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Lamont names new leader to Connecticut State Colleges and Universities board

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Lamont names new leader to Connecticut State Colleges and Universities board


Gov. Ned Lamont named a new chair Wednesday to lead the Connecticut Board of Regents, the governing body for the Connecticut State Colleges and Universities system. Martin Guay, who has served on the board since September 2023, will assume the chair.

Guay succeeds JoAnn Ryan, who will not seek reappointment to the board. Her term as a member expires on June 30.

The board’s 15 voting members, all of whom are volunteers, are appointed: nine by Lamont, four by legislative leaders and two are student members appointed by their peers. The governor selects one member as chair and the board elects a vice chair and officers from among the members.

Guay, who was appointed by Lamont to a term ending in 2029, is vice president of business development at Stanley Black & Decker in New Britain. In this role, he “creates business value opportunities by working with startups, academia, venture capital, philanthropy, and global corporations,” according to the release. “He has worked with innovation communities, universities, incubators, and accelerators across the world. Concurrently, he is working on workforce development, economic development, and advanced manufacturing and growing the trades strategies in Connecticut and in the United States.”

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Guay holds a bachelor’s degree and M.B.A. from the George Washington University, and has completed the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School.

Lamont said Guay’s experience in business enables him to lead CSCU to prepare its students for careers.

“Marty has spent his career in the manufacturing sector and understands the needs of businesses to have access to a workforce that is already trained with the skills needed for in-demand, good-paying jobs that are driving innovation and building economic opportunities,” Lamont said. “This aligns with CSCU’s overarching goals and efforts to partner with the business community so that when students graduate they can get started on the right track for successful, long-lasing careers. His leadership is a good fit at CSCU and I am excited that he has agreed to take on this position. I also want to thank JoAnn Ryan for her many years of dedicated and generous service to Connecticut’s higher education system. I am particularly appreciative of her work to strengthen these schools during a period of transition, and I applaud her commitment to our students, their success, and the success of our state.”

Guay affirmed the role of CSCU as a driver of Connecticut’s economy.

“It is a tremendous honor to be appointed to serve as the next chair of the Connecticut Board of Regents,” Guay said. “Our colleges and universities are an integral part of Connecticut’s growth strategy, making an $11 billion annual impact on the state’s economy. I am excited to partner further with Governor Lamont, Chancellor Cheng, the Board of Regents, institution leaders, and community partners on spearheading and implementing initiatives that enable CSCU to continue to offer new innovative courses and programs that meet both students’ aspirations and the needs of our workforce. Together, we can ensure that our institutions continue to be key economic drivers for our communities and state.”

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CSCU consists of four state universities, Connecticut State Community College, and Charter Oak State College.

For more information about the Board of Regents, visit ct.edu/regents.



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Connecticut House votes to add $500 million to ‘rainy day fund’

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Connecticut House votes to add 0 million to ‘rainy day fund’


HARTFORD, Conn. (WTNH) — Shortly before 10 p.m. on Wednesday, the Connecticut House of Representatives signed off on a plan to set aside a $500 million surplus into the state’s “rainy day fund” as a temporary stopgap against cuts from Washington.

The $500 million will sit in the state’s budget reserves and be available for use at the direction of Governor Ned Lamont — who must get sign-off from the legislature’s leadership — until the legislature reconvenes for its regular session next February.

When lawmakers were crafting the legislation, they envisioned the funds being used to fill in the gaps created by the federal government shutdown, as well as cutbacks included in President Donald Trump’s signature “Big Beautiful Bill.”

Even with a deal in place to end the shutdown, the legislature’s majority Democrats held to their course and pushed for the deposit into the budget reserves. Funding for programs like SNAP food assistance, Democrats reasoned, should be guaranteed by the state in the face of uncertainty at the federal level.

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“To bank on Washington not falling back into chaos or dysfunction is probably not a bet we’re willing to make when we’re talking about pretty important programs,” State Rep. Matt Ritter, the Democratic House Speaker, said.

Ritter’s Democratic caucus voted uniformly in favor of the $500 million measure and were joined by a majority of the House’s Republicans. State Rep. Vincent Candelora, the House GOP leader, helped craft the funding bill and voted in favor of it’s passage. Most of Candelora’s top lieutenants and key committee leaders also voted in favor. 21 members, mostly members of the GOP caucus’s more conservative wing, broke ranks and opposed the bill.

Candelora said that, with the shutdown over and the need to backfill programs like SNAP and the LIHEAP heating assistance program now negated, he is hopeful the money will not be spent — though some Democrats have floated using the funds to counteract cuts to Affordable Care Act subsidies that are currently set to take effect in the new year.

“I imagine most of that money will be intact and it will return to the rainy day fund,” Candelora said.

Now that it has won approval in the House, the bill heads to the State Senate, which is scheduled to convene on Thursday.

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Map shows where police say CT man set house fire, led cops in chase amid crime spree

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Map shows where police say CT man set house fire, led cops in chase amid crime spree


Jalen Rasheed Skeete, 24, of Bridgeport, is accused of eluding state police multiple times Friday morning, including a during a police pursuit that began in Newtown and ended in Brookfield, according to state police. 

State police said Skeete is also a suspect in Friday’s home invasion and fire at a home in the 100 block of Sylvan Avenue in Waterbury. 

Waterbury Police Sgt. Joseph Morais said the incident remains under investigation. 

Responding firefighters found heavy fire in the back part of the house, overtaking both the first and second floors, according to fire officials. 

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Fire officials said the house was left uninhabitable but is not a total loss. It has heavy damage in the back and smoke and water damage everywhere else, they said.

Earlier in the day on Friday at around 7:15 a.m., Skeete allegedly fled from police in the parking lot of a Prospect school and struck a police cruiser.

After the fire, state police said he again evaded capture during pursuits in Newtown before being stopped in Brookfield. 

Skeete is being held on $250,000 bond on charges by state police in the evading in Prospect and the pursuit in Brookfield. He is charged with first-degree reckless endangerment, interfering with police, reckless driving, engaging in a police pursuit and evading responsibility. 



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16-year-old New Haven girl seriously injured in Route 15 moped crash

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16-year-old New Haven girl seriously injured in Route 15 moped crash


NEW CANAAN, Conn. (WTNH) — A New Haven teen suffered life-threatening injuries after being thrown from a moped on Route 15 Monday afternoon, according to Connecticut State Police.

State police said the 16-year-old girl was a passenger on a black moped being driven by a 17-year-old boy, also from New Haven.

They were driving southbound on Route 15 when the driver lost control of the moped while moving into a lane for the Exit 13 off ramp.

As a result of the collision, the 16-year-old passenger was thrown from the moped.

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She was transported to Norwalk Hospital first, then Yale New Haven Hospital for a higher level of care, state police said.

The driver had no apparent injury, according to a report from state police.

Route 15 South was closed for more than three hours as the incident was investigated. The collision remains under investigation.



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