Author: Christopher Keating

  • Massive Gas Explosion Rocks Middletown; Governor Rell Imposes No-Fly Zone Above Power Plant

    Gov. M. Jodi Rell announced a “no-fly zone” on Sunday night over the Middletown power plant that suffered a huge explosion, killing at least five people.

    The zone covers three nautical miles for any aircraft flying under 3,000 feet in an effort to ensure the safety of the rescue teams working below. The heavily damaged building is unstable, and the no-fly zone will remain in effect at least until sunset Monday.

    “We cannot have the safety of our first responders jeopardized,” said Rell, who spent several hours at the scene Sunday.

    Further details are at http://www.courant.com/community/middletown/hc-middletown-kleen-power-plant-explosion-0207,0,6714580.story

    Throughout the day, updates will be posted at www.courant.com.

  • The Battle For New Britain: Dannel Malloy vs. Mary Glassman; 35 Delegates Up For Grabs For May Convention

    The Battle for New Britain is in full swing.

    It’s not Antietam or Gettysburg, but it’s very important to Dannel Malloy and Mary Glassman.

    Malloy and Glassman are one-time allies who are now running against each other for the Democratic nomination for governor. And part of the battle is being waged on Glassman’s home turf of New Britain, where she grew up as Mary Messina.

    The issue started when Malloy announced that he had captured the New Britain delegation after winning the support of town chairman John McNamara and a host of others. Those joining the list include state Sen. Donald DeFronzo, Rep. Timothy O’Brien, town council president Michael Trueworthy, city treasurer Teresa Sapieha Yanchak, and former treasurer Jason Jakubowski, among others.

    Malloy’s campaign touts the endorsements as a remarkable turnaround for a candidate who lost 27 to 4 among New Britain’s 31 delegates in the 2006 race against New Haven Mayor John DeStefano. In the same year, the New Britain delegation voted 24 to 7 for the U.S. Senate candidacy of Ned Lamont, who is now running for governor.

    “We kind of shut Malloy out in ’06,” McNamara told Capitol Watch. “He’s done a lot of sweat equity [since then]. For me, it’s based on ability to govern and a good chance of winning. I think Malloy can fire up the base because he’s tenacious. I think he can fire up the rank-and-file people. … I think Malloy has earned it – although I don’t know why he would want to become governor.”

    But Glassman – Simsbury’s longtime first selectman – isn’t taking New Britain lightly.

    When she and Malloy were allies in the August 2006 primary, Glassman won a higher percentage of votes in her race – 57 percent – than Malloy did in his battle with DeStefano.

    Glassman has announced support from former state Sen. Joseph H. Harper, a conservative Democrat who was a powerhouse in his heyday at the Capitol during the income-tax battles in the early 1990s when he co-chaired the budget-writing appropriations committee. She is also being supported by well-known attorney John C. King, a longtime Democrat who served as a past chairman of the New Britain Town Committee, and Paul D. Catanzaro, the top vote-getter on the New Britain city council.

    As a New Britain native, Glassman is touting her background as the daughter of Angelo and Frances Messina. After graduating from Roosevelt Junior High School and St. Thomas Aquinas High School, she later graduated from UConn law school.

    “Her name is Mary Messina Glassman when she’s in New Britain, and it’s Mary A. Glassman when she’s running Simsbury,” McNamara said. “I get it.”

    McNamara says he was “confounded” when he heard about Glassman’s endorsements because Harper now lives in Berlin, and he has not heard a word recently from John King.

    New Britain this year has 35 delegates, up from 31 in 2006. But the delegates won’t even be picked until late March for the convention that will be held on May 22. New Britain represents the ninth largest delegation in the state.

    McNamara did not denigrate the achievements of Glassman, a well-known attorney at the state Capitol who worked for both House Speaker Moira K. Lyons and Senate President Pro Tem Kevin B. Sullivan.

    “She’s a New Britain success story,” McNamara said of Glassman. “I’ve got great respect for Mary and especially Ned, but the guy from Stamford is the guy who can best put it together.”

  • Lt. Governor’s Race In Illinois: Cohen Admits Past Steroid Use; Ex-Girlfriend Arrested For Prostitution; Finally Resigns

    Illinois politics often make other states look quite tame.

    The latest in that state involves lieutenant governor nominee Scott Lee Cohen – a pawnbroker who recently won the Democratic primary. One of the problems is that Cohen had been charged with holding a knife to his then-girlfriend’s neck. Another problem is that he said he did not know that she had been previously arrested for prostitution and instead thought she was a masseuse.

    The charges were dropped in the knife incident, but Cohen has not yet dropped out of the race.

    Stay tuned.

    Details are at http://www.courant.com/news/politics/sns-ap-us-lieutenant-governor-illinois,0,1917257.story

    Update: Cohen finally stepped down on Super Bowl Sunday, making the announcement at a bar during halftime.

     

     

  • Rep. James O’Rourke To Be Sued In Civil Case In Death Of State Employee; No Criminal Charges Filed

    The estate of a former Department of Motor Vehicles employee intends to file a wrongful death suit against veteran state Rep. James O’Rourke, who gave her a ride on the night she died.

    O’Rourke, a Cromwell Democrat, is a deputy speaker of the state House of Representatives.

