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The Hartford-based band of five was selected as a favorite among judges for NPR’s Tiny Desk Contest — and for WSHU Public Radio — out of more than 6,000 submissions from all 50 states and Washington, D.C.
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United Illuminating wants to install dozens of monopoles near Metro-North railroad tracks in Southport, Fairfield and Bridgeport. The company said it's needed to bring power to the community — but residents want the cables buried.
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Travel time can impede a person's ability to treat opioid use disorder. CT officials and nonprofits are spending millions to change that.
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Connecticut lawmakers expect to act on adjustments to the state budget this week. Democrats and Republicans have competing proposals.
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A bite-sized look at what else hearing: An investigation is underway into a death in Suffolk County Police custody. President Biden pardoned a New Haven woman for her nonviolent drug conviction. Congestion pricing is slated to start June 30.
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According to the National Center for Education Statistics, college enrollment in Connecticut and across the country has faced a decline in recent years. Some school officials see an emphasis on the liberal arts as part of the solution.
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Shipbuilders are pursuing a variety of measures to find more workers, including a marketing partnership with Major League Baseball.
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TaShun Bowden-Lewis was placed on administrative leave by the state’s Public Defender Services Commission in February. She faces 16 charges, including unethical and untruthful behavior, bullying and instructing a subordinate to hack an adversary’s e-mail.
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House Republicans pitched a budget that boosts education, ends health care for undocumented women and children and trims the state workforce.
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New England needs more housing — especially affordable housing. But what happens when the land picked for that housing is also valuable in the fight to slow climate change?
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U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and several colleagues have introduced federal legislation to tackle the nationwide affordable housing crisis and climate change.
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A bite-sized look at what else we're hearing: Election officials in Connecticut say they’re still overwhelmed with complaints from Bridgeport’s Democratic primary election for mayor last year. Suffolk County will overhaul its opioid settlement disbursement program.