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Paige Bueckers is in a class by herself in the Big East, becoming the first player to win the most outstanding player of the conference tournament three times.
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March 2020 brought the first confirmed case of COVID-19 to Connecticut. What followed was a crisis that would soon overwhelm hospitals, shutter businesses and alter daily life in ways few could have imagined.
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A proposed bill providing residents the right to sleep and eat on public property was recently approved by the state’s Housing Committee. The bill, a response to a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling, is next up for General Assembly approval.
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Members of the delegation recently gathered with residents at the Ferguson Library and shared their priorities. Reproductive health care and climate change both sparked discussion.
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Sandy Hook Promise, a nonprofit founded after 26 children and adults were killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012, launched a new public service announcement Monday to prevent school gun violence.
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People who were vaccinated during the 1960s should confirm which version of the vaccine they received, officials say.
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The Center of Africana Studies at Central Connecticut State University held its 31st annual conference Thursday, celebrating African strength, culture, and how people can help be an ally for the Black community.
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The state’s Housing Committee voted to approve the expansion of Connecticut’s Just Cause Eviction law. The bill moves next to the state's House of Representatives for a final vote.
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The case involves the Aquarion Water Company's appeal of a regulator's decision two years ago to deny the utility's requested rate increase and then require it to cut rates by nearly $2 million per year.
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Connecticut’s congressional delegation and veterans advocates are criticizing a leaked internal memo revealing the federal government's plans to cut more than 80,000 Department of Veterans Affairs workers. There are an estimated 150,000 veterans living in the state.
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Integrated Refugee and Immigrant Services has laid off about half of its staff as the Trump administration ordered sudden cuts in federal funding for resettlement agencies.
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Five Bridgeport Democratic officials made their first appearance in court after being accused of abusing Connecticut's absentee ballot system and other election-related crimes during city's 2023 mayoral primary.