    The Hartford Courant’s Christine Dempsey has the details at http://www.courant.com/community/cromwell/hc-web-orourke-suit-0206feb06,0,5064927.story

  • Bill DiBella Will Pay Nearly $800,000; Former Democratic Senator Involved In Civil Case Regarding Treasurer’s Office

    Former state Senate majority leader William DiBella will pay nearly $800,000 to settle a long-running civil case regarding a large payment that he received in the state treasury scandal.

    The case dates back to the tenure of Republican Paul Silvester, who was appointed as state treasurer by then-Gov. John G. Rowland after Republican Chris Burnham stepped down. Silvester later lost the 1998 race for treasurer to Democrat Denise Nappier and documents said that DiBella, a Democrat, secretly helped the Republican in that race.

    Jon Lender and Edmund Mahony have the details at http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-dibella0205.artfeb05,0,2465322.story

  • Rick Green on WWE, Linda McMahon, Eugene

    Our colleague, Rick Green, weighs in on the battle for the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate between Greenwich wrestling entrepreneur Linda McMahon and former U.S. Rep. Rob Simmons.

    The latest controversy erupted over remarks initially made by Rahm Emanuel, the chief of staff for President Barack Obama.

    Green’s view is at http://blogs.courant.com/rick_green/2010/02/republicans-get-nasty.html

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvfPHyWPTRE

  • Amanda Falcone Joins The Courant’s Capitol Crew

    Many legislators and staff members knew reporter Amanda Falcone through the years as the Capitol correspondent for the Meriden Record-Journal.

    But she switched to The Hartford Courant last year, covering Rocky Hill and Wethersfield. This week, she joined the Capitol crew for the 2010 General Assembly session.

    She will be covering various committees, so when you see her in the hallways, please say hello.

  • David Fein Nominated By President Obama As The Next U.S. Attorney; Would Replace Acting Atty. Nora Dannehy

    President Barack Obama has nominated Stamford attorney David Fein to be Connecticut’s  next U.S. Attorney – a highly powerful position that oversees investigations by federal prosecutors and the FBI.

    The Hartford Courant’s veteran court reporter, Edmund Mahony, has the details at http://www.courant.com/news/politics/hc-web-fein-0205feb05,0,473756.story

  • Gov. Rell Offers $18.91 Billion, No-Tax-Increase Budget; Democrats Criticize Commission To Streamline Govt.

    In her final State of the State Address, Gov. M. Jodi Rell called for a new era of political civility as she offered an $18.91 billion, no-tax-increase budget that includes the legalization of Keno electronic gambling and provides loan guarantees to spur small businesses to create jobs in a sluggish economy.

    Saying that the cash-strapped state needs to close its current budget deficit and prepare for larger deficits in the future, Rell said this is not the year for grandiose, big-spending plans. Instead, her budget calls for essentially flat funding for the largest items in the budget, such as funding for nursing homes and aid to cities and towns.

    Rell is seeking to avoid a repeat of the nearly year-long clashes last year that prompted the longest budget battle in state history and ended with an exasperated Rell allowing the budget to become law without her signature. This year, she said, the sniping needs to end and leadership needs to begin.

    “We need to stop the game-playing and name-calling and constant bickering that has come to consume too many at the Capitol,” Rell told legislators in the historic Hall of the House. “None of us are blameless in this regard. All of us must accept our responsibilities to treat one another with respect and to listen.”

    During a 28-minute speech that was interrupted by applause 13 times, Rell said that voters are looking for action and new jobs at a time when the state unemployment rate has reached 8.9 percent.

    “They don’t want to hear shallow lamentations of sympathy or understanding from their elected officials,” Rell told the standing-room-only crowd. “They want action and assistance. And they want an end to the theatrical histrionics of political press conferences and partisan pinball. They want us to act like adults.”

    Keno and other issues are outlined at http://www.courant.com/videobeta/?watchId=2dfb262a-014d-4bfa-a3b5-3b3e305252f8

    In an attempt to save money at a time when the state budget deficit has reached $500 million for the current fiscal year, Rell called for a 24-member, bipartisan commission to study the bureaucratic streamlining that would cover all three branches of government. But Democrats immediately rejected the idea as two years late and duplicative of many past commissions. Legislators have been talking about blue-ribbon commissions until they’re blue in the face.

    “We already have measures to streamline government,” said House Majority Leader Denise Merrill, a Storrs Democrat. “I don’t see it. She runs the executive branch. It’s up to her to streamline the agencies.”

    Since Rell is not seeking re-election, her speech marked her final budget address to the General Assembly. In her low-key style, she spent relatively little time on nostalgia. But she mentioned in her remarks that her husband Lou and son Michael were sitting in the House chamber as her daughter, Meredith, was watching streaming video from her home in Colorado. Rell briefly recapped her proudest achievements: ethics reform, civil unions, the Charter Oak health insurance program, new charter and magnet schools, and open-space preservation, among others.

    “There is no time for reflection, however, for much work remains ahead, and much history is yet to be written,” Rell said.

    With Rell out of the race, 12 candidates have stepped forward to seek the toughest political job in the state. Many of them were in the chamber Wednesday – with the Democrats trashing her speech and the Republicans soft-pedaling any criticisms.

    Simsbury First Selectman Mary Messina Glassman, who is seeking the Democratic nomination, said she was “extremely disappointed” by the speech because it contained nothing on affordable housing or improving education.

    “It’s not acceptable to have a governor who puts the state on autopilot,” said Glassman, who previously served as an attorney in the House and the Senate.

