|
After months of negotiation, House Democrats shepherded passage of a bipartisan budget demonstrating that compromise remains the most effective way to govern.
Together, we produced a 2027 budget that significantly boosts support for the state’s education system, increases crucial investments in housing and transportation, supports town and city budgets, and more, all while safeguarding the state's strong fiscal outlook, including $1 billion toward paying down long-term debt.
This budget includes:
- Over $300 million relief package for cities, towns, and schools
- $190 million in direct support for schools
- $100 million to address local tax increases
- $12 million to establish universal free school breakfast programs across the state
- Expanded grants for successful special education programs
- Numerous grants to towns to address the rising costs associated with construction and purchasing
- $4 million to help communities where three hospitals abruptly came off the tax rolls
A historic agreement with our hospitals:
- Providing them with much-needed tax relief
- Maximizing federal funding for health care
- Setting up a system to address rising costs
More investments in transportation options for our residents:
- Increased funding for Shoreline East rail
- Funded successful "micro-transit" public transportation programs
- Helped prevent hikes in bus fares
Making Connecticut more affordable for working families:
- Expanding sales tax-free week to include clothing, shoes, and backpacks under $300 (from $100)
- Making basic school supplies tax-free, including backpacks, lunchboxes, notebooks, pens, pencils, crayons, rulers, and paper
- Creating a family caregiver tax credit for residents caring for a loved one
Investing in Connecticut businesses and job growth:
- Helping small businesses offer health care support by providing a tax credit when they contribute toward employees’ individual health insurance coverage.
- Supporting small businesses and biotech companies through a new research and development tax credit to help them grow and create jobs in our state
Taking Aim at Property Taxes:
- $162M new Education Equalization Grant to address underfunding in our current school funding formula
- Additional 2% for the towns that have seen recent population decreases
- $100M in new funding to cities and towns
Connecticut residents made a call for help in many areas. Connecticut lawmakers heard it and answered in a strong, bipartisan way.
|
|
|
Celebrating the passage of Senate Bill 123: An Act Requiring Public Hearings for Certain Rate Increases at Assisted Living Facilities.
Key points of the bill include:
- requiring assisted living services agencies to hold a public informational hearing if they increase a fee by more than 10%
- requiring home health aide agencies to give their employees certain personal protective equipment for free
- creating an exception to the state’s nursing home bed moratorium and modifying related certificate of need (CON) criteria
The purpose of SB 123 is to improve transparency, accountability, and resident protections in long-term care.
|
|
|
We also advanced:
Senate Bill 125: An Act Restricting Private Equity Ownership of Nursing Homes, which aims to increase transparency, accountability, and safety in nursing homes with private equity (PE) ownership. It requires mandatory annual financial disclosures to the state, ensures license holders maintain control over clinical decisions, and mandates performance bonds, following reports that PE ownership can lead to reduced staffing and lower-quality care.
The bill ensures that the state can identify who is actually controlling the facility and ensures financial stability, requiring compliance with these new provisions by February 2028.
|
|
|
The House passed Senate Bill 5: An Act Concerning Online Safety. The C.A.R.T. Act creates clear standards for powerful AI systems, while preparing Connecticut's residents, workers, students, small businesses, public agencies, and institutions for an AI-driven economy. AI is already affecting our economy, workplaces, online platforms, and the information Connecticut residents encounter every day. Senate Bill 5 responds to the new reality of AI through targeted protections, transparency for consumers, and system accountability.
This legislation targets areas where AI is making a meaningful impact on residents' lives, including employment-related automated decision tools, consumer disclosures, synthetic media provenance, youth online safety, and workforce preparation. Connecticut residents are already being impacted by AI systems. It is our state's responsibility to take action to set clear expectations to keep residents protected from harmful AI practices.
|
|
|
We also advanced a bill to protect your personal information:
Senate Bill 4: An Act Concerning Consumer Privacy and Protection, will safeguard Connecticut residents’ personal information from exploitation by data brokers, surveillance technology companies, and federal agencies.
This bill makes it easier to exercise your right to delete your data from data brokers and people tracking websites and prevents predatory surveillance pricing. As technology evolves, our laws must evolve with it. Senate Bill 4 takes critical action to strengthen privacy protections, promote transparency, and ensure Connecticut consumers are treated fairly.
Senate Bill 4 will target the following specific threats to consumer privacy:
- Data brokers: Consumers may request, at no cost, the deletion of any personal data collected by a data broker.
- Dynamic pricing: Strict disclosure requirements apply when businesses use algorithmic pricing to increase prices.
- Geolocation data: Controllers and processors are banned from selling or sharing precise geolocation data.
- Genetic Testing: Consumers would have the right to their own genetic data when using direct to consumer genetic testing services and create more transparency in their policies.
- Volume of Ads: Streaming platforms cannot transmit the audio of any commercial advertisement at a volume that is louder than the volume established by the Federal Communications Commission for television commercials.
Senate Bills 4 and 5 now move to the Governor's desk to be signed into law.
|
|
|
Connecticut has strived to be a leader in renewable energy, and this approach ensures we keep moving forward while prioritizing affordability. House Bill 5340: An Act Concerning Renewable Power Generation, modernizes Connecticut’s renewable energy programs by introducing measures meant to make them more reliable, consistent and flexible to economic fluctuations.
This bill will:
- Create clear annual megawatt and budget targets so renewable energy programs remain financially sustainable, and ratepayer impacts stay predictable and focus on investments that result in savings for ratepayers holistically
- Give state regulators the flexibility to adjust programs year-to-year to remain within overall budget limits instead of being tied to rigid annual caps that may not reflect market conditions
- Create dedicated solar rates for low-income residents, residents in distressed municipalities, and affordable multifamily housing residents
- Encourage municipalities to adopt an existing streamlined solar permitting platform (Solar APP +) to help simplify and speed up the permitting process
As electricity demand grows, we must ensure that our energy programs are cost effective and efficient.
|
|
I am pictured with Mayor Zoppo-Sassu, Fire Chief Hart, as well as members of the Fire Board and Building Committee.
|
|
Last weekend, I proudly joined members of the Bristol Fire Department to celebrate the grand opening and ribbon-cutting of the new Fire Station 3. The event marked an important milestone in strengthening the city’s public safety infrastructure and ensuring that first responders have the modern facilities they need to serve residents effectively.
The new station represents a significant investment in emergency preparedness, improving response times, enhancing coordination, and providing firefighters with updated equipment and workspace. It stands as a testament to the community’s commitment to public safety and to supporting the dedicated professionals who work every day to keep Bristol safe.
|
|
Click here for more information and to register.
|
|
The Bristol Bazaar is home to over 75 local makers, unique gifts, creative workshops, and Yellow King Bristol.
Shop small, support local and explore thousands of handmade treasures in our one-of-a-kind indoor market space. Open 6 days a week (67 Race Street), click here for more information.
|
|
|
|
|