Connecticut
Northern Lights seen across Connecticut

The Northern Lights were once again visible in Connecticut, thanks to a solar storm that erupted from the sun’s surface earlier in the week.
The aurora will be visible through the early morning of Saturday with the best viewing time through 4 a.m.
Unlike the aurora event of October 2024, you won’t be able to see this with the naked eye, instead a long exposure camera will be needed.
Look to the north and away from city lights.
Your photos: Northern Lights visible across Connecticut

Connecticut
Face the Facts: How cuts could impact health care in Connecticut

Lawmakers in Washington, D.C. are working through the weekend on a reconciliation bill that includes massive cuts to Medicaid. Rep. Joe Courtney (D-2nd District) discusses how those cuts could impact health care in Connecticut.
Mike Hydeck: As the federal budget process continues in Washington, DC, the Trump administration is looking for $1.5 trillion in cuts they say will help make the government more efficient. So far, between buyouts and cuts, 120,000 jobs have been eliminated in the federal workforce, according to The New York Times. Rooting out waste and fraud is part of the goal of the administration, as well. This week, Republican Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, unveiled a draft of his budget, which includes things like cuts to Medicaid and changes to SNAP benefits, also known as food stamps. Congressman Joe Courtney spoke out about this on the House floor this week, he joins me now. Welcome back, Congressman. You said the speaker needs to go back to the drawing board. Why?
Joe Courtney: Because I think if he listened to the entire hospital sector of our country, from coast to coast, who have taken a look at this proposal and have unanimously denounced it in terms of the damage it’s going to do to the finances of our health care sector and again, we’re talking to Catholic hospitals, children’s hospitals, the larger umbrella group, the American Hospital Association. You know, they realize that if you take $800 billion out of the Medicaid system, which is what this measure proposes to do, it is going to again, put a lot of these facilities on even shakier ground than they are today, cripple their ability to hire more nurses and staff, which is really, you know, something they’re all desperately trying to achieve. Patient groups have also now risen up, whether it’s the American Cancer Society or Alzheimer’s Association, the disabilities community, you know for whom Medicaid really is a life blood sort of system in terms of making sure that people get essential care. Medicaid is again, different than Medicare, different than private health insurance. It’s not awash in cash. I mean, you talk to any doctor or physician out there, the rates that are paid through Medicaid are bare bones, but it does keep people connected to health care coverage. And the Congressional Budget Office weighed in and basically determined, if this measure was to come into law, that basically 8.6 million Americans would lose their health insurance. On top of that, the you know, exchange, you know, Obamacare premium subsidies, which are also hitting a cliff pretty soon, none of those subsidies were extended in the bill. That would add another 6 million people who would lose their their health coverage. So this is not the direction that I think anybody reasonable, reasonably wants to see this country to go.
Mike Hydeck: Among the other things in this plan, Republicans want to have work rep work requirements. Meaning, if you get SNAP benefits or Medicare and Medicaid, you should be required to work a certain number of hours. What’s your position on that? They’ve been talking about this for a while, by the way.
Joe Courtney: Yeah. So I mean, if you look at the Medicaid program, if you take out people who are on social security and in nursing homes, which I think you know, that’s actually where the real money goes in the Medicaid program. The people who are covered by it are roughly, according to Sean Scanlon, it’s roughly about 75 to 80% are working in the system as it is. And that you know, again, means that really you’re, you’re dealing with people, probably with disabilities, who are not connected to the workforce. What we do know is this program, of, you know, so called work requirements, is going to create extra red tape in terms of administering the program. We know that because Georgia and Arkansas tried to do this, and it was a bust, you know, in terms of just, you know, really the amount of time that was consumed versus whatever return on investment. So, you know, people are going to, people are going to drop off the rolls. The issue of whether or not people on Medicaid are actually working, I think the numbers don’t lie. I mean, it’s not a program for people who are just sitting around playing video games like Speaker Johnson alleged the other day, which really was a, in my opinion, a disgraceful comment.
Mike Hydeck: So as we know, fraud in these programs has been an issue. There’s big cases in Florida. Throughout the country as well. In fact, this week, the Wall Street Journal reported that insurance company United Healthcare is being investigated by the Justice Department for overbilling. Can fraud be found in the system overall, in your opinion?
Joe Courtney: Absolutely. But if you really talk to people who are doing investigations for Medicaid fraud, there’s a whole unit in government in Connecticut that does this. It’s really, the most of the fraud, almost all of it, is in the provider side of the equation, where people, again, are gaming the billing system who are providers. You know, like is being alleged with United Healthcare. So you know, by all means, that effort should be sustained and expanded to make sure that nobody’s gaming the system. But in terms of beneficiaries, people who are recipients, the fraud numbers are tiny, and the value, or the the return on investment, is minuscule, as opposed to rip off artists who are basically running Medicaid mills, as they call them, that you know, that’s where the real fraud money is.
Mike Hydeck: Congressman Courtney, we have to leave it there. I have quite a few more questions. Hopefully we can have you back. We appreciate your time.
Joe Courtney: Happy to do so. Thanks, Mike.
Connecticut
Connecticut Sun open WNBA season Sunday by hosting Washington Mystics – The Boston Globe

