Month: June 2018
Sen. Moore Welcomes $800K State Grant Funds for Improvements to Trumbull’s Stern Village
Sen. Moore Welcomes $800K State Grant Funds for Improvements to Trumbull’s Stern Village
TRUMBULL—Senator Marilyn Moore (D-Bridgeport) welcomed an $800,000 state Community Development Block Grant for improvements to Stern Village, a 222-unit senior rental housing development run by the Trumbull Housing Authority. Renovations will focus primarily on upgrading the windows to be more energy efficient.
“I’m so glad that Trumbull is one of 16 towns across the state to receive this shared grant,” Sen. Moore said. “These new energy-efficient windows at Stern Village will save money and our environment.”
Governor Dannel P. Malloy and Connecticut Department of Housing (DOH) Commissioner Evonne M. Klein announced Thursday that $10.5 million is being awarded to 16 municipalities in Connecticut to provide infrastructure upgrades and improvements with the goal of combatting blight, improving neighborhoods, and increasing economic development.
Awarded through the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Small Cities program, which is administered by DOH with funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the grants are given to small towns that have a population below 50,000 residents and will advance projects that develop and preserve affordable housing, provide services to the most vulnerable residents in their communities, and also create and retain jobs.
Looney E-News: Heat Wave Alert
Senator Duff E-News: Heat Wave Alert; Visit a State Park or Beach for Free!
Senator Larson E-News: Heat Wave Alert!
Sen. Flexer Welcomes $700K State Community Development Funds for Killingly Domestic Violence Shelter
Sen. Flexer Welcomes $700K State Community Development Funds for Killingly Domestic Violence Shelter
KILLINGLY—Senator Mae Flexer (D-Danielson) today welcomed a $700,000 Community Development Block Grant for much-needed renovations to the Killingly Domestic Violence Shelter Rehabilitation Project.
The Town of Killingly, in conjunction with United Services Inc., will complete capital improvements on their 12-bed domestic violence shelter. The work includes a complete renovation of the property, with energy-efficient improvements. The work will include replacing windows, doors, insulation, upgrades to plumbing, electrical upgrades, improvements to ensure code compliance, and a modification to the internal design of the facility to maximize space.
“In Connecticut, we are committed to ensuring that survivors of domestic violence are treated equitably and with dignity,” Sen. Flexer said. “I’m proud to have fought for this funding which will allow the Killingly shelter to continue to be a safe haven for women and families in our community as they escape violence in their homes.”
With Connecticut domestic violence shelters operating at 122 percent of capacity statewide and a critical need for solutions, Sen. Flexer joined the Connecticut Coalition Against Domestic Violence (CCADV) and the Connecticut Coalition to End Homelessness (CCEH) last month to announce the success of their unique and innovative partnership to house survivors of domestic violence facing homelessness. Through this groundbreaking approach, recognized as a national model of collaboration, 73 households, including 28 single adults and 45 families, have been housed or begun the process of securing permanent housing during the first 18 months of the program.
Governor Dannel P. Malloy and Connecticut Department of Housing (DOH) Commissioner Evonne M. Klein today announced that $10.5 million is being awarded to 16 municipalities in Connecticut to provide infrastructure upgrades and improvements with the goal of combatting blight, improving neighborhoods, and increasing economic development.
Awarded through the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Small Cities program, which is administered by DOH with funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the grants are given to small towns that have a population below 50,000 residents and will advance projects that develop and preserve affordable housing, provide services to the most vulnerable residents in their communities, and also create and retain jobs.
Statement From Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff on Supreme Court Ruling in Janus v. AFSCME
Statement From Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff on Supreme Court Ruling in Janus v. AFSCME
Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk) today released the following statement on the Supreme Court’s decision on Janus v. AFSCME, determining that public sector unions can no longer collect fair share dues from employees who opt not to belong to a union—even though the union is required by law to represent workers in union jobs:
“There can be no doubt that unions helped build and create the middle class in this country. Today’s Janus decision by five activist judges rolled back decades of precedents and continues the Republican dream of dismantling worker rights, breaking the backs of the middle class, furthering the economic divide, deepening the financial insecurity felt by too many families and continuing the covert class warfare of Republican megadonors.”
