‘Clean slate’ won’t increase education and work skills

By Chris Powell Connecticut law is full of mistaken premises, and more will be added in January when the criminal records of an estimated 80,000 people will be privatized — not exactly erased but removed from public access under what is being called the “clean slate” law. The records involve convictions for misdemeanors more thanContinue reading “‘Clean slate’ won’t increase education and work skills”

‘Creative’ thinking isn’t answer to youth crime; standards are

By Chris Powell What should Connecticut do with juvenile criminal offenders, who are increasingly a problem?  By legislation this year the General Assembly and Governor Lamont required the Judicial Department to develop a plan for removing minors from adult prisons. That the Judicial Department has anything to do with administering prisons is a gross violationContinue reading “‘Creative’ thinking isn’t answer to youth crime; standards are”

Only one Connecticut news organization gets special government aid

By Chris Powell Government in Connecticut now may have more publicists than there are independent journalists keeping watch over it. Indeed, it’s starting to seem as if government in Connecticut has a more or less official news media organization on top of all those publicists. For the Hartford Business Journal reported last week that ConnecticutContinue reading “Only one Connecticut news organization gets special government aid”

‘See something, say something’? Better not try it in New Haven

By Chris Powell For 22 years, ever since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Americans have been urged by various government agencies: “If you see something, say something.” Having done just that may cost New Haven’s registrar of vital statistics her job. The registrar, Patricia Clark, had been alerting federal immigration authorities to dozensContinue reading “‘See something, say something’? Better not try it in New Haven”

What does Rosa DeLauro think about husband’s rap on Biden?

By Chris Powell Married couples are entitled to differences of opinion and separate careers. But when married couples are in politics, such differences may be of public interest. Such is the case with Connecticut U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-3rd District, and her husband, Stanley Greenberg, perhaps the most prominent poll taker, political analyst, and liberalContinue reading “What does Rosa DeLauro think about husband’s rap on Biden?”

Compassion for Palestinians comes easy in West Hartford

By Chris Powell Some Jews in Connecticut and around the country are upset with the extent of the destruction Israel is committing in Gaza to uproot the territory’s rulers, the terrorist group Hamas. Participants in a rally in West Hartford last week called for a “ceasefire” and chanted, “Not in my name!” But Israel isn’tContinue reading “Compassion for Palestinians comes easy in West Hartford”

Will governor dare to make UConn Health Center solvent?

By CHRIS POWELL When government officials face a problem of administration whose solution will cause great controversy, they typically appoint a study committee or hire a consultant to provide political cover for whatever will have to be at least proposed. That’s what Governor Lamont and University of Connecticut President Radenka Maric have agreed to doContinue reading “Will governor dare to make UConn Health Center solvent?”

Goodbye to school integration; and college is way overpriced

By CHRIS POWELL For decades, even before the state Supreme Court decision in the school integration case of Sheff v. O’Neill 27 years ago, educators in Connecticut have been telling the state that racial integration in education is crucial to better student performance, especially for children from minority groups. In response Connecticut built and operatedContinue reading “Goodbye to school integration; and college is way overpriced”

Plenty of room at the inn but who’ll unlock the door?

By Chris Powell Congratulations to Danbury. A Superior Court judge has ruled that the city was within its rights and zoning law to prevent a social-service organization, Stamford-based Pacific House, from operating a vacant motel as a shelter for the homeless.  Pacific House was operating the motel under one of Governor Lamont’s emergency orders duringContinue reading “Plenty of room at the inn but who’ll unlock the door?”

Enough ethnic pandering already, and enough stereotyping as well

By Chris Powell Has Connecticut been more Balkanized or less so by Groton’s decision to replace its observance of Columbus Day with a holiday that will be both Italian Heritage Day and Indigenous Peoples Day? Columbus now is considered politically incorrect for having helped to open the Western Hemisphere to the European exploration and colonizationContinue reading “Enough ethnic pandering already, and enough stereotyping as well”