SEN. KUSHNER PLEDGES TO RAISE NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENT BILL THIS SESSION

SEN. KUSHNER PLEDGES TO RAISE NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENT BILL THIS SESSION

HARTFORD – Speaking today at a press conference on protecting the survivors of sexual abuse in the workplace and in prison, state Senator Julie Kushner (D-Danbury) pledged to raise a bill this session in the Labor and Public Employees Committee that would limit the use of non-disclosure agreements in Connecticut.

The bill will receive its public hearing on March 3.

Sen. Kushner vowed to raise the bill at a press conference today organized by the Connecticut Alliance to End Sexual Violence, which is advocating this session to end nondisclosure agreements and to codify the federal Prison Rape Elimination Act into state law. The event featured a survivor of prison sexual abuse and a woman who is suing World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and others for sexual abuse, and who was later forced to sign a nondisclosure agreement.

“If the legislature fails to pass this bill this year, then we’re simply perpetuating the sexual abuse of women in the workplace. It’s that simple,” Sen. Kushner said. “When victims are silenced with NDAs, the perpetrator is never brought to justice, and they just continue their abuse. There’s no question that this is a critical piece of legislation this year, and that this is the year we need to get it done.”

Nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) between a company and an employee typically restrict employees from sharing business trade secrets and confidential information, but they can also be used to prevent employees from reporting fraud, insider trading, or sexual abuse. In such instances, the perpetrators of these crimes are never reported or prosecuted and may simply be shuffled off to another company to abuse more people.

Senate Democrats Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

Newsletter Header

Senate Democrats Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

HARTFORD – Senate Democrats today outlined an ambitious legislative agenda to counter rising costs in the Trump economy by proposing broad tax relief for Connecticut families, expanded healthcare access, and new protections against private equity exploitation as residents face mounting costs from tariffs, the elimination of healthcare subsidies, and the deterioration of privacy and constitutional rights.

At a press conference Thursday at the Legislative Office Building, Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney and Majority Leader Bob Duff, joined by members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, highlighted priority legislation addressing affordability, healthcare costs, consumer privacy protections, online safety, support for children and families, as well as educational equity.

Senate Bill 1: Making Connecticut More Affordable

The caucus’s flagship proposal, Senate Bill 1, includes sweeping tax relief measures designed to reduce costs for Connecticut families. The legislation would eliminate the sales tax on school supplies, prepared food purchased at grocery stores, clothing under $100, and certain major home appliances, such as washing machines, dryers, and refrigerators. Additionally, the bill will establish a renters’ tax credit, create a tax credit for family members caring for elderly or disabled relatives, and eliminate the state income tax on Social Security benefits.

Sales Tax Cuts

  • School Supplies – $12.9 million
  • Prepared Food at Grocery Stores – $65 million for the entire 7.35%
  • Clothing under $100 – $175 million per year
  • Home Appliances – $12 million per year, if based on the Maryland model of exempting Energy Star appliances

Income Tax Cuts

  • Elderly Care – Exact cost still being analyzed OFA, but a maximum of $60 million
  • Rental Tax Credit – Exact cost still being analyzed OFA, and parameters to be determined, but as high as $395 million
  • Social Security – $54 million: Of the 737,000 receiving Social Security, 225,000 people still pay the tax.

“Reckless federal policies have created an affordability crisis for American families,” Senator Looney said. “Tariffs that function as taxes on consumers and the elimination of healthcare subsidies have made it harder for families to make ends meet. While we cannot stop Washington Republicans from ratcheting up costs, we can work to reduce the everyday expenses that strain household budgets. Senate Bill 1 provides relief where families need it most, cutting taxes on clothing, school supplies, and groceries while providing tax credits for those caring for elderly or disabled relatives.”

“While Washington Republicans prioritize billionaires over working people, Connecticut is stepping up to provide real relief,” Senator Duff said. “Whether it’s eliminating the sales tax on back-to-school clothes and supplies or making sure families aren’t facing unnecessary taxes when they buy groceries, Senate Bill 1 puts money back in people’s pockets. We’re not going to sit by while GOP policies drive up costs for Connecticut families.”

Senate Bill 2: Supporting Local Commerce

Senate Bill 2 will reduce operational costs for Connecticut’s small businesses and strengthen municipal resources. The bill eliminates the 6.35% sales and use tax on electricity and natural gas for commercial and industrial customers with gross income under $10 million, providing immediate relief to Main Street businesses struggling with high energy costs.