    Former Stamford Mayor Dannel Malloy said the state is drowning in “a sea of red ink” on a day when Rell was wearing red in front of the standing-room-only crowd in Hartford.

    “It’s a little too little and a little too late,” Malloy said, adding that it makes little sense for Rell to create a commission on government efficiency as she’s heading out of office.

    But House Republican leader Lawrence Cafero, one of Rell’s strongest defenders, said that neither gubernatorial aspirants nor lawmakers had solved the state’s ongoing budget problems, either.

    “I haven’t heard a thing from one Democratic candidate for governor, and Mr. Malloy has been running for four years,” Cafero said. “There are two things we have to focus on like a laser beam, and that’s jobs and getting state finances in order.”

    In making adjustments to the second year of the two-year budget, Rell repeated some of her previous ideas and also came out with some new ones.

    Among Rell’s most controversial proposals is a plan to launch Keno gambling in the state, which she estimates would generate $20 million in the first year and then $60 million in subsequent years. Rell raised the idea for the electronic gambling game last year, but it was dropped without a vote by the Democrat-controlled legislature.

    Attorney General Richard Blumenthal issued a legal opinion that allowing keno could violate an agreement between the state and the two tribal-operated casinos in Connecticut and said it might prompt the casinos to withhold the state’s share of their slot-machine revenues. The state’s share of the slot revenues peaked at more than $430 million in 2007, but the total has dropped sharply to an estimated $371 million for this year.

    Insiders said the Rell administration has not engaged in detailed talks with the casinos about the Keno plan, but Rell’s budget director, Robert Genuario, said he did not envision any problems.

    “We believe the Keno proposal is consistent with the compact,” Genuario said Wednesday.

    Although Rell is seeking money from many sources in order to balance the budget, she rejected the idea of allowing the sale of alcohol in package stores and supermarkets on Sunday. The Connecticut Package Stores Association has fought for years against the proposal, but liquor wholesalers have been pushing the idea recently in a perennial battle at the Capitol.

    “The governor is not a proponent of Sunday sales. Period,” Genuario said.

    Rell wants to save money by deferring a payment of $100 million into the state-employees’ pension fund, but critics say that will save no money in the long term because no one’s pension will be decreased. She is also seeking to eliminate the Permanent Commission on the Status of Women and other commissions in a move that has been rejected in the past.

    The Hartford Courant’s Daniela Altimari and Amanda Falcone tell us:

    One of the centerpieces of Rell’s plan is an effort to assist small and medium-sized businesses, which Genuario called ”vital to our economy.” The governor is proposing using $100 million in bond funds – matched by $400 million from banks – to establish a low-interest loan pool that is designed to help businesses that are unable to obtain credit. Another initiative is designed to foster research and development in so-called ”green industries.” Rell is proposing a loan forgiveness program for students who earn degrees in ”green technology,” life sciences or health-related information technology. Students who take advantage of the program must remain in the state after graduation and work in one of those three fields.

    Among other proposals, magnet and charter schools will also receive $5 million in additional funding under Rell’s plan and the Shoreline East commuter rail line would get an additional $1.6 million to expand service to New London. But those on Medicare will see their monthly Part D maximum co-pays rise from $15 to $20 for prescription drugs, a change that is expected to save $1.1 million.

    In another move that was questioned by Democrats, Rell wants to make it easier for herself and future governors to make budget cuts when there is a projected budget deficit. The governor can currently cut up to 3 percent and up to 5 percent in various accounts without requiring approval by the legislature. Rell’s plan calls for doubling her authority if the state deficit increases to 3 percent to 5 percent of the general fund, and tripling if there is a deficit of 5 percent or more.

    While Democrats question giving Rell more power, Senate Republican Leader John McKinney of Southport and Sen. Dan Debicella of Shelton support the idea that the GOP has favored in the past.

    House Speaker Christopher G. Donovan says that both legislators and the governor should work together to determine cuts, rather than giving more power to the governor.
    Donovan is also hesitant to fully agree with Rell when it comes to bonding. Rell wants to automatically repeal bond authorizations that have not been awarded by the State Bond Commission – which is controlled by the governor – within five years. Currently, once bond requests are authorized, they stay on the books indefinitely. Donovan notes that his hometown of Meriden has been waiting for years for about $10 million for a flood control project in its downtown area, but requests have not been brought before the bond commission.

    Another highlight of Rell’s speech was a measure that would help small and medium-sized businesses. The Connecticut Credit Consortium would require a $100 million bond authorization and would rely on cooperation with banks. Of that money, $75,000 would be provide access loans of $500,000 to $3 million to all businesses, while $25,000 will be set aside for direct loans of up to $500,000 to small and medium businesses.

    The consortium is a good idea given that revenue is down, costs are up and profits are gone, said state Banking Commissioner Howard Pitkin.

    “It’s a vital place to start,” he said, noting that the program would help borrowers to qualify for loans.

    Greenwich multi-millionaire Tom Foley, a Republican running for governor, said Rell’s budget proposal was a good start, but said she should have focused more on reducing spending. The results of the streamlining commission will come too late, he said, adding that Rell should have looked to reduce expenditures by at least $1 billion for the next fiscal year.

    Repealing or putting off the public financing of campaigns would have helped her do that, Foley said. She also should have taken a harder look at Medicaid costs, he said.

  • Larry Cafero On Governor Rell’s State of the State Address

    In her final State of the State Address, Gov. M. Jodi Rell stood on the raised dais above many legislators and announced that the era of name-calling and hyper-partisanship in Hartford must come to an end.

