Connecticut
Connecticut prisons in ‘sustained institutional failure,’ watchdog report finds
Systemic problems with medical care, frequent lockdowns and unsanitary conditions jeopardize the well-being of people in Connecticut prisons, according to a new report.
Correction Ombuds DeVaughn Ward on Tuesday released a detailed account of conditions inside state correctional facilities.
The 57-page document describes routine staffing shortages, poor sanitation and inconsistent access to health care, nutrition, legal services and communication.
Courtesy Office of Correction Ombudsman
Ward, who serves as an independent watchdog for the corrections system, wrote that state prisons now operate in a state of “sustained institutional failure.”
“I did not make that finding lightly,” he said in an interview Tuesday.
“When you look at any of the metrics that you would judge a functional correctional system on, I could not think of one that … the state of Connecticut was meeting to standard,” he said.
In a statement, the Department of Correction (DOC) said it strongly objects to Ward’s findings. While there is room for improvement, the report draws wide-ranging inferences from singular occurrences, and contains unsupported allegations that “appear to serve only to foster an extremely negative perception of the agency,” the department said.
DOC plans to submit a detailed response to the report by Feb. 20.
‘Basic standards of sanitation’
Among its significant findings, the report describes unsanitary housing conditions across a range of facilities, including mold on showers, mice in food preparation areas and a lack of toilet paper and hygiene supplies.
Ward wrote that he personally observed black mold during visits to MacDougall–Walker Correctional Institution, and saw vents heavily coated in gray mold at Hartford Correctional Center.
A photo included in the report shows a bathroom with black and white mold spots spread across the ceiling. Another shows a dead mouse lying on the floor of the dining area at Osborn Correctional Institution.
Courtesy Office of Correction Ombudsman
“Prolonged lack of access to showers, inadequate hygiene supplies, soiled bedding, rodent infestations, and poor ventilation—especially during periods of extreme heat—pose significant health risks and undermine basic standards of sanitation, dignity, and humane treatment,” the report reads.
Delayed diagnosis and treatment
Ward, an attorney who previously represented incarcerated people who were denied adequate medical care, also described ongoing health care challenges, including delays in diagnosis and treatment.
The report notes that DOC missed an Oct. 1, 2025 deadline to develop a comprehensive health care services plan, which is still pending.
The report also includes numerous anecdotes from incarcerated people who described not receiving timely or adequate treatment.
Courtesy Office of Correction Ombudsman
In one example, Ward wrote his office received a complaint in October from the family of a person incarcerated at York Correctional Institution who experienced delayed treatment for a known ear condition, despite recognizing the signs of a recurrence. A specialist at UConn Health later determined earlier intervention could have prevented additional surgery, according to the report.
DOC’s Health Services Unit doesn’t maintain a centralized system for tracking sick-call wait times, or wait times for outpatient or specialty medical services, which limits DOC’s ability to monitor delays and identify backlogs, according to the report.
“Delayed diagnosis and treatment may increase long-term medical costs borne by the State and increase exposure to grievances and litigation,” the report said.
Lockdowns and staffing shortages
Staffing shortages are a significant and recurring problem, according to the report, which indicates that facilities are frequently placed in modified or full lockdowns because there aren’t enough staff on duty.
The frequency of lockdowns results in family members missing visitation, and lack of access to core activities, such as bathing, recreation, educational programming and medical care, the report said.
“These conditions affected not only incarcerated individuals but also staff, who were required to work extended hours under increasingly strained conditions,” it said.
Rudy Demiraj, a service representative of AFSCME Council 4, one of the largest unions representing DOC employees, agreed staffing is a significant concern.
Council 4 represents approximately 4,000 DOC workers, including correction and parole officers.
Demiraj, a retired correction officer, said the union has long advocated for the department to address staff recruitment and retention. Officers are sometimes required to work back-to-back shifts when not enough staff are available, Demiraj said.
“It’s a difficult environment to work in for eight hours, and it becomes an even more difficult environment to work in for 16 hours,” he said.
Governor: ‘DOC must do better’
In a written statement, Gov. Ned Lamont’s administration highlighted recent progress at DOC, but acknowledged the need for improvement.
The department has strengthened oversight of administrative leave, improved compliance with rules for training and documentation, and done better with asset management and medication administration, according to Rob Blanchard, a spokesperson for Lamont.
Nevertheless, “repeated findings across multiple audits show this is about whether our systems are built to succeed,” Blanchard said.
He added the problems highlighted in the report are systemic rather than the fault of an individual.
The governor’s administration will continue working to strengthen internal controls, clarify accountability, modernize systems and ensure clear performance metrics, he said.
“For the safety of our correctional officers, those in our custody, and Connecticut taxpayers, DOC must do better,” he said.
Connecticut
Soaring fertilizer prices from Iran war impacting Connecticut farmers
The Iran war is having a big impact on farmers in Connecticut who are now dealing with soaring fertilizer prices. It’s a crucial material that helps grow or produce the food you buy at the grocery store.
“I go to the grocery store, and you see how expensive it is,” Jon Hermonot, an owner of Fairholm Farm, said.
High supermarket prices have Hermonot wincing whenever he makes a grocery run, but he has a good understanding of how prices are set, as he owns Fairholm Farm. It’s a dairy farm in Woodstock. Hermonot says it’s a very demanding and intensive operation with small profit margins.
“We put a lot of our money back into it, and we want this farm to be here,” he said.
