Connecticut News and Info Tracker
Connecticut is heading into summer with lawmakers and business leaders digesting a busy end to the 2026 legislative session. According to JD Supra, the General Assembly approved several property tax changes, including a new homestead exemption, optional rather than mandatory 10-year interior inspections by assessors, and a rule that deadlines falling on weekends or holidays will be treated as timely if filed the next business day. The same report says Hartford was also given permission to delay its October 1, 2026 revaluation by one year, while certain towns were allowed extra time for exemption applications. Business groups are weighing a session they describe as mixed. The Connecticut Mirror reports that the legislature expanded the research and development tax credit for small businesses and created a small-business concierge at the Department of Economic and Community Development, both of which were welcomed by employers. At the same time, the article says business advocates remain concerned about new labor mandates, warehouse rules, and state artificial intelligence regulations that could raise compliance costs and affect hiring. In government and politics, the session’s final days produced several major policy moves. Connecticut Mirror reports that lawmakers advanced AI and consumer data privacy legislation after revisions that softened some earlier concerns, and Governor Ned Lamont signaled support for the changes. Business leaders still warn the new rules could affect innovation, while supporters say the state is trying to balance growth with consumer protection and worker rights. At the local level, communities are still making land-use and planning decisions. In Columbia, the town has scheduled a public hearing on its draft Plan of Conservation and Development for May 26, according to the town’s planning and zoning commission, giving residents one more chance to weigh in before a vote. Education officials are also active, with the Connecticut State Board of Education continuing its 2026 meeting schedule on CT.gov, where issues affecting districts such as Hartford and Bridgeport remain on the agenda. On the weather front, no major statewide storm has recently dominated headlines in the available reports, though Connecticut is entering the season when severe thunderstorms and flooding become more likely. Looking ahead, listeners should watch for Governor Lamont’s action on the new tax measures, the rollout of the AI and labor laws, and continued local budget and planning decisions across the state. Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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