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Holiday light shows in Greater Hartford start now. Here’s where to find them

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Holiday light shows in Greater Hartford start now. Here’s where to find them


With more than 500,000 holiday lights and the towering 100-foot-high Christmas tree that it bills as the tallest in Connecticut, Lake Compounce will launch its annual Holiday Lights show on Friday evening.

Between then and the closing night on Dec. 31, the amusement park will hold several charity fundraisers on some of its Holiday Lights evenings, and will host a Pawliday Lights version Dec. 10 when families are invited to bring their dogs and make donations to the Meriden Humane Society.

Lake Compounce’s show is among the major holiday light festivals around the state that either just started their seasons or are getting underway right after Thanksgiving.

The holiday season at the amusement park kicks off Friday at 5 p.m. with the arrival of Santa and a ceremony to light the enormous tree on the plaza between the ticket booths and the admission gates.

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“We’ll have all of our characters out, we’ll have hot cocoa cups for everybody, lots of festive music,” said Meg Forno, marketing director.

Since Halloween, employees have been busily taking down Phantom Fall Fest’s spooky decorations and putting up strings of lights, artificial snowmen and holiday-themed decor. Holiday Lights will be open through Dec. 31 on Fridays from 5 to 9 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays from 3 to 8 p.m. Admission is $20, and $15 for children and seniors.

The rollercoasters and thrill rides are closed until April, but many of the kiddie rides will be operating through Holiday Lights along with the carousel, bumper cars and the train, which is being redecorated as the North Pole Express. Children are invited to win prizes if they successfully search the park for displays showing each of the 12 days of Christmas.

“We’ll have a lot of activities to get kids into the holiday spirit,” Forno said. “There will be pictures with Santa, a make-your-own snow globe activity for kids, buy-an-ornament and personalize it for free, letter writing to Santa.”

Daniel Hansford, wraps a tree with lights during the preparation for Lake Compounce’s holiday Festival of Lights On Monday, Nov. 20, 2023. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

From Dec. 1 to 3, the $10 parking fee is waived for customers who bring winter gear to donate to the Bristol Boys & Girls Club. From Dec. 8 to 10, there’s free parking for anyone bringing a pet supplies donation for the Meriden Humane Society, and between Dec. 15 and 17, parking is free for those bringing nonperishable goods or personal care items for Bread For Life.

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And for every season pass sold on Nov. 28, the park will donate one 2024 single-day ticket to the Boys & Girls Club of Bristol.

  • Snowmen are stacked ready to be placed around Lake Compounce...

    Snowmen are stacked ready to be placed around Lake Compounce as they prepare for Lake Compounce’s holiday Festival of Lights On Monday, Nov. 20, 2023. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

  • Shera Tripp, hangs light near the entrance of Lake Compounce...

    Shera Tripp, hangs light near the entrance of Lake Compounce as they prepare for Lake Compounce’s holiday Festival of Lights On Monday, Nov. 20, 2023. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

  • Paula Offei, hangs light at the Potato Patch as they...

    Paula Offei, hangs light at the Potato Patch as they prepare for Lake Compounce’s holiday Festival of Lights On Monday, Nov. 20, 2023. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

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  • The 100-foot-high Christmas tree at the entrance to Lake Compounce...

    The 100-foot-high Christmas tree at the entrance to Lake Compounce is ready to go for the amusement park’s Festival of Lights. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

  • Shera Tripp, hangs light near the entrance of Lake Compounce...

    Shera Tripp, hangs light near the entrance of Lake Compounce as they prepare for Lake Compounce’s holiday Festival of Lights On Monday, Nov. 20, 2023. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

  • Paula Offei, hangs light at the Potato Patch as they...

    Paula Offei, hangs light at the Potato Patch as they prepare for Lake Compounce’s holiday Festival of Lights On Monday, Nov. 20, 2023. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

  • Daniel Hansford, wraps a tree with lights during the preparation...

    Daniel Hansford, wraps a tree with lights during the preparation for Lake Compounce’s holiday Festival of Lights On Monday, Nov. 20, 2023. (Aaron Flaum/Hartford Courant)

A sampling of other major holiday-themed light displays in Connecticut:

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Magic of Lights, East Hartford

WFSB and Hartford are not doing Holiday Light Fantasia at Goodwin Park this year, but the new Magic of Lights show will be at Rentschler Field across the river.

