Winning numbers drawn in Sun.’s Connecticut Cash 5
Digest more
Pratt & Whitney unit said Friday that it had reached a preliminary labor agreement with the union representing roughly 3,000 striking machinists in Connecticut, potentially ending a walkout that began earlier this month over job security,
Here are some of the best boys and girls golf nine-hole scores from matches around Connecticut this past week.
Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.), the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, voted against the proposed One Big Beautiful Bill Act alongside the rest of his party last week — but is
When Florida's tourism agency removed a section aimed at LGBTQ+ travelers, Connecticut welcomed the community to the state.
DATES — Quarterfinals: Friday, May 23 and Saturday, May 24 at higher seeds; Semifinals: Tuesday, May 27 at Trumbull, 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m.; Championship: Thursday, May 29 at Trumbull, 5:30 p.m.
Explore more
The Connecticut DMV allows owners to get back into towed cars to retrieve items that are essential to their health and welfare. But people have lost work equipment, car seats, important documents and priceless mementos.
The BookSmiths Shoppe is Danbury, Connecticut's first independent bookstore and specializes in highlighting local authors.
Giovanni Petruzziello reached speeds up to five times the posted limits on residential streets in three towns, Connecticut State Police said.
Representative Jim Himes (D-CT) spoke with Margaret Brennan on Face the Nation Sunday about the House's passage of President Donald Trump's "One Big, Beautiful Bill," the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine and more.
The governor’s initiative, the first phase of which in December canceled debt for 23,000 people, leverages state money to buy large, bundled portfolios of qualifying medical debt owed by Connecticut patients from hospitals and other medical providers at a discount.
CT has the second-highest rate of registrations in the National Do Not Call Registry and has filed the second-most complaints per capita.
From taxes to housing, how can Connecticut inequality be addressed? Here are some possible solutions
Should Connecticut change its tax structure? Cap rents? Reform education? We asked experts, advocates, lawmakers and regular people. Here's what they said.