New England is no stranger to cold winters or snowstorms, but even the most seasoned residents of the Northeast would be hard-pressed to remember a series of winter storms like this year brought.
Prompted by poses struck by candidates for the Republican nomination for governor, the Hartford Business Journal asked its readers recently: “Can Connecticut realistically eliminate the state income tax and produce a balanced state budget?” Two-thirds of the readers who responded answered “no.”
There's much to accomplish in the coming months, but overseers of a state-created retirement plan for private-sector employees hope to begin enrolling at least some Connecticut workers by January, a year later than originally hoped.
Government officials in a number of Connecticut cities and towns have long wanted to broaden access to faster internet speeds to spur economic development and make their local communities more attractive places to live and work.
George Kyriacou, who is retiring in December as president and CEO of Gaylord Specialty Healthcare, says his current job has served as the pinnacle of a long career in health care.
Q&A talks with Joseph Gianni, Bank of America's president for the Greater Hartford market, about artificial intelligence and other technology reshaping the financial services industry.