Author: Christopher Keating

  • Former U.S. Rep. Chris Shays Not Running For Governor; Seven Republicans Still In The Race Vs. Five Democrats

    Former U.S. Rep. Chris Shays is not running for governor, casting aside speculation that he might run.

    Shays had never said he was running, but some Republicans were urging him to explore the race because he would instantly have been the most experienced, most high-profile Republican in the race. None of the Republicans in the race has ever served in Congress, where Shays had 21 years of experience from the Fourth Congressional District.

    He was also nationally known for his support of the Iraq War and other issues.

    Shays came to the state Capitol on the opening day of the General Assembly session on February 3, standing in the back of the Hall of the House as Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell delivered her final State of the State Address. Before Rell’s speech, Shays walked up to the Capitol press room and told Capitol Watch that he was simply listening that day to fellow Republicans – and would not be making any pronouncements about the race.

    After serving in Congress from the summer of 1987 until January 2009, Shays has higher name-recognition than any of the GOP candidates in the field. He won a multi-pronged primary on a hot summer night in 1987 to capture the seat that had been held by former U.S. Rep. Stewart McKinney.

    The GOP field includes Lt. Gov. Michael Fedele of Stamford, former Bush appointee Tom Foley of Greenwich, longtime business executive Oz Griebel of Simsbury, Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, Newington Mayor Jeff Wright, former U.S. Rep. Larry DeNardis of Hamden, and Chester First Selectman Thomas E. Marsh.

    Shays joins a well-known group that has dropped out of the governor’s race this year, including Gov. M. Jodi Rell, Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz, former House Speaker James Amann, and state Sen. Gary LeBeau.

    The news of Shays dropping out was reported first online in the Capitol Report, a relatively new Web site.

  • Major Hearing Tuesday On Keno – Controversial Proposal By Gov. Rell; Concerns By Two Tribes Over Compact

    One of the most controversial issues of the legislative session is Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell’s proposal to legalize the Keno electronic gambling game.

    Keno is legal in spots around the country, and it is a popular game in all the surrounding states – New York, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island.

    But Democratic legislators have given a cool response to Rell’s plan, saying they have concerns that legalizing Keno could violate the compact between the state and the two Indian tribes that run the Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods casinos in southeastern Connecticut. The compact allows the state to collect 25 percent of the slot-machine money, which is about $370 million in the current fiscal year after topping out in the economic boom days at about $430 million.

    In order to clear the air on the swirling controversy, the legislature’s public safety committee is calling in the biggest players in the game for an informational hearing on Tuesday, March 2. The committee co-chairs, Sen. Andrea Stillman of Waterford and Rep. Stephen Dargan of West Haven, have pulled together the lineup.

    The following are the speakers – most of whom are scheduled for 10 minutes – in the order of their appearance:

    Robert L. Genuario, Rell’s budget director; Anne M. Noble, president and CEO of the  Connecticut Lottery Corporation; Paul A. Young, executive director of the state’s Division of Special Revenue; and Dr. Marc N. Potenza, the director of the Problem Gambling Clinic at Yale University in New Haven.

    Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, will discuss, among other things, the history of the compact between the state and the tribes.

    The representatives of the Mohegan tribe will be Chuck Bunnell, the chief of staff, and John Meskill, the executive director of the Mohegan Tribal Gaming Commission. Following their testimony will be Jackson King, the general counsel of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribe, which owns Foxwoods.

  • GOP’s Mark Boughton Lines Up Endorsements From Mayors, Legislators In Race For Governor

    Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton has announced his first 35 endorsements, including prominent Republicans in municipal and state government.

    Boughton, who joined the race on the same day that state Sen. Gary LeBeau got out, is battling in a crowded field for the GOP nomination. If he captures at least 15 percent of the delegates at the May convention in Hartford, then he will qualify for the August primary.

    The endorsements include New Britain Mayor Tim Stewart, Torrington Mayor Ryan Bingham, state Sen. Michael McLachlan of Boughton’s hometown of Danbury, and state representatives David Labriola of Naugatuck and Jan Giegler of Danbury. McLachlan had previously served as Boughton’s chief of staff.

    “Mark Boughton is a proven leader who has the right blend of experience in the legislature, as well as that of a chief elected official,” Stewart said in a statement. “Mark is a fiscal conservative who has the vision to lead Connecticut through these difficult times. I am proud to support him.”

