Connecticut
NC State opens on the road for the second straight year when it visits Connecticut on Thursday
North Carolina State at Connecticut, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. ET (CBS Sports Network)
Line: N.C. State by 14 1/2, according to FanDuel Sportsbook.
Series record: N.C. State leads 3-0.
WHAT’S AT STAKE?
N.C. State opens its 11th year under Dave Doeren with a team picked to finish fourth in the Atlantic Coast Conference, though it will be one facing multiple changes — most notably, a new offense — after reaching eight-plus wins for the fifth time in six seasons. As for UConn, Jim Mora begins his second season as head coach after leading the Huskies to a 6-7 record last year and the program’s first bowl appearance since the 2015 season.
KEY MATCHUP
UConn’s offensive line versus N.C. State’s defensive front. The Huskies return four starters to the offensive line, including guard Christian Haynes, who was a third-team All-American last season. The Wolfpack gave up just over 19 points per game a year ago, tied for the best in the ACC. Their defensive line will be bolstered by the return of fifth-year defensive end Savion Jackson, who started seven games last season, before being sidelined with a knee injury.
PLAYERS TO WATCH
N.C. State: WR Keyon Lesane. Receiver is an area of concern for the Wolfpack entering the season, with Lesane being the most game-tested of the group. The fifth-year player had 31 grabs for 342 yards and two touchdowns last year.
UConn: LB Jackson Mitchell. The senior captain is the Huskies unquestioned leader. He recorded a team-high 140 tackles (50 solo) last season, including 9.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks, an interception and two forced fumbles and five fumble recoveries.
FACTS & FIGURES
This year marks a reunion for N.C. State quarterback Brennan Armstrong and new coordinator Robert Anae, with the two connecting again after being together at Virginia in 2021. That season, Armstrong ranked second nationally in passing (404.5 yards per game) with 31 touchdowns. … Joe Fagnano, a senior transfer from Maine, won a three-way battle to become UConn’s starting QB in a system run by former Maine head coach Nick Charlton. Fagnano threw for 2,231 yards and 15 touchdowns with six interceptions for the Black Bears a year ago. He beat out last year’s starter, sophomore Zion Turner, and Penn State transfer Ta’Quan Roberson, who won the job at UConn a year ago, but suffered a season-ending right knee injury. … N.C. State won 41-10 in last year’s meeting at home and survived a 10-7 win in 2012 in its lone visit to Connecticut. … This marks the Wolfpack’s second straight season opener on the road going back to last year’s narrow escape at East Carolina.
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AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll
Connecticut
CSCU officials vow to fix spending problems outlined in audit
One day after an audit raised concerns about spending by top executives, officials with the Connecticut State Colleges and Universities (CSCU) vowed to impose more financial control.
“I understand people’s frustration, I understand people’s disappointment and we have to take that very seriously,” CSCU Chancellor Terrence Cheng said after a Board of Regents meeting Thursday at CT State Community College Manchester.
Cheng was the focus of an audit released Wednesday by Comptroller Sean Scanlon that reviewed how he and other administrators used their state-issued credit cards, or P-cards.
The audit found Cheng often exceeded limits for meals, occasionally purchased alcohol and hired a driving service three times despite the state providing transportation for him.
The audit also found questionable spending by some presidents at the system’s four state universities and 12 community colleges.
Cheng said he is looking to implement Scanlon’s 10 recommendations. Those involve clear, consistent polices and creating more financial oversight.
Board of Regents Chairman Martin Guay also said the system needs to impose changes to restore public trust.
“This is very fixable and it will be fixed,” Guay said.
Guay agreed on the need for more oversight, especially after regents cut eliminating internal auditing operations in 2017 as a way to save money.
Guay noted Cheng is no longer using his P-Card and the CSCU system is re-evaluating when a school’s nonprofit foundation should pay for an administrator’s meal or other costs.
Cheng said he’s still reviewing Wednesday’s audit, but hopes to start working on system-wide P-Card policy and other measures. He wants to implement changes over the next 100 days.
But questions remain about whether Cheng will be the one to make those changes.
Republican lawmakers called for Cheng’s termination Wednesday. Guay said he isn’t ready to make that determination.
He wants to talk with Scanlon to learn more about his findings, as well as with CSCU’s financial leaders and attorney.
“We don’t know enough to make that kind of a decision so we’re not making that right now,” he said.
Governor Ned Lamont expressed his support for Cheng while speaking with reporters at an unrelated event in Hartford.
Students, meanwhile, expressed frustration. The audit’s findings detailed spending over a three-year period that coincided with tuition increases and unpopular cost saving moves.
This includes a consolidation of community colleges that has drawn criticism from students and faculty.
“We do expect a level of credibility and accountability from our leaders,” CT State Community College Manchester student Darren Mack said.
Guay said he understands the audit undermines the CSCU system’s efforts to control costs.
“You make progress and something like this happen and you get – it becomes problematic with trust,” he said.
Connecticut
Firefighter Dies After Being Struck By Vehicle, ID Released: CT News
Patch AM CT brings you the breaking and trending news stories from all across Connecticut each weekday morning. At any point, you can find your local Patch and catch up on those stories here.
