Insurance Innovation Under Hartford Spotlight This Month

Insurance Innovation Under Hartford Spotlight This Month

Hartford has no intention of giving up the title of Insurance Capital of the World. And while corporate mergers, relocations, and more than a year of COVID dislocations, the industry is looking forward, not backward. That is particularly evident with the return of the 2021 Innovation Challenge, a chance get a glimpse of what’s next for the industry, locally and beyond.

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Fewer Students in Connecticut Schools Again This Year; 6th Consecutive Annual Drop

Fewer Students in Connecticut Schools Again This Year; 6th Consecutive Annual Drop

The current school year, which began last fall amidst the coronavirus pandemic, appears to have had a dramatic impact on the number of children in Connecticut schools, according to preliminary data released by the Connecticut Department of Education, continuing a trend of fewer students that has continued annually for the past six years.

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Students, STEM Professionals Honored by Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering

Students, STEM Professionals Honored by Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering

Connecticut’s most talented young scientists and engineers were honored by the Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering (CASE) at its 46th Annual Meeting last week, part of a virtual program that recognized 32 newly elected 2021 members of the Academy, along with 36 members elected in 2020.

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Childhood Disability Rate Increases Across U.S., Connecticut Slightly Higher

Childhood Disability Rate Increases Across U.S., Connecticut Slightly Higher

The childhood disability rate in the United States was higher in 2019 than in 2008, according to newly released data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The Census Bureau concludes that “disability does not appear to affect all children equally.” Connecticut’s childhood disability rate was slightly higher than the national average in the latest data, as was the Northeast region of the U.S.

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Drive-Thru Event Recognizes Foster Care Families, Particularly Amidst Pandemic

Drive-Thru Event Recognizes Foster Care Families, Particularly Amidst Pandemic

A first-time, drive-through event for foster families will be held at The Village for Families & Children in Hartford, as part of Foster Care Awareness Month. Participants include Village staff and dozens of foster care families participating in the Therapeutic Foster Care Program, which provides nurturing foster homes for children ages 6-18 who have been exposed to trauma. Village staff will distribute food, supplies and gifts to the foster parents and children.

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Racism is a Public Health Crises, CT Senate Declares

Racism is a Public Health Crises, CT Senate Declares

The Connecticut State Senate – with bipartisan support - has passed Senate Bill 1, which takes several key steps to address systemic racism in Connecticut. This bill declares racism a public health crisis; creates a cross-sector commission to set goals and create a strategic plan for dismantling systemic racism as it impacts public health; defines the doula profession; standardizes how race, ethnicity, and language data are collected; and takes other steps to address the impacts of racism on health in our state.

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Call for Comprehensive Reform of Childcare, Post-COVID

Call for Comprehensive Reform of Childcare, Post-COVID

Connecticut Voices for Children (CT Voices) released a report that examines the structural barriers to access, quality, and stability of early child care in Connecticut. The report, “The State of Early Childhood During the COVID-19 Pandemic,” offers six short-term and seven long-term recommendations Connecticut can use to reimagine the child care industry as an essential public service and infrastructure, in order to address the longstanding barriers to child care and industry stability that have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

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As Academic Year Concludes, Addressing Anti-Asian Racism Remains Priority

As Academic Year Concludes, Addressing Anti-Asian Racism Remains Priority

As the collegiate semester winds down and in-person commencement ceremonies hint at a return to near-normalcy, the past year, and particularly the past few months, have ongoing ramifications for the University of Connecticut’s Asian-American community, as is true on campuses and in communities across the country.

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