    In her low-key style, Rell admonished lawmakers for the finger-pointing and blame-laying that prompted the longest budget battle in state history last year.

    By contrast, House Republican leader Larry Cafero is often a little more direct than Rell.

    Commenting after the speech, Cafero said that Rell’s message was: “We better cut the crap and start acting civil.”

  • Exclusive: Rell’s State Of The State Address Will Call For Creating “Connecticut Credit Consortium” Of $500 Million

    In a State of the State Address that will focus on jobs and balancing the budget, Gov. M. Jodi Rell will propose a $500 million “Connecticut Credit Consortium” today that will provide loans to small and medium-sized businesses.

    Rell will call for spending $100 million in state bond funds, to be combined with $400 million in loans from the state’s community banks, for a loan pool in order to help create jobs, an administration source said Tuesday night.

    Rell will say in her televised speech today that credit is “the lifeline” of business in a tough economy, said the highly knowledgeable administration source.

    The Rell administration cites the example that banks do not earn much money on a loan of $10,000 for a local florist to purchase inventory. As such, the business often gets turned away because the cost of the paperwork isn’t worth it for the bank, according to the administration. Rell has used the anecdote of the local florist in the past as an example of a small, struggling business that is trying to make a profit. The state, though, will write loans of that size at a time when the state’s unemployment rate is 8.9 percent and the national rate is 10 percent.

    In her final State of the State address, Rell will steer her remarks toward the fiscal problems facing the state. The deficit for the current fiscal year that ends on June 30 is now projected at more than $500 million, and the deficit for the next fiscal year will be more than $250 million. Those numbers can changed quickly with the ups-and-downs of the stock market and the overall strength or weakness of the economy.

    Rell had proposed a similar bank consortium soon after the Lehman Brothers investment bank collapsed in September 2008. That pool, however, involved only about $60 million to $100 million overall.

    In an effort to close the deficit, some insiders expect that Rell will once again propose legalizing the controversial Keno electronic gambling game. The administration did not confirm or deny that Tuesday night.

    Rell raised the issue last year, but it was dropped without a vote by the Democratic-controlled legislature during a contentious budget year. Rell believes the Keno games, which would be run by the state’s lottery corporation, would generate $20 million in the first year and $60 million in the second year for state coffers.

    The move is guaranteed to prompt controversy among Democrats, who were cool to the idea last year. Attorney General Richard Blumenthal issued a legal opinion that said allowing keno could violate an agreement between the state and the two Indian casinos in Connecticut and could potentially prompt the casinos to withhold the state’s share of their slot machine revenues.

    Some House Democrats, though, said they had no major problems with Keno if the games could help the state close its deficit.

    Lottery-style keno is a betting game in which players pick a set of numbers from 1 to 80 by buying and filling out a play slip from a retailer, such as a restaurant or bar. The payouts can range up to $1 million.

    As the state’s budget problems continue, Rell is also seeking to increase her budget-cutting authority. Rell has been trying to make deeper cuts in the budget, but she lacks the unilateral authority to make certain cuts. As such, large cuts can only be made with the legislature’s approval.

    Rell is currently allowed to cut certain funds by 3 percent or 5 percent under certain conditions. Now, however, she wants to increase those totals to 6 percent or 10 percent if the state deficit grows to be 3 percent of the general fund.

    If the deficit gets worse and exceeds 5 percent of the general fund, then Rell could cut as much as 10 percent “of the total appropriation from any fund or 15 percent of any appropriation,” according to her proposal.

    Currently, Rell is handcuffed on certain portions of the budget. For example, cities and towns receive billions of dollars each year from the state, but Rell lacks the unilateral authority to cut that money. In addition, she does not have the sole authority, for example, to reduce health insurance and pensions for both current and retired state employees.

    The six Democratic candidates who are running for governor will be watching Rell’s speech and budget proposals closely today.

    Former Stamford Mayor Dannel Malloy, who is trailing Greenwich cable television entrepreneur Ned Lamont in the latest Quinnipiac University poll, is making his comments even before Rell makes her speech.

    “Governor Rell said her budget speech this week would contain ‘no big surprises,’ ” Malloy said in a statement. “Based on what the people of Connecticut have seen the last few years, perhaps we could use a surprise or two.”

    Administration sources, however, said this is not the year for multiple new proposals.

    Besides seeking to increase her budget-cutting authority, Rell will outline a series of other fiscal proposals Wednesday at the state Capitol in an attempt to cut the state’s borrowing, reduce the debt and preserve the “rainy day” fund for fiscal emergencies.

    “Simply put, state government cannot – and must not – spend what it does not have,” Rell said. “The far-reaching and devastating effects of the national recession laid bare areas of our budget process that must be strengthened and improved to ensure that Connecticut can weather this economic downturn and economic maelstroms of the future.

    Rell continued, “The changes I am proposing would require contributions to the Rainy Day fund throughout the fiscal year, based on surplus projections from the comptroller. Like any household would do, if there is something left over at the end of the month it goes straight into the savings account.”

    Democrats have complained that Rell has not used all of her current budget-cutting authority and question why she is seeking even more fiscal powers. Democrats are now researching the issue to determine the precise amounts of Rell’s unused authority.

    The two top Senate Democratic leaders – Senate President Pro Tem Donald Williams and Majority Leader Martin Looney – said they intend to work with Rell during the short, three-month regular session.

