HARTFORD – State Senator Julie Kushner (D-Danbury) has received a perfect score of 100 from the Connecticut League of Conservation Voters (CTLCV) for her support of environmental public policy bills during last year’s 2021 legislative session.
The CTLCV released its annual scorecard (https://www.ctlcv.org/scorecard2021.html) ranking all Connecticut legislators on their support or opposition to a variety of pro-environmental legislation designed to protect and improve Connecticut’s air, soil and water for generations to come.
The scorecard throws into sharp relief the difference between Democrats and Republicans when it comes to protecting the beauty of our natural environment: the average Senate Democrat scored a 97.5 (A+), while the average Senate Republican scored a 70 (C-) and the average House Republican scored a 58.7 (F).
“There was a poll last fall which showed that nine out of 10 Connecticut residents believe that climate change is a serious problem, and that state government has a public policy role to play in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, investing in solar and wind energy, plugging gas leaks in transmission pipes, and other proactive environmental measures,” Sen. Kushner said. “I’m proud to play a role in protecting Connecticut’s environment and keeping its residents and businesses healthy and productive.”
The CTLCV says its biggest legislative wins last session were:
“We urge lawmakers to use this document as a framework for what is still urgently needed to address climate change, and to make significant and lasting investments in our state’s environment,” said CTLCV Executive Director Lori Brown.
“All the available science proves that we are in a climate emergency. Lawmakers need to ramp- up their efforts to make the environment a priority this year,” said Megan Macomber, CTLCV Policy Advocate. “This is a critical year for legislators to rally their colleagues and push through bills that were stalled last year.”
For more than two decades, the CTLCV’s annual Environmental Scorecard rates state legislators on key environmental priorities each year. The CTLCV grades lawmakers on a scale of 0 – 100 based on how they vote on key environmental bills in committees, the House, and the Senate. Their final score represents an average of their votes on those specific bills.
Share this page: