Month: August 2017
Senator Larson E-News: Celebrating Women’s Equality Day
Senator McCrory E-News: Celebrating Women’s Equality Day
Senator Duff E-News: Celebrating Women’s Equality Day; Road Work and Construction
Looney E-News: Fort Hale Pier Groundbreaking; A Secure Retirement
Senator Bye E-News: Celebrating Women’s Equality Day
Senator Winfield E-News: “Because You Matter” Kicks Off Monday!
Fonfara Celebrates Grand Opening of UCONN Hartford Campus

Fonfara Celebrates Grand Opening of UCONN Hartford Campus

Senator John Fonfara (D-Hartford) today joined hundreds of elected officials, university leaders, students, and members of the community to mark the grand opening of the University of Connecticut’s new Hartford Campus.
Returning to downtown Hartford, UConn Hartford interweaves top-tier academic programs with the vitality and unique educational and service opportunities offered by Connecticut’s capital city. The move establishes a neighborhood campus, with UConn Hartford being integrated with the Hartford Public Library and surrounded by the Wadsworth Atheneum, Connecticut Science Center, Connecticut Convention Center, and state and city government offices.
Home to many undergraduate programs as well as graduate and professional programs, UConn Hartford offers all of the benefits of a prestigious public research university in a metropolitan setting.
UCONN Hartford Quick Facts:
- 3,100 students
- 232,000+ square feet of learning and community space
- 300 full-time faculty and staff
- 13:1 faculty to student ratio
Bye Helps Cut Ribbon on New UCONN Downtown Hartford Campus

Bye Helps Cut Ribbon on New UCONN Downtown Hartford Campus

State Senator Beth Bye (D-West Hartford) today helped cut the ribbon on UConn’s new downtown campus in the former Hartford Times building on Prospect Street in Hartford, a move that returns UConn to its roots in Hartford, where it had been located from its opening in 1939 until it moved in 1970 to West Hartford.
Classes start Monday at the downtown campus, which will be home to about 2,300 undergraduate and graduate students and almost 300 full- and part-time employees. When combined with other students enrolled in classes at the nearby Graduate Business Learning Center, UConn now brings more than 3,100 students to downtown Hartford businesses, cultural destinations, and community organizations.
“Today is an important day for democracy in Connecticut, because education is the foundation of our democracy, and it strengthens our state and our nation,” said Sen. Bye, who is Senate Co-Chair of the General Assembly’s Higher Education and Employment Advancement Committee. “Schools and colleges build an educated citizenry. Institutions of higher education like UCONN are places of community discourse, places to try out new ideas, and places for the arts and humanities to flourish. So today is wonderful celebration, and I want to thank the faculty and staff who will be working with these students, expanding their thinking and helping them try on new perspectives. You are helping to build our democracy one student at a time.”
The new UConn campus comprises about 160,000 square feet in the former Hartford Times building; a nearby 34,500-square-foot building that UConn purchased at 38 Prospect St. to house the School of Social Work; and about 19,200 square feet in the Hartford Public Library in partnership with that organization.
UConn’s new downtown campus includes 23 classrooms, staff and faculty offices, three state-of-the-art computer labs, five science teaching labs, a collaboration space where students and faculty can work on ideas in an informal environment, study areas, conference rooms and meeting spaces, and the atrium.
There are also several student spaces: the student services offices (registrar, bursar, advising, and career counseling); space for student activities, the cultural centers, and student government; a large student lounge; and a Veterans’ Oasis lounge.
In the Hartford Public Library, UConn’s space includes classrooms, study areas, a student lounge, a shared computer lab and classroom, and, appropriately, the campus library.
“UConn Hartford is not only brick, mortar, and steel. It is a living, breathing institution at the core of this city,” UConn President Susan Herbst said at Wednesday’s ribbon cutting. “It will be part of the backbone of Hartford: a place of learning, engagement, and discovery, and a vibrant part of this neighborhood and the capital city as a whole. This is one of the greatest, most momentous days in the 136-year history of UConn, and an exceptionally proud moment for this city and our state.”
“The investment we have made in UConn’s new downtown campus is an investment in higher education, in our capital city, and in our state’s economy,” Governor Dannel P. Malloy said. “Importantly, we are connecting students with all the city has to offer—museums, shops, restaurants, night life, and sports venues—showing the next generation of young professionals how vibrant Hartford is becoming.”
“Today is a great day for the City of Hartford and for the State of Connecticut,” Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin said. “UConn’s beautiful new campus not only brings the historic Hartford Times building back to life, but brings thousands of students and faculty to downtown Hartford—adding tremendous energy and vitality to our capital city, and bringing us closer to our goal of building a truly vibrant Hartford. I’m deeply grateful to everyone.”
Statement from Senator Larson on Governor Malloy’s Revised Executive Order Resource Allocation Plan
Statement from Senator Larson on Governor Malloy’s Revised Executive Order Resource Allocation Plan
Senator Tim Larson (D-East Hartford) today issued the following statement regarding Governor Dannel P. Malloy’s announcement of a revised Executive Order Resource Allocation Plan ahead of tonight’s rally in South Windsor:
“While I appreciate that East Hartford and East Windsor will receive their full education funding under the governor’s revised executive order, I am concerned about the deep cuts to education in many other municipalities throughout our state, including South Windsor and Ellington,” Sen. Larson said. “I think we can all agree the remedy for this is to have a budget that supersedes the governor’s executive order. Today, Democrats in the Senate caucused to continue our work producing a balanced budget that provides stability for Connecticut families.
“While Republicans continue to criticize and complain about the current circumstances, they have done little to contribute to the ultimate goal, which is passing a bipartisan budget that works for cities and towns across Connecticut. The partisan budget proposed by Senate Republicans earlier this year, crafted in secret, is unbalanced, illegal, and simply would not work. For example, to quote President Susan Herbst, the Senate Republican Budget devastates UCONN and the UCONN Health Center, cutting more than $118 million in fiscal year 18 and $172 million in fiscal year 19, for a total biennial cut of over $291 million. It also cuts scholarships for college students across the state by over 60 percent, or over $46 million over the biennium.
“It’s time for Republicans to step up and work with us to develop a balanced budget that reflect the reality of the SEBAC agreement. Allowing the governor to continue running the state by executive order is in no one’s best interest. The state’s current fiscal crisis was created by decades of poor choices by Democrats and Republicans. For my entire tenure in the legislature, it’s been only the Democrats who have stepped up and voted for budgets that have begun to correct this bad planning. I hope Republican legislators will break their more than 10-year-record of not voting for a budget and get to a place where they are willing to compromise in order to reach a bipartisan agreement.
“We must pass a budget that protects Connecticut’s core assets, including our public education system. I’ve always been an advocate for education; in fact, I am looking forward to attending the ribbon cutting of Orchard Hill Elementary School right here in South Windsor on Saturday, a $33.5 million project of which $11.26 million was funded by the state.”