CURRENT NEWS

COVID Update 9.8

September 8, 2020

Our long-term care facilities – nursing homes and assisted living facilities – have been hard hit by the COVID-19 crisis, and deaths among those residents make up more than half of the state’s total. Those deaths are concentrated in certain facilities, while almost 30% of the nursing homes in CT suffered almost no infections at all.

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State Capitol update for the week of August 31.

September 4, 2020

Earlier this week, Governor Lamont signed orders extending the state’s civil preparedness and public health emergency to February 9, 2021. Due to expire on September 9, this extension allows the Governor’s prior executive orders to remain in effect (pending any legislative action, which would override them) and allows him to continue to modify those orders as conditions change.

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COVID Update 9.1

September 1, 2020

Some students in the district went back to school yesterday, and others will be going back next week. "Back to School" this year looks different for every family and I have heard from many of you about the anxiety caused by the uncertainty about COVID-19.

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State Capitol for the Week of August 24

August 27, 2020

I had a confluence of events this week that focused on public goods: things that are, or should be, available and accessible to all of us.  They include the US Postal Service, the ballot box, clean air and water, mental health care, and utilities like electricity, phone and internet, for example.  The way we make these accessible is different in each case, but there are market failures with each that make it necessary for the government to play a role to ensure equitable access. 

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COVID Update 8.25

August 25, 2020

The need to close the digital divide and provide reliable internet access for every resident becomes more clear with every event that befalls us. The pandemic showed us that bare-bones access is not adequate for a family working from home with children who are expected to learn remotely. Health care also suffers when there’s no internet access.

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State Capitol Update for the Week of August 17

August 20, 2020

COVID-19 hit nursing homes hard throughout the Northeast, and residents of Connecticut’s long-term care facilities experienced higher lethality levels than any other state. This week the state received an interim report taking a hard look at what happened, good and bad. The report (linked to, and described more fully below), made no sweeping conclusions, but identified a number of missteps, some of which came as a result of our limited knowledge of the virus.

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COVID Update 8.18

August 18, 2020

Today is the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, which prohibited the states and the federal government from denying women the right to vote. After decades of protest and agitation, by many whose names are still not widely known today, women took a huge step towards true equality, a fight that continues today. By some measures 100 years is a long time, but it is squarely within the lifetimes of women in my family I grew up with, and it is hard to imagine a world which did want their vote.

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State Capitol update for the week of August 10

August 14, 2020

After a brutal week (and more, for many residents of the Northwest Corner), the conversations I’m having with constituents are shifting.  They’re shifting from Eversource (and concerns about electrical power) to other utilities that provide telephone, cable, or internet (Comcast/Xfinity, Frontier, and Optimum/Altice, for example), as the fragility of this infrastructure has been laid bare, and I work to make sure individual problems get attention. 

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