It’s a drive-through experience with LED lights and digital animation, and is scheduled to open Thanksgiving night at 5 p.m. From then through Dec. 31, its schedule is Mondays to Thursdays from 5 to 9 p.m., and Fridays to Sundays from 5 to 10 p.m.

Ohio-based Family Entertainment Live is running more than 20 similar shows around the country and in Canada. Ticket prices in East Hartford range from $18.50 to $23.50 for cars and $60 for a tour bus.

Tunnel of Lights, East Windsor

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The Connecticut Trolley Museum turns its museum and trolley ride into a holiday-themed winterfest starting Thanksgiving evening.

There are more than 15,000 lights indoors at the museum and arching over the trolley tracks.

“Trolley cars transport jolly guests down a tunnel of lights for 20 to 30 minutes as they sing traditional Christmas carols with their trolley car operators. For an open air view of the Tunnel of Lights, one open sleigh car is lit up entirely with holiday lights,” the museum staff said in a statement.

The rides are offered on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through Dec. 30. Advance purchase is required, and ticket prices range from $16 to $21.

Glow Gardens, Hartford

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The Connecticut Convention Center is the scene of Glow Gardens, which promotes itself as being twice as big as last year’s version and having a million lights to illuminate gardens and structures. It advertises a Christmas-themed children’s scavenger hunt, free pictures with Santa and his elves, a track-less “Glow-comotive” ride, seasonal food, family activities and a holiday market.

The indoor display is open during daylight hours, mostly late morning to dinnertime but daily schedules vary. The show operates Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through Dec. 23, and will be open for two Thursdays: Dec. 14 and 21.

Tickets must be bought in advance through glowgardens.com/hartford-christmas. Admission is for a specific day and time; organizers say the exhibit takes about two hours to tour. Tickets are $29 for adults, $23.50 for children and $19 for seniors. A $105 family rate is also available.

Festival of Silver Lights, Meriden

Hubbard Park hosts a free drive-through light show with more than 350,000 white lights and more than 200 characters and scenes ranging from elves and reindeer to camels, bears and wooden soldiers. There is an opening ceremony Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. with music and hot chocolate, followed by the lights being turned on around 6:15 p.m. Admission is free and the park will be open for drive-throughs every night through Jan. 1.

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Home for the Holidays, Mystic

Mystic Aquarium celebrates its 50th anniversary with a display of lights outside as well as indoors.

“A choreography of dancing lights will be showcased in various areas of the campus on select evenings from 6 to 9 p.m., and will feature music from iconic holiday movie favorites,” aquarium staff said in a statement. “Aquarium-goers will be able to enjoy the Arctic Coast Beluga Exhibit, Pacific Northwest, main indoor aquarium gallery, as well as the newly renovated courtyard. The aquarium will offer fun and festive activities, live music performances and holiday character meet-and-greets on select nights.”

Festivities begin Nov. 24 at 6 p.m. and continue on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through Dec. 30 from 6 to 9 p.m. Admission is $25, or $20 for members.

Fantasy of Lights, New Haven

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In its 29th year, this nighttime light extravaganza is a fundraiser for Goodwill of Southern New England. Vehicles drive through a roughly 15-minute long showing of lighted figures and scenes, and can tune in to the accompanying holiday music on the car radio. It opens every evening at 5 o’clock through Dec. 31 at Lighthouse Point Park. Closing time is 9 p.m. Sundays through Thursdays, 10 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.
Admission is $10 per car or family van, $25 per minibus and $5 for a full-size bus.



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A small CT town accepted a ‘first-of-its-kind’ affordable housing project. Why it’s a positive step.

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A small CT town accepted a ‘first-of-its-kind’ affordable housing project. Why it’s a positive step.


Connecticut has an affordable housing problem.

Connecticut has a job vacancy problem.

The two problems, no surprise to many, go together, according to advocates for housing in the state. If people can’t afford to live here, they can’t take the jobs that are available, they say.

And yet, local residents, citing local control, fight against multiple-unit developments coming into their towns.

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That has changed in one small town, with what the state of Connecticut has called a “first-of-its-kind” development for the town.