    “In the end, this election is not about me. It’s about the people who are struggling day to day to make ends meet,” Boughton said. “Having the endorsements of these grass roots Republican and community leaders, will help us drive our message of revitilizing our economic development strategy to create jobs, redesigning our state government to one we can afford, and rethinking the relationship of government and the people that it serves.”
     
    Others endorsing Boughton include former House Speaker Fran Collins, former Naugatuck Mayor Ron San Angelo, and former Danbury mayors James Dyer and Donald Boughton, the candidate’s father.

    Boughton is running in a hotly contested race against Lt. Gov. Michael Fedele of Stamford, former Bush appointee Tom Foley of Greenwich, longtime business executive Oz Griebel of Simsbury, former U.S. Rep. Larry DeNardis of Hamden, Newington Mayor Jeff Wright, and Chester First Selectman Thomas E. Marsh.

  • Washington Post Profile of WWE’s Linda McMahon

    The Washington Post has published a detailed profile of Republican U.S. Senate candidate Linda McMahon, and a wrestling blogger has his own thoughts on it.

    http://wrestlingbabylon.wordpress.com/2010/02/21/washington-post-profile-of-linda-mcmahon-proves-that-wrestling-is-real-%e2%80%93-it%e2%80%99s-journalism-that%e2%80%99s-fake-part-1/

    McMahon is running against former U.S. Rep. Rob Simmons of Stonington and well-known investor Peter Schiff of Weston in the race for the Republican nomination. They are expected to clash in an August primary before the general election contest in November against Democrat Richard Blumenthal.

  • Ex-VP Dick Cheney Back In Hospital With Chest Pains

    It has happened many times in his life, but former VP Dick Cheney is back in the hospital with chest pains.

    He has suffered four heart attacks and has been dealing with various heart problems for decades.

    http://www.courant.com/news/breaking/ktla-dick-cheney-hospitalized,0,767397.story

     

     

     

     

  • East Haven Mayor Controversy Settled; Charges Against Mayor Dropped In Clash Between Police And The Mayor

    The clash between East Haven mayor April Capone Almon and her police department – which led to her being charged with interfering with police in a case involving towed cars – has been high profile.

    Now, the case has been dismissed by a judge.

    http://www.courant.com/community/new-haven/hc-ap-ct-easthavenmayorfeb22,0,7077195.story

  • GOP’S John Pavia Gathering Support For Attorney General; GOP Has Not Won AG Seat In More Than 50 Years

    While much of debate surrounding the state’s next attorney general has focused on the Democratic race, Republican John Pavia has been quietly gathering support for his own run.

    Many of them come from the Republican strongholds in Fairfield County — down near Pavia’s hometown of Easton.

    Some of the early supporters include New Canaan First Selectman Jeb Walker, Stamford Mayor Michael Pavia, Easton First Selectman Thomas Hermann, Trumbull First Selectman Timothy Herbst, Wilton First Selectman Bill Brennan, and Norwalk Mayor Richard Moccia.

    Other supporters are Mark DelMonaco, chairman of the Bridgeport Republican Town Committee; Peter Martin, acting West Hartford Republican town chairman, and Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, who is running for governor.

    Pavia is facing an uphill battle in a Democratic state where the past seven attorneys general have been Democrats. The last Republican to hold the seat was John J. Bracken of Hartford, who held the seat from 1955 through 1959.

    Since then, the seven Democrats to hold the office over the past five decades have been Albert L. Coles, Harold Mulvey, Robert Killian, Carl Ajello, Joseph Lieberman, Clarine Nardi Riddle, and Richard Blumenthal.

    Coming up on 20 full years, Blumenthal is the longest-serving attorney general in Connecticut history. Lieberman, by contrast, served for only six years – a shorter tenure than Killian and Ajello, and others.

    “I have made it clear to these early supporters that I will make a final decision shortly, at which time I will seek their full endorsement,” Pavia said. “In the next couple of weeks I will continue to consult family, friends, donors and supporters to decide whether or not to officially seek the Republican nomination.”

  • Former Secretary Of State Alexander Haig Dies At 85; Lived In Farmington When At Hartford-based United Technologies

    Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig, who held a series of high-profile posts in the military, government, and business during a long career, died Saturday at the age of 85.

