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.

Senator Larson Statement Re: Today’s Veto Session

Senator Larson Statement Re: Today’s Veto Session

State Senator Tim Larson (D-East Hartford) released the following statement regarding today’s veto session:

“I believe we should come back in special session and continue to work on some of the issues that were voted on today, especially Senate Bill 261, which would have extended the manufacturing apprenticeship tax credit to the personal income tax. I’d also like to come back and address the concerns parents and child advocates across the state raised about Senate Bill 453, which dealt with improving school safety.”

Senators Moore and Gomes Welcome $200k State Grant for Bridgeport Brass Remediation Project

Senators Moore and Gomes Welcome $200k State Grant for Bridgeport Brass Remediation Project

BRIDGEPORT—Senator Marilyn Moore (D-Bridgeport) and Senator Ed Gomes (D-Bridgeport) today welcomed a $200,000 state grant that will help to remediate and redevelop blighted properties in Bridgeport and put them back into productive use.

The grant, being awarded to the Bridgeport Economic Development Corporation (BEDC), will be used to create a comprehensive implementation strategy to remediate and redevelop the Bridgeport Brass Project Area. The Bridgeport Brass Project Area is located in the geographic center of the city along the Pequonnock River, approximately one-third of a mile north of Bridgeport’s central business district and intermodal center, and it provides the opportunity to optimize transportation and waterfront access and site use.

“Investments in brownfields have a positive impact on improving the economic development opportunities in local communities. Bridgeport will benefit greatly from the remediation and redevelopment of the former Bridgeport Brass Company.” Sen. Moore said. “We’ve already started to see some redevelopment of these abandoned sites along the Pequonnock River, and this grant will continue these improvements.”

“This plan will hopefully allow us to safely clean up and reuse the Bridgeport Brass area so that the residents of Bridgeport can once again enjoy a safer, healthier community that is also aesthetically pleasing,” Sen. Gomes said.

Governor Dannel P. Malloy announced today that Bridgeport is one of six communities across the state receiving a total of $1 million in brownfields grants. The funds are being awarded by the Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development through the recently launched Brownfield Area-Wide Revitalization Grant program. This is the second round of grants being awarded under the program. Created in 2015, the program encourages communities to consider areas such as neighborhoods, downtowns, waterfront districts, or other sections with multiple blighted properties and develop strategies to assess, clean up, and reuse the parcels for business, housing, and public amenities that will generate jobs and revenues and revitalize the entire area.

Since 2011, the state has invested $225.6 million in 170 brownfield projects located in 72 municipalities across the state. For every $1 of state investment in a brownfield project, $11.41 has been or will be invested by non-state partners.

Brownfields in Connecticut

A brownfield is defined by Connecticut General Statutes as “any abandoned or underutilized site where redevelopment, reuse or expansion has not occurred due to the presence or potential presence of pollution in the buildings, soil or groundwater that requires investigation or remediation before or in conjunction with the restoration, redevelopment, reuse and expansion of the property.”

Bridgeport Brownfield Success Stories

Brownfields in Bridgeport

Bridgeport was once a major industrial center and communities were built around industry as walk-to-work neighborhoods. Most of these industrial sites are now unused or abandoned. In 2009, there are over 400 potentially contaminated sites in the city, ranging in size from less than one quarter of an acre to 40 acres. These sites pose potential health threats to the community’s sensitive populations.

About the Bridgeport Brass Company.

Bye Cuts the Ribbon on New Workforce Housing Adjacent to CTfastrak Station

Bye Cuts the Ribbon on New Workforce Housing Adjacent to CTfastrak Station

photo of Senator Bye.

WEST HARTFORD—In another Connecticut win for affordable housing, millennial and veteran housing, and environmentally sensitive mass transit, state Senator Beth Bye (D-West Hartford) today helped cut the ribbon on a new $22 million mixed-use, transit-oriented apartment and retail complex at 616 New Park Avenue in West Hartford, directly north of the Elmwood CTfastrak station.