The ID of the firefighter killed in the crash has been released by authorities.>>>Read More.
The fatal crash is under investigation.>>>Read More.
The driver was found walking on a road, according to a report.>>>Read More.
The vehicle was parked in the customer parking lot with several other vehicles in close proximity, officials said.>>>Read More.
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Patch asked readers in Connecticut to send in photos of their favorite neighborhood displays, and you did not disappoint.>>>Read More.
A meal at a local restaurant is one of the best you can get in America, according to a new list from The New York Times.>>>Read More.
Saturday, the Winter Solstice, may be the shortest day of the year, but you’ll still find plenty to do in Connecticut, all weekend long.>>>Read More.
Connecticut
End the corruption and mismanagement in CT's state colleges
Connecticut students, educators, and taxpayers deserve better than the broken status quo at our Connecticut State Colleges and Universities (CSCU).
A pattern of entitlement among unaccountable administrators, wasteful spending, and mismanagement have led to the prospect of disastrous cutbacks for students and faculty. Where is the Board of Regents for Higher Education (BOR), the entity tasked with oversight of the CSCU system? Why did it take years of inaction for Gov. Ned Lamont to finally call for an outside audit of the CSCU system and its chancellor Terrence Cheng? How can we know taxpayer funds aren’t continuing to be misused?
Getting answers for taxpayers, implementing concrete reforms, including real oversight, and holding those responsible accountable must be a priority for the legislature in the upcoming legislative session starting in January.
For years, those tasked with oversight of this unaccountable body, especially the Board of Regents, have sat idly by while Cheng was treated to cushy perks and treated taxpayer dollars meant for education like a personal piggy bank.
In addition to Cheng’s generous salary of $403,000, his compensation also includes a brand-new car and a separate $25,000 “housing and entertainment” allowance. Cheng has continued to live primarily in New York and makes a 90-minute commute to Hartford. That alone should not be problematic, many Connecticut residents commute to New York and vice versa.
But unlike those thousands of hardworking Connecticut citizens, Cheng used state college system funds to pay a chauffeur to drive him on his commute. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Reporters have uncovered a pattern of skirting spending rules and reporting requirements — from misusing his state car, frequently blowing past a $50 per-person cap with expensive meals, charging alcohol to his expense account, and keeping insufficient records.
The complete abdication of responsibility for those charged with overseeing the state college system is even more unacceptable now that educators and students face significant budget cuts – a direct consequence of years of tolerance for mismanagement and waste.
The National Center for Higher Education Management Systems found in a recently released report that CSCU, “has consistently fallen short in addressing its dire fiscal situation, suggesting sweeping reforms in order for the system’s long-term sustainability.”
This is on top of tuition increases in recent years. Chancellor Cheng and his complicit Board of Regents recently approved a 5% tuition price hike for students, the recipients of the bill for their inaction and failure.
The complete lack of accountability within the CSCU system goes deeper than fiscal management. Other reports have revealed that state college administrators spent time and resources looking for loopholes to let them extend grants, internships, and paid opportunities to illegal immigrants without disclosing their citizen status. While hardworking Connecticut citizens are being squeezed by inflation and one of the highest tax burdens in the nation, unaccountable administrators were trying to turn education dollars into new taxpayer-funded benefits for illegal immigrants.
The Board of Regents has been either incompetent, inattentive, or both. They have not acted nearly swiftly enough or aggressively enough to bring scrutiny and accountability to the CSCU system.
For this reason, the Board of Regents itself may need to be audited — in addition to the legislature exercising full accountability for the CSCU system itself in the upcoming session.
We must know how those tasked with overseeing our state colleges and approving tuition increases are allocating resources and making budgetary and management decisions. And we must know why it took so long, and ultimately for others to start asking questions, for the out-of-control situation to come to light. The legislature should consider whether structural reforms need to be made at a higher level — to how an unaccountable body of political appointees are left to oversee such an important institution of education in our state.
The misuse of taxpayer funds and ideologically charged behavior of those tasked with working for the taxpayers follows a pattern I’ve worked to expose and reform across various quasi-public boards and government agencies.
When I realized the Board of Pardons and Paroles was engaged in a reckless spree of commutations that included a number of violent criminals, I led the charge to expose them that forced the governor to replace the board chair. Now I’m leading the push to structurally reform the parole board to uphold public safety and protect victims.
Before that, I led the crackdown on mismanagement at the Port Authority. I demanded a public hearing to disinfect the mess with sunlight and wrote legislation to strengthen the independent watchdog office that reviews and vets contracts. I also helped expose abuse at Whiting Forensic Hospital and corruption at the Connecticut Municipal Electric Energy Cooperative (CMEEC), resulting in jail time for those responsible.
Real reform is always achievable. But it requires relentless leadership that cuts through the noise to deliver results and put our citizens and taxpayers before business as usual in Hartford.
As I have in the past, I will be ready to hold Hartford accountable to taxpayers. This time, to work with my fellow legislators, educators, students, and others to ensure taxpayer funds meant for educating the next generation are spent for that purpose, not lavish perks for unaccountable administrators or ideological pet projects.
Heather Somers represents the 18th District of Connecticut in the State Senate.
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