    Haig lived in a Farmington mansion when he made the short commute along Interstate 84 during the days he served as president at Hartford-based United Technologies Corp. He moved in and out of government service through his career, but he came to Connecticut for the high-level, private-sector post at the major contractor that makes jet engines, helicopters, air conditioners, and elevators.

    Haig was recruited by legendary UTC chieftain Harry Gray, a fellow Farmington resident who offered Haig the highest salary of his life in an attempt to make Haig his eventual successor at the conglomerate. Haig, though, left about a year later to become Secretary of State under then-President Ronald Reagan.

    Despite his decades-long career, Haig is perhaps best known for a single incident for saying that “I am in control here, in the White House” after Reagan was shot in 1981 outside a hotel in Washington, D.C.

    The national security writer for the Associated Press has the full details on Haig’s life at http://www.courant.com/news/politics/sns-ap-us-obit-haig,0,5628333.story

  • John Cougar Mellancamp Running For U.S. Senate? Possibly Running For Evan Bayh’s Seat In Indiana

    Is John Cougar Mellancamp running for the U.S. Senate in Indiana?

    The Note, the well-known blog from ABC News, has details at http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2010/02/a-senator-john-cougar-mellencamp.html

  • State Pension Fund Rebounds With Strong Stock Market In 2009; Finishes Year At $23 Billion – After Bad Year In 2008

    Rebounding with a strong stock market, the state’s pension fund finished the 2009 calendar year at $23 billion – up by $2.7 billion for the year.

    State Treasurer Denise Nappier issued the results late Friday afternoon – one day after the release of a report by the Pew Center On The States that said that Connecticut’s pension fund was the fifth worst in the nation for underfunding its obligations. The Pew report analyzed the results of pension funds in all 50 states through 2008, while Nappier revealed the latest results that benefited from the strong Wall Street performance in 2009.

    “Since July 1, 2009, our state’s pension funds have realized strong investment performance, returning 15.25 percent,” Nappier said. “For the entire 2009 calendar year, it generated an average return of 19.82 percent. This turn-around was a dramatic improvement over the market downturns we saw earlier in 2009, and potentially very good news for state taxpayers and the approximately 160,000 pension plan beneficiaries and participants.”

    While unemployment has remained high at the state and national levels, many Wall Street firms have returned to profitability.    

    Some of the best-performing categories in the pension fund were emerging market equities, which was up more than 74 percent, and high yield bonds, which were up 50 percent, Nappier said. Emerging market debt was up by 37.70 percent.

    So far this year, the results have been solid.

    “These strong early investment results for fiscal year 2010 put us on a path that takes the edge off last fiscal year’s double-digit negative returns as a result of the historic market downturns of the “Great Recession,” said Nappier.

    For the calendar year that ended on December 31, 2009, the State Employees’ Retirement Fund was up by 20.2 percent, while the Teachers’ Retirement Fund was up by 19.93 percent. The Municipal Employees’ Retirement Fund increased by 18.08 percent.

    The results are a sharp improvement from the major nosedive that started in mid-September 2008 with the collapse of the Lehman Brothers investment banking firm and financial problems at major firms like Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch. The economy tumbled into recession and has been struggling to recover ever since.

    Nappier told Capitol Watch on Friday night that she was not surprised by the Pew Center on the States report about the state’s under funding of the pension fund. She believes strongly in making reforms – beyond anything that the state has already done. The investment upswings, she said in an interview, can help lower the state’s need to contribute more to the fund.

    “My concerns about this looming liability are no secret,” Nappier said. “I have been working to shine light on this issue for more than a decade, through testimony before the General Assembly, opinion editorials, speeches and press releases.  Indeed, this issue formed the backbone of my 1998 campaign for state treasurer.”

    She added, “Every year since I was first elected state treasurer, I have testified before the General Assembly raising concerns about the under funding.  As an example, in 2001, I testified that “no single issue facing our state pension system – and the fundamental integrity of future state budgets – is more important than fully funding the state’s annual pension contributions.”

    In her extensive statement regarding Pew and pensions, Nappier continued, “As the Pew report clearly shows, years of under funding pension obligations and zero attention paid to post retirement benefit costs has only exacerbated our state’s financial challenges. But make no mistake, the under funding of pension funds for state employees and teachers is the consequence of poor fiscal practices that date back to the 1970s. It is important to recognize that since assuming office in 2006, Governor Rell, with the support of the General Assembly, has been a proponent of fully funding our Teachers’ Retirement Fund and honoring the collective bargaining agreement for the State Employees’ Retirement Fund, with the exception of an agreement to defer up to $200 million in contributions because of the current fiscal crisis.  It is my hope that the current Pew Report will serve as a reminder that we need to stay disciplined and chart the right course to ensure that our commitment to current and future retirees remains firm.  There is much work to do and additional reforms to consider as we look to the future.”

