Category — Posts
A Dan Malloy Black Friday: Gun Sale in Bridgeport.
It’s Governor Dannel P. Malloy’s notion of economic development: a gun store in Bridgeport and more than $30 million in taxpayer subsidies. Today, the faux anti-gun governor’s favored purveyor of guns has put some of its ware on sale to celebrate the start of the holiday season. Malloy must be so proud. He’s brought Bridgeport a micro pistols Christmas.
November 25, 2016 Comments Off on A Dan Malloy Black Friday: Gun Sale in Bridgeport.
Boughton Forms “Commmittee” to Begin 3rd Bid for Governor.
Mark Boughton, who fell far short of victory in 2010 and 2014 bids for governor, has formed a “commmittee” to launch a third attempt for the Republican nomination for the state’s highest office. The Danbury mayor and former state representative makes the odd announcement in his online declaration that he has been sitting “idly by” as Connecticut has declined. Not true, he was a leader in the recent education funding court case that calls for denying an education to students with special needs and yanking funding from many suburban towns and giving it to urban ones. Welcome to Boughton’s Connecticut.
November 22, 2016 Comments Off on Boughton Forms “Commmittee” to Begin 3rd Bid for Governor.
It Begins: Kane Files Exploratory Committee for Statewide Office in 2018.
Maybe the growing state budget deficit will not require every legislator’s full attention. State Senator Rob Kane must have a $3 billion solution in his laptop. The Senate ranking member of the legislature’s spending committee is jumping into the 2018 campaign just days after the 2016 one ended. The Watertown Republican has kicked off a campaign for an undetermined statewide office, Daily Ructions can report, by forming an exploratory committee in documents filed with the State Elections Enforcement Commission.
November 19, 2016 Comments Off on It Begins: Kane Files Exploratory Committee for Statewide Office in 2018.
Current State Budget Deficit Jumps $62 Million From October Estimate.
One way to tell an election in Connecticut is over is to watch budget deficit estimates. This month’s estimate, released Friday afternoon, grew by $62 million to $67.7 million, according to a Friday afternoon letter from budget director Benjamin Barnes to State Comptroller Kevin Lembo. Revised revenue predictions account for $49.3 million of the added red ink. Increased spending is the cause of the remaining $12.3 million in news from Barnes’s permanent crisis.
November 18, 2016 Comments Off on Current State Budget Deficit Jumps $62 Million From October Estimate.
Ethics Audit Lottery Winners Include AFL-CIO, Newspaper Association.
The state’s ethics agency has announced its random audit drawing winners. They include the AFL-CIO and The Connecticut Daily Newspaper Association.
November 17, 2016 Comments Off on Ethics Audit Lottery Winners Include AFL-CIO, Newspaper Association.
Librarians Rejoice! Reckless Foe of Civil Liberties Booted From Trump Transition Team.
We take our good news where we can find it in these uncertain times. It arrived with the announcement that former U.S. Attorney Kevin O’Connor was kicked off the Donald Trump transition team. O’Connor is a close ally of Chris Christie, the New Jersey governor whose unpopularity in his home state is exceeded only by the loathing expressed toward him in the inner counsels of the Trump camp.
O’Connor and Christie became allies while bother served as U.S. attorneys in the George W. Bush administration. Christie is said to have been helpful in finding O’Connor a place to land after his sudden departure from Connecticut-based UTC.
O’Connor first came to statewide notice when he ingratiated himself into the more louche elements of disgraced former Governor John G. Rowland’s administration during its demimonde middle years.
The Courant’s Ed Mahony has the inside dope on O’Connor’s ouster from Team Trump. Sounds like O’Connor poured his woes out to Mahony over a disagreement about what the Justice Department should do about Hillary Clinton and that home server that has caused her so much grief. O’Connor wanted to let it go. U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions (R-AL) an early and relentless Trump supporter disagreed, according to the story. Sessions is an influential member of the Trump team in formation.
This version would be the O’Connor method. Bring the full force of the law against the powerless, like the librarians he disgraced himself pursuing without mercy when he was U.S. attorney. Claiming to be a martyr for Hillary Clinton, that is consistent with the career of the perpetual courtier. Gag librarians, but don’t take on anyone with real influence.
