Connecticut
CT state income tax cuts could be erased by rising local property taxes, lobbying group says
Whereas the proposed cuts in Connecticut’s state revenue tax are being cheered, the state’s largest lobbying group for cities and cities stated Monday the celebration could also be untimely as a result of positive factors by taxpayers are more likely to be largely erased by rising, native actual property taxes.
The primary discount within the state revenue tax since 1996 can be transfer, stated Joe Delong, government director of the Connecticut Convention of Municipalities. However in a state the place the funds surplus has risen above $3 billion, there have to be extra funding to offset the prospect of rising property taxes, pushed largely by inflation and better power prices,
“The prices are rising and with none help or assist from the Normal Meeting, these prices will straight shift into property taxes,” Delong stated.
Delong’s feedback got here in a digital roundtable dialogue with reporters and editors at The Courant on subjects starting from the implications of seven% inflation and hovering power payments for the budgets of Connecticut’s cities and cities to CCM’s push for extra monetary compensation by the state for municipalities — notably cities like Hartford — which have dozens of tax-exempt buildings, a lot of them state-owned.
Delong stated it doesn’t take a “nice deal of deep diving” to know that turning on the lights in colleges prices extra; sustaining authorities buildings means greater payments and highway restore — proper all the way down to filling potholes — carries the next price ticket.
“I consider what you’ll see occur is the Normal Meeting will cross some form of revenue tax break,” Delong stated. “However most individuals will see their total tax burden improve, not lower, as a result of the property tax will increase will wipe that out.”
One among CCM’s legislative priorities this 12 months was pushing for growing the state’s payment-in-lieu of taxes program — identified by the acronym “PILOT.” This system, which has existed for many years, supplies a reimbursement for property taxes for some tax-exempt properties in cities and cities.
Historically, state regulation known as for a forty five% reimbursement of property taxes for state-owned buildings and 77% for personal faculties and colleges. However the precise funding additionally was topic to the monetary ups and downs of the state funds. In keeping with CCM, PILOT reimbursements had been truly 14% for state properties in 2021 and 22% for personal colleges and hospitals.
In 2021, state lawmakers authorised adjustments that included making a three-tiered system that now supplies for a brand new PILOT reimbursement for the poorest cities, together with Hartford. This system now supplies Hartford and different “tier-one” cities 50% of what would have been due beneath a mix of the present share reimbursements for state-owned buildings and personal colleges and hospitals.
Delong stated the change was first step, however the full quantity of the reimbursement — supplied for in state statutes — ought to be paid by the state.
“It is best to begin the day without work by simply saying, OK — we have now all this cash, let’s pay our payments,” Delong stated. “It doesn’t need to be a brand new program. The three-tier PILOT was created, let’s put some extra money in.”
CCM additionally opposes a invoice now within the legislature would enable present firefighters and people inside 5 years of retirement to entry employees’ compensation advantages for any most cancers of the mind, pores and skin, digestive, endocrine, hematological, lymphatic, reproductive, respiratory or skeletal programs.
It might not apply to firefighters with a propensity for most cancers or proof of most cancers throughout their entry examinations. Exemptions would additionally happen for individuals who did not submit annual bodily exams, didn’t put on respiratory and private protecting tools, smoked inside 15 years of the diagnoses, or have labored lower than 5 years on the roles.
Cities and cities have opposed the invoice — successfully an growth of employee compensation — as a result of it might overburden municipal budgets.
“All of these issues are being paid for — in the event that they had been to cross — via elevated property taxes,” Delong stated.
Reporting by Courant Workers Author Alison Cross was included. Kenneth R. Gosselin will be reached at kgosselin@courant.com.
Connecticut
CT Couple Who Stole $1M In Lululemon Merchandise Busted In MN: Reports
WOODBURY, MN — A Connecticut couple stole roughly $1 million in Lululemon merchandise over the course of a multi-state retail theft operation before they were eventually arrested at a store in Minnesota, according to reports.
Danbury residents 44-year-old Jadion Anthony Richards and 45-year-old Akwele Nickeisha Lawes-Richards were charged with felony organized retail theft in connection with the crime spree that started in September, The New York Times reported.
They were arrested Nov. 14 at a location in Woodbury, Minnesota, after hitting another store in Minnesota the day before, according to NBC News, which reported there was $50,000 in Lululemon clothing at Richards’ hotel room. The couple had stolen from three other Minnesota locations as well as from stores in Connecticut, New York, Colorado and Utah, the Times reported.