Additionally, the proposal redirects revenue from the existing 1% meals tax increase to support communities and tourism: half of the collected funds will be returned directly to municipalities as local aid, while the other half will be deposited into the state’s Tourism Fund. By reducing costs businesses pass on to consumers and reinvesting in local communities, this proposal aims to make Connecticut more competitive for small business owners while ensuring towns and cities have the resources they need to thrive.

Senate Bill 3: Healthcare Affordability

After Donald Trump and Congressional Republicans allowed the federal enhanced premium tax credits to expire at the end of 2025, Connecticut residents saw their premiums on Access Health CT skyrocket. While Connecticut has provided full subsidies to families earning 100-200% of the Federal Poverty Level and partial subsidies to those earning 400-500%, middle-income families are still struggling with these price hikes. Senate Bill 3 proposes full subsidies for families earning 400-600% of the Federal Poverty Level, ensuring Connecticut families can afford to stay healthy.

Senate Bill 4: Consumer Privacy

Building on Connecticut’s national leadership in consumer privacy protections, Senate Bill 4 introduces comprehensive privacy measures that address emerging threats to consumer data in the digital age. The bill will tackle critical privacy concerns, including the lightly regulated sale of geolocation data, the proliferation of license plate readers and facial recognition technology, and the exploitative practices of data brokers.

Given federal law enforcement’s current overreach and violations of civil rights, this bill will help prevent third-party vendors from retaining or providing data that tracks individuals’ movements and locations to federal agencies, including ICE.

The proposal also addresses dynamic pricing schemes and ensures price transparency on car sales by requiring retailers to disclose costs attributable to tariff increases on receipts. To effectively enforce these enhanced protections, the bill includes increased funding for the Attorney General’s office.

Senate Bill 5: Online Safety

Senate Bill 5 advances critical artificial intelligence legislation to protect Connecticut residents from emerging digital harms, with a primary focus on preventing AI-driven threats to mental health and youth safety. The bill establishes accountability measures for chatbot platforms and AI systems that encourage self-harm or suicidal ideation.

The legislation will hold technology companies responsible when their AI systems promote dangerous content or behaviors, ensuring that platforms cannot evade liability for harm caused by their algorithms. This bill sets clear rules to keep AI safe and stops companies from using AI to unfairly discriminate against job applicants. Connecticut is leading the nation in making sure AI helps people instead of putting them at risk, especially those who are most vulnerable.

Senate Bill 6: Supporting Children and Families

Recognizing the rising cost of living in Trump’s economy, Senate Bill 6 proposes relief through a refundable child tax credit covering up to three children. The credit would support families earning up to $100,000 for single filers or up to $200,000 for joint filers.

With grocery costs high and families struggling, the bill also seeks to increase funding to provide no-cost breakfast and no-cost lunch through the school meal program. The expected cost of providing free breakfast is $13 million per year.

Senate Bill 7: Educational Equity

Senate Bill 7 proposes a historic increase in state funding for public education by adjusting the Education Cost Sharing formula’s foundation grant. The foundation grant is the basic, per-pupil funding each district receives under the ECS formula before other adjustments. Increases in the foundation grant benefit every town and city in Connecticut.

Currently, the foundation sits at $11,525 per pupil. Senate Bill 7 would raise that amount to $12,500 in fiscal year 2027, $13,500 in fiscal year 2028, $14,500 in fiscal year 2029, and $15,500 in fiscal year 2030. The projected cost of raising the foundation grant in the first year is approximately $194 million.

On the fourth year of scheduled increases in state education support, the bill would index the foundation grant to economic indicators, ensuring that Connecticut communities have school funding that keeps pace with current conditions.

The bill will also establish a working group to evaluate the Education Cost Sharing grant and recommend improvements.

Finally, Senate Bill 7 will establish a program for paid student teaching positions in low-income districts for educators who will continue to work in those districts in Connecticut for the first 5 years after their student teaching ends.

Senate Bill 8: Supporting Graduate Students

For 20 years, American students have used the federal GradPLUS loan program to access lower-interest loans to bridge financial gaps in paying for their graduate studies. The Trump administration has cut the program and implemented lower borrowing limits for students pursuing critical degrees such as nursing, education, and social work. Senate Bill 8 proposes expanding the Connecticut Higher Education Supplemental Loan Authority to backfill GradPLUS cuts, thereby investing in workforce development and offering Connecticut students a pathway to affordable higher education without relying on high-interest private loan servicers.

