© 2024 WSHU
NPR News & Classical Music
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

A revamped plan

Hochul projects her plans will lead to 800,000 new homes in the next ten years.
Office of Governor Kathy Hochul
Hochul projects her plans will lead to 800,000 new homes in the next ten years.

New York Democrats release their plan to increase affordable housing. Connecticut Republicans worry an EV mandate is still on the table. One of the victims has been identified in the case of discovered human remains on Long Island. And a film created by brothers from Waterbury will premiere in their home state this week.

Sabrina is host and producer of WSHU’s daily podcast After All Things. She also produces the climate podcast Higher Ground and other long-form news and music programs at the station. Sabrina spent two years as a WSHU fellow, working as a reporter and assisting with production of The Full Story.
Related Content
  • Suffolk officials plan to boost solar use throughout the county. Trumbull, Connecticut residents are concerned over potential future uses for the town’s dying mall. And Connecticut has thousands of dams — is it time to get rid of some?
  • Connecticut lawmakers shift plans for an electric vehicle mandate. Governor Hochul proposes cuts to a popular home care program. George Santos says he'll run for Congress again. And military families feel anxiety over the familiar threat of a possible government shutdown.
  • A new bill in Connecticut would allocate funding to towns for mixed-use and affordable housing. Long Island residents are confused over the release of suspects in a case of a human remains discovery. What’s really to blame for Connecticut’s low police recruitment numbers? And Governor Hochul stands by her controversial school aid proposal.