  • Independent Contractors And The WWE

    A wrestling blog is weighing in on the issue of independent contractors and the World Wrestling Entertainment empire.

    http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/WWE_News_3/article_39191.shtml

  • Sen. Ernie Newton Released From Prison; Convicted On Corruption Charges; Called Himself “Moses Of My People”

    Four years after he was sentenced on corruption charges, former state Sen. Ernie Newton of Bridgeport has been released from federal prison.

    Newton has been transferred to a halfway house in Waterbury in the same way that former Bridgeport Mayor Joseph Ganim was recently transferred to Hartford.

    Newton’s release marks the latest chapter in a long-running scandal that culminated in his sentencing for accepting a $5,000 bribe, evading taxes and pilfering campaign contributions to pay for car repairs and personal cellphone calls.

    Senior U.S. District Court Judge Alan H. Nevas criticized Newton at the 2006 sentencing for saying during his resignation speech that he was “the Moses of my people” and for shaking down constituents in his hometown of Bridgeport in return for state funding.

    “I don’t think there’s any reference in the Bible … that as God led his people for 40 years in the desert that he ever took money from them,” Nevas said toward the end of a three-hour sentencing hearing in February 2006.

    Saying he had personal insight into Newton’s case, Nevas mentioned the three terms he served as a state legislator from Westport before he became a prosecutor and then a federal judge.

    “Those were six of the best years of my life,” said Nevas, who is now 81 years old. “It is inconceivable to me that anyone who serves in the General Assembly could make a business out of it, and that’s what you did. … You sold your office.”

    Newton, who was highly outspoken as a legislator, could not be reached for comment Friday. An employee at the Chase Center in Waterbury said that Newton is not permitted to answer telephone calls from reporters while he is staying at the halfway house. He then referred calls to a supervisor, which in turn referred calls to the Northeast regional office of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, which oversees inmates.

    Newton, a Democrat who served for 17 years in the legislature before resigning in 2005, stood before the judge in the crowded courtroom that day and said multiple times that he was sorry. When Newton was finished, Nevas asked him whether he believed in his prior statements that he was being prosecuted because he is African-American.

    “This is not about black or white,” Newton responded. “It’s about right or wrong, and I was wrong. Justice has no color. … This is not about race, but it’s about right and wrong. And I’m sorry.”

    Before issuing the sentence, Nevas said he was pleased that Newton had retracted his statements about his prosecution being racially motivated.

    “That was a despicable thing to say,” Nevas told Newton. “It was offensive, and you should have known better.”

    Newton briefly bowed his head when Nevas ordered him to serve 60 months in prison, but said nothing as he remained standing. He left the courtroom with an entourage of supporters and declined to comment to reporters.

    Newton’s supporters, who had asked for a lighter sentence of home confinement and community service, were upset, even though the judge said federal guidelines could have allowed a sentence of more than seven years. Some questioned how Newton received a five-year sentence, compared with one year and one day for former Gov. John G. Rowland, who has since been released.

    Federal prosecutors had sought a longer sentence for Rowland, but the U.S. Attorney’s office noted that Rowland had pleaded guilty to one felony and Newton pleaded guilty to three. Newton admitted to accepting a bribe, evading taxes and engaging in mail fraud in connection with misusing campaign contributions for personal use.

    “You had a quid pro quo, not just alleged, but on tape — and the evidence was very powerful,” then-U.S. Attorney Kevin O’Connor said at the time.

    The investigation against Newton stretched out for 5 1/2 years ago and started during an FBI investigation of Ganim, who was sent to prison for nine years on corruption charges. Federal prosecutors learned that Newton obtained a no-show job at the Bridgeport sewer plant and later demanded a raise for a $30,000 job in which he did no work.

    At the State Capitol, Newton, 49, had been largely ostracized by hundreds of former friends and colleagues who served with him since he first took office in 1989. None of the 187 current legislators or any high-ranking colleagues appeared at his sentencing. The only Capitol colleague who spoke on Newton’s behalf was former state Rep. Annette Carter of Hartford, who told the judge that Newton had “the burdens of Bridgeport on his shoulders” when they worked together in the legislature.