On May 13, a 46-unit affordable development opened in Orange with much fanfare, including an appearance by Gov. Ned Lamont. Orange, a town comprised of a farming past and mostly single-family homes, with its retail and business corridor purposely confined mostly to Route 1, previously had 1.31% affordable housing. The town has housing set aside for seniors and has changed dramatically in some places within the past 25 years, including with many apartments built near the border with West Haven. Not unlike other towns, there have been vocal objections to affordable housing in the past.

A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange. Hartford Courant.

Orange First Selectman James Zeoli said the affordable project was accepted by residents because it was “very tastefully done.”

A small CT town accepted a ‘first-of-its-kind’ affordable housing project. It’s a positive step in a state that needs 120,000 units.

“Sometimes when people hear this type of (affordable) title put onto a development, it draws sideways looks, sometimes inappropriate comments and stuff,” he said. “So the developer, one of the principals, lives right near it. It provides a need for both people with disabilities, special needs and income needs. They’re designed quite beautifully.”

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The project was developed by Gyroscope Development Group and the units were offered by Lascana Homes. The units are totally filled and even the waiting list is closed.

“One thing that’s very important that people forget: Not every town can fit what I’ll call appropriate affordable housing, because not everybody is able to drive or owns a car or has people nearby that can help them all the time,” Zeoli said.

“This development is … probably within 5-600 feet of the Route 1,” he said.

“It’s nestled in a neighborhood and yet it offers the availability of transit with busing,” he said. “It has sewer access … It has gas and it has shopping and other needs that people might have, and so it makes it available, being that it’s in that proximity and offers all those amenities.”

The site of the development is about 5 acres and, according to zoning documents, was mostly unimproved and had
consisted of wooded area, with single family homes in the area, and a “variety” of commercial uses to the southeast/ east, including a fence company, health care center, a restaurant and a credit union. “A heavily wooded area with wetlands serves as a buffer between the site and the single-family homes to the northeast,” the zoning document noted.

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  • A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

    A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

  • A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

    A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

  • A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

    A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

  • A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

    A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

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  • A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

    A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

  • A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

    A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

  • A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

    A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

The project was done with support from the Connecticut Department of Housing and the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority.

Zoning documents said the project was seven buildings and 92 parking spaces. A key is that connects to sanitary sewers in a residential town largely served by septic tanks. The quiet site, not far from the Post Road, is landscaped with new shrubbery but also surrounded by trees in an established neighborhood.

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More work to do in Connecticut

While Orange, with its population of about 14,000 people, has made a positive step, the Open Communities Alliance would like to bring a Fair Share plan for planning and zoning to the entire state.

“We’re missing about 120,000 units of affordable housing,” said Erin Boggs, executive director of the Open Communities Alliance, which advocates for affordable housing.

“Rents have been skyrocketing for a long time; our homelessness numbers are way up; our housing production numbers are way down,” she said. “We have between 90,000 and 100,000 jobs that are vacant, and a lot of those vacancies are tied to potential employees not having places to live in Connecticut, so it doesn’t sound worth it for them to come here. It’s both a social justice crisis but also an economic crisis.”

There’s simply a lack of housing inventory throughout the state in general, sometimes as low as a 1% vacancy rate in a given town, said Hugh Bailey, policy director for the alliance.

“There just aren’t units available,” Bailey said. “And those units that are available are subject to bidding wars. That price gets much higher than the initial asking price. And the jobs available might support someone paying in a place that has the asking price but, once it’s gone on the market and it goes up, it no longer becomes viable.”

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The problem is statewide and particularly acute in places where there are jobs, such as Groton, where Electric Boat recently had $1 billion restored in a draft spending bill for a second Virginia-class attack submarine.

“It’s very clear right there that this mismatch is the case where they don’t have the housing for the jobs that they need filled,” Boggs said.

“You can also see acute need in more expensive places,” she said. “In Fairfield County, the possibility of finding housing that’s affordable outside of Bridgeport and in Norwalk (and) Stamford, but even in those places it can be incredibly hard. It’s basically impossible outside of those cities.”

But the alliance has done analyses for each region of the state, and the problem is present everywhere, she said.

According to the alliance, there are 28 cities and towns that have at least 10% affordable housing, generally meaning rent is no more than 30% of monthly income.

