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  • Full Long Island Rail Road service to Grand Central opened Monday. West Haven’s financial director steps down amid a possible state takeover. New legislation would create an English learners bill of rights in Connecticut. And are your recyclables actually getting recycled?
  • New Haven’s Peabody Museum has almost 90% of unreturned remains from Connecticut tribes. Suffolk veterans are urged to apply for health and disability benefits. Rep. Jahana Hayes wants to declare racism a public health crisis. And once deemed controversial, psychedelics are being considered to treat PTSD.
  • Nine research projects studying the Long Island Sound have received funding from Connecticut and New York agencies. New York housing advocates are confused over a recent comment from the governor. Connecticut-based Pratt and Whitney announced a new multi-billion dollar deal. And get to know the U.S. Treasurer and Chief of the Mohegan Tribe, Lynn Malerba.
  • What happens to people in a community where violence is a common occurrence? It can lead to urban trauma.
  • Some members of Congress come together to push for tax relief for middle class Americans. Activists call for stronger regulations to improve air quality in Connecticut. Suffolk County downplays reports of a January cyber incursion. And how the Shinnecock Tribal Nation is using art to tell a lesser-known part of their history.
  • Connecticut’s tribes need to agree on a new name for the Thames River. Lawmakers can’t seem to agree on a solution to the state’s housing crisis. Bridgeport police could be changing unions. And fiscal watchdogs say New York’s surplus won’t last.
  • Coastal resilience for Connecticut and Long Island, Suffolk red light camera fees are ended, and Indigenous curriculum for Connecticut.
  • Over $10 million in grants will go to 41 projects to preserve Long Island Sound. Connecticut municipalities take a “civil pledge” towards respectful engagement with residents. The state will receive millions in a national settlement with drugstores, and how a surge of evictions are impacting children.
  • The Newtown Action Alliance calls for renewed action against gun violence in Washington D.C. Michael Valva will serve 25 to life for the murder of his son. Governor Kathy Hochul is warning New Yorkers of another COVID surge. And the state’s attorney general takes heat for the inappropriate actions of her longtime chief of staff.
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