-
Connecticut Attorney General William Tong now wants the state to give his office more authority to go after potential price gouging at major grocers.
-
Some communities have found it easier to invest in splash pads, since they don’t require lifeguards or knowing how to swim.
-
New laws in Connecticut are geared towards making child care and early childhood education more affordable and accessible.
-
Mark Griffin and his fiancee, Cheryl Rabe, are suing Mandy Management LLC, one of the biggest landlords in New Haven, alleging housing discrimination.
-
It’s the 11th time the flag has been flown on the New Haven Green, as part of the city’s commemoration of Juneteenth, when enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas, belatedly learned they were free and could now live the rest of their lives as citizens, not property.
-
Gospel singer/songwriter Blessing Offor’s latest song “Somebody’s Child” features a duet with the country music icon.
-
Maurie McInnis will be the first woman to serve as Yale's permanent president.
-
Connecticut's pizza industry is sending a delegation on a chartered jet to Washington, D.C., Wednesday to declare New Haven as the pizza capital of the United States.
-
The demonstration was the latest in an ongoing series of actions calling on Yale University to divest from weapons manufacturers supplying Israel with arms in its ongoing war in Gaza.
-
Many small towns don’t meet a state threshold of having 10% of housing stock considered affordable, according to state housing data. Orange has been at about 1%, but officials are aiming to make progress.