    “We look forward to seeing more details on the governor’s proposals to balance the budget and enact fiscal reforms,” they said. “Of course, the other top priority for this legislative session must be growing and protecting jobs. Senate Democrats have made a number of proposals to jump start job growth and help small businesses. We hope to hear the governor substantively address this issue” today.

    In a crackdown on crime, Rell will seek to strengthen the laws against sex predators who target children and expand details on the criminals on the state’s sex-offender registry. The state will begin to adopt a multi-tiered approach to identify sex offenders by classifying them as Tier 1, Tier II, and Tier III in accordance with federal law. Currently, there are no tiers in the state system and a relative lack of details on the crimes committed.

    “Those sick individuals who would traffic in the sexual exploitation of children and others will lose more than their freedom when they are convicted and put behind bars,” Rell said. “Just as we deal with drug traffickers, new laws will give the state the authority to seize any and all property they have amassed from their sinister enterprises.”

    While talking on a cell phone while driving has been illegal for years, Rell will propose that texting while driving – which has become more common in recent years – should also be illegal.

    The Hartford Courant’s Edmund H. Mahony tells us that both Rell and state lawmakers said they will introduce legislation today to correct potential legal defects in the existing campaign finance law – even as a crowded field of statewide candidates is embarking on what promises to be a contentious campaign season.

    After a federal district judge gutted the state’s much-debated public financing law late last summer, a federal appellate court in New York City is working on what it has promised to be an expedited decision.

    Meanwhile, Rell’s office and lawmakers will submit similar bills that could become quick fixes if the appeals court agrees that the existing law is flawed – and the full legislature agrees on what traditionally has been a contentious issue. With an election set for March 2 in Stratford, lawmakers are looking at the issue with some urgency. Rep. James F. Spallone, an Essex Democrat who co-chairs the Government Administration and Elections committee, said he wants a legislative hearing on his committee’s bill on February 10.

    Both bills would subject major, minor and petitioning candidates to the same qualifying and fund distribution formulas. They would also eliminate a provision that would essentially repeal the law if the legislature fails to quickly respond when it is successfully challenged in court.

    State assistance during times of economic distress is not unprecedented. As 42 banks were failing in the early 1990s, then-Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. said the state was being forced to lend money because the banks weren’t doing it – and the Department of Economic Development became the state’s lending arm. Some of those loans went sour, including a subsidy package to Hi-G Co. Inc., a South Windsor military contractor that fell apart soon after obtaining $3.5 million in loans and grants from the state.

    By September 1994, the department had made 350 loans for a combined total of more than $100 million. Weicker’s economic spokesmen said at the time that the loan-failure rate was lower than that at many banks.

  • Rell Seeks To Increase Her Budget-Cutting Authority; Various Fiscal Reforms Will Be Unveiled Wednesday

    As the state’s budget problems continue, Gov. M. Jodi Rell is seeking to increase her budget-cutting authority.

    Rell will unveil a series of proposals in her State of the State Address on Wednesday as she presents adjustments to the second year of the two-year budget.

    Rell has been trying to make deeper cuts in the budget, but she lacks the unilateral authority to make certain cuts. As such, large cuts can only be made with the legislature’s approval.

    Rell is currently allowed to cut certain funds by 3 percent or 5 percent under certain conditions.

    Now, however, she wants to increase the totals to 6 percent or 10 percent if the state deficit is 3 percent of the general fund.

    If the deficit gets worse and exceeds 5 percent of the general fund, then Rell could cut as much as 10 percent “of the total appropriation from any fund or 15 percent of any appropriation,” according to her proposal.

    Currently, Rell is handcuffed on certain portions of the budget. For example, cities and towns receive billions of dollars each year from the state, but Rell lacks the unilateral authority to cut that money. In addition, she does not have the sole authority, for example, to reduce health insurance and pensions for both current and retired state employees.

    Besides seeking to increase her budget-cutting authority, Rell will outline a series of other fiscal proposals Wednesday at the state Capitol in an attempt to cut the state’s borrowing, reduce the debt and preserve the “rainy day” fund for fiscal emergencies.

    “Simply put, state government cannot – and must not – spend what it does not have,” Rell said. “The far-reaching and devastating effects of the national recession laid bare areas of our budget process that must be strengthened and improved to ensure that Connecticut can weather this economic downturn and economic maelstroms of the future.

    Rell continued, “The changes I am proposing would require contributions to the Rainy Day fund throughout the fiscal year, based on surplus projections from the comptroller. Like any household would do, if there is something left over at the end of the month it goes straight into the savings account.”

    “Any bonding item that languishes for five years without ever being approved by the state Bond Commission will be automatically dropped from the list of authorized projects,” she said. “This will ensure that Connecticut borrows only the most urgently needed projects and will restore our credit rating to a robust status.

     “Through an executive order, I am establishing a broad-based commission of state and union officials, financial experts and business leaders to remedy the growing debt caused by years of under-funding state employee retirement and health benefit plans,” Rell said. “The state of Connecticut has a commitment to its work force that must be honored. We cannot do that if we fail to meet our financial obligations to these accounts.”

    The two top Senate Democratic leaders – Senate President Pro Tem Donald Williams and Majority Leader Martin Looney – said they intend to work with Rell during the short, three-month regular session.