He has hundreds of cows to feed and care for, but doing so has gotten harder ever since the Iran war began, especially because of the price of fertilizer.
“You combine that with the price of fuel and the other costs on the dairy farm, and to top that off, it’s like a perfect storm right now,” he said.
At the farm, they have seen the price of fertilizer double in about a month, in the tens of thousands of dollars. It’s used to grow the corn that goes into the feed the dairy cows eat.
“No fertilizer, no food. No farms, no food,” Paul Larson, president of the Connecticut Farm Bureau board, said.
He said fertilizer is crucial to grow many types of crops.
“Whether it’s vegetables, you’re raising hay, corn silage,” he said.
Larson explained that natural gas, a key component in fertilizer production, is affected by the war. That region produces a lot of it, and tankers are unable to get through the Strait of Hormuz, leading to a jump in price on the world market. Larson said farmers across Connecticut are noticing.
“It went around $400 in early February, but then after this war started in Iran, we’re now up to $850 to $900 a ton,” Larson said.
UConn vegetable and hemp specialist and educator Shuresh Ghimire said the timing isn’t great. Farmers have to decide now what to grow and how much to plant, so they’re ready for harvest in the fall.
“Not enough fertilizer would mean decreased crop yields. And that would also translate to increased produce prices at grocery stores later in the summer and fall,” he said.
Ghimire says even if the war ended quickly, there’s no immediate relief for farmers.
“The prices are not going to come down the day after. It will take some time to come down,” he said.
Larson and Hermenot hope President Trump secures a peace deal soon that ends the conflict and reopens trade to stabilize prices.
“That would be amazing. That would take the edge off of this,” Larson said.
“Maybe coming down to an agreement that can maybe open up the channel for oil to be flowing again,” Hermenot said.
Connecticut
Eversource flying helicopters to inspect electric lines in several Connecticut municipalities
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) — Eversource is conducting aerial inspections of electrical lines in several municipalities in the state this week, according to officials.
A low-flying helicopter will survey the condition of the electrical lines to identify potential issues before they cause power outages, officials said.
The helicopters will fly along the utility right-of-way Wednesday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. depending on the weather, officials said.
Inspections are expected in:
- Avon
- Bloomfield
- Bolton
- Cromwell
- East Hartford
- Hartford
- Manchester
- Rocky Hill
- Simsbury
- West Hartford
- Wethersfield
- Windsor
Between Monday and Tuesday, Eversource helicopter inspected Berlin, Bethany, Bristol, Cheshire, Durham, Farmington, Meriden, Middlefield, New Britain, Newington, Plainville, Plymouth, Prospect, Southington and Wolcott.
Connecticut
‘I don’t think we have balance’: Gov. Lamont tours solar facilities in East Windsor
About a third of the state’s solar energy is collected in East Windsor, and another facility could be coming.
Neighbors have been airing their concerns about more solar in town. Gov. Ned Lamont toured a facility on East Road with lawmakers and people who live in the neighborhood across the street to hear some of those concerns on Tuesday.
“I love clean, renewable power that’s also affordable, but I also love open space, protecting open space, and I don’t think we have that balance right now,” Lamont said. “We’re taking open space, we’re taking fields and commercializing them. In this case with solar, I think that’s going the wrong direction.”
Neighbor Amanda Berube described a constant humming coming from the facility.
“We built our home prior to the solar array going in, and we had built it for the peace and quiet that the area offered up, surrounded by farmland,” she said. “We deal with a ringing noise that comes from this facility from sunup to sundown. And it’s extremely loud, and it just permeates through our home if we have our windows open.”
Berube also told the governor about a fire that started from one of the transformers on the facility’s property last March.
“If the wind had been blowing in a different direction that day into the panels, we don’t have the support apparatus to put that out,” East Windsor First Selectman Jason Bowsza (D) said. “We can’t use PFAS. We don’t have fire hydrants out here.”
East Windsor and Ellington State Representative Jamie Foster backs a bill that would upgrade fire reporting. She said she’s confident it will pass.
“There’s no plan for when there’s been an incident on a solar field, and there’s a fire,” she said. “Who determines the point of safety? It certainly shouldn’t be just the developer on their own who gets to say, ‘yep, safe. I’m turning it back on.’ They obviously have a financial incentive to turn it back on.”
Plans for a proposed solar project called Saltbox Solar would build arrays across from Berube’s neighborhood, throughout East Windsor, and in Ellington. It would produce 160,000 megawatts of energy annually, according to the project’s website.
John Hoffman, the owner of Hockanum Valley Farm, said the proposed site for Saltbox Solar is prime, meaning it can produce food year-round.
“It drains well, and we are in a 45-inch rainfall zone in this state,” he said. “And you can grow, especially food. So, vegetables and corn silage or hay for dairy cows. And we have a big concentration of dairy cattle to be fed right in this area.”
Flat land near transmission lines is ideal infrastructure to build solar arrays, which is why companies drift towards East Windsor.
Saltbox Solar has not yet been considered by the state siting council, which approves solar projects, such as the recently approved 150-acre expansion of Gravel Pit Solar in East Windsor.
Currently, municipalities lack representation on the siting council. The governor said it was too early to announce his support for a bill that would implement local representation, but he admitted there needs to be a change.
“I will say we ought to make sure we have legislation in place that guides the Siting Council and DEEP towards what we think are our broad interests,” he said.
DESRI, the parent company of Saltbox Solar and Gravel Pit, was unavailable for comment.
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