Senate Bill 9: Supporting Commuters and Microtransit Services

In 2024, Connecticut funded $19.5 million for a two-year pilot program that implemented nine micro transit systems across the state. These programs provide on-demand, accessible, and affordable transportation to connect underserved areas and bridge the “last-mile” gap that keeps seniors, people with disabilities, and those without transportation from reaching larger transit hubs. The pilot program was successful, and Senate Bill 9 proposes a $9 million one-year continuation of the program, as well as a commuter tax credit and leasing of airspace over Department of Transportation (DOT)-owned land to build more housing.

Additional Work on Behalf of Residents

Beyond the caucus’s low-number bills, Senate President Pro Tem Looney and Majority Leader Duff have outlined additional high-priority issues in a series of letters to the chairs of the legislature’s subject matter committees as part of their work on behalf of Connecticut residents. Those issues include:

Protecting Constitutional Rights from Federal Overreach

The unprecedented attack on civil and Constitutional rights by the Trump administration, as it weaponizes the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency against American residents, must stop. Senate Democrats will introduce legislation to address ICE overreach and a variety of Constitutional concerns, including creating a new cause of action for wronged individuals to sue federal agents; clarifying the state Inspector General’s ability to investigate federal officers who use deadly force in Connecticut; banning all law enforcement officers from wearing masks; prohibiting armed military forces from entering Connecticut without the governor’s permission; requiring judicial warrants for arrests in certain areas like hospitals, homeless shelters, schools, and places of worship; and creating a database to track ICE activities in Connecticut.

Implementing No-Excuse Absentee Voting

On Election Day 2024, 58% of Connecticut voters approved a change in the state Constitution allowing any Connecticut voter to request an absentee ballot without having to meet any of the existing criteria for voting absentee. Senate Democrats will work to establish the rules and procedures for implementing no-excuse absentee voting.

Supporting Workers’ Rights

Senate Democrats will introduce legislation to provide unemployment benefits to striking workers who have been on strike for more than two weeks, representing a step forward for middle-class families in Connecticut by providing financial support during labor disputes. New York and New Jersey already have such laws.

Expanding Health Coverage Options

The Connecticut Health Security Act will focus on small-business employees, entrepreneurs, and part-time workers whose employers don’t offer health care coverage.

Criminal Justice Reform

Senate Democrats are advancing criminal justice reforms, including codifying into state law the Department of Corrections’ informal policy not to deny any inmate medical treatment based on their ability to pay. Another proposal would require prisons to allow inmates two or three in-person visits per week, building on research showing that regular family visits reduce recidivism by 26% and reduce prison misconduct by 25%.

Restricting Private Equity Across Critical Sectors

Senate Democrats have called for comprehensive action to limit the growing influence of private equity firms across multiple sectors that impact Connecticut families.

Education & Special Education Services

In a letter to committee leadership, Senators Looney and Duff called on the Education Committee to restrict private equity firms in Connecticut’s education and special education services. The senators noted that private equity-owned companies are twice as likely to go bankrupt and requested legislation to protect students, families, and education workers from profit-driven models that prioritize returns over quality services.

“At a time when Connecticut residents are watching their bills pile up and struggling to make ends meet, the last thing they need are risky private equity deals threatening their jobs, their communities, and their security,” the senators wrote.

Child Care

As child care costs rise, private equity firms are entering the field with the resources and capital to acquire significant market share, seeking higher profitability at the expense of families and workers. Proposed legislation will counter the effects of private equity ownership in child care and ensure families can access affordable, high-quality early child care.

Health Care

Private equity weakened several important community hospitals in Waterbury, Manchester, and Vernon-Rockville over the last decade. Building on concepts developed in 2025, new legislation will seek to limit private equity ownership of Connecticut hospitals and health care facilities, increase oversight, and protect the security of existing health care operations in Connecticut.

Nursing Homes

The Aging Committee is expected to consider legislation restricting private equity ownership of nursing homes in Connecticut. In a letter to committee leadership, Senators Looney and Duff highlighted the need to protect seniors, their families, and nursing home workers from profit-driven models that threaten the stability and quality of long-term care facilities.