The mix-income 54-unit development, on the site of an abandoned automobile dealership, was built with a $5 million in state Department of Housing funding that Sen. Bye made a priority two years ago. 616 New Park was also built with a variety of other Connecticut state funding, including $11.6 million in tax credits, a $2.1 million state Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) brownfield remediation loan, and $110,000 in energy rebates.

“Today is an example of what the state and the Town of West Hartford can accomplish when we work together for the benefit of our residents and our businesses,” Sen. Bye said. “This is about affordable housing first and foremost, and about housing for veterans. But it’s also about giving people easy access to a bus line and a rail line, keeping cars off the roads and bringing people to the thousands of jobs that are located along these mass transit routes, with more jobs and more opportunities to come. This is a sustainable housing development, both economically and environmentally, and I’m proud to have played a role in getting it off the ground.”

616 New Park includes 54 units of market-rate and work force housing and is expected to attract young, working professionals in their 20’s and 30’s. The development also includes eleven units of supportive housing specifically for veterans and will have a commercial use on the first floor of the building.

616 New Park is owned by Trout Brook Realty Advisors and managed by the West Hartford Housing Authority. In addition to the massive state aid, private financing partners include Trout Brook Realty Advisors, National Equity Fund, TD Bank, Farmington Bank, Local Initiatives Support Corporation and Eversource.

Sen. Gerratana E-news: Recent Happenings; Summer Safety Tips

Senator Osten E-News: Summer Safety Tips

Senator Duff E-News: Investing in Mass Transit; Summer Safety Tips; Congratulations Graduates; CT Economic News

Senator McCrory E-News: Summer Safety Tips

Sen. Moore E-News: Summer Safety Tips

Connecticut Senate Democrats Call for End of Forcibly Separating Migrant Children From Their Parents and Zero Tolerance Policy at Border

Connecticut Senate Democrats Call for End of Forcibly Separating Migrant Children From Their Parents and Zero Tolerance Policy at Border

Members of the Senate Democratic Caucus sent the attached letter today to Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and Attorney General Jeff Sessions regarding the cruel and inhumane policy of forcibly separating migrant children from their parents when apprehended at the border.

The Honorable Kirstjen Nielsen

Secretary

Attorney General

The Honorable Jeff Sessions

Dear Secretary Nielsen and Attorney General Sessions:

We write to you regarding the cruel and inhumane policy of forcibly separating migrant children from their parents when apprehended at the border. We feel compelled to speak out against this heartless and unconscionable practice which runs counter to the very fabric of American society and Connecticut’s values.

This crisis is a tragedy of this administration’s own making, stirring the echoes of some of history’s darkest hours. And at what cost? The senseless trauma that these children are experiencing will have long and lasting effects. It is why this policy has been rightly condemned by the president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, former first ladies of the United States, at least 75 former U.S. Attorneys, members of Congress and countless others.

Tearing families apart should not be the official policy of the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice. This policy has brought international shame to the United States. In Connecticut, we value immigrants, we have enshrined it in our laws and our public policy because we know that time and again America is at its strongest when we openly accept people from foreign lands; when we view immigrants not as competition, but as brothers and sisters in carrying forward the torch of liberty.

We demand that the Departments of Homeland Security and Justice immediately halt forcibly separating migrant children from their parents and end this zero tolerance policy for undocumented immigrants entering the United States.

Sincerely,

Martin M. Looney

Senate President Pro Tempore

Bob Duff

Senate Majority Leader

Gary Winfield

Senator, 10th District

Doug McCrory

Senator, 2nd District

Marilyn Moore

Senator, 22nd District

Beth Bye

Senator, 5th District

Cathy Osten

Senator, 19th District

Tim Larson

Senator, 3rd District

Steve Cassano

Senator, 4th District

Terry Gerratana

Senator, 6th District

Carlo Leone

Senator, 27th District

John Fonfara

Senator, 1st District

Edwin Gomes

Senator, 23rd District

Joan Hartley

Senator, 15th District

Mae Flexer

Senator, 29th District

Paul Doyle

Senator, 9th District

Ted Kennedy, Jr.

Senator, 12th District