    “We look forward to seeing more details on the governor’s proposals to balance the budget and enact fiscal reforms,” they said. “Of course, the other top priority for this legislative session must be growing and protecting jobs. Senate Democrats have made a number of proposals to jump start job growth and help small businesses. We hope to hear the governor substantively address this issue” Wednesday.

  • Diane Randall, Joan McDonald on WNPR’s “Where We Live”

    Affordable housing is an important issue every year – not just in election years.

    But politicians might be paying more attention than usual this year as 2010 could be a game-changing electoral year.

    West Hartford resident Diane Randall, executive director of the Hartford-based Partnership For Strong Communities, will be joined by state DECD commissioner Joan McDonald today on WNPR’s “Where We Live” to talk about housing. The program, hosted by John Dankosky, airs from 9 a.m. until 10 a.m. on the WNPR stations.

  • Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton Running For Governor; Republican Ex-Legislator Will Accept Public Financing

    The race for governor changed yet again Monday as one candidate dropped out and another joined the race.

    Danbury Mayor Mark D. Boughton became the latest Republican to join the race, while state Sen. Gary LeBeau, a Democrat, dropped out. That brings the number to 12 candidates for the seat being left vacant by popular Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell, who is not seeking re-election after more than five years as governor.

    Boughton, who has served as mayor since winning his first term in November 2001, said in an interview that he is the only candidate to have served both as a mayor and a state legislator. Boughton followed in the footsteps of his father, who also served as both Danbury mayor and a legislator in the 1990s.

    Although Greenwich multi-millionaire Tom Foley and Lt. Gov. Michael Fedele had higher ratings in the latest Quinnipiac University poll, Boughton noted that he had 6 percent of the vote in the poll without yet having declared his candidacy. By far, the leading response among Republicans in the poll was “undecided” at a whopping 59 percent – followed by Foley at 17 percent and Fedele at 8 percent.

    “It’s a wide-open race on the Republican side,” Boughton said Monday in an interview. “I would not say there are any front-runners in the race.”

    Pushing for more jobs at a time when the state’s unemployment rate is 8.9 percent, Boughton said the state needs “one-stop shopping” for companies to receive financial help in either expanding or relocating to Connecticut. The Senate Democrats called for the same idea Monday – a concept that has been touted for years but never seems to get accomplished.

    In another long-running idea, Boughton said he favors property tax reform that would involve removing unfunded mandates for cities and towns. Some politicians favor allowing Danbury to keep part of the 6 percent state sales tax from the millions of dollars in sales at the city’s gigantic shopping mall near the New York State border, but Boughton did not immediately embrace that proposal Monday.

    “Everything should be on the table,” Boughton said. “I don’t favor one particular method over another.”

    Boughton, who turns 46 in less than three weeks, is a Danbury native who graduated from the city’s high school and later attended Central Connecticut State University in New Britain. After receiving a bachelor’s degree in American history, he later earned a master’s degree in his hometown at Western Connecticut State University. He began teaching social studies at his high school alma mater five years after graduating.

    After winning elections for state representative in 1998 and 2000, he won his first race for mayor in November 2001 and has won multiple elections since then. His blog already has a picture of himself with Rell.

    While Boughton was getting into the race, LeBeau was bowing out. He had fared poorly in the latest Quinnipiac University poll and had not gained much traction in his campaign since his announcement in late July in his hometown of East Hartford.

    A former member of the state House of Representatives for four years, LeBeau lost a race for the state Senate in 1994 to Republican Kevin Rennie by 76 votes. Two years later, he defeated Rennie, who is now a Courant columnist, in a year when the Democrats regained control of the Senate.

    A retired public school teacher, LeBeau, 62, has served for the past 13 years in the state Senate. During 11 years as co-chairman of the legislature’s commerce committee, LeBeau has been heavily involved in various business initiatives involving tax incentives and new technologies like fuel cells. LeBeau had been raising money for the campaign with the help of his treasurer, former East Hartford Mayor Tim Larson, who lives on the same street as LeBeau.

    LeBeau was among a large group of candidates for governor that former state Democratic chairman John F. Droney calls “second and third-tier players.”

    When he started running for governor, LeBeau conceded that relatively few people knew who he is because he has never run for statewide office.

    “The state has no idea who Gary LeBeau is,” LeBeau said in an interview with The Hartford Courant in late July. “My guess is my name recognition, statewide, is maybe 5 or 6 percent. Even town committee people, they don’t know who I am.”

    But state Republican Chairman Christopher Healy said LeBeau’s name recognition statewide was even lower – at “less than 1 percent.”

  • Senate Democrats Want Tax Cut For ‘Mom And Pop’ Businesses; At Sen. Jonathan Harris’s Dry Cleaner In WH

    Seeking to create jobs, the Senate Democrats issued a four-pronged proposal Monday to kick-start the economy and eliminate the $250 business entity tax for small businesses for two years.

    Multiple senators gathered at a West Hartford dry cleaner to make their point about helping “mom and pop” stores. The cleaner – owned by Dana Gordon – was filled with clothes, but some insiders believe there were no stuffed shirts there Monday.

    “Sedgwick Cleaners – which is my dry cleaner – is an example of a small business that keeps a community alive,” said Senator Jonathan Harris, a West Hartford Democrat. “And this bill helps keep small businesses alive. Dana is a Rotarian like me, he sponsors youth sports, and he advertises local events in his storefront window. Besides creating jobs, he is a vital part of the West Hartford community. And we need to protect and grow these types of businesses.”