Housing

Connecticut is home to one of the most constrained housing markets in the United States, with limited supply and high demand elevating prices. Studies show that private equity ownership makes homeownership less accessible for first-time buyers and pushes housing prices even higher, with private equity owning up to one in 11 residential parcels in urban locations. Legislation will limit private equity’s ability to acquire swaths of the housing market by preventing private equity companies from making offers on one- and two-family homes for the first 75 days after listing or face a $250,000 fine.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Kevin Coughlin | kevin.coughlin@cga.ct.gov | 203-710-0193

Senate Democrats Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

Newsletter Header

Senate Democrats Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

HARTFORD – Senate Democrats today outlined an ambitious legislative agenda to counter rising costs in the Trump economy by proposing broad tax relief for Connecticut families, expanded healthcare access, and new protections against private equity exploitation as residents face mounting costs from tariffs, the elimination of healthcare subsidies, and the deterioration of privacy and constitutional rights.

At a press conference Thursday at the Legislative Office Building, Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney and Majority Leader Bob Duff, joined by members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, highlighted priority legislation addressing affordability, healthcare costs, consumer privacy protections, online safety, support for children and families, as well as educational equity.

Senate Bill 1: Making Connecticut More Affordable

The caucus’s flagship proposal, Senate Bill 1, includes sweeping tax relief measures designed to reduce costs for Connecticut families. The legislation would eliminate the sales tax on school supplies, prepared food purchased at grocery stores, clothing under $100, and certain major home appliances, such as washing machines, dryers, and refrigerators. Additionally, the bill will establish a renters’ tax credit, create a tax credit for family members caring for elderly or disabled relatives, and eliminate the state income tax on Social Security benefits.

Sales Tax Cuts

  • School Supplies – $12.9 million
  • Prepared Food at Grocery Stores – $65 million for the entire 7.35%
  • Clothing under $100 – $175 million per year
  • Home Appliances – $12 million per year, if based on the Maryland model of exempting Energy Star appliances

Income Tax Cuts

  • Elderly Care – Exact cost still being analyzed OFA, but a maximum of $60 million
  • Rental Tax Credit – Exact cost still being analyzed OFA, and parameters to be determined, but as high as $395 million
  • Social Security – $54 million: Of the 737,000 receiving Social Security, 225,000 people still pay the tax.

“Reckless federal policies have created an affordability crisis for American families,” Senator Looney said. “Tariffs that function as taxes on consumers and the elimination of healthcare subsidies have made it harder for families to make ends meet. While we cannot stop Washington Republicans from ratcheting up costs, we can work to reduce the everyday expenses that strain household budgets. Senate Bill 1 provides relief where families need it most, cutting taxes on clothing, school supplies, and groceries while providing tax credits for those caring for elderly or disabled relatives.”

“While Washington Republicans prioritize billionaires over working people, Connecticut is stepping up to provide real relief,” Senator Duff said. “Whether it’s eliminating the sales tax on back-to-school clothes and supplies or making sure families aren’t facing unnecessary taxes when they buy groceries, Senate Bill 1 puts money back in people’s pockets. We’re not going to sit by while GOP policies drive up costs for Connecticut families.”

Senate Bill 2: Supporting Local Commerce

Senate Bill 2 will reduce operational costs for Connecticut’s small businesses and strengthen municipal resources. The bill eliminates the 6.35% sales and use tax on electricity and natural gas for commercial and industrial customers with gross income under $10 million, providing immediate relief to Main Street businesses struggling with high energy costs.

Additionally, the proposal redirects revenue from the existing 1% meals tax increase to support communities and tourism: half of the collected funds will be returned directly to municipalities as local aid, while the other half will be deposited into the state’s Tourism Fund. By reducing costs businesses pass on to consumers and reinvesting in local communities, this proposal aims to make Connecticut more competitive for small business owners while ensuring towns and cities have the resources they need to thrive.

Senate Bill 3: Healthcare Affordability

After Donald Trump and Congressional Republicans allowed the federal enhanced premium tax credits to expire at the end of 2025, Connecticut residents saw their premiums on Access Health CT skyrocket. While Connecticut has provided full subsidies to families earning 100-200% of the Federal Poverty Level and partial subsidies to those earning 400-500%, middle-income families are still struggling with these price hikes. Senate Bill 3 proposes full subsidies for families earning 400-600% of the Federal Poverty Level, ensuring Connecticut families can afford to stay healthy.

Senate Bill 4: Consumer Privacy

Building on Connecticut’s national leadership in consumer privacy protections, Senate Bill 4 introduces comprehensive privacy measures that address emerging threats to consumer data in the digital age. The bill will tackle critical privacy concerns, including the lightly regulated sale of geolocation data, the proliferation of license plate readers and facial recognition technology, and the exploitative practices of data brokers.