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Of the rest, many have minuscule percentages of affordable housing, less than 1%.

While a city like New Haven has been including affordable housing in a number of new developments, “we shouldn’t be expecting New Haven to do it all by itself; they’re not going to solve the housing crisis standing alone,” Boggs said.

“And that is what we really focus on, which is what our whole region’s doing. What are suburban areas, even rural areas doing to play a role in addressing the crisis, and part of that comes through adjusting planning and zoning so that they are actually complying with existing state law that says they need to be playing a role in solving the regional housing crises and allowing housing of all different kinds to go in.”

Part of the law that municipal zoning boards must follow is the Zoning Enabling Act, Section 8-2 of the state code, which, among other things, requires them to “Promote housing choice and economic diversity in housing, including housing for both low and moderate income households.”

It also calls for the “the development of housing opportunities, including opportunities for multifamily dwellings.”

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“These are existing obligations that towns have already agreed to,” Boggs said. “For some people, there’s just not an understanding that that’s how it works.”

Going along with Section 8-2 is Section 8-30g, the Affordable Housing Appeals Act, “which says for any town that has less than 10% affordable housing, if a developer comes along proposing a development with a meaningful percentage of affordability, and the town rejects that, the developer can take the town to court and basically get a leg up in court,” Boggs said. “And the town can then be ordered to allow the affordable housing to be built.”

Towns “not held to account”

The problem is that 10% affordable housing in a town is not nearly enough.

“If every town in Connecticut were to allow you to get to that 10% number … we would have about 41,000 additional units of affordable housing, when we need something in the range of 120,000,” Boggs said.

But even the laws on the books aren’t being enforced, Bailey said.

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“These laws exist and it’s very plain language that says the towns have to do this, but they are not held to account, which is one of the things that’s frustrating because it’s a very clear law,” he said.

“So when towns talk about local control, certainly local control is traditionally Connecticut, but state laws also exist,” he said. “And they need to abide by those laws, and the fact that they aren’t doesn’t mean that the law doesn’t exist. It just means it’s not being enforced.”

This year, a bill, Senate Bill 6, was introduced in the General Assembly that would have helped increase the affordable housing supply in the state, but it was never voted on.

A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange
A 46-unit affordable development has opened in Orange

Boggs said a Fair Share plan would basically assess “how much affordable housing we need in each region of the state, and then allocates that out to each town in a way that considers their resources and also what they’ve done in the past and then asks them to plan and zone for that over a period of time.”

“So it could be 10 years, could be 20 years. But the bottom line is they have to change their zoning to try to reach their number and there are actual sticks that are imposed if the housing does not appear,” she said.

First, Section 8-30g would be imposed. 

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“If they ultimately can’t, (if) the housing doesn’t come to fruition, then some basically default zoning goes into place, so very low scale,” Boggs said. “On sewer (connections), you could build 10 units. In places without sewer, you could build up to what the public health code would allow.”

That might be a duplex, triplex or quadruplex, she said. 

“And this is something, broadly speaking along these lines, that is in place and has been in place in New Jersey for a long time and it has been the most effective law in the nation in creating more affordable housing. It’s working incredibly well there,” Boggs said.

Bailey said enforcement mechanisms are necessary because incentives, such as tax breaks, don’t seem to work.

“There are many in Connecticut that will look at those carrots and say, well, thanks for the offer, but we like things the way they are and, nothing,” he said. “So in terms of the carrot-vs.-stick debate, carrots are great and incentives can be helpful, but you really need some sort of enforcement mechanism to ensure that something gets built.”  

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Also, the towns don’t need to build the housing themselves, they just need to allow developers to come in and build projects, Bailey said. “They would just have to stop saying no to everything,” he said.

Ultimately, “the town really does need to be more of a partner in this. They need to change the underlying zoning, not just on a one-off basis,” Boggs said. Capitulating on a Section 8-30g case isn’t the way to go.

“Right now, the way towns plan in many cases for affordability is, how do we not have it?” Boggs said. “So it shifts the conversation for not will we have affordable housing or not, but we need to have it, where does it go? How are we going to do this in a way that works well with our vision?” 