November 17, 2016 Comments Off on Librarians Rejoice! Reckless Foe of Civil Liberties Booted From Trump Transition Team.
Closer and Closer. Senate Leaders On Verge of Comprehensive Agreement.
They are not there yet, but Democratic and Republican state Senate leaders are negotiating their way to an agreement that will reflect their historic 18-18 partisan divide, Daily Ructions can report. Democratic leader Martin Looney will remain as President Pro Tem of the upper chamber. If the deal holds, There will be be joint majority leaders, Bob Duff for the Democrats and Len Fasano for the Republicans. The parties will exercise joint control over the Senate calendar, allowing lobbyists to charge their bewildered clients more.
The deal may also include Senate co-chairs of committees. The House, where incoming Democratic speaker Joe Aresimowicz’s relationship with Republican leader Themic Klarides gives him a 151 seat majority on critical organizing issues, will add its own third co-chair to committees. The even divide in the Senate will require each party’s members to add to their committee assignments if the number of committees is not reduced.
The Senate budget will require adjustment to reflect this new partisan divide. This may be the real most difficult point. Democratic staffers, who enjoy disproportionate influence over the elected members of their caucus, are in a high state of alarm at the prospect of layoffs in their ranks. No one appears to be talking about reducing salaries to save comrades. The Malloy administration is not likely to be eager or able to provide a refuge for the dispossessed.
Negotiations continue.
November 17, 2016 Comments Off on Closer and Closer. Senate Leaders On Verge of Comprehensive Agreement.
Avon High School Interim Principal’s Email.
Here’s what the interim principal Timothy Breslin of Avon High School sent by mistake to parents of students last week after Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton. The Courant has more on the convoluted story.
Yesterday throughout the day, I heard that a small number of students made comments in the aftermath of the victory of Donald Trump in Tuesday’s election that some of you might have found unusually inappropriate or bigoted, or even threatening. If any of this happened, I am deeply sorry.
As citizens of the United States, we will of course honor the outcome of the election. As you know, this is one of our most sacredly held democratic values. And another value, just as sacred, is that we do not tolerate bigotry. Bigotry is not a democratic value. And as I am sure you understand, your teachers, tutors, custodians, cafeteria workers, and every other adult in our school, and I will not tolerate it. Needless to say, you as students of this fine high school should not tolerate it either.
Please understand that there is always room for disagreement, particularly with respect to matters of governance and politics. As you know from your history, our country has experienced far more intense disagreements than this one. And as you also know from your history, we have survived and in many instances grown stronger as a nation when these arguments have been settled. So now we are in a moment of deep disagreement in our nation, and there are many things to disagree on. But let us not disagree on this:
Bigotry is not a democratic value and, as such, it will not be tolerated in our school. Rather, our great democratic value is our tolerance of each other and our occasional differences. Not only will we honor the results of the election, we will honor each other in our understanding of and care for each other. We will stand by each other. We will stand by our Muslim families. We will stand by our Asian families. We will stand by our Black families. We will stand by our same-sex parent families.
(Say what a great highschool is and is not.
Tell them, second, that you will honor the outcome of the election, but that you will fight bigotry. Tell them bigotry is not a democratic value, and that it will not be tolerated at your school. Tell them you stand by your Muslim families. Your same-sex parent families. Your gay students. Your Black families. Your female students. Your Mexican families. Your disabled students. Your immigrant families. Your trans students. Your Native students. Tell them you won’t let anyone hurt them or deport them or threaten them without having to contend with you first. Say that you will stand united as a school community, and that you will protect one another. Say that silence is dangerous, and teach them how to speak up when something is wrong. Then teach them how to speak up, how to love one another, how to understand each other, how to solve conflicts, how to live with diverse and sometimes conflicting ideologies, and give them the skills to enter a world that doesn’t know how to do this.
Tell them bigotry is not a democratic value, and that it will not be tolerated at your school.
