2022-08-08@6:40pm–#Shelton CT– A passenger bus fire has Route 8 southbound closed at exit 14.
Those that have our app received a push notification warning them to avoid this !!
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2022-08-08@6:40pm–#Shelton CT– A passenger bus fire has Route 8 southbound closed at exit 14.
Those that have our app received a push notification warning them to avoid this !!
This press release is made possible by:
U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) released the following statement after the Senate approved the Inflation Reduction Act, a measure to cut costs for consumers, lower drug prices, and make historic investments in clean energy:
“The Inflation Reduction Act is history-making and record-setting. This bill will save money, it will save lives, and it will help save the planet.”
“Our bill will cut costs for consumers. It will help families better afford groceries, gas, and utilities while billionaire tax cheats will finally have to pay their fair share. Democrats have fought for years to allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices which will result in huge savings for seniors. This bill is the largest investment and most important action to fight climate change in history.”
“Every single American will benefit from this bill.”
“Despite the years of bipartisan negotiations that led to this bill, my Republican colleagues were categorically unwilling to support it when it actually came to a vote. Instead, they devised a series of bad faith amendments – in effect malicious poison pills. As they made clear, not a single one of their amendments would have changed their vote, which is why I opposed all of them to protect the integrity of the bill.”
Fighting Inflation and Cutting Costs for Consumers
The legislation will close loopholes that allow the biggest corporations to avoid paying taxes and invest in IRS resources to prevent ultra-wealthy tax cheats from gaming the system at the expense of Middle Class Americans.
The bill will invest $300 billion in deficit reduction.
Lowering Drugs and Healthcare Costs
The bill will empower Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices, beginning with ten of the highest-costing drugs in 2023 and expanding to 20 each year by 2029. It will also cap out-of-pocket costs for Medicare beneficiaries, saving seniors thousands of dollars each year.
The legislation extends the Federal Advance Premium Tax Credits, which reduced health care premiums by millions of dollars for residents of Connecticut.
Fighting Climate Change and Investing in Clean Energy
The combined investments in this bill represent the single biggest climate investment in U.S. history.
The legislation includes rebates to lower high energy costs. The bill also provides resources to help consumers afford technologies that will lower emissions and energy prices by, for example, purchasing new electric appliances or retrofitting their homes with more energy efficient systems.
The bill will increase American energy security by investing in domestic clean energy manufacturing, which will also create millions of new jobs.
The legislation includes major investments in both urban and rural communities that have previously been excluded from the benefits of the transition to a clean economy.
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(WATERBURY, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont today announced that he has signed into law Public Act 22-49, which will align Connecticut’s standards on childhood lead poisoning with federal standards and help alleviate the risks associated with it. The governor proposed the legislation earlier this year as part of his package of priorities for the legislative session, explaining that the state needs to proactively do a better job of protecting children from lead poisoning.
The governor discussed the importance of the new law today during an event on the topic in Waterbury, a city where 72% of its housing units were built before 1978, making the presence of lead likely now or in the past. Waterbury has embraced the issue of addressing lead in its housing stock over the last few decades by building a strong remediation program that received $5.7 million in 2020 – the largest possible federal grant – to assist in tackling this issue. Speaking in front of two homes that were recently remediated for lead, Governor Lamont emphasized the importance of lead remediation programs like Waterbury’s and a strong partnership between state and local health departments to combat lead poisoning in Connecticut’s children.
“Childhood lead poisoning has catastrophic impacts on health and development, including irreversible learning and developmental disabilities,” Governor Lamont said. “In particular, this problem has most deeply impacted minority families and those who live in disadvantaged communities. For too long, the standards for lead testing and treatment in Connecticut have fallen well behind the best practices, and I am glad we are making these long-overdue updates.”
The newly signed law includes steps that will strengthen early intervention in instances of lead poisoning by gradually reducing the blood lead level that triggers parental notifications and home inspections to more closely align with recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and American Academy of Pediatrics. In 2020, 1,024 Connecticut children had a significant enough concentration of lead in their blood that those organizations would have recommended a home inspection. However, Connecticut law required only 178 investigations.
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Video Report:
2022-08-07@11:20pm–#Fairfield CT– #ctfire– Firefighters were called to the Stop and Shop at 1160 Kings Hwy Cutoff for a fire in the freezer area. After about 40 minutes they located the fire in a wall. The health department and electrical department were called for an inspection.
2022-08-07@8:08pm–#Shelton CT– A woman in a black Mercedes dropped off a cat at the Shoreline Veterinary Clinic at 895 Bridgeport Avenue. The cat cat was doused in bleach and cologne according to radio reports and the woman refuses to take responsibility for it. Police on the way to investigate.
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2022-08-07@12:49pm–#Bridgeport CT- Firefighters are on Rosedale Street in the rear of the building. The fire is out on their arrival but they are making sure it didn’t extend elsewhere to the home.
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20222-08-06@7:30pm–#Bridgeport CT– Two people were trapped on the rocks at Seaside Park. The fireboat uber brought them back.
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UPDATE: Radio reports say it’s a 14-year-old bicyclist with knee and back injuries.
2022-08-06@6:02pm–#Bridgeport CT– Report of a pedestrian being struck at Housatonic and Congress Street.
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Police UPDATE:
On Saturday, August 6, 2022 at approximately 5:43 PM, the Fairfield Police Department responded to a
motor vehicle collision at the intersection of Commerce Drive and Coolidge Street in Fairfield, CT. The
crash was reported to have involved a van and a motorcycle.
The initial on-scene investigation revealed that a motorcycle traveling south on Coolidge Street entered
the intersection of Commerce Drive where it collided with a van which was traveling west on Commerce
Drive. The motorcycle was occupied by two individuals, both of whom were thrown from the
motorcycle.
The two occupants of the motorcycle were transported to an area hospital with life-threatening injuries.
The operator and sole occupant of the van was not injured.
The collision is currently under investigation by the Fairfield Police Department Crash Reconstruction
Unit.
Anyone who may have witnessed this crash is asked to contact the Fairfield Police Department at (203)
254-4800.
This is an active and ongoing investigation and updates will be provided when available.
2022-08-06@5:49pm– #Fairfield CT– A crash involving a motorcycle has Commerce Drive closed from Brentwood to the Bridgeport town line as well as exit I-95 northbound exit 25. Radio reports say it will be closed for an extended period of time for the investigation.
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2022-08-06@3:46pm–#Bridgeport CT– #cttraffic–A rollover with ejection according to radio reports on Route 8/25 southbound near exit 5.