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The Day - Wheeler Class of 2021 made lemonade out of lemons - News from southeastern Connecticut

The Day - North Stonington residents approve items at first hybrid town meeting - News from southeastern Connecticut

North Stonington    About 120 residents voting from home and in person, approved six items Monday night during the town s first hybrid town meeting. About two-thirds of residents cast ballots from home and the other third voted in person at the Wheeler School Gymnatorium, where the meeting was held. On Tuesday, First Selectman Mike Urgo said he thought the meeting went well and participation was above average for a town meeting without a controversial issue or major expenditure.  Urgo said some residents said they appreciated having the option to participate from home. More participation is a good thing, he said.  I definitely think this is the wave of the future.

The Day - North Stonington approves items at region s first hybrid town meeting - News from southeastern Connecticut

The Day - North Stonington approves items at region s first hybrid town meeting - News from southeastern Connecticut
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The Day - Cities, towns set to receive COVID aid windfall, contemplate how to spend it - News from southeastern Connecticut

It’s one thing to approve $1.9 trillion in American Rescue Plan aid for the country, including $65.1 billion for its 19,000 municipalities. It’s another to sort out how all those cities, towns and villages can spend the money. The federal largesse, meant to mitigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, will funnel $2.6 billion to municipalities in Connecticut, including $1.6 billion for general government and $1 billion for schools. The general government portion includes $870 million in aid to cities and towns and $691 million for counties, which, because there is no county government in the state, will be distributed to municipalities on a per capita basis.

The Day - Residents, officials oppose solar farm proposed in North Stonington - News from southeastern Connecticut

North Stonington   A Tennessee company is seeking approval from the Connecticut Siting Council to install 28,971 solar panels on one-third of the 157 acres of forested land it owns off Route 184 west of Boombridge Road. A subsidiary of Silicon Ranch Corp., which is based in Nashville and operates 135 solar facilities in 15 states, plans to clear 47 of the 157 residential zoned acres for the panels, which would measure 6 feet, 10 inches by 3 feet, 5 inches. The site comprises five lots, one of which is north of Route 184 and the other four to the south of the road. The panels would generate 9.9 megawatts of electricity and the power would be sold to Eversource and United Illuminating. Silicon Ranch officials say the project will not only generate clean, renewable energy at a stable price but create temporary construction jobs and generate tax revenue for the town. Silicon Ranch also uses a procedure called Regenerative Energy, in which it partne

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