In the Center for Education Reform's 2024 Parent Power Index, Connecticut secured the forty-third position, with an Overall Parent Power Index Score of 59.9%.
The average VA home loan amount in Connecticut during the first quarter of the fiscal year 2024 was $362,539, a 0.5% decrease from the previous quarter, according to the Veterans Affairs Home Loans Index.
Governor Ned Lamont signed a bill into law on May 21, 2024, prohibiting contributions by foreign nationals or entities to state and local ballot referenda.
With $362,539 in home loans issued, Connecticut ranked 24th in average loan amount for VA home loans in the first quarter of fiscal year 2024, according to the Veterans' Affairs Home Loans Index.
The VA issued four Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loans in Connecticut during the first quarter of fiscal year 2024, compared to seven loans the previous quarter, according to figures provided by the Veterans Affairs Home Loans Index.
There were 310 VA home purchases in Connecticut in the first quarter of the VA's fiscal year 2024, totaling $116.6 million in loans, according to figures provided by the Veterans Affairs Home Loans Index.
The VA issued four Interest Rate Reduction Refinance Loans in Connecticut during the first quarter of fiscal year 2024, according to the Veterans Affairs Home Loans Index.
There were 310 VA home purchase loans issued in Connecticut in the first quarter of the fiscal year 2024 totaling $116.6 million, according to figures provided by the Veterans Affairs Home Loans Index.
The U.S. Department of Veterans' Affairs (VA) issued 401 home loans totaling $145.4 million in Connecticut during the first quarter of the fiscal year 2024, according to the Veterans' Affairs Home Loans Index.
The average VA Purchase Loan amount for Connecticut in the first quarter of fiscal year 2024 was $376,189, according to figures provided by the Veterans Affairs Home Loans Index
Pro-Palestine protests at University of Connecticut is one of several demonstrations on college campuses across the country, with student groups organizing encampments, protests, and demonstrations at their schools in an attempt to force the universities and colleges to divulge and divest from any connections that benefit Israel.
As of April 2024, Connecticut experienced a 16.6% increase in prices of goods and services since January 2021, compared to the nationwide trend of a 19.9% increase.
Proponents of a legislative proposal that would exempt from public disclosure all research, data, and reports produced by public colleges and universities have adopted a strategy of attacking the messenger rather than the message — that is, the individual who represents the pro-government transparency group, the Connecticut Council on Freedom of Information.