Battle over a proposed 'mansion tax' highlights CT's affordability issues
Alexander Soule
FacebookTwitterEmail
Martin Looney, D-New Haven, is sworn in as Senate President Pro Tempore during the of the start the legislative session held outside at the State Capitol, in Hartford, Conn. Jan. 6, 2021.Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticut Media
For East Hartford resident Torrina Evans, it’s about long, stressful nights spent figuring out how to make ends meet on the low pay she draws in disabilities services.
For Woodbury’s Deborah Schultz, it comes down to how much more she’ll have to shell out in retirement, dipping into a lifetime of earnings she and her husband saved over the years.