    Senate President Pro Tem Donald E. Williams Jr., D- Brooklyn, the highest-ranking senator and a colleague of Newton’s in the Democratic caucus, said after the sentencing that it marked a close in “a disappointing chapter” of Newton’s life.

    “Ernie served with us in the legislature — he had talent and potential, but unfortunately threw it all away,” Williams said. “He did not tell the truth to us or his constituents, and is today paying a heavy price.”

    Both aides and senators felt betrayed after Newton told his Capitol colleagues that he was not guilty of any wrongdoing, adding that what prosecutors described as a $5,000 bribe was a consulting fee from Progressive Training Associates, a job-training program in Bridgeport.

    But prosecutors released detailed transcripts of wiretaps that showed Newton telling the group’s executive director, Warren Keith Godbolt, to send him a federal income-tax form so that the payment could be recorded as a consulting fee. In addition, prosecutors said that Newton falsely filed a form with the State Ethics Commission indicating that he worked as a consultant for Progressive Training Associates.

    Godbolt pleaded guilty to paying a bribe to Newton. Judge Nevas seemed upset while recounting the evidence outlined in the wiretaps.

    “Clearly, he was asking Mr. Godbolt to lie to the FBI agents” about being a consultant, Nevas said. “Then he has the gall to send paperwork to the State Ethics Commission. … If that isn’t an obstruction of justice, I don’t know what is.”

    Newton was also sentenced to three years’ probation, and he was ordered to pay nearly $14,000 in restitution to the State Elections Enforcement Commission.

    Newton was well known at the Capitol for malapropisms, including when he stood up on the House floor and said, “I’m afraid of opening up a Panacea’s box.”

  • Mary Glassman, Running For Governor, Offers Zero-Growth Budget in Simsbury; Trying To Hold Down Tax Increase

    Simsbury First Selectman Mary Glassman, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor, has proposed a zero-growth budget in her hometown.

    Glassman’s plan would involve closing one of the two town swimming pools, but would keep the larger Simsbury Farms complex open.

    The Hartford Courant’s Rinker Buck has the details at http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-simsbury-budget-0218.artfeb18,0,5634069.story.

    Glassman is running in a five-way Democratic battle against Greenwich cable television entrepreneur Ned Lamont, former Stamford Mayor Dannel Malloy, Ridgefield First Selectman Rudy Marconi, and former Hartford state representative Juan Figueroa of Meriden. Four of the candidates are placing their bets on getting enough support at the May convention in order to qualify for the August primary. Figueroa has pledged to collect about 15,000 signatures to get his name on the ballot.

    Four candidates have already dropped out of the race: Gov. M. Jodi Rell, Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz, former House Speaker James Amann, and state Sen. Gary LeBeau.

  • Dick Blumenthal Announces Campaign Team; Opens Offices In Hartford And Stamford For U.S. Senate Race

    Attorney General Richard Blumenthal has announced his campaign team for the U.S. Senate – including some of the same individuals who have known him since his first race for attorney general in 1990. The campaign’s Hartford office is currently at the Democratic State Central Committee and will soon move to its own headquarters.

    While Blumenthal has hired an extensive team, some political insiders say that the campaign manager for all of Blumenthal’s campaigns has been Dick Blumenthal.

    The team is as follows:

    Michael J. Cacace – campaign chairman. While not widely known to the general public, Cacace has led each of Blumenthal’s campaigns for more than two decades. A graduate of Fordham, he founded a law firm in Stamford that bears his name. Connecticut Magazine has named him among the top lawyers in the state on real estate and zoning matters. A former president of the Italian Center of Stamford and president of the United Way of Stamford, he has held a wide variety of volunteer positions through the years.

    State Representative Jim Shapiro – vice chairman. A Stamford resident, Shapiro will oversee operations in the newly opened Stamford office and handle fundraising and legal issues.

    Justin Kronholm – director of political operations. A Hartford native, he will oversee the office in the capital city – mainly handling political issues. Kronholm is best known from his previous job as the state Democratic Party’s executive director.

    Liz Donohue – deputy director of operations and political affairs.  A Farmington resident, she will work with both Kronholm and Shapiro on a variety of issues. A former deputy policy director for the state House Democrats, Donohue has experience in direct-mail and holds an MPA from the Kennedy School at Harvard.