Flexer and Health Care Advocates Blast SCOTUS Decision to Side with Anti-Choice Women’s Health Centers
Flexer & Health Care Advocates Blast SCOTUS Decision to Side with Anti-Choice Women’s Health Centers
State Senator Mae Flexer (D-Danielson), state legislators, Hartford city officials and women’s health care advocates from across Connecticut today gathered on the steps of the State Capitol to denounce Tuesday’s U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down a California law requiring anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers to more fully disclose what they are—organizations that attempt to look like legitimate family planning clinics, while actually providing medically inaccurate, anti-choice information.
“Every woman should have the right to make her own medical decisions and choose what she wants to do with her body. But these co-called ‘crisis pregnancy centers’ take that choice away by disguising themselves as legitimate clinics, providing false information and shaming their patients seeking to end a pregnancy,” Sen. Flexer said. “This decision makes it clear now that every branch of the federal government is prepared to roll back women’s rights. In Connecticut we must be vigilant in protecting these rights because our state government is the last line of defense to empower women and protect their access to health care.”
Sen. Flexer was joined by women’s health care advocates from across the state including NARAL Pro-Choice Connecticut, The National Organization for Women (CT NOW), Connecticut Women’s Education and Legal Fund (CWEALF), Hartford City Councilwoman Wildaliz Bermudez and Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin.
“Yesterday five male justices tried to say that it’s okay for fake women’s health centers to lie to women. These aren’t the values of Connecticut,” said Sarah Croucher, Executive Director, NARAL Pro-Choice Connecticut. “The critical fact remains that individuals in our city and across the state are being deceived when they seek out medical care. We remain committed to ensuring that women who are pregnant or think they might be have access to comprehensive, medically accurate health care options, without deception or shame. I hope that all of our pro-choice majority in the legislature will stand with us so that we can end the lies.”
“No one should be deceived or misled as they seek critical health care services,” said CWEALF Executive Director Kate Farrar. “But, the decision yesterday by the Supreme Court will limit women’s access to comprehensive, honest and transparent health care in our own backyards.”
“The Connecticut chapter of the National Organization for Women denounces the NIFLA v Becerra decision and is disgusted that the Supreme Court would allow these ‘crisis pregnancy centers’ to continue to manipulate women through their practice of providing false information, which undermines the right of every woman who walks through their doors to make an informed decision on whether she wants to terminate her pregnancy, or carry it to term,” Kate Hamilton Moser, Vice-President of CT NOW, said. “There is no place for extreme religious ideology in health care. Medical decisions need to be based on access to complete and unbiased information, coupled with the patient’s own personal beliefs and desires. Connecticut NOW is committed to protecting Connecticut women and girls against deceptive health care practices, as well as to ensuring that they never lose their reproductive freedom.”
“Since 1978 Hartford GYN Center has served the Hartford community by providing abortion care by licensed physicians and practitioners, as well as well-woman visits and the full range of reproductive health care services, always based on accurate, trustworthy medical information,” said Roxanne Sutocky, Director of Community Engagement at Hartford GYN Center. “We have witnessed firsthand the dangers that CPCs pose by deceiving patients and delaying their access to time-sensitive medical care in their efforts to convince them not to have an abortion. We are proud to continue our work as a part of Connecticut’s health care community and we welcome the public, our elected officials, and the press for a scheduled visit to see firsthand what legitimate, comprehensive reproductive health care provision looks like.”
This year, Connecticut Democrats introduced several bills establishing protections for women’s health in Connecticut to defend against the ongoing attempts at the federal level to roll back women’s access to necessary health services. Democrats led final passage of a bill ensuring that insurance policies offered in Connecticut must cover the “10 Essential Health Benefits” protected in the federal Affordable Care Act, including outpatient care, trips to the emergency room, prenatal care and ongoing care for the baby throughout its childhood, prescription medicine, lab tests, mental health services and substance use disorder services.
Also included in the 2018 Democratic Values Agenda was a bill that would have shed light on fake “Crisis Pregnancy Centers” that target urban neighborhoods and other medically underserved communities where people do not have access to a regular gynecologist. Democrats introduced legislation to ensure that people seeking health care advice about a pregnancy are not lied to or shamed by staff at “crisis pregnancy centers” seeking to further a political agenda. Unfortunately, the bill did not pass.
