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Eversource C.E.O. “deeply concerned” about region’s winter power capacity

Eversource C.E.O. “deeply concerned” about region’s winter power capacity

by Kimberly Glassman | Oct 31, 2022 | Uncategorized

New England may not have enough power if a severe cold spell hits this winter, the President and Chief Executive Officer of Eversource Energy warned in a letter to President Joe Biden. “I write to you today to ask for your Administration’s leadership again to swiftly...
Eversource C.E.O. “deeply concerned” about region’s winter power capacity

Seeking fresh start for a failing section of town, East Hartford on verge of seizing rundown Silver Lane Plaza

by Kimberly Glassman | Oct 31, 2022 | Uncategorized

Complaining of decades of decay at the Silver Lane Plaza, a series of East Hartford residents on Friday praised town government’s progress toward acquiring the property through eminent domain. A town panel voted unanimously Thursday night to pursue seizing the...
Eversource C.E.O. “deeply concerned” about region’s winter power capacity

Former New Haven Coliseum site to begin new life as ‘Square 10’

by Kimberly Glassman | Oct 31, 2022 | Uncategorized

Fifteen years after the city imploded the New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum, construction of the first of three buildings in Phase 1 of the site’s redevelopment — to be known as “Square 10” — is about to begin, Mayor Justin Elicker and the...
Eversource C.E.O. “deeply concerned” about region’s winter power capacity

Danbury’s west side school of the future requires a return to the zoning of 40 years ago

by Kimberly Glassman | Oct 31, 2022 | Uncategorized

The latest stop on the city’s journey to build a $164 million upper school of the future on a hilltop overlooking Kenosia Avenue is to go back to the way zoning was 40 years ago when the biggest thing on the west side was the Danbury Fair. Before the city can retrofit...
Eversource C.E.O. “deeply concerned” about region’s winter power capacity

CT’s riverfronts increasingly seen as major economic development opportunities

by Kimberly Glassman | Oct 25, 2022 | Uncategorized

Once used as open sewers for manufacturing spoils and human waste, Connecticut’s long-abused rivers have recovered much of their past allure following stricter environmental laws passed in the 1960s and 1970s, accompanied by the retreat of large-scale manufacturing...
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The Foundation for Fair Contracting of Connecticut (FFC) is a non-profit organization that promotes fairness and accountability in public works construction. Since 1994, we’ve worked to enforce prevailing wage laws, ensure proper worker classification, and support compliance with state standards to protect workers’ rights and help contractors follow the rules.

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