    Maura Downes – communications director. A former scheduler for John B. Larson’s 1994 gubernatorial primary campaign, Downes also worked on Larson’s first successful campaign for Congress – in which he defeated Miles Rapoport, Joe Suggs, and state Rep. James R. McCavanagh in a four-way Democratic primary in September 1998. Since then, she has worked for a wide variety of officials and candidates, including political consultant Roy Occhiogrosso.

    Ashley Codianni – deputy communications director. Working directly with Maura Downes, she previously worked on NBC’s political desk in  Washington, D.C. and served on msnbc.com’s political page, “First Read.”

    Scott Bates – senior policy advisor. Well known for his television and radio appearances, Bates is the vice president at the Washington-based Center for National Policy and has made numerous trips to hot spots overseas.

    Tom Kelley – director of new media. After working on Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign, Kelley was the deputy new media director for the unsuccessful 2009 reelection campaign of New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine.

    Ivy Mackin – finance director. A former finance director for U.S. Rep. Joseph Courtney in the 2006 and 2008 campaigns, Mackin also served as a legislative assistant for Courtney in Connecticut and in Washington, D.C.

    Melissa Ozols – scheduler. A former member of the House Democratic press office, she also held a policy post under former House Speaker James Amann.

    Jeff Long – special assistant to the candidate, meaning that he will be Blumenthal’s driver. He has had internships with the DCCC in the 2006 campaign and in the Office of the President under President William Jefferson Clinton.

    In addition to hiring these 11 individuals, Blumenthal is returning to the same media and political consultant that has helped him for two decades, known as The Campaign Group. The Philadelphia-based operation has been involved in more than 40 winning campaigns for Congress and governor, including well-known Democrats Bill Richardson of New Mexico and Ed Rendell of Pennsylvania.

    While hiring that many people can be expensive, the campaign could not say how much money Blumenthal has raised or spent so far. The amounts, however, will be disclosed when Blumenthal files his first FEC report that is due on April 15.

  • UConn Tuition To Increase 5.66 Percent For September; Trustees Approve Rate Lower Than Initial 6.3 Percent

    Tuition for in-state students will increase 5.66 percent in the next academic year at the University of Connecticut.

    Some students have protested, but the increase is lower than the initial 6.3 percent hike that was recommended by the university’s chief financial officer.

    The tuition increase was approved by the university’s board of trustees at a time when public records show that UConn professors in Storrs and at the UConn Health Center in Farmington are among the highest paid of all state employees – and receive some of the highest pensions when they retire.

    Former UConn president Harry Hartley is currently earning a pension of more than $185,000 per year, according to the state comptroller’s office. Like all retired state employees, his pension has been increasing in recent years under a cost-of-living adjustment. Citing his 36-year career at UConn, Hartley said previously that his pension is “well deserved.”

    The Hartford Courant’s Kathy Megan has the details at http://www.courant.com/news/education/hc-web-uconn-tuition-0219feb19,0,6919442.story

    The pension situation is at http://blogs.courant.com/capitol_watch/2010/02/ct-is-5th-worst-in-national-pe.html

  • Susan Bysiewicz Files Lawsuit Seeking Ruling On Whether She’s Qualified To Be AG In Ongoing Political Controversy

    In an unusual move without precedent in recent Connecticut political history, Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz is filing a lawsuit in state Superior Court in an attempt to receive a ruling on whether she is qualified to be attorney general.

    “It is clear that I more than meet the requirements to serve as attorney general and this effort will confirm that once and for all,” Bysiewicz said Thursday.

    The controversy over Bysiewicz’s qualifications has been raging for the past month, and it focuses on the state law that says anyone serving as attorney general must be “an attorney of at least ten years’ active practice at the bar of this state.”

    Bysiewicz argues that her 11 years as Secretary of the State qualifies her because she says she is essentially running a public-interest law firm and regularly dispenses legal advice on the state’s election laws.

    The lawsuit also states that the 10-year requirement is unconstitutional under both the state and federal Constitutions.

    “I am proud to stand with Susan as she takes this important step to resolving a critical issue not just for this election, but for all future elections for Attorney General,” said Nancy DiNardo, the state Democratic Party’s chairwoman.

