Looney, Duff & Honig Call on Federal Government to Restore Home Loan Protections for Veterans

Looney, Duff & Honig Call on Federal Government to Restore Home Loan Protections for Veterans

HARTFORD — Senate President Pro Tempore Martin Looney, Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, and Senate Chair of the Veterans’ and Military Affairs Committee Paul Honig today condemned the federal government’s abrupt cancellation of a key VA home loan assistance program that has left more than 10,000 veterans across the country facing foreclosure, and called for an immediate restoration of protections for veterans.

“Reports that more than 10,000 veterans have lost their homes since the federal government abruptly shut down a key program are deeply troubling. The federal government ignored warnings from the mortgage industry that veterans would be kicked out of their homes. We find it unfathomable that federal elected officials would not do everything in their power to support those who served our country. We ask all our colleagues in the General Assembly to join us in calling on the federal government to immediately fix this injustice and give veterans the protections they deserve. We owe them that much, and more.”

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

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

GAE COMMITTEE ADVANCES ELECTION PROTECTION BILLS

Measures aim to prevent election interference and voter intimidation

HARTFORD – On its final day for bill action in the 2026 legislative session, the Government Administration & Elections Committee has advanced a series of bills to protect Connecticut elections by preventing interference or intimidation of voters.

GAE Senate Chair Senator Mae Flexer and GAE House Chairman Representative Matt Blumenthal (D-Stamford) co-authored, sponsored, or introduced these measures to ensure the sacred right to vote is safeguarded without fear at home or at the polls.

House Bill 5533 and Senate Bill 463 “AN ACT CONCERNING PROTECTION OF ELECTION ADMINISTRATION PROCESSES, ELECTIONS SITES, ELECTION WORKERS AND ELECTORS” fights back against threats from President Donald Trump and Congressional Republicans to “nationalize” and “take over” our elections. The bill would:

  • Bar federal law enforcement within 250 feet of a polling place without permission from state election officials or a court order
  • Require coordination with the Connecticut Secretary of the State and the Attorney General before federal agents conduct operations near a polling place
  • Establish state penalties for violations to ensure protections are taken seriously

House Bill 5001 “AN ACT CONCERNING ABSENTEE VOTING FOR ALL AND VARIOUS OTHER REFORMS TO THE ADMINISTRATION OF ELECTIONS” would implement Absentee Voting For All two years after Connecticut voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment. The measure would allow eligible voters to request an absentee ballot without providing a reason. Currently, absentee ballots are limited to voters who meet specific criteria. Removing those restrictions will make voting more accessible, increase participation, and ensure voters have safe and flexible options for casting their ballots.

House Bill 5342  AN ACT CONCERNING THE USE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND OTHER MEANS TO GENERATE DECEPTIVE SYNTHETIC MEDIA AND AFFECT ELECTION addresses a growing threat to elections: AI-generated “deepfake” videos, images, and audio used to spread misinformation about candidates. The bill would:

  • Prohibit deceptive AI-generated media intended to influence an election
  • Apply to manipulated videos, audio, or images that falsely depict a candidate
  • Covers the 90 days leading up to an election or primary, when misinformation can have the biggest impact

“Maintaining American democracy is a top concern among voters in national polls, and for good reason – the Trump administration has been working overtime to gerrymander voting districts, re-write voting rules, steal ballots, and repeatedly cast doubt on elections where Republicans lose. It’s an outrageous assault on America’s free and fair elections. In Connecticut, we have been working diligently to improve access to democracy,” Sen. Flexer said.

 

“Our elections are under attack like never before. On Friday, we took strong action to protect voters and voting rights said Rep. Blumenthal. “These measures will help prevent intimidation at the polls by anyone — including the federal government. They expand access to absentee voting. They crack down on deceptive deepfakes. They help ensure that every eligible voter can make their voice heard without fear or interference. As our 250th anniversary of independence approaches, they will help preserve our democracy for generations to come.”

 

With approval from the GAE Committee, all three of the measures move to the House floor for further consideration if they are called before the end of session on May 6.

Bill Bringing Relief to Success Village Residents Heads to House & Senate for Consideration

Bill Bringing Relief to Success Village Residents Heads to House & Senate for Consideration

A bill designed to provide financial relief to residents of Success Village, a common interest community spanning Bridgeport and Stratford, has passed out of the Planning & Development Committee and will now head to the House and Senate for passage.