Given federal law enforcement’s current overreach and violations of civil rights, this bill will help prevent third-party vendors from retaining or providing data that tracks individuals’ movements and locations to federal agencies, including ICE.

The proposal also addresses dynamic pricing schemes and ensures price transparency on car sales by requiring retailers to disclose costs attributable to tariff increases on receipts. To effectively enforce these enhanced protections, the bill includes increased funding for the Attorney General’s office.

Senate Bill 5: Online Safety

Senate Bill 5 advances critical artificial intelligence legislation to protect Connecticut residents from emerging digital harms, with a primary focus on preventing AI-driven threats to mental health and youth safety. The bill establishes accountability measures for chatbot platforms and AI systems that encourage self-harm or suicidal ideation.

The legislation will hold technology companies responsible when their AI systems promote dangerous content or behaviors, ensuring that platforms cannot evade liability for harm caused by their algorithms. This bill sets clear rules to keep AI safe and stops companies from using AI to unfairly discriminate against job applicants. Connecticut is leading the nation in making sure AI helps people instead of putting them at risk, especially those who are most vulnerable.

Senate Bill 6: Supporting Children and Families

Recognizing the rising cost of living in Trump’s economy, Senate Bill 6 proposes relief through a refundable child tax credit covering up to three children. The credit would support families earning up to $100,000 for single filers or up to $200,000 for joint filers.

With grocery costs high and families struggling, the bill also seeks to increase funding to provide no-cost breakfast and no-cost lunch through the school meal program. The expected cost of providing free breakfast is $13 million per year.

Senate Bill 7: Educational Equity

Senate Bill 7 proposes a historic increase in state funding for public education by adjusting the Education Cost Sharing formula’s foundation grant. The foundation grant is the basic, per-pupil funding each district receives under the ECS formula before other adjustments. Increases in the foundation grant benefit every town and city in Connecticut.

Currently, the foundation sits at $11,525 per pupil. Senate Bill 7 would raise that amount to $12,500 in fiscal year 2027, $13,500 in fiscal year 2028, $14,500 in fiscal year 2029, and $15,500 in fiscal year 2030. The projected cost of raising the foundation grant in the first year is approximately $194 million.

On the fourth year of scheduled increases in state education support, the bill would index the foundation grant to economic indicators, ensuring that Connecticut communities have school funding that keeps pace with current conditions.

The bill will also establish a working group to evaluate the Education Cost Sharing grant and recommend improvements.

Finally, Senate Bill 7 will establish a program for paid student teaching positions in low-income districts for educators who will continue to work in those districts in Connecticut for the first 5 years after their student teaching ends.

Senate Bill 8: Supporting Graduate Students

For 20 years, American students have used the federal GradPLUS loan program to access lower-interest loans to bridge financial gaps in paying for their graduate studies. The Trump administration has cut the program and implemented lower borrowing limits for students pursuing critical degrees such as nursing, education, and social work. Senate Bill 8 proposes expanding the Connecticut Higher Education Supplemental Loan Authority to backfill GradPLUS cuts, thereby investing in workforce development and offering Connecticut students a pathway to affordable higher education without relying on high-interest private loan servicers.

Senate Bill 9: Supporting Commuters and Microtransit Services

In 2024, Connecticut funded $19.5 million for a two-year pilot program that implemented nine micro transit systems across the state. These programs provide on-demand, accessible, and affordable transportation to connect underserved areas and bridge the “last-mile” gap that keeps seniors, people with disabilities, and those without transportation from reaching larger transit hubs. The pilot program was successful, and Senate Bill 9 proposes a $9 million one-year continuation of the program, as well as a commuter tax credit and leasing of airspace over Department of Transportation (DOT)-owned land to build more housing.

Additional Work on Behalf of Residents

Beyond the caucus’s low-number bills, Senate President Pro Tem Looney and Majority Leader Duff have outlined additional high-priority issues in a series of letters to the chairs of the legislature’s subject matter committees as part of their work on behalf of Connecticut residents. Those issues include:

Protecting Constitutional Rights from Federal Overreach

The unprecedented attack on civil and Constitutional rights by the Trump administration, as it weaponizes the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency against American residents, must stop. Senate Democrats will introduce legislation to address ICE overreach and a variety of Constitutional concerns, including creating a new cause of action for wronged individuals to sue federal agents; clarifying the state Inspector General’s ability to investigate federal officers who use deadly force in Connecticut; banning all law enforcement officers from wearing masks; prohibiting armed military forces from entering Connecticut without the governor’s permission; requiring judicial warrants for arrests in certain areas like hospitals, homeless shelters, schools, and places of worship; and creating a database to track ICE activities in Connecticut.

