Updates from State Rep. Nick Menapace for Jan. 20, 2026
January 20, 2026
Due to HIGH DEMAND, AccessHealthCT has extended its enrollment deadline to January 31st. Finding the right health insurance coverage can often be difficult to navigate, but AccessHealthCT has staff dedicated to walking you through the process. Visit their website, call the help center, or attend an enrollment event to have your questions answered.
As I said in my letter to the editor in The Day (link paywalled), I am proud of my bipartisan work at the State Capitol. I only wish some elected officials didn't govern by "owning the other side" instead of doing the work the benefit Connecticut residents.
I recently joined the "Pete Mezzetti Show" to reflect on my first year in the legislature — what I’ve learned, what surprised me, and what I’m looking ahead to in 2026.
Connecticut stepped up with a $500 million emergency fund to respond to federal funding cuts and protect the basic needs of our residents.
With $332 million still unallocated and a fast-approaching deadline, I joined colleagues last week to urge that these funds be used to close remaining gaps — so Connecticut kids, families, and seniors stay fed and healthy.
I am happy and proud to be in the third of legislators -- along with 11 other freshmen -- who had a 100% voting record in the 2025 legislative session.
Details are still being worked out, but I am hosting a pre-session Town Hall event on Feb. 2 at 6 p.m. in the East Lyme room of the East Lyme Library. Please mark your calendars and I will be sending out more information soon.
On January 27 at 10 a.m., the Animal Welfare Caucus will meet at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford.
We welcome advocates, constituents, and community members to join us and share ideas on how we can strengthen Connecticut’s laws protecting animals as we prepare for the upcoming legislative session in early February.
Grateful for the opportunity to visit Crescent Point in Niantic and hear directly from residents about their priorities as seniors and as members of our community. Listening is one of the most important parts of this job.
Carol Burgess was one of the very first people to help me when I ran for office — she didn’t know me, but she spent hours walking with me anyway. Now she’s Chair of the Montville Board of Education, and I’m grateful that we both get to serve Montville together.
I had a great visit at Norwich Technical High School, where students from across the region — including East Lyme, Salem, and Montville — are doing impressive work and preparing for their futures.
I was especially glad to run into a few former students and see how well they’re doing. Moments like that are a powerful reminder of the impact strong public education and career-focused learning can have.