Cómo medio de comunicación estatal Connecticut Public se enfoca en contar las historias de la población en Connecticut, incluyendo la representación de las comunidades latinoamericanas. Aquí te presentamos algunos reportajes que han impactado a los hispanos en el estado.
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Connecticut Public’s role as statewide public media is to tell the stories of the people of Connecticut. We can’t do this without representing our Latino communities in the state. Here are some stories that have impacted Latinos in Connecticut.
Have story ideas or news you want us to cover? Email us at noticias@ctpublic.org.
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The Carmona family was welcomed to their new home during a home dedication ceremony in Hartford Thursday.
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The Food and Drug Administration approved selling Narcan, a leading naloxone product, without a prescription. Connecticut was among the first states to expand access to naloxone by training pharmacists as prescribers.
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The Environmental Protection Agency's "good neighbor" rule aimed at reducing pollution in the Midwest and South will impact air quality in Connecticut.
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The women were recognized for contributions that included providing meals to the sick, helping repatriate the remains of immigrants in Connecticut back to their countries and community activism.
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As Connecticut continues to diversify and the legislature grapples with how to implement early voting, people in the Latin American community share their aspirations.
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CT's Black and Puerto Rican Caucus has identified “four key pillars,” and various members are sponsoring bills supporting these objectives.
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Advocates said the March for Life rally is designed to send a message to Connecticut state lawmakers during the legislative session. Abortion remains legal in Connecticut; the right to an abortion was codified in state law in 1990.
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One bill, co-authored by Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, focuses on safety and gives children and parents greater control over what online content can be viewed.
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Urban farmers in Hartford hope to get approval from the city to transform vacant lots into community green space.
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The 2023 Community Wellbeing Index from DataHaven shows disparities in health outcomes from county to county, city to city, and within the same ZIP code – sometimes just two blocks apart.
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A new bill is generating support from Hartford’s North End advocates who are seeking systemic changes after what they’ve described as years of sewage and flooding problems in their community.
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A new federal program has begun training everyday Americans to privately sponsor refugees coming to the U.S. "Welcome Corps" is largely modeled on a refugee resettlement program in Connecticut.