AltWeeklies Wire

Convicted Rapist Bill Coleman is Starving Himself to Prove His Innocencenew

Coleman began refusing solid food on Sept. 16, 2007, to protest what he claims was his wrongful conviction in 2005 of raping his wife -- he was convicted solely on her testimony, without forensic evidence, and no witnesses were called on his behalf. This September, on the one-year anniversary of his hunger strike, he began refusing liquids as well.
New Haven Advocate  |  Daniel D'Ambrosio  |  11-04-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Special Interest Money Leaks into Connecticut's First 'Clean' Electionnew

Why should we be surprised to learn that powerful labor unions and deep-pocketed campaign donors are funneling tens of thousands of dollars into Connecticut's first ever publicly-funded election?
New Haven Advocate  |  Andy Bromage  |  10-28-2008  |  Politics

Connecticut Tax Dollars Subsidize a Film Industry That Doesn't Need the Helpnew

The state is betting a small fortune on Connecticut becoming a viable home to the film industry, offering production companies the most generous tax breaks in the country and paying film union members upwards of half a million dollars to train a hundred or so people to do film jobs they may never get.
New Haven Advocate  |  Andy Bromage  |  08-26-2008  |  Movies

Divorce, Connecticut-Stylenew

Our court battles are long, nasty and expensive. Is there a better way?
New Haven Advocate  |  Daniel D'Ambrosio  |  07-29-2008  |  Culture

Does Ct.'s Insurance Plan for Middle-Class Families Threaten the Health of its Poorest Citizens?new

Dozens of independent health care advocates say the Charter Oak Health Plan -- a new health care plan aimed at healthy middle-class adults -- is threatening to destabilize the state Medicaid program that serves some of the poorest, most at-risk populations.
New Haven Advocate  |  Andy Bromage  |  07-29-2008  |  Science

Two Top Republicans Block Universal Health Care Study in Connecticutnew

We've been calling Republican leaders John McKinney and Lawrence Cafero all week to ask why they're blocking a universal health care campaign by holding up a puny amount of money that a study group needs to conduct a health care survey. To no avail.
New Haven Advocate  |  Andy Bromage  |  07-22-2008  |  Politics

The Real Solutions to Our Energy Crisis are Off the Tablenew

After a marathon special session that lasted into the early hours last week, the State Legislature proudly proclaimed that it had acted to address soaring gas prices. Too bad it focused on supply-side issues, and didn't look at the demand side of the equation.
New Haven Advocate  |  Jim Motavalli  |  06-24-2008  |  Economy

Banning Sex Offenders from West Haven's Public Places Won't Keep Kids Safenew

There are 57 registered sex offenders living in West Haven, and the City Council is trying to ban all of them from its beaches, parks, sports facilities and swimming pools in order, they say, to protect the children. The idea comes riddled with questions about constitutionality, enforceability and its real effect on the safety of children.
New Haven Advocate  |  Rachel Slajda  |  06-24-2008  |  Crime & Justice

The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Poorer in Connecticutnew

A new report from Connecticut Voices for Children (CVC), a research and advocacy group for low-income families with offices in New Haven and Hartford, offers a stark analysis: Connecticut is the only state in the nation to see a significant decline in the real wages of the poorest 20 percent of state residents.
New Haven Advocate  |  Jim Motavalli  |  06-10-2008  |  Economy

In Connecticut, Government and Businesses Combat the Toxic Terror Known as E-Wastenew

If all goes well, by July 1, 2009, towns across the state will provide free recycling of home computers, television and other electronic devices, and the entire operation will be paid for by the manufacturers, not the taxpayers.
New Haven Advocate  |  Daniel D'Ambrosio  |  05-20-2008  |  Environment

Can Connecticut's New Carbon Emissions Cap Deliver?new

The bill requires the state to reduce greenhouse gas emissions an ambitious 17 percent from current levels by 2020, and a huge 80 percent by 2050. It doesn't specify exactly how we're going to reach that goal, and current efforts -- while laudable -- don't appear to be nearly enough to get the state on track for such big reductions.
New Haven Advocate  |  Jim Motavalli  |  05-20-2008  |  Environment

High Metal Prices Fuel Underground Trade of Stolen Scrapnew

Scrap dealers and police say they cooperate to prevent the sale of stolen goods, and Connecticut law has recently been toughened. But the rise in metal heists begs the question: Would there be so much theft if there wasn't a network of places to "fence" the swag?
New Haven Advocate  |  Jim Motavalli  |  05-13-2008  |  Economy

Discrimination Suits Accuse Southern Connecticut State University of Institutional Discriminationnew

Five SCSU business professors, past and present, are suing the university for discrimination and harassment, and all say the university president is aware of and maybe even condones the problems. If the claims are true, the lawsuits paint a bleak picture of academic life at the state school.
New Haven Advocate  |  Betsy Yagla  |  04-29-2008  |  Education

Remounting Ned Lamontnew

Is Lamont's re-emergence tied to a possible 2010 run?
New Haven Advocate  |  Freda Moon  |  08-28-2007  |  Politics

Both Sides Nownew

Joe Lieberman is riding his support for Bush to a likely victory.
New Haven Advocate  |  Joshua Mamis  |  10-31-2006  |  Politics

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