The new-look Connecticut Sun open the WNBA season on Sunday when they host the Washington Mystics at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn., at 1 p.m. (NBCSB).
Six players, including the entire starting five, are gone from last year’s squad that went 28-12 and lost to the Minnesota Lynx in five games in the WNBA semifinals. DeWanna Bonner. DiJonai Carrington, Tyasha Harris, Brionna Jones, Tiffany Mitchell, and Alyssa Thomas combined for more than 80 percent of the team’s scoring.
Thomas, Carrington, and Harris were moved as part of a four-team trade, with Thomas headed to Phoenix, and Carrington and Harris to Dallas. Bonner signed a one-year deal with Indiana, and Jones a one-year deal with Atlanta.
Among the new faces hoping to lead the Sun back to the postseason for the ninth straight season are veterans Tina Charles, Lindsay Allen, and Jacy Sheldon, as well as 2025 first-round picks Aneesah Morrow (LSU) and Saniya Rivers (NC State). Leïla Lacan, the 2024 first-round pick from France, is also joining the team this year.
It’s a homecoming for Charles, 36, who spent the first four years of her career with the Sun after they drafted her No. 1 overall out of UConn in 2010. The eight-time All-Star was named Rookie of the Year, then went on to win MVP honors in 2012.
“I’m really excited to be here,” said Charles. “I have a lot of history here from my collegiate time to my first four years professionally.
“I’m very thankful toward the end of my career to be here, to be playing for this franchise as they’re entering a new chapter.”
Among the holdovers are Marina Mabrey and Olivia Nelson-Ododa. Mabrey, who averaged 14.9 points last season, had requested a trade in the offseason, but the Sun are hoping the acquisitions will keep the seventh-year guard out of Notre Dame content. She had nothing but praise for the rookies.
“They’ve been like sponges,” said Mabrey. “They’ve brought energy that is irreplaceable. They come in, they’re smiling, they’re working hard. They want to learn. They bring exactly what they do best to the table also, so it’s hard to not want that around you, it’s hard to not want that on the court, just because they’re new.
“It’s refreshing, and although they’re going to make mistakes, it’s easy to work through that when you have the mentality that they have.”
Coach Stephanie White, who went 55-25 and led the team to the semifinals in her two seasons, also departed for Indiana to coach the Fever, where she wlll be reunited with Bonner.
The Sun hired Rachid Meziane to take over for White. He led Belgium to a fourth-place finish in the 2024 Olympics, and also served as the coach of the French women’s club Villeneuve D’Asco since 2019. He led the team to a Ligue Feminine de Basketball championship and a EuroLeague runner-up finish during the 2023-24 season.
Follow Andrew Mahoney @GlobeMahoney.
Connecticut
Growing challenges to find and afford starter homes in Connecticut

It can be especially daunting for those considering buying their first home and to see the costs surging.
Karess Cannon is ready to stop renting and is searching for her first home somewhere in central Connecticut.
“I realize there’s no perfect time, but as rents keep going up, it just makes sense to actually be putting money into something that I own,” Cannon said.
For many buyers, it’s becoming harder to find and afford a starter home – those in the bottom quarter of sales.
Starter prices here in Connecticut have skyrocketed about 50% from 2019 to 2024, according to Realtor.com.
The average starter home going from about $263,000 to then hitting $390,000.
Cannon has been saving and while she hasn’t been priced out of the current market yet, it still has its surprises.
“Like the listings, the reality of what’s out there right now, how does that contrast with your expectations going into the process?” NBC Connecticut’s Matt Austin asked.
“Yeah, I mean, I think it’s just kind of knowing that X amount of dollars isn’t going to get you X amount house. Like that’s been the biggest management and being like, what things do I really need versus wants,” Cannon said.
When it comes to the costs, experts recommend buyers keep their mortgage payments to less than 30% of their income.
That means to afford the average starter home in the state, someone needs an income of about $93,000.
That’s gone up a lot recently amid a rise in prices and mortgage rates.
“You put those two things together and affordability starts to feel less and less attainable,” said Rachael Cisz, of Berkshire Hathaway Home Services New England Properties.
Cisz says with lower supply these past few years starter homes are in high demand.
It’s all adding up and last year only 24% of successful homebuyers were first-timers – the lowest on record.
Cisz tries to prepare her clients for searching in this market.
“I think it is all about setting the expectations both for what the process is going to look like and also kind of showing them firsthand. Here’s what your money can buy you, you know, in different towns, different types of properties,” Cisz said. “I’m always stressing to them, ‘you know, you might want this in a house, but you need to remember this isn’t your forever home. It’s just getting you into the market.’”
Cisz also reminds hopeful homeowners there is help for first-time buyers, including state assistance with a down payment.
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