House Bill 5500, “An Act Concerning a Waiver of Interest on Certain Delinquent Municipal Property Taxes’, will address the financial fallout caused by the mismanagement of former community management, who failed to properly manage community funds, leaving residents with significant back property taxes and accruing interest despite having paid their community fees in full and on time.

“On January 6, I hosted a town hall at Success Village to connect residents with community resources and hear directly about the challenges they were facing,” said State Senator Herron Keyon Gaston (D-Bridgeport). “During that meeting, many residents spoke about the hardship caused by mismanagement, from lack of heat and hot water to financial burdens they should never have had to carry. I heard you loud and clear. Since that conversation, I have been working with the Bridgeport and Stratford legislative delegations and other key partners to push for meaningful relief and long-term stability for the residents of Success Village. The residents of Success Village have done nothing wrong. They paid what was asked of them and deserved responsible leadership in return. I stand in solidarity with this community and will continue fighting to ensure these wrongs are made right.”

“House Bill 5500 is about doing right by the residents of Success Village,” said State Representative Christopher Rosario (D-Bridgeport). “These families paid their common charges in good faith and should not be punished for financial mismanagement they had no control over. I’ve been working alongside Councilwoman Maria Pereira and Councilwoman Keyla Medina to make sure the residents receive the relief they deserve, and that this community has the stability it needs moving forward.”

“The residents of Success Village have really been put through the wringer over the last few years, including problems with old equipment, leading to issues with heat and hot water,” said State Representative Joseph Gresko (D-Stratford). “But they’re working hard to right the ship. This bill would allow the funds that have been paid in interest and penalties to be returned to the receivership from the municipalities to continue paying down debt. The residents deserve a resolution. This is the light at the end of the tunnel that we want to see keep going.”

Residents of Success Village, many of whom went weeks without heat and hot water as a direct consequence of the unpaid taxes, have been burdened with a financial crisis that was not of their making. HB 5500 would forgive the interest on those back property taxes and return any payments residents have already made toward that interest, providing critical relief to a community that did everything right.

The committee heard substantial public testimony in support of the bill ahead of its advancement.

SENATE DEMOCRATS’ STRONG COMMITMENT TO EDUCATION INVESTMENT MOVES FORWARD

SENATE DEMOCRATS’ STRONG COMMITMENT TO EDUCATION INVESTMENT MOVES FORWARD

Today, the Education Committee advanced key legislation from Connecticut Senate Democrats seeking to make a strong and transformative increase in the state’s public education systems.

Senate Bill 7, “An Act Concerning Educational Equity,” passed out of the Education Committee March 16.

“We know our state needs to better keep pace with the costs of education, and our schools and children lose out on opportunities when that isn’t happening,” said State Senator Doug McCrory, Senate Chair of the Education Committee. “It leads to fewer programs, kids struggling, teachers spending their own funds to help out in the classroom. Raising the foundation amount in the grant will change that. It will deliver on our promises and make sure schools, students and communities across Connecticut get the care, attention and funds they deserve.”

“This situation doesn’t call for a short-term fix. Senate Democrats are focused on a full overhaul of our education funding systems that allow every school to succeed – with secondary impacts on local taxes, local educational resources and local community support,” said Senate President Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven) and Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk). “This legislation marks Connecticut’s determination to make sure every student has the best opportunities to succeed.”

The bill proposes raising the Education Cost Sharing formula’s foundation grant from its current level of $11,525 per pupil. In the next four fiscal years it would continue to increase, growing 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.

Following 2030, the foundation grant would be indexed to economic indicators to ensure funding meets financial pressures in future years.

Under this framework, the proposal would increase state education funding by $58 million in fiscal year 2027, $233 million in fiscal year 2028, $422 million in fiscal year 2029 and $618 million in fiscal year 2030.

Senate Bill 7 received nearly 700 pieces of testimony in support during the public hearing process, including from dozens of school superintendents, principals and teachers.

Hartford Public Schools teacher Ron Acosta noted in public testimony that the current foundation of $11,525 per student has remained unchanged for 13 years and is highly outdated, leaving schools unable to meet students’ needs. “The classrooms are overcrowded and students are underserviced, if serviced at all,” Acosta said.