To pull off the thefts, Richards would enter a store and make a relatively small purchase, according to the Times. Then, he and Lawes-Richards would use a tool to attach a security tag from a different item in the store to one of Richards’ purchases, causing the alarm to go off when he left, the Times reported. Lawes-Richards and a third person would walk out ahead of Richards with stolen merchandise under their clothes, but employees would assume the alarm was from Richards and the misplaced security tag, according to the Times.
Connecticut
Couple charged for allegedly stealing $1 million from Lululemon in convoluted retail theft scheme
A couple from Connecticut faces charges for allegedly taking part in an intricate retail theft operation targeting the apparel company Lululemon that may have amounted to $1 million worth of stolen items, according to a criminal complaint.
The couple, Jadion Anthony Richards, 44, and Akwele Nickeisha Lawes-Richards, 45, were arrested Nov. 14 in Woodbury, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis-St. Paul. Richards and Lawes-Richards have been charged with one count each of organized retail theft, which is a felony, the Ramsey County Attorney’s Office said. They are from Danbury, Connecticut.
The alleged operation impacted Lululemon stores in multiple states, including Minnesota.
“Because of the outstanding work of the Roseville Police investigators — including their new Retail Crime Unit — as well as other law enforcement agencies, these individuals accused of this massive retail theft operation have been caught,” a spokesperson for the attorney’s office said in a statement on Nov. 18. “We will do everything in our power to hold these defendants accountable and continue to work with our law enforcement partners and retail merchants to put a stop to retail theft in our community.”
Both Richards and Lawes-Richards have posted bond as of Sunday and agreed to the terms of a court-ordered conditional release, according to the county attorney. For Richards, the court had set bail at $100,000 with conditional release, including weekly check-ins, or $600,000 with unconditional release. For Lawes-Richards, bail was set at $30,000 with conditional release and weekly check-ins or $200,000 with unconditional release. They are scheduled to appear again in court Dec. 16.
Prosecutors had asked for $1 million bond to be placed on each half of the couple, the attorney’s office said.
Richards and Lawes-Richards are accused by authorities of orchestrating a convoluted retail theft scheme that dates back to at least September. Their joint arrests came one day after the couple allegedly set off store alarms while trying to leave a Lululemon in Roseville, Minnesota, and an organized retail crime investigator, identified in charging documents by the initials R.P., recognized them.
The couple were allowed to leave the Roseville store. But the investigator later told an officer who responded to the incident that Richards and Lawes-Richards were seasoned shoplifters, who apparently stole close to $5,000 worth of Lululemon items just that day and were potentially “responsible for hundreds of thousands of dollars in loss to the store across the country,” according to the complaint. That number was eventually estimated by an investigator for the brand to be even higher, with the criminal complaint placing it at as much as $1 million.
Richards and Lawes-Richards allegedly involved other individuals in their shoplifting pursuits, but none were identified by name in the complaint. Authorities said they were able to successfully pull off the thefts by distracting store employees and later committing fraudulent returns with the stolen items at different Lululemon stores.
“Between October 29, 2024 and October 30, 2024, RP documented eight theft incidents in Colorado involving Richards and Lawes-Richards and an unidentified woman,” authorities wrote in the complaint, describing an example of how the operation would allegedly unfold.
“The group worked together using specific organized retail crime tactics such as blocking and distraction of associates to commit large thefts,” the complaint said. “They selected coats and jackets and held them up as if they were looking at them in a manner that blocked the view of staff and other guests while they selected and concealed items. They removed security sensors using a tool of some sort at multiple stores.”
CBS News contacted Lululemon for comment but did not receive an immediate reply.
Connecticut
Public Middle School In Fairfield Among Top 5 In CT: New Report
Roger Ludlowe Middle School in Fairfield is the fifth-best in the state, and is credited with having a 10:1 student/teacher ratio; 72 percent proficiency in math; and 80 percent proficiency in reading.
U.S. News ranks schools based on “their performance on state-required tests, graduation, and how well they prepare their students for high school.” Click here to read the publication’s methodology.
Roger Ludlowe joins five public elementary schools in Fairfield to be ranked by U.S. News among the state’s best.
The best public middle school in Connecticut is House of Arts Letters and Science Academy in New Britain. Rounding out the top five are Eastern Middle School in Riverside (#2); Saxe Middle School in New Canaan (#3); and Middlebrook School in Wilton (#4).
U.S. News studied publicly available data from the U.S. Department of Education for its ranking, and analyzed 59,128 middle schools throughout the country for the report.
For more information on U.S. News & World Report’s ranking of top public middle schools, click here.
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