The Connecticut State Department of Education issued a guidance document for every K-12 public school district in Connecticut in response to immigration enforcement activities carried out by U.S.
Gov. Ned Lamont hopes to strengthen the state’s existing hate crime statutes and seek greater penalties to more effectively and appropriately charge criminals.
I work well. I know the CEOs pretty well. I want them to believe in Connecticut. And if they don’t we’ll find alternatives,” ...
Gov. Ned Lamont (D-Conn.) was at the UConn School of Pharmacy on Friday to tout initiatives aimed at expanding access to ...
Terrence Cheng, chancellor of Connecticut’s largest public college system, spent a year evaluating a move but still lives in New York, auditors say.
A memo from the federal Office of Management and Budget on Monday night said there would be a temporary pause on federal ...
CT Dems unveiled a $250M plan to raise Medicaid reimbursement rates, saying ‘we can’t stop doing our jobs’ amid federal ...
A bill to consolidate and strengthen the state’s existing hate crime statutes will be included as part of the legislative ...
Only a few days after President Donald Trump rescinded an order this week pausing all federal grants and loans, the federal Department of Transportation issued new directives tying funding for ...
Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont, after a three-year study, will ask state lawmakers to clarify state law on hate crimes.
The Connecticut Hate Crimes Advisory Council, along with Gov. Ned Lamont, law enforcement officials, and other advocates announced an effort to simplify and strengthen the state’s hate crimes statutes ...
HARTFORD - Gov. Ned Lamont will propose that the state legislature consolidate and rewrite hate crime statutes, including ...