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Connecticut's Department of Transportation joins a three-state study of advanced anti-DUI technology.
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Heat, poor air quality, rain and flooding affected New England summer theater this year.
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After Connecticut Attorney General William Tong deemed the chapel is not legally historic, the Jewish congregation who owns the chapel is moving toward demolition.
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The state is partnering with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to combat the invasive aquatic plant hydrilla.
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The majority argued Connecticut’s law contains “no trace of hostility toward religion” and that there is generally not a right for parents to “direct how a public school teaches their child.”
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At the Springfield Museums, an exhibit about Native Americans, land and Colonial-era maps pushes visitors to think about how Indigenous peoples describe land.
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Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont is talking up the expansion of service at Tweed-New Haven Airport which will include direct flights to Puerto Rico this fall. But some of the airport’s neighbors worry about increased noise and air pollution.
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Farmers reported losses from July floods that span over 1,500 acres of land and total nearly $21 million in lost sales revenue, according to state officials.
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Farmers along the Connecticut River are experiencing significant losses from recent flooding. The river, the longest in New England, is filled with floodwater from storms that hit Vermont with heavy rainfall and catastrophic damage.
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Although adults and children both experience climate change anxiety, it’s an issue of particular concern for adolescents.