-
Across New England, developers are looking for new ways to increase affordable housing inventory, and some are using a building method known as mass timber, to inflict less environmental damage.
-
Gov. Ned Lamont delivered his State of the State Address Wednesday, a budget-focused speech that was interrupted by pro-Palestinian protesters.
-
The new regulations for the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, or NAGPRA, require institutions like museums and schools to obtain "free, prior, and informed consent" before exhibiting human remains and cultural objects, or giving people access to them or conducting research on them.
-
Sandy Hook Permanent Memorial Commission Vice Chair Alan Martin reflects on the first full year since the memorial was dedicated.
-
An increase in utility costs is driving a spike in families seeking aid. During the most recent application period, which ran from August to October, Operation Fuel says the number of families seeking assistance doubled.
-
Hartford Hospital and the Institute of Living have prescribed food to nearly 200 patients. The program is expanding to Charlotte Hungerford Hospital
-
A new study from the Yale School of Medicine saw a trend toward diagnosis of late stage cancers in people after incarceration.
-
Amilcar Hernandez said Puerto Ricans have long been treated as second-class citizens of a U.S. commonwealth without voting members of Congress.
-
Rotting food in landfills is contributing significantly to planet-warming methane emissions, according to a new federal report released this month.
-
Connecticut author Kathleen Housely's biography tells the story of an intellectual and polymath, James Gates Percival, whose geological work laid the foundations for generations of Earth scientists.