Connecticut
Ed Klonoski: Charter Oak State College serves CT students well. Defunding it would be a mistake
A good portion of the way forward for increased schooling is on-line.
For 50 years, Connecticut has been well-served by Constitution Oak State Faculty, the state’s public online-only school. We provide progressive applications geared towards serving to working adults of all backgrounds full their levels, develop into higher educated variations of themselves, and finally enhance their financial prospects.
We provide a seamless pathway for neighborhood school graduates to earn their bachelor’s levels – on the similar tuition fee they paid at neighborhood school. We have now served greater than 600 of those college students since 2018, creating actual alternatives for individuals who could not have had different increased schooling choices.
Constitution Oak additionally performs a major function within the state’s workforce plans. Along with in-demand credentials in every part from nursing and social work to enterprise and cybersecurity, we even have an progressive on-line program that may put residents again to work after eight weeks of coaching throughout which they obtain a laptop computer and wages for the coaching time.
Briefly, Constitution Oak is a key element of the state’s increased instructional ecosystem.
All of that may be put in danger if both of the state finances proposals as they’re presently written have been to develop into legislation.
Within the present biennium, Constitution Oak obtained roughly $8 million in funding to assist the faculty. Together with ARPA funds distributed in response to the pandemic, the full quantity of state assist was practically $10 million. The present proposals allocate simply over $6 million to Constitution Oak.
To be blunt, this reduce can be catastrophic. It might power rapid layoffs at a faculty that has maintained enrollment all through the pandemic and been tasked by the CSCU system with responding rapidly to workforce wants by the event of further on-line applications.
Our request is that our biennial finances not be set at an quantity decrease than what we obtained earlier than the pandemic and that we obtain $8 million in funding assist versus the approximate $6 million proposed. A 25 p.c reduce would put applications and operations in danger, and it could threaten entry to high quality on-line schooling for Connecticut college students.
With a diminished Constitution Oak, the place would these looking for versatile on-line instructional alternatives go? The unlucky actuality is that they might be compelled to decide on dearer for-profit establishments that usually have slick ads however subpar scholar outcomes. They’d be compelled to pay extra, tackle increased debt hundreds, and be left with fewer alternatives upon commencement.
These looking for to defund public increased schooling usually level to outdated enrollment numbers as a motive to slash budgets. The basic misunderstanding of upper schooling budgeting and enrollment traits apart, Constitution Oak’s enrollment has stayed constant in the course of the pandemic interval with a notable uptick within the variety of courses every scholar is taking. In different phrases, by the administration’s personal requirements, Constitution Oak ought to obtain a finances improve, not a draconian reduce.
The full affect of the finances on increased schooling has been well-covered: greater than 650 layoffs throughout CSCU, elimination of practically 3,000 part-time positions, reductions in scholar companies (at a time, I’d add, that college students require further, not fewer, helps), closure of in-demand applications, and the potential for campus closures. All of this might be dangerous to the state’s future. I be part of with my colleagues throughout CSCU in asking our legislators to take one other look and guarantee increased schooling is correctly funded – and in doing so, I ask them to reverse course and restore enough sources to Constitution Oak.
Divesting from our solely on-line school would solely serve to hurt college students and reduce alternative.
Ed Klonoski is president of Constitution Oak State Faculty.
Connecticut
Connecticut couple arrested for $1 million Lululemon theft spree across multiple states | The Express Tribune
A Connecticut couple allegedly stole nearly $1 million worth of Lululemon merchandise during a two-month, multi-state theft spree, according to authorities.
Jadion Richards, 44, and Akwele Lawes-Richards, 45, were arrested on November 14 for stealing high-end fitness apparel from stores in Minnesota, Utah, Colorado, New York, and Connecticut since September, as detailed in a criminal complaint reported by multiple outlets.
The theft spree was uncovered after Lululemon investigators noticed significant losses, which escalated when the pair triggered a security alarm while leaving a store in Woodbury, Minnesota.
Richards reportedly accused store employees of racially profiling him, the complaint stated. However, a company investigator alleged the couple had stolen at least 45 items worth $5,000 from various stores the previous day.
Police apprehended the pair and discovered multiple credit and debit cards, along with a key to a Marriott hotel room. Inside the room, officers found 12 suitcases, three of which contained approximately $50,000 worth of Lululemon merchandise, as per the complaint.
The company investigator estimated the total stolen merchandise could be worth up to $1 million, though the complaint did not detail how this estimate was calculated.
Lululemon merchandise is known for its high price points, with clothing starting at over $50 and sweatshirts often costing more than $130.
“This outcome continues to underscore our ongoing collaboration with law enforcement and our investments in advanced technology, team training and investigative capabilities to combat retail crime and hold offenders accountable,” Lululemon’s vice president of asset protection told NBC News.
“We remain dedicated to continuing these efforts to address and prevent this industry-wide issue.”
The couple allegedly used various tactics to commit the thefts, including one distracting store staff while the other hid the fitness apparel under their clothes and jackets, according to the complaint.
Connecticut
Connecticut man arrested in Puerto Rico for allegedly killing 4-month-old and Massachusetts mother
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
Connecticut
Connecticut man dies nine days after being struck by car in Wall
Two-minute read
Choose APP for breaking news
APP is your source for breaking news
WALL – A 64-year-old Connecticut man has died from injuries suffered when he was struck by a car on Route 35 Nov. 9, police said.
Michael Losacano, of Niantic, Connecticut, passed away on Nov. 18 at Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, police said. Losacano was hit by a Ford Explorer being driven southbound on the highway near Wall Church Road by a 72-year-old Farmingdale man at about 6:42 p.m. Nov. 9, according to police.
Losacano was taken to the hospital by Wall Township EMS. The accident is still under investigation and police did not reveal the name of the Explorer’s driver.
The accident is being investigated by Wall police Sgt. Andrew Baldino, the Monmouth County Serious Collision Analysis Response Team (SCART), and Detective Nicholas Logothetis of the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office.
Anyone who witnessed the collision or who has information relevant to the investigation is asked to call Wall police at (732) 449-4500.
Jean Mikle: @jeanmikle, jmikle@gannettnj.com.
-
Business1 week ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
Science5 days ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Politics6 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Technology6 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Lifestyle7 days ago
Some in the U.S. farm industry are alarmed by Trump's embrace of RFK Jr. and tariffs
-
World7 days ago
Protesters in Slovakia rally against Robert Fico’s populist government
-
News6 days ago
They disagree about a lot, but these singers figure out how to stay in harmony
-
News7 days ago
Gaetz-gate: Navigating the President-elect's most baffling Cabinet pick