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A recent analysis from Yale concluded that poor pension fund investments have cost Connecticut tens of billions of dollars over the past decade.
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The COVID public health emergency is over, three years after it began. How did Connecticut change, and what changes are here to stay?
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Controversy swirled last month around Carleton J. Giles, the pastor and former police officer removed by Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont as chair of the Board of Pardons and Paroles after a backlash to the dramatic increase in the commutation of prison sentences.
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The biggest climate bill proposed in Connecticut this year is dead, and a few smaller measures could be the stars of the 2023 legislative session.
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Agriculture is changing in Connecticut, a revolution about more than marijuana. Connecticut farmers are growing choi, forming co-ops — and hosting weddings.
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An analysis shows Connecticut's health care program for retired state workers, by one metric, was the fifth-worst funded among all states in 2019.
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The Connecticut Senate unanimously passed a bill that would place the state among the first to begin setting standards for the use of AI tools.
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The Connecticut House offered absolution, not exoneration, to the nine women and two men hanged for witchcraft in the 17th-century.
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Wrong-way driver was ‘causative factor’ in fatal head-on car crash took the lives of Connecticut state Rep. Quentin “Q” Williams and Kimede Mustafaj.
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The school, which Connecticut officials approved in 2018, is caught in the middle of debates over whether it's a good option for struggling students.