Statement From Senate President Pro Tempore Martin M. Looney on Supreme Court Ruling in Janus v. AFSCME
Statement From Senate President Pro Tempore Martin M. Looney on Supreme Court Ruling in Janus v. AFSCME
Senate President Pro Tempore Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven) released the following statement on the Supreme Court’s decision on Janus v. AFSCME, determining that public sector unions can no longer collect fair share dues from employees who opt not to belong to a union—even though the union is required by law to represent workers in union jobs:
“Today, at a time when income inequality is on the rise and families are finding it harder to make ends meet, strong unions are desperately needed because they raise the tide for all workers—members and nonmembers alike. For generations, it has been labor unions that have led the fight for fair wages and safe working conditions. Today’s decision is a blow to hardworking people everywhere.”
Sens. Bye, McCrory Celebrate Economic Victory for Bloomfield’s R&D Dynamics
Sens. Bye, McCrory Celebrate Economic Victory for Bloomfield’s R&D Dynamics
BLOOMFIELD—State Senators Beth Bye (D-West Hartford) and Doug McCrory (D-Hartford) joined executives of R&D Dynamics in Bloomfield today to celebrate the company securing Class 1 renewable energy source designation for their groundbreaking
“ThermoGen” system, which generates electricity from industrial low-grade waste heat.
The desirable Class 1 renewable energy designation for R&D’s product—the same designation given to solar, wind, fuel cells and geothermal products—was included in Senate Bill 9, “An Act Concerning Connecticut’s Energy Future,” which was signed into law on May 24.
Sens. Bye and McCrory help craft and pass the necessary legislation—which passed on an overwhelmingly bipartisan basis in both the House and the Senate—after meeting with R&D officials in January.
“Your support and hard work was monumental,” R&D Dynamics President Dr. Giri Agrawal told Sens. Bye and McCrory. “Many things were started in Connecticut first, and we’re going to start the ThermoGen in Connecticut, and we are going to change the world starting in Connecticut.”
“You believe in Connecticut, and you believe Connecticut is a great place to do business. But you needed help, and you knew that we would help,” Sen. Bye said. “To have somebody who believes in Connecticut, to have a company that wants to grow, it is really our job as your state representatives to make that happen.”
“I felt your passion for wanting to do this. You stepped out on a limb. You explained to us why this is important, not only to Connecticut but to the entire world,” Sen. McCrory said. “Your business is going to grow, and when your business grows you hire more people, and more people stay in Connecticut.”
“This Class 1 designation will allow for significant job growth here at R&D Dynamics; we think customers are really going to be excited by this product,” said R&D Dynamics Vice-President Sunil Agrawal. “This legislation will allow sooner commercialization of ThermoGen, and customers will see a quicker payback on their investment.”
The Connecticut Center for Advanced Technology, Inc. (CCAT) provided strategic assistance to R&D Dynamics for the identification of market opportunities and technical viability. CCAT was also on hand to acknowledge the efforts provided by R&D Dynamics, Sens. Bye and McCrory, and the production staff at R&D Dynamics.
“We are pleased to help our hydrogen and fuel cell businesses in Connecticut increase opportunities for business, job, community, and economic development,” said CCAT’s Director of Energy Joel Rinebold. “This is what it takes to make Connecticut and the United States great, made possible by a team of strong individuals. Identifying the market need for clean energy technology, designing advanced technology solutions, supporting and manufacturing the product and technology to make tech for domestic and global markets.”
Founded in 1990 and now located on West Dudleytown Road in Bloomfield, R&D Dynamics has grown from just five employees to more than 65. It designs and manufactures oil-free, energy-efficient and high-speed turbomachinery for aerospace and commercial sectors like General Electric, BMW, Rolls Royce, FuelCell Energy and the U.S. military.
At 12 feet long, eight feet tall and five feet wide, the ThermoGen system can produce 180 kilowatts of electricity from waste heat—enough to power 180 homes. It is oil-free, has zero emissions, and has a 25-year lifespan.