Posted inCT Viewpoints

Connecticut needs aid-in-dying laws

This month, I joined my fellow Connecticut residents testifying in support of the state’s proposed medical aid-in-dying legislation now being considered by the General Assembly. The bill would allow terminally ill people with a prognosis of six months or less to live, the option to take medication to die peacefully in their sleep. My message to the committee was simple. This issue is about giving peoplethe ability to make decisions about how they will face the final days. Across the country, states are passing similar laws.

Posted inCT Viewpoints

Let the General Assembly decide on aid in dying

Last week, there was a public hearing about House Bill 5898 – An Act Concerning Medical Aid in Dying for Terminally Ill Patients. Now, the members of the Public Health Committee will decide whether this proposal will be allowed to be discussed and voted on by the entire General Assembly.  Although legislation which would allow terminally ill patients the option to choose medical aid in dying has been proposed many times in the past 20 years, no bill has ever made it out of committee.

Posted inCT Viewpoints

Governor, special ed school children are not ‘costly burdens’

As part of his transition plan Gov. Ned Lamont, the Education Committee and the Planning & Development Committee have drafted numerous bills regarding regionalization of our schools.  Although language has been updated to the Governor’s Bill 874 to remove the words “redistricting” and “consolidation” to “sharing” and “collaboration” the bill still imposes deadlines for data collection of all of our districts and does not specify whether the decisions of this Commission on Shared School Services will be subject to a vote by the legislature or will be written into law with no input from those who it will directly affect. All of this is a particular threat to those of us with children in special education. 

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Legislature approves pay hikes for assistant AGs

The General Assembly approved arbitrated pay raises of 5.5 percent per year for a small bargaining units representing assistant attorneys general. The raises, approved largely by majority Democrats over Republican objections, sparked yet another debate whether Connecticut’s collective bargaining system is broken as the state struggles with one budget crisis after another.

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There is no unconditional right to die

No one can charge the advocates of assistance in dying with stoic acceptance of defeat. Every two or three years they return to their cause with conviction, but the flaws in their arguments remain the same. We freely grant that most of those who favor “choice in dying,” or assistance by physicians to hasten death with lethal overdoses of medication, are motivated by an honest desire to relieve-or end- intolerable suffering. I cannot support their efforts for several reasons.

Posted inCT Viewpoints

For some disabled, plastic straws bring independence

I would like to commend The Friends of the Animals for their informative article regarding single-use plastic and Styrofoam containers. The article does a good job of raising awareness about how sea life can be saved by not using plastic bags. One thing that was missing from Ms. Feral’s op-ed was acknowledgement of the impact that a ban on plastic straws would have on people with disabilities.

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