Connecticut
Obituary: Charles J. Jackson, 81, Of Shelton
Charles J. Jackson, age 81, of Shelton, passed away peacefully on Saturday, February 10, 2024 at St. Vincent’s Medical Center.
Born on December 25, 1942 in Bridgeport, CT, Charles originally lived in Waterbury, CT but later moved to the North End of Bridgeport, CT. He graduated from Central High School and went on to the Connecticut School of Electronics in New Haven, CT.
He married Elizabeth Betsy O’Connell on October 25, 1964. They first lived in the Black Rock section of Bridgeport, moved to Brookfield, CT, but later settled down in the Huntington section of Shelton, CT in 1976. He has two children, Ed Jackson and his significant other Alyssa Matthews and Lori McFarren and her husband Rick McFarren and one grandson Ricky McFarren. He is preceded by both his parents, Joseph Jackson and Phyllis Mascia Jackson, a brother Joseph Jackson and a sister Margaret Strich. Additional survivors include his sister-in-law Donna Jackson, a brother-in-law John Strich, a sister-in-law Barbara Beloin and her husband Ronnie Beloin, and several nieces and nephews.
Charlie worked for Connecticut Light & Power, then Yankee Gas which later became part of Northeast Utilities and finally became part of Eversource Utilities. Toward his retirement, he worked as a Supervisor in the Corrosion Department of Yankee Gas. He enjoyed the field work of finding an issue, diagnosing it, and developing a solution.
Charlie enjoyed working on projects around the house, maintaining a beautiful lawn, home improvement projects (building a deck and two sheds), maintaining cars (changing the oil, brakes, antifreeze, gaskets, and spark plugs), painting inside and outside, and managing his stock and mutual fund investments.
He cared for and worked to help his family. He maintained the yards of not only for himself, but also for his parents and children’s houses. He helped them out with home improvement projects from painting, refinishing hardwood floors, installing a deck, hanging a replacement window, replacing an oil tank, renovating an entire kitchen and bathroom, and putting up crown molding.
All funeral services were held in private.
In lieu of flowers, donations in his memory may be made to the Food bank at St. Vincent De Paul of the Valley, 237 Roosevelt Drive, Derby, CT 06418. Their contact is https://svdpvalley.com or they may be reached at (203) 734-7577.
Connecticut
Connecticut Science Center temporarily closed for burst pipe
HARTFORD, Conn. (WFSB) – The Connecticut Science Center is temporarily closed for a burst pipe in the building.
As a result, the Science Center posted on Facebook saying they will be closed on Sunday, February 1.
“Our team has been working tirelessly to clean and restore the affected areas, but unfortunately, we will not be ready to reopen on Sunday,” they wrote.
The Science Center told anyone who pre-purchased tickets to use them on a future date or contact the office on Monday for a refund.
“We look forward to welcoming you back very soon,” said the Connecticut Science Center.
Copyright 2026 WFSB. All rights reserved.
Connecticut
Another cold weekend as biting winds gradually return
Temperatures are well below average again for Saturday with highs in the upper teens and lower 20s.
Winds will start to increase through tonight, eventually gusting up to 35 miles per hour on Sunday.
Temperatures will feel like -10 to -20 through Sunday morning with a biting wind out of the north.
Sunday is cloudy, but Connecticut will stay dry as a strong snowstorm misses us well to the southeast.
High temperatures will lift into the 30s by Monday, and we’ll stay there through next week.
Connecticut
Connecticut lawmakers looking at reforms to DCF, homeschooling
Lawmakers say they’re working on reforms to a child welfare agency that’s been in the spotlight for the past 12 months.
Rep. Corey Paris (D-Stamford), who co-chairs the Children’s Committee, said that the reform package could include training, oversight, and even more funding for staffing and resources.
“When the state steps into a family’s life, the bar has to be set extraordinarily high and right now, quite frankly, there are places where we need to do better,” Paris said Friday.
The legislature begins its session on Wednesday.
His comments came as the mother and aunt of Jacqueline “Mimi” Torres-Garcia had court dates this week, both charged in Connecticut with the death of the 11-year-old girl.
New Britain police found her remains in October, but believe she may have been dead for as long as a year before that.
DCF had been monitoring Torres-Garcia, raising questions about whether it had done enough to protect her.
That incident came roughly eight months after a 32-year-old man named “S” claimed he started a fire in his Waterbury home to bring attention to decades of neglect and abuse.
He and his family also had contact with DCF.
Sen. Jonathan Perillo, (R-Shelton), agrees with Paris that lawmakers need to look at reforms.
He wants to see an end to virtual visits, an issue in Torres-Garcia’s case.
Both lawmakers said they’re talking with DCF about what other changes are needed to avoid similar occurrences.
Paris was vague on details, though, saying he’s still trying to build a consensus with Republicans, advocates, and DCF.
The lawmakers said the problem is deeper than the two high-profile incidents.
A state auditor’s report in June raised concern that DCF lost track of children 3,700 times between fiscal years 2021 and 2023.
Lawmakers could also look at more oversight of homeschool families.
Many states require homeschool families to bring their children for an annual visit to a local school, checking in with a mandatory reporter. Connecticut does not.
Interim Child Advocate Christina Ghio renewed calls in March to change that, saying abusive families can minimize contact with mandatory reporters by claiming they are homeschooling their children.
That’s what happened when Matthew Tirado died in 2017, and that allegedly happened in the case of “S.”
Rep. Jennifer Leeper (D-Fairfield), who co-chairs the Education Committee, said lawmakers are looking into the issue, though no proposal has been drafted yet.
She said she’s trying to find a balance, but she wants to ensure that state laws ensure children are safe and are getting a quality education.
“Almost every other state has a more robust system to ensure children’s both well-being and also educational attainment and that those families, too, are enjoying a really meaningful and flexible and self-directed homeschooling experience,” she said.
Perillo said the legislature should focus on DCF reforms.
“DCF is the authority here, and DCF has been the home of systemic problems for decades,” he said.
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