Implementing No-Excuse Absentee Voting

On Election Day 2024, 58% of Connecticut voters approved a change in the state Constitution allowing any Connecticut voter to request an absentee ballot without having to meet any of the existing criteria for voting absentee. Senate Democrats will work to establish the rules and procedures for implementing no-excuse absentee voting.

Supporting Workers’ Rights

Senate Democrats will introduce legislation to provide unemployment benefits to striking workers who have been on strike for more than two weeks, representing a step forward for middle-class families in Connecticut by providing financial support during labor disputes. New York and New Jersey already have such laws.

Expanding Health Coverage Options

The Connecticut Health Security Act will focus on small-business employees, entrepreneurs, and part-time workers whose employers don’t offer health care coverage.

Criminal Justice Reform

Senate Democrats are advancing criminal justice reforms, including codifying into state law the Department of Corrections’ informal policy not to deny any inmate medical treatment based on their ability to pay. Another proposal would require prisons to allow inmates two or three in-person visits per week, building on research showing that regular family visits reduce recidivism by 26% and reduce prison misconduct by 25%.

Restricting Private Equity Across Critical Sectors

Senate Democrats have called for comprehensive action to limit the growing influence of private equity firms across multiple sectors that impact Connecticut families.

Education & Special Education Services

In a letter to committee leadership, Senators Looney and Duff called on the Education Committee to restrict private equity firms in Connecticut’s education and special education services. The senators noted that private equity-owned companies are twice as likely to go bankrupt and requested legislation to protect students, families, and education workers from profit-driven models that prioritize returns over quality services.

“At a time when Connecticut residents are watching their bills pile up and struggling to make ends meet, the last thing they need are risky private equity deals threatening their jobs, their communities, and their security,” the senators wrote.

Child Care

As child care costs rise, private equity firms are entering the field with the resources and capital to acquire significant market share, seeking higher profitability at the expense of families and workers. Proposed legislation will counter the effects of private equity ownership in child care and ensure families can access affordable, high-quality early child care.

Health Care

Private equity weakened several important community hospitals in Waterbury, Manchester, and Vernon-Rockville over the last decade. Building on concepts developed in 2025, new legislation will seek to limit private equity ownership of Connecticut hospitals and health care facilities, increase oversight, and protect the security of existing health care operations in Connecticut.

Nursing Homes

The Aging Committee is expected to consider legislation restricting private equity ownership of nursing homes in Connecticut. In a letter to committee leadership, Senators Looney and Duff highlighted the need to protect seniors, their families, and nursing home workers from profit-driven models that threaten the stability and quality of long-term care facilities.

Housing

Connecticut is home to one of the most constrained housing markets in the United States, with limited supply and high demand elevating prices. Studies show that private equity ownership makes homeownership less accessible for first-time buyers and pushes housing prices even higher, with private equity owning up to one in 11 residential parcels in urban locations. Legislation will limit private equity’s ability to acquire swaths of the housing market by preventing private equity companies from making offers on one- and two-family homes for the first 75 days after listing or face a $250,000 fine.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Kevin Coughlin | kevin.coughlin@cga.ct.gov | 203-710-0193

TODAY: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

Newsletter Header

TODAY: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

WHAT: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney and Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, joined by members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, will hold a press conference to announce the caucus’s 2026 legislative agenda designed to counter rising costs driven by federal Republican policies. The agenda includes sweeping tax relief, expanded healthcare coverage, protections against private equity exploitation, and new consumer privacy and online safety measures.

WHO: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, and members of the Senate Democratic Caucus

WHEN: TODAY, Thursday, February 19, at 11:15 a.m.

WHERE: Room 1D, Legislative Office Building

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Kevin Coughlin | kevin.coughlin@cga.ct.gov | 203-710-0193

Stay Connected with Senate Democrats

TODAY: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

Newsletter Header

TODAY: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

WHAT: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney and Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, joined by members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, will hold a press conference to announce the caucus’s 2026 legislative agenda designed to counter rising costs driven by federal Republican policies. The agenda includes sweeping tax relief, expanded healthcare coverage, protections against private equity exploitation, and new consumer privacy and online safety measures.