Paul Brenton, Superintendent of Plainfield Public Schools, said the planned increase in SB7 is a necessary and welcome step toward restoring balance and strengthening the state’s partnership with local school districts. This is especially important in some districts that are economically strained, Brenton added, as Plainfield’s student poverty rate recently climbed significantly and is facing stagnant local growth, meaning such increases are specifically important in communities that otherwise could risk falling behind.

Maureen Brummet, Superintendent of Newington Public Schools, noted the stagnancy of the ECS foundation fails to “reflect the real-world expenses of providing a quality education,” forcing towns to shoulder additional costs in providing students with education – in comparison, the predictability and adjustments offered by SB7 is the “only path” to fostering stability, predictability and long-term fiscal planning capacity.

With the bill’s passage today, it next heads to the Senate floor for further deliberation.

SEN. KUSHNER JOINS 32BJ SEIU & UNITED HERE TO SUPPORT PROPOSED WORKER RETENTION LAW

SEN. KUSHNER JOINS 32BJ SEIU & UNITED HERE TO SUPPORT PROPOSED WORKER RETENTION LAW

HARTFORD – State Senator Julie Kushner (D-Danbury), 32BJ SEIU and United Here! today threw their support behind a proposed bill that would protect workers’ jobs for 90 days after a change in contractors at a worksite and require business owners to provide sufficient notice in advance of such job changes.

Under current Connecticut law, workers employed by building-service contractors have no legal right to keep their jobs if the contractor changes or if the building is sold and the new employer decides to replace the entire workforce.

A bill that received its public hearing today before the Labor & Public Employees Committee – Senate Bill 358, “AN ACT CONCERNING THE RETENTION OF SERVICE CONTRACT WORKERS” – seeks to rectify this by requiring incoming building service contractors to retain the existing workforce for 90 days, and to give employees a 15-day notice of a switch in their employer, ensuring they have sufficient time to prepare for a life-changing job loss.

Such worker retention laws historically protect low-wage, subcontracted jobs, including janitors, security guards, healthcare facility housekeepers, airport workers, and food preparation workers in education and healthcare facilities.

“This is a really important piece of legislation, and I think sometimes we lose track of the human beings that are impacted, and how much of a difference we’ll make in their lives if we pass this legislation into law,” said Sen. Kushner, who fought in Danbury last summer when 14 longtime employees of a local company were suddenly let go when they lost their building cleaning contract to another company. “They shouldn’t have had to go through that. And the problem for our community is, we can’t have people who have worked at a company for 20 years all of a sudden have no income, have no health benefits, and no job. retentionI’m really excited about this  legislation, and I think it can make a difference, not just for the workers involved, but for our communities that suffer losses along with our neighbors.”

“Many of the grievances that come our way are from workers who’ve been displaced because a building has replaced a responsible contractor with an irresponsible one. With this law, we’re saying loud and clear: no more.” said Rochelle Palache, Vice President and Connecticut District Leader, 32BJ SEIU. “This common-sense law will ensure accountability and transparency and protect workers from abrupt and unjust losses in their pay, insurance, or other benefits.”

The Labor and Public Employees Committee has until March 24 to pass bills; the General Assembly adjourns for the year on May 4.

IN THE FACE OF TRUMP HEALTHCARE CUTS, SEN. CABRERA APPLAUDS RECORD ENROLLMENT IN CT’S HEALTH INSURANCE MARKETPLACE

IN THE FACE OF TRUMP HEALTHCARE CUTS, SEN. CABRERA APPLAUDS RECORD ENROLLMENT IN CT’S HEALTH INSURANCE MARKETPLACE

HARTFORD – State Senator Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden), who is Senate Chair of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee, today applauded the record enrollment in Connecticut’s health insurance marketplace – Access Health CT – even as the Trump administration ends federal health care subsidies for millions of Americans.

Access Health CT announced Thursday a record 157,246 people enrolled in a Qualified Health Plan during the 2026 Open Enrollment Period, compared to 151,151 at the end of the Open Enrollment Period in 2025. This year’s enrollment broke last year’s record by 4%.

Included in that number are 51,629 residents enrolled in the Covered CT Program; Covered CT provides no-cost coverage for eligible residents, and the State of Connecticut pays the consumer portion of premiums and cost-sharing.

“The Trump administration may be heartless, but Connecticut has a heart big enough for everyone,” Sen. Cabrera said. ” We’re covering a year’s worth of Access Health CT premium co-pays for those Connecticut residents who lost their federal tax credit due to Trump and the Republican budget, but who still desperately need health care. I’m pleased that a record number of Connecticut residents have put their faith in state government because the federal government under Donald Trump doesn’t give a damn.”