    Sen. Donald Williams, the highest-ranking senator, noted that many companies pay the business entity tax – and it is not directly related to how much profit a company earns. The money needs to be paid “regardless of whether you’re UTC or Sedgwick Dry Cleaners,” Williams said.

    Overall, the state collects $38 million per year from the tax, but the entire amount would not go back into the economy because only “mom and pop” businesses would be eligible for the tax cut. More than 100,000 businesses – from landscapers to painters to dry cleaners – currently pay the tax, officials said.

    While $250 is a small sum for many businesses, the money could go toward the dry cleaner’s monthly utility bill of $900, Democrats said.

    Sen. Edith Prague, an outspoken Democrat, said, “Small businesses provide the foundation for every community and provide the backbone for our state’s economy. For the duration of this downturn, we must help them retain their vitality in any way we can. The plan we’ve introduced today will help them retain and perhaps create new jobs – to the benefit of employees in the short term and to the benefit of our overall economic health for the longer term.”

    The Democratic plan would be paid through a temporary, two-year surcharge on wealthy Connecticut residents who receive huge bonuses from Wall Street firms that received federal bailout money.

    This would include employees of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, and Citigroup, which all have bonus pools in the billions of dollars.

    The tax would be imposed only on bonuses of $1 million or more – at a top Connecticut income tax rate of 8.97 percent, which is the same as the highest rate in New York State.

    “It’s almost a concept of restitution – taking it back from Wall Street and giving it to businesses on Main Street,” Williams said.

    While tax filers do not write the name of their employer on their federal or state tax forms, the names of the companies can be tracked back through W-2 forms and employer-identification numbers – which must be filed with the IRS and the state tax department. As such, tax authorities can find out which Connecticut residents work for Goldman Sachs and other large firms. 

  • Sen. Gary LeBeau Drops Out Of Governor’s Race; Will Likely Run For Re-Election As Senator From East Hartford

    State Sen. Gary LeBeau dropped out of the governor’s race on Monday morning.

    The East Hartford Democrat had been among the lowest-favored candidates in the latest Quinnipiac University poll – trailing far behind Democrats Ned Lamont of Greenwich and Dannel Malloy of Stamford.

    “With deep regret and strong sense of achievement, I am ending my bid for the Democratic nomination for governor,” LeBeau wrote in an e-mail to supporters. “I thank you and my many supporters who have given me encouragement, advice, time and donations over the past 12 months.  I am wiser and wealthier as a result of this experience, and you are a key reason.”

    He continued, “You know, last year I started this campaign with the idea that jobs and Connecticut’s economic future are the most important challenges facing our state. At that time, I, –drawing on my many years of experience chairing the legislative Commerce Committee — was virtually the only one saying this. Now, every candidate has recognized the importance of this issue.  I will continue to fight for a more competitive and prosperous Connecticut, most likely by seeking reelection as state senator.”

  • Legislative Session Opens Wednesday; Speaker Donovan Wants To Postpone Estate Tax Cuts That Gov. Rell Vetoed

    State legislators battled for nearly an entire year over the state budget last year, but they will be back at it again when the General Assembly session opens Wednesday.

    Despite increases in the cigarette and income taxes on the state’s wealthiest residents, the state is still facing a projected deficit of $500 million in the current fiscal year. As part of her annual State of the State Address, Gov. M. Jodi Rell will unveil adjustments to the second year of the two-year budget that the legislature passed last year.

    The budget battle is not expected to be as intense as last year because the legislature has already made the decisions to spend the entire $1.4 billion “rainy day fund” for fiscal emergencies and about $1.5 billion in federal stimulus money over the two-year budget. In the upcoming session, they will work to close the deficit for the current year, as well as adjustments for the new year that begins July 1.

    With the longest-running budget battle in state history last year, it seemed to lawmakers that the session almost never ended. In fact, the regular session and multiple special sessions stretched out in 2009 from Jan. 2 to Dec. 22 — a year-long process.

    Since the economy has improved since the depths of the recession and the bottoming out of the stock market last year, House Speaker Christopher Donovan says he is confident about tackling the state’s budget deficit. When the stock market improves, the state’s richest residents – often from Fairfield County – pour millions of dollars into the state coffers. In boom years for the stock market, that translates into huge surpluses. In bad years, like after the Lehman Brothers investment bank collapsed and stock prices nose-dived, the deficits can become huge – as they did in 2009.

    But since many economists believe the worst of the economic downturn is over, Donovan prefers to be optimistic.

    “We can close it,” Donovan said in an interview in his office. “I’m confident in closing that hole.”

    One of the chief ways to close the deficit, he said, is to postpone $76 million in cuts in the estate tax that took effect on January 1. The Democratic-controlled legislature voted on December 22 to delay the tax cuts, but Rell vetoed the bill. The Democrats were unable to override Rell when the Senate failed to generate enough votes.

    Even after the veto, Donovan said the issue “has to be” revisited because the tax cut was never something that was pushed by the Democrats.

    “It was what the governor wanted,” Donovan said. “It was not what we wanted in the budget.”

    When asked if the state income will be raised on millionaires again this year, Donovan responded that the deficit can be closed by delaying the estate tax, trimming the state bureaucracy and making sure that the administration makes the cuts that are already required in the budget that was passed last year.