Ed Stannard can be reached at estannard@courant.com



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Missing Dartmouth student Kexin Cai found dead in Connecticut River

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Missing Dartmouth student Kexin Cai found dead in Connecticut River


Missing Dartmouth College student Kexin Cai was found dead in the Connecticut River after a days-long search.

Cai, 26, of West Lebanon, N.H., vanished last Wednesday, according to the Lebanon Police Department.

She was was officially reported missing last Friday. A bike believed to have belonged to Cai was spotted near a conservation area in Lebanon, leading searchers to focus on that area.

A fisherman found a body along the Connecticut River in Windsor, Vt., at about 4 p.m. on Monday, according to police. The body was brought to shore and identified as Cai, WMUR reported.

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Her death remains under investigation, though foul play is not suspected.

Cai was a doctoral student in the Mutual Understanding Lab of the Psychological and Brain Sciences Department, according to the school’s website.

She was described as as “an exceptionally gifted and humble researcher” who “loved cats so much that she would sneak images of them into every poster or presentation,” according to an email sent to the school community by Dean of the Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies Jon Kull.

Kristian Droste, Cai’s partner, told The Dartmouth she had admitted herself to the school’s health service facility for a “mental health crisis” last week and was transferred to the university’s hospital. She was released the day she was last seen.



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Missing Dartmouth student is found dead in the Connecticut River after riding her e-bike into the woods

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Missing Dartmouth student is found dead in the Connecticut River after riding her e-bike into the woods


  • Kexin Cai was reported missing last Friday after being last seen on Wednesday 
  • Police in new Hampshire confirmed they recovered her body on Monday night 
  • The Chinese native was a second-year doctoral student at the Ivy League school

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The body of a missing Dartmouth college was found in the Connecticut River on Monday, days after she was last seen disappearing into a wood.

Kexin Cai, 26, was first reported missing last Friday two days after a final confirmed sighting in Lebanon, New Hampshire. 

She had left her home on Drake Lane on the Wednesday afternoon on an electric bike, according to local police. 

Investigators managed to secure footage from two different businesses showing her riding her bike toward West Lebanon.

On Monday, cops said a motorist had possibly seen the E-bike at the Boston Lot Conservation wooded area on either Thursday or Friday morning with a search then being concentrated in the area.

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Kexin Cai, 26, was first reported missing last Friday after being last seen on the Wednesday prior in Lebanon, New Hampshire

On Monday, cops said a motorist had possibly seen the E-bike at the Boston Lot Conservation area, seen here

On Monday, cops said a motorist had possibly seen the E-bike at the Boston Lot Conservation area, seen here

Local police, Dartmouth Safety and Security, New England K-9, Dhart Helicopter, and the NH Fish and Game Department assisted in the search for Kexin. 

Around 4pm on Monday, a fisherman alerted authorities to a sighting along the Connecticut River in Windsor, Vermont. 

Emergency services were able to retrieve a body that was later identified as Cai, bringing her to shore shortly after 5:30pm. 

Lebanon Police Department said there was no suggestion of foul play in the incident. It remains unclear if they managed to recover her E-Bike. 

DailyMail.com has contacted police for further information on the whereabouts of the bike. 

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The Chinese native was a second-year doctoral student in the psychological and brain sciences department at the Ivy League school.

Dean of the Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies Jon Kull said her focus was on communication challenges for people with autism. 

Lebanon Police Department said there was no suggestion of foul play in the incident. It remains unclear if they managed to recover her E-Bike

Lebanon Police Department said there was no suggestion of foul play in the incident. It remains unclear if they managed to recover her E-Bike

Around 4pm on Monday, a fisherman alerted authorities to a sighting along the Connecticut River in Windsor, Vermont, seen here

Around 4pm on Monday, a fisherman alerted authorities to a sighting along the Connecticut River in Windsor, Vermont, seen here

In an email sent to campus, and seen by The Dartmouth, she enjoyed hiking, skiing and road trips. 

Kull wrote: ‘Kexin was an exceptionally gifted and humble researcher with a genuinely sweet personality.

‘She loved cats so much that she would sneak images of them into every poster or presentation. Kexin loved the Upper Valley.’

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Cai’s partner, research assistant Kristian Droste, also told the outlet that Cai had admitted herself to the college health service due to a ‘mental health crisis’. 

She was then transferred to Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center where she was released on May 15, the outlet reported. 

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