For the full Access Health CT press release, please visit: https://agency.accesshealthct.com/access-health-ct-enrolls-record-number-of-connecticut-residents-in-health-insurance-for-2026

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.

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.

SEN. CABRERA STATEMENT ON OFFICE OF CHILD ADVOCATE RECOMMENDAITONS FOR SUMMER CAMP SAFETY

SEN. CABRERA STATEMENT ON OFFICE OF CHILD ADVOCATE RECOMMENDAITONS FOR SUMMER CAMP SAFETY

HARTFORD – Nearly a year after responding to sexual assault charges at a Bethany, CT summer camp and introducing bill language that would have required municipal summer camps to be licensed by the state and have employees undergo criminal back checks, State Senator Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden) today issued the following statement regarding an Office of Child Advocate report that recommends various changes to Connecticut’s municipal summer camp operations.

The OCA report can be found at: Bethany Summer Camp report.

“The OCA recommendation that all summer camp employees — including those working for town summer camps – be mandated child neglect reporters and receive mandated reporter training, that’s just basic common sense. And the OCA recommendation that all employees receive ‘comprehensive’ background checks, I assume that means criminal background checks. That’s something we asked for in last year’s bill, which didn’t pass.

“Overall, the OCA report addresses some of the concerns in our bill last year. They get to the essence of what we were trying to do, and they really highlight the huge gap between what the State of Connecticut expects from most private camps, and what they expect from town- run camps.

“I know the Children’s Committee has introduced a bill this session to look at the issue of summer camps, and I’ll work to ensure that these OCA recommendations are included in the final bill. It’s the least we can do for our kids.”

Sen. Osten States Her Case to the New Budget Secretary for Greater State Investment in Avery Point UConn Campus

Sen. Osten States Her Case to the New Budget Secretary for Greater State Investment in Avery Point UConn Campus

HARTFORD – State Senator Cathy Osten (D-Sprague) told Connecticut’s new budget secretary Josh Wojcik today that the lack of state investment in UConn’s Avery Point campus in Groton is unacceptable and that she will introduce legislation this session seeking to build new housing and make other upgrades there.

Sen. Osten’s remarks came during a routine, start-of-session appearance by Office of Policy and Management Secretary Wojcik, who was briefing the Appropriations Committee on Governor Ned Lamont’s proposed budget adjustments for the 2026-2027 fiscal year, which begins on July 1.

Sen. Osten, who is Senate Chair of the budget-writing Appropriations Committee, noted today that while Gov. Lamont has made “significant” new investments in housing at UConn’s Hartford Stamford, and Waterbury campuses, there have been no similar, significant investment in housing the Avery Point Campus.

“Avery Point is experiencing a $13 million deficit year, over year, over year, because we have made a policy decision to not put housing in Avery Point and not put additional majors there,” Sen. Osten said. “It is the one area of the state where we have a large defense industry that will be seeing 7,000 jobs per year growth in the next three years. Not 7,000 jobs over three years, but 7,000 new jobs each year. I find it a little bit distressing that UConn  made a decision in October and didn’t bother to tell state legislators for the region until just last week that they’ve decided that we’re just going to have a $13 million deficit, and you guys can eat it, and don’t worry, we won’t close you down. But I don’t buy it. I think it’s a bunch of crap. And I will not sit silent. I will be putting in a bill to put housing there. Everybody talks about housing, but it’s only convenient to put money into housing in certain areas of the state. That’s not fair. It’s taking away a significant part of higher education in Eastern Connecticut. And I just want to put that on the record.”

On January 29, UConn officials presented the Southeastern Connecticut legislative delegation with their report on the “Strategic Assessment of UConn’s Regional Campuses,” which concluded that declining high school graduation rates in the region, declining enrollment at Avery Point, reduced state budget support for UConn, and a decline in federal research awards means that UConn needs to “adjust our strategies and allocate or limited resources to the highest institutional priorities” and concluded that on-campus housing at Avery Point “is not currently feasible.”

Sen. Osten has been pushing for months for housing parity between UConn’s four satellite campuses, as well as an expansion of majors offered at Avery Point, noting that UConn will not grow enrollment if they cannot offer prospective students a housing and educational experience comparable to those in Hartford, Waterbury, and Stamford.