WHO: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, and members of the Senate Democratic Caucus

WHEN: TODAY, Thursday, February 19, at 11:15 a.m.

WHERE: Room 1D, Legislative Office Building

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Kevin Coughlin | kevin.coughlin@cga.ct.gov | 203-710-0193

Stay Connected with Senate Democrats

TOMORROW: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

Newsletter Header

TOMORROW: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

WHAT: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney and Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, joined by members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, will hold a press conference to announce the caucus’s 2026 legislative agenda designed to counter rising costs driven by federal Republican policies. The agenda includes sweeping tax relief, expanded healthcare coverage, protections against private equity exploitation, and new consumer privacy and online safety measures.

WHO: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, and members of the Senate Democratic Caucus

WHEN: TOMORROW, Thursday, February 19, at 11:15 a.m.

WHERE: Room 1D, Legislative Office Building

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Kevin Coughlin | kevin.coughlin@cga.ct.gov | 203-710-0193

TOMORROW: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

Newsletter Header

TOMORROW: Senate Democrats to Unveil Legislative Agenda Focused on Affordability

WHAT: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney and Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, joined by members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, will hold a press conference to announce the caucus’s 2026 legislative agenda designed to counter rising costs driven by federal Republican policies. The agenda includes sweeping tax relief, expanded healthcare coverage, protections against private equity exploitation, and new consumer privacy and online safety measures.

WHO: Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, and members of the Senate Democratic Caucus

WHEN: TOMORROW, Thursday, February 19, at 11:15 a.m.

WHERE: Room 1D, Legislative Office Building

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Kevin Coughlin | kevin.coughlin@cga.ct.gov | 203-710-0193

SEN. CABRERA, KATHERINE HINDS WELCOME BRIDGE BRIGADE FREEDOM OF SPEECH RESOLUTION WITH CONNECTICUT STATE POLICE

SEN. CABRERA, KATHERINE HINDS WELCOME BRIDGE BRIGADE FREEDOM OF SPEECH RESOLUTION WITH CONNECTICUT STATE POLICE

HAMDEN – State Senator Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden) and his Connecticut Visibility Brigade protest leader and constituent Katherine Hinds today welcomed a new agreement between the Connecticut ACLU and the Connecticut State Police that prohibits state police from arresting citizens like Hinds who are exercising their free speech rights by protesting the Trump regime on highway overpasses.

It was the Connecticut State Police arrest of Hinds last summer on criminal trespass and breach of peace charges – charges that were later dismissed in court – that led to the new ACLU/state police agreement.

“Catherine is a friend, a constituent, and she is a role model for what it means to be a patriotic American in the very difficult times that we are all facing under Donald Trump and his awful, awful administration and all of the harm he’s causing our country,” Sen. Cabrera said. “If it weren’t for Katherine’s courage and fortitude, police may have felt free to trample the first amendment rights of other bridge protestors all across Connecticut — Lord knows we’ve seen people in power trample civil rights in other states. But thanks to Katherine, here in Connecticut, we have secured some basic protections for freedom of speech and assembly.”

“I’m thrilled, I’m relieved, and I’m so grateful to the ACLU and to all of the state legislators who assisted on this – and Jorge is right at the top of the list. They all stood up for the first amendment, and I couldn’t be more grateful,” Hinds said. “This agreement is a win-win. It applies to everyone in the state.”

Hinds founded the Connecticut Visibility Brigade just over a year ago, on Valentine’s Day 2025. It was the first of about 12 such ‘bridge brigades” whose members protest the Trump regime with signs and banners on highway overpasses around the state. Hinds says her group, which operates mostly on Interstate 95 in the New Haven area, sees about 7,000 to 10,000 cars per hour during their protests. There are now about 400 such bridge protest groups in 48 states, Hinds says.

Hinds was arrested last July by Connecticut State Police and charged with criminal trespass and breach of peace for holding signs and banners while standing on the sidewalk of an I-95 overpass. According to published reports, the bridge signs included phrases such as “Deport Musk,” “Go Grads, Save Democracy” and “Resistance Is Not Futile.”

A month later, the same Connecticut State Trooper who arrested Hinds in July pounded on the door of her home at 6 a.m. and presented her with a warrant for her arrest on similar charges based on his review of her Facebook account. All the state police charges against Hinds were dismissed by a New Haven judge in late October.

