in dying, so that all Connecticut residents at the end of their lives would have the option to end unbearable suffering.
Can independent primary care doctors survive dominance of hospital health systems?
hospital systems and private businesses are increasingly buying private medical practices and taking over their business operations.
Closely followed Woodbridge zoning case enters new phase
On Monday night, commissioners held their final public hearing on a two-pronged rezoning proposal looking to make it easier for developers to build multi-family affordable housing in Woodbridge.
How one Waterbury pastor is making a faith-based case for getting the vaccine
Connecticut ranks fifth in the percentage of the population with vaccinations. Still, racial disparities in the rollout remain.
Cardona taps a top Lamont staffer to join him at the U.S. Department of Education
Nick Simmons was director of strategic initiatives in Lamont’s office for nearly two years.
This tiny CT town has only one place to get the COVID vaccine. So the FEMA trailer is on the way to help.
On Thursday, the FEMA trailer will be in the town hall parking lot, the only place big enough for it.
Lamont, top lawmakers make progress streamlining emergency orders issued during pandemic
It remains unclear whether the two parties will agree on the extent of the governor’s emergency powers during future crises.
Enriching the already rich — it’s been the American way.
There are supposed to be two certainties in life: death and taxes. Here’s a 2021 corollary: As the rich get richer and richer, they pay less and less into the U.S. Treasury. It’s no joke, my fellow 1040 filers. A recent study by economists and the IRS found that the richest Americans —yes, those infamous one-percenters— have been cheating on their taxes to the collective tune of at least $175 billion a year.
There is no equity without standardized race, ethnicity and language data
Over a year into a pandemic that has cost the lives of Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and other people of color at rates that are unjust and preventable, we cannot allow ourselves or our state to continue to use the word “equity” without the data to show policies really are addressing injustice. We all know the disparities aren’t about race; they’re about racism.
Baseball is still a civil rights battleground
For over 150 years, the baseball field has been a battleground for civil rights. Bigoted politicians like Texas governor Greg Abbott are still fighting the Civil War — on the wrong side of history.
Getting connected for Connecticut students
There is one key to ensuring the success of Connecticut students: we must keep them connected. Whether your children are in fifth grade or freshman year, they have or will continue to learn virtually in some capacity, which means unstable Wi-Fi during class, delays in homework submission or inability to research are unacceptable.
Clark Chapin is the GOP choice for state auditor
Clark Chapin has been nominated to succeed the late Rob Kane as the Republican auditor of public accounts.
Keep youths out of the justice system, or hold them accountable? Judiciary committee advances bills that do both
Republicans were concerned about a provision in one bill that would erase certain juvenile records.