    George Jepsen, one of Bysiewicz’s Democratic rivals in the race, said, “Today’s announcement acknowledges what should have been clear all along – that only in court can Bysiewicz clear up questions of her legal qualifications to serve as attorney general. Perhaps she finally got around to reading Attorney General Blumenthal’s opinion. The fact that she has to go to court at all underscores how paper thin her actual, real world experience is as a practicing attorney.”

    Jepsen added, “Win or lose in court, the issue of her qualifications will not go away. Republicans can be expected to appeal any favorable decision to the State Supreme Court.
    The Democratic Party cannot afford a nominee whose legal fitness to serve remains in doubt.”

    Political observers have been anticipating a battle between Bysiewicz and Jepsen for attorney general for years. State Rep. Cameron Staples, a New Haven lawmaker who co-chairs the legislature’s powerful finance committee, said he expects to qualify for the Democratic primary in a three-way race with Bysiewicz and Jepsen in August.

    Republican John Pavia, a well-known party activist, law school professor, attorney, and fundraiser, is seeking the GOP nomination.

    “Having the judiciary decide the constitutionality of the law and whether she meets the standard is the right course of action,” Pavia told Capitol Watch on Thursday. “I give her and Chairwoman DeNardis credit for moving the issue forward.”

    Before the controversy started, Bysiewicz was far ahead in the Quinnipiac University poll for AG last month with 62 percent of the Democrats polled. Jepsen had 10 percent, and Waterbury Mayor Michael Jarjura – who has not officially announced his plans – had 3 percent.

  • Cartoonist Bob Englehart On Linda McMahon, WWE, Senate

    Hartford Courant cartoonist Bob Englehart weighs in on Linda McMahon, the WWE, and the U.S. Senate race in Connecticut.

    http://blogs.courant.com/bob_englehart/2010/02/february-17-2010.html

  • CT Ranks 5th Worst In National Pension Report; Only 62 Percent Funded; Some Pensions Over $180,000 Per Year

    Connecticut ranks as the fifth worst state in the nation in funding pensions for its state employees, and the problem is growing worse, according to a national study to be released Thursday.

    The report says the problem “is cause for serious concern” as Connecticut’s pension fund is only 62 percent funded – clearly short of the 80 percent that federal experts deem as preferred. The only states that currently fund their pensions lower than Connecticut are Illinois, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island.

    Since the state legislature and the governor have not set aside enough money through the annual budgeting process, the state’s unfunded pension liability has increased by more than $9 billion since 2000. The report states that Connecticut’s pension assets grew by 89 percent between 1999 and 2008, but the liabilities jumped even higher – by 99 percent. 

    The nonprofit Pew Center On The States, which authored the report, says, “Connecticut’s management of its long-term pension liability is cause for serious concern, and the state needs to improve how it handles the bill coming due for retiree health care and other benefits.”

    In another disclosure, public records from the state comptroller’s office show that Connecticut has about 175 retired employees who are receiving pensions of more than $100,000 per year. Some retirees from the cash-strapped UConn Health Center are receiving pensions of more than $180,00 per year. All of those listed below have increased in recent years because of cost-of-living adjustments.

    Some of the highest pensions in the state are as follows:

    Dr. Jack N. Blechner, former professor at UConn Health Center; former chair, department of obstetrics and gynecology                                                                            $240,099

    Eleanor Henken, wife of late emeritus professor, UConn medical school            $223,131

    Richard F. Kochanek, former head, accounting dept., UConn business school   $187,605

    Harry Hartley, former president, University of Connecticut                                 $185,587

    Richard Judd, former president, Central CT State University                              $184,897

    Dr. Eugene Sigman, former dean, UConn medical school                                 $181,564

    Dr. John R. Raye, former physician-in-chief CT Children’s Medical Center          $180,950

    Anthony DiBenedetto, former UConn vice president, academic affairs                $180,890

    Dr. Leslie Cutler, former chancellor, UConn health center                                 $180,165

    Further details on state pensions are available at the Yankee Institute For Public Policy’s web site at www.CTSunlight.org

    Concerned about the state’s growing problems, Gov. M. Jodi Rell announced on the opening day of the legislative session that she is creating the “Post-Employment Benefits Commission” that will make recommendations on short-term and long-term solutions for the pension system that is underfunded by $9.3 billion. In addition, the state is on the hook for future health insurance and other retiree benefits of $24.6 billion.

    “The unfunded liability is considered debt and has negative impact on the state’s position with bond rating agencies,” Rell said two weeks ago.

