Legislative Updates for Sept. 4, 2025

September 4, 2025



 

 

Having just celebrated the holiday, I wanted to share our Labor Day statement from the Democratic members of the Labor and Public Employees Committee:

Labor Day is the day we honor and celebrate the achievements, social and economic, of the American worker as well as the labor movement that fought for better working conditions during the 19th century.

Today, the American worker is under attack by the most anti-worker, anti-labor administration in our history, and just recently, the administration intensified its attacks on the union rights of federal employees at several agencies.

Here in Connecticut, state lawmakers have taken action to protect workers, including strengthening labor laws at the state level and launching programs to mitigate potential changes from the federal government. We also enhanced wage protections and expanded paid leave.

The Office of the Attorney General is in place as an advocate for federal workers facing challenges. We care about workers in Connecticut, and we stand with them. We will continue to fight back against policies or Executive Orders that would harm them and their families.

State Senator Julie Kushner(Senate Chair)
State Representative Manny Sanchez (House Chair)
State Senator Jorge Cabrera (Sen. Vice Chair)
State Representative Derell Wilson(House Vice Chair)
State Representative Joshua Hall
State Representative Anne Hughes
State Senator Matt Lesser
State Representative Nick Gauthier
State Representative Kaitlyn Shake
 
 

9/11 Memorial and Celebration Tonight

Tonight I will be attending the State of Connecticut’s annual 9/11 Memorial Ceremony, honoring and celebrating the lives of those killed in the 2001 terrorist attacks.

The public is invited to attend the ceremony, which will be held at Sherwood Island State Park in Westport, where Connecticut's official 9/11 memorial is located, at 5:30 p.m.

Additionally, we will not forget the many CT First Responders that took action in the wake of that tragedy, and are paying dearly with the costs to their health and deadly cancers and respiratory illnesses as a result. We remember and we advocate to take care of them as the 9/11 First Responder Health Fund runs dry.

(Every year, the state intentionally holds its official memorial ceremony several days prior to the actual anniversary in order to accommodate the family members and friends of the victims. Because Connecticut is in such close proximity to New York City, many family members and friends who live in the state choose to also attend the annual ceremony that is held annually at the site of the World Trade Center on Sept. 11.)

Weston will have its own flag-lowering ceremony on the Town Green, 56 Norfield Road, on Sept. 11 at 9 a.m.

 

Humane Society Opening

I attended the opening of the new CT Humane Society Pet Resource Center in Wilton last week, that will revolutionize resourcing families adopting pets and keeping their pets fed and staying healthy in difficult times. I am so impressed with the pet-centric design of the Center, including the ‘catio’, the natural lighting and volunteer support and natural spaces for taking dogs out to play, run and walk, multiple times a day.
 

The Effect of the Federal Budget

I, along with my Democratic colleagues, attended a critical Health and Human Services Committee hearing this week on the impact the federal budget cuts will have on Connecticut residents.

My Republican colleagues, save for one, boycotted the hearing after months of gaslighting residents that the cuts wouldn't have any effect on them.

What came out at the hearing couldn't have been further from the truth, explaining the Republicans' absence. The Donald Trump/Republican-led federal government budget is nothing short of disastrous.

Experts shared that roughly 168,000 people, or one in seven Medicaid recipients, would lose coverage, and over 51,000 Connecticut residents would see their health insurance subsidies slashed.

We heard from panicked families, in every district: small business owners, self-employed, who received notices that their premiums on the ACA exchange (AccessHealthCT) could skyrocket by several thousand dollars a month in January, which they flat-out cannot afford.

We heard heartbreaking testimony from families whose loved ones on Medicaid would be potentially losing coverage, and now those on Medicare would have to struggle with receiving prior authorizations before receiving routine care.

Additionally, federal cuts will end key programs, including the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), which provides $80 million in heating aid for seniors.

My colleagues and I expressed our shock at the cuts, which include reductions to food stamps (SNAP) that would impact single mothers, veterans, children exiting foster care, and survivors of domestic violence and human trafficking.

We know that with the federal bill that passed -- “HR-1, the BBBill -- cruelty is the point. And as the members of the Human Services Committee of the legislature who showed up, we demand, “Not on our watch!”  We are committed to finding solutions to address this devastating harm in a Fall Special Session.

We must use all the creativity, collaboration, and resources available to protect our people before the whole healthcare and hospital system collapse in this proposed death spiral.

Meanwhile, statewide GOP lawmakers remain silent, save for House Minority Leader Vincent Candelora, who dismissed the cuts as a "fantasy" and blamed Democrats for not spending enough on social services.

This despite years of the statewide GOP advocating for spending cuts.

Connecticut and the nation deserve better.

For more information, please read here.

 

Bill Tracking

The 2025 OLR Bill Tracking report is now available.

This report identifies bills considered during this year’s legislative session whose content or concepts were incorporated into other legislation, under different bill numbers, that the legislature then passed.
 
During this past session, the content or concepts originating in at least 201 bills were incorporated into other legislation that was enacted in 51 public acts. Click here to view this report and track down the bill concepts you may be curious about.
 

Veterans Stand Down

On Sept. 19, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., the Connecticut Department of Veterans Affairs will host its annual Stand Down event. This event is a commitment to serving Connecticut’s veterans, military personnel, and their immediate families by providing “one-stop” access to a range of programs and services offered by state and federal agencies, veterans organizations, and community-based nonprofits at regional sites across the state.
 
A formal ceremony will be held at the Rocky Hill Stand Down location at 9:30 a.m.; however, you're welcome to attend any of the six Stand Down locations at any time throughout the day.

Stand Down locations are:

  • Bridgeport: University of Bridgeport, Wheeler Recreational Center, 400 University Avenue
  • Southington: Southington Armory, 600 Woodruff Street
  • Danbury: Danbury War Memorial 1 Memorial Drive
  • Norwich: Easter Seals Veterans Rally Point, 24 Stott Avenue
  • Rocky Hill: Connecticut Veterans Affairs campus, 287 West Street
  • Stamford: UConn at Stamford, 1 University Plaza

Click HERE for more information. 

 

Tag Sale

The Easton Senior Center, 650 Morehouse Road, is having a tag sale starting on Sept. 8 and running on weekdays from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. for three weeks. 

For more information please contact the Easton Senior Center 203-268-1145
 

Hazardous Waste Dropoff in Weston

Please see details below.
 

Redding Shred Day

Please see details below.
 

As always, please feel free to contact my office at 800-842-8267 or by email at anne.hughes@cga.ct.gov. And "Like" and follow my Facebook page for regular legislative updates. 

Peace,

Anne Hughes
State Representative

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