But the Connecticut ACLU still needed plaintiffs to make a case that the civil rights of Connecticut residents are being violated. Two other members of the Connecticut Visibility Brigade complained that they feared protesting out of concern that they would be arrested; those fears led to last week’s agreement between the ACLU and state police.

The agreement, which must become state police policy by February 22, stipulates that:

  • State Troopers shall not use Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 53a-107 (First-Degree Criminal Trespass), 53a108 (Second-Degree Criminal Trespass), 53a-109 (Third-Degree Criminal Trespass), 53a-181 (Second-Degree Breach of the Peace), 53a-182a (Obstructing Free Passage), 53a-182 (Disorderly Conduct), 13a-123 (Restriction of Outdoor Advertising Signs), or 13a-124 (Unauthorized Signs) to detain, identify, threaten, fine, disperse, or arrest individuals for peacefully assembling or for holding up signs conveying non-commercial, political messages when those individuals are on a sidewalk of an overpass that is not a limited-access highway.
  • In addition, State Troopers shall not detain, identify, threaten, fine, disperse, or arrest individuals for peacefully assembling or for holding up signs conveying non-commercial, political messages when those individuals are on a sidewalk of an overpass that is not a limited-access highway based on the pace, conduct, or reaction of traffic on the highway below.
  • The directive does not prevent State Troopers from arresting, fining, or dispersing any individual who incites imminent unlawful action, engages in fighting words, affixes a sign to an overpass fence, drops an item from an overpass onto a highway below, or who stands in a roadway.

WEDNESDAY: PUBLIC HEALTH COMMITTEE, SENATOR ANWAR TO HOLD PUBLIC HEARING ON PRIVATE EQUITY IN HEALTH CARE, FIGHTING OVERDOSES

Senator Anwar

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Joe O’Leary | Joe.OLeary@cga.ct.gov | 508-479-4969

February 17, 2026

WEDNESDAY: PUBLIC HEALTH COMMITTEE, SENATOR ANWAR TO HOLD PUBLIC HEARING ON PRIVATE EQUITY IN HEALTH CARE, FIGHTING OVERDOSES

Where: LOB Room 1D, Zoom, Youtube Live
When: Wednesday, Feb. 17, noon

On Wednesday, February 18 at noon, in 1D of the Legislative Office Building and simulcast online on Zoom and Youtube Live, the Public Health Committee will hold its first public hearing of the 2026 legislative session. Among the 14 bills on the agenda are two session priorities for State Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor), Senate Chair of the Public Health Committee, regarding key priority bills:

  • Senate Bill 196 seeks to provide a response to recent private equity woes seen in Connecticut by addressing certain practices undertaken in the past by companies operating in Connecticut. Under the legislation, beginning October 1, no hospital will be allowed to enter a sale-leaseback transaction, where they sell the property/land of the hospital and then lease it back from the new owner, unless they are in direct financial distress, their governing body authorizes the decision explicitly for financial reasons and the hospital informs the Public Health Commissioner and Attorney General. Hospitals would need to confirm annually that private equity does not have a controlling interest in a hospital and that it maintains full governance over its assets and activities.
  • As Connecticut finally sees success in slowing the growth of overdose deaths within its borders, Senate Bill 195 takes legislation that nearly became law in 2025 before an eleventh-hour removal and pushes for new resources and approaches to support people struggling with opioid use disorder. It would create a pilot program for up to four overdose prevention centers in Connecticut, which would be staffed by licensed health care providers to provide aid, access to test strips and connections to treatment for individuals entering the centers. Individuals would have access to visit the overdose prevention centers in the process of using substances; they are stocked with opioid antagonist drugs and other resources to improve safety and encourage treatment for those struggling.

Senator Gaston Mourns Passing of Civil Rights Mentor Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr.

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Senator Gaston Mourns Passing of Civil Rights Mentor Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr.

Today, state Senator Herron Keyon Gaston (D-Bridgeport) issued the following statement on the passing of Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr.:

“Today we have lost a towering figure of the civil rights movement. He was a man who dedicated his life to the pursuit of justice, equality, and human dignity. Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. was not just a leader; he was a moral force who challenged America to live up to its highest ideals.

“As a Black man, I am devastated by this loss. He served as Godfather, a moral tiger, and was an exemplary leader to all of us. He infused in us that we are somebody and poured deeply into our spirits to make a difference in the world.

“He taught us our worth is not determined by circumstances that we are born into, but by the character that we build. His legacy will live on. My prayers are with his family and loved ones.”

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