Teach them, third, how to be responsible members of a civic society. Teach them how to engage in discussion—not for the sake of winning, but for the sake of understanding and being understood. Students need to learn how to check facts, to weigh news sources, to question taken-for-granted assumptions, to see their own biases, to take feedback, to challenge one another. We need to teach students how to disagree—with love and respect. These skills will be priceless in the coming months and years as we work to build a democratic society that protects the rights of all people ― regardless of the cooperation or resistance those efforts face from the executive branch.
Say that silence is dangerous, and teach them how to speak up when something is wrong.
Finally, remind them ― to ease their minds ― that not everyone who voted for Donald Trump did so because they believe the bigoted things that he has said this year. Many of them voted for him because they feel frustrated with the economy, they feel socially left behind, and they are exercising the one power they have. We need to challenge Trump and his supporters to differentiate between their fears and the bigotry catalyzed by those fears.
In the aftermath of this traumatic election, I hesitate to even exercise my voice in this way. In the past year, I received hate mail and a death threat from white supremacists for blog posts like this ― blog posts that are, let’s be honest, fairly insignificant expressions of personal opinion from a person with very little power. I am not a threat. And yet people have threatened me ― and my family ― for expressing my view that we should build a world in which all human beings can live freely in the wholeness of their identities. I fear that this kind of intimidation will only increase in the event of a Trump victory. I fear that it will worsen tomorrow ― as soon as I hit send ― if Trump supporters are emboldened in their aggression towards people with whom they disagree. And yet the only thing that makes me feel safe in this moment ― as I stare into the face of a possible of a Trump victory ― is to speak up and speak out, and to invite others to do the same.
Tell them, first, that we will protect them. Tell them that we have democratic processes in the U.S. that make it impossible for one mean person to do too much damage. Tell them that we will protect those democratic processes ― and we will use them ― so that Trump is unable to act on many of the false promises he made during his campaign.
November 16, 2016 Comments Off on Avon High School Interim Principal’s Email.
A Suggestion for UConn Law Students: Listen to 4 Year Old Suzie McCash.
Some University of Connecticut Law School students are in a state over the election of Donald Trump. They are not alone. What sets them apart is that the future advocates and courtroom brawlers appear to have little faith in their ability to withstand the results of an election. There’s a celebration of each other today at 5 p.m. to boost each other’s flagging spirits. The announcement of the event includes a list of mental health resources for those wobbling under the weight of a presidential election.
Mental Health Resources: Please see the attached PDF which contains additional information and resources.
- Lawyers Concerned for Lawyers is a confidential crisis intervention and referral service. 1-800-497-1422. https://www.jud.ct.gov/LCL.htm
- PFLAG Hartford is an LGBTQ family and ally organization which provides support, education, and advocacy. 860-785-0909. http://www.pflaghartford.org/resources.html
- Mindlink provides non-crisis warmlines around the state, including Hartford. http://www.mindlink.org/warm_lines.html#warmlines
- Toivo provides free holistic services in the South End of Hartford including yoga, meditation, and self-expression activities. http://toivocenter.org/
- TurningPointCT.org was developed by young adults for young adults and provides resources to guide your search for mental wellness. http://turningpointct.org/resources/
- University of Connecticut Women’s Center provides resources including the Violence Against Women Prevention Program. 860-486-4738, http://womenscenter.uconn.edu/
Time to buck up. So here’s another suggestion. Gather yourselves and listen to this emergency call from Suzie McCash, a plucky 4 year old British girl who kept her wits about her when her doctor mother suffered anaphylactic shock at home. She is remarkable.
November 16, 2016 Comments Off on A Suggestion for UConn Law Students: Listen to 4 Year Old Suzie McCash.
FOI to Hear Evidence on Landmark Case on Social Media as Protected Public Documents.
A big day Tuesday at the Freedom of Information Commission as a case regarding a public agency’s use of social media resumes before a hearing officer. The case involved a public agency’s duty to preserve and make available those postings as routine public documents under Connecticut’s far reaching Freedom of Information Act. The underlying matter arises out the application of state law to a Native American payday loan operation.
The hearing is likely to include where social media posts went and at whose direction or advice. Combustible stuff.
November 14, 2016 Comments Off on FOI to Hear Evidence on Landmark Case on Social Media as Protected Public Documents.