    Attorney Jeffrey Beckham, a spokesman for the governor’s budget office, said it was “good news” that Donovan is confident about solving the state’s budget problems. But he declined to reveal Rell’s budget plans in advance of Wednesday’s speech.

    “We’re in a confidential, lock-down mode at this point,” Beckham said.

    Concerning Donovan’s statement that the Democrats did not want the estate tax cut in the budget that became law, Beckham said, “They voted for it.”

    Besides the budget, the legislature will tackle multiple issues in a session that is scheduled to last only three months in an election year. Some insiders believe the budget deliberations will not be as contentious as last year because lawmakers have an incentive to finish their work so that they have more time to campaign in the fall elections. Traditionally, the legislature has raised taxes only in the first year of the two-year budget in an effort to avoid tax increases in an election year.

    For the Democrats, job creation will be a top priority, and some recommendations from a working group may be released as early as Tuesday. Another group that has been working on domestic-violence laws is expected to release recommendations next week, and Donovan said the legislature will “absolutely” improve the domestic-violence laws this year.

    One of the most high-profile issues will be whether the General Assembly should mandate that public school buses must have seat belts. The issue gained prominence when a Rocky Hill teenager, 16-year-old Vikas Parikh, died after a bus crash on January 9 on Interstate 84 as he and his fellow students were headed to a robotics competition on the weekend. After the crash, three out of four registered voters who were surveyed in a Quinnipiac University poll said they favor mandating seat belts on the buses.

    Until now, lawmakers have failed to pass 23 bills on seat belts during the past 20 years, but the issue will undoubtedly receive increased scrutiny this year. State Rep. Tony Guerrera, a Rocky Hill Democrat who serves as co-chairman of the legislature’s transportation committee, has already proposed a bill that is expected to be debated in a public hearing.

    Connecticut could become the seventh state to require seat belts on school buses, and either the state or the local towns would be required to pay for installing the belts.

    “If you ask the average person – and I’m an average person – you would say we need seat belts,” said Donovan, who ranks among the state’s most powerful public officials. “Personally, I favor seat belts, but I don’t know the costs.”

    Another major issue is whether the legislature would call for installing tolls on state highways.

    The issue arose again in recent days when Simsbury resident Oz Griebel, a Republican who is now running for governor, said he would favor tolls as long as the money collected would be placed into a “lock box” and would be guaranteed to be spent only on transportation improvements. The idea has been raised in the past, but Donovan is not sure whether lawmakers can tackle the matter in a three-month session.

    “That’s a big discussion that I haven’t reached any conclusion on,” Donovan said.

  • The Courant’s extensive political coverage on the Web

    As the 2010 political year heats up, The Hartford Courant is offering extensive political coverage on the Web.

    The politics page has an archive of articles on the races for U.S. Senate and governor, along with 11 articles on the career of U.S. Sen. Christopher J. Dodd and an interactive timeline of his life. In addition to videos and photo galleries, the page also has links that are constantly updated on state and national politics.

    If you have not seen the recently updated page, there’s more there than you might realize at http://www.courant.com/news/politics/

  • Columnist Dan Haar On Oz Griebel’s Run For Governor

    Hartford Courant columnist Dan Haar weighs in on the candidacy of R. Nelson “Oz” Griebel for governor.

    Griebel joined the race Thursday and will be battling against Republican frontrunners Tom Foley of Greenwich and Lt. Gov. Michael Fedele of Stamford. Former U.S. Rep. Larry DeNardis of Hamden and Chester First Selectman Thomas E. Marsh have also created exploratory committees to run for governor as Republicans.

    On the Democratic side, seven aspirants are in the race: Greenwich cable TV entrepreneur Ned Lamont, former Stamford mayor Dannel Malloy, former House Speaker Jim Amann, Simsbury first selectman Mary Glassman, Ridgefield first selectman Rudy Marconi, state Sen. Gary LeBeau of East Hartford and former state Rep. Juan Figueroa of Meriden. Others are still considering whether to run.

    Haar’s column is at http://www.courant.com/business/hc-haar0129.artjan29,0,7366429.column

  • Senator Chris Dodd’s Race Was Never A Piece Of Cake

    It was meant as a joke.

    When state Democratic Party spokeswoman Colleen Flanagan came to a Christmas party in the state Capitol press room, she brought a chocolate cake with green writing from one of the top bakeries in Hartford – Mozzicato DePasquale’s Bakery and Pastry Shop on Franklin Avenue.

    Placed on a table in the historic press room, the dessert said, “My Race Is Going To Be A Piece of Cake” and it was signed, “Love, Chris.”

    At that moment, in mid-December, Dodd was trailing in the Quinnipiac Poll against the two Republican frontrunners in the U.S. Senate race – former U.S. Rep. Rob Simmons and World Wrestling Entertainment entrepreneur Linda McMahon.

    Gov. M. Jodi Rell, who attended the party, appeared stunned when an attendee suggested that she look at the cake. She questioned whether Dodd had actually sent the tasty dessert.

    State GOP chairman Chris Healy was also stunned – enough to prompt him to take a picture for posterity.

    It turned out that the cake was the work of Flanagan, who is now stepping down as the party’s spokeswoman. A former employee of Dodd, Flanagan was heavily involved in the party’s work when Dodd was still running for re-election to the Senate.

    But since Dodd dropped out of the race on January 6, Flanagan has been relatively silent – as compared to the daily barbs that she had e-mailed to political reporters. Starting Monday, she will start working for Dodd again – in his downtown Hartford office.