Vox Church will send its message from its new 27,000-square-foot anchor home in Branford
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From left; Vox Church Kids Director Maria Conrad of Plainville, Lead Pastor Justin Kendrick of Guilford, CFO Tom Holeva of West Haven and church member Charles Maynard of Madison break ground Sunday on a new church in Branford April 8, 2021.Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticut Media
BRANFORD The site where bowlers once scored strikes and spares is gone. In its place a church will rise to serve as an anchor for a growing congregation in Connecticut and beyond.
Vox Church, a nondenominational Christian group that launched as City Church in 2011 in New Haven, will build its first anchor location on Commercial Parkway, a 27,000-square-foot church where the congregation will be able not only to hold services, livestreaming them to its nine satellite churches, but have the space to hold ministry programs and meetings.
How the CARES Act Forgot America s Most Vulnerable Hospitals
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Municipal leaders urge Gov. Lamont to include PILOT in next biennial budget
Hartford s PILOT shortfall is indicative of the state s level of funding of the program.
On Friday, January 15, New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker and 27 of his counterparts, executive officeholders from across Connecticut, sent a letter advocating that Gov. Ned Lamont includes in his budget the necessary funding to implement a tiered Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) program. Here is the complete text:
Dear Governor Lamont,
As you continue to guide our state through the COVID-19 pandemic your budget proposal for the next biennium will be an essential part of the economic recovery of our state and the well- being of our residents. There is an opportunity to provide desperately needed funding to municipalities, support small businesses, prevent an increased property tax burden on our most vulnerable residents, and secure future tax revenue for the state.
How the CARES Act Forgot America’s Most Vulnerable Hospitals ProPublica 1/26/2021 by Brianna Bailey, The Frontier
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This article was produced in partnership with The Frontier, which is a member of the ProPublica Local Reporting Network.
A federal economic relief package passed by Congress in March promised to provide a lifeline for hospitals, particularly those in rural communities where many facilities struggled to survive even before the coronavirus pandemic.
But over the past 10 months, the distribution of more than $100 billion in CARES Act funding for health care providers has been plagued by a dizzying rollout and, at times, contradictory guidelines for how to use the funding.The result has been a patchwork of problems for rural hospitals, which were already at far greater risk of closure than other health care fa
How the CARES Act Forgot America’s Most Vulnerable Hospitals
COVID-19 relief was meant to give a lifeline to hospitals, especially the small, rural facilities that struggled to stay open before 2020. But in states like Oklahoma, problems created by confusing guidelines could cause harm long after the pandemic.
by Brianna Bailey, The Frontier
Jan. 26, 11 a.m. EST
Investigating the Business of Oklahoma’s Rural Hospitals
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.
This article was produced in partnership with The Frontier, which is a member of the ProPublica Local Reporting Network.
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