    The new commission, which has already been created by executive order, will include representatives from the top state offices that are involved in solving the problem, including the state comptroller, treasurer, governor’s budget office, actuaries, certified public accountants, and the state employee unions coalition, known as SEBAC.

    “She addressed that on the first day of the session,” said Rell’s spokeswoman, Donna Tommelleo. “That’s something she’s serious about.”

    Hartley, whose pension has grown from $169,000 to more than $185,000 over the past five years, said previously that his pension – after 36 years at UConn – is “well deserved.”

    http://www.courant.com/news/politics/hc-state-pensions-0218.artfeb18,0,2842427.story

    Susan Urahn, the managing director for the Pew Center, said that the 50-state report showed “highly troubling” findings with total liabilities of more than $3.3 trillion for pensions and healthcare that have been promised to state workers nationwide.

    The problem has gotten worse in recent years as states have postponed their contributions into pension funds. In Connecticut, then-Gov. John G. Rowland and the state legislature agreed to postpone payments into the pension fund in order to save money in the short-term and balance the budget. The problem, though, is that the savings were only temporary because the amount of money that the state workers were scheduled to receive was never decreased. The legal, contractual amounts remained the same – and thus the postponement of the payments was only a short-term fix.

    The practice continued under Rell as the state deferred a payment of $100 million under an agreement with the state-employees unions.

    Nationally, more than half of the 50 states had fully funded pension systems in 2000, according to the Pew report, whose release was embargoed until 12:01 a.m. today. Only eight years later, that total had dropped to only four states – New York, Florida, Wisconsin, and Washington – with 100 percent funded systems.

    Connecticut ranks in a group of eight states in which at least one-third of the liability remains unfunded. Illinois ranks last at 54 percent, followed by Kansas at 59 percent. Rhode Island and Oklahoma are tied at 61 percent, and Connecticut is next at 62 percent.

    “Too often, policy makers kick the can down the road,” Urahn told reporters Wednesday in a conference call. “It is important to note that this problem was not created by the current recession.”

    Despite the low numbers, Urahn said that states can solve the problem – if they don’t wait until it gets even worse. First, the states could start fully funding the pension obligation each year – something that often is not done. Second, they could reduce the overall liability by reducing the benefit levels. For example, Iowa in recent years raised the amount of money that must be contributed by state employees.

    “Even small changes – made today – can have a significant impact in the future,” Urahn said. “The consequences of inaction are simply too great.”

    Another way to cut costs is to eliminate the pension plan for new state employees and instead enroll them in a 401 (k) – style plan that is common in the private sector. R. Nelson “Oz” Griebel, who is seeking the Republican nomination for governor, has proposed such an idea in his campaign. Griebel says he understands that there are contractual obligations for current employees, but he says the state should consider a different plan for new employees.

    Two states – Alaska and Michigan – have moved toward the 401 (k) – type plan. In Minnesota, the state saved $650 million over 20 years by simply raising the retirement age by one year – from 65 to 66. That move, which was made in 1989, has proven beneficial through the decades, Urahn said Wednesday.

    “If they wait, it’s going to continue to get worse,” Urahn said.

  • Susan Bysiewicz Staying In The Race For Attorney General; Will Seek Ruling Over Whether She’s Qualified For AG

    Despite incorrect Internet speculation to the contrary, Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz is not dropping out of the race for attorney general.

    Instead, she is holding a press conference Thursday morning with one of the top lawyers in the state, Wesley Horton.

    Bysiewicz will be seeking a legal ruling in state Superior Court in Hartford over whether she has the requisite 10 years of active legal practice in Connecticut, which is the legal requirement to become attorney general.

    Horton, who is known for the famous Horton vs. Meskill public school funding case, will host the press conference at his Hartford office – and will be joined by the state Democratic Party chairwoman, Nancy DiNardo.

    The candidacy of Bysiewicz has been rocked by controversy lately. A former Democratic leader in the polls for governor, Bysiewicz switched last month and decided to run for attorney general. But some lawyers have been questioning whether she meets the requirements to serve in the office. Bysiewicz has countered that her full 11 years as Secretary of the State should count toward the requirement because she says she is essentially running a public-interest law firm by supervising lawyers and dispensing legal advise regarding the state’s elections laws.

    The latest Quinnipiac Poll, taken before the controversy that has played out recently, showed Bysiewicz with a huge lead in the AG race.