As the reporter for East Lyme, Old Lyme and Lyme, I cover the routine and the extraordinary aspects of small-town Connecticut life with the same level of care and attention to detail. This commitment is guided by the belief that the local level is where an informed citizenry can have the biggest impact. I enjoy telling the stories that make this area unique and asking the questions you need answered.
Elizabeth Regan
As the reporter for East Lyme, Old Lyme and Lyme, I cover the routine and the extraordinary aspects of small-town Connecticut life with the same level of care and attention to detail. This commitment is guided by the belief that the local level is where an informed citizenry can have the biggest impact. I enjoy telling the stories that make this area unique and asking the questions you need answered.
May 19—OLD LYME — Roughly 20 voters at Monday evening's annual budget meeting unanimously passed the town's $38.2 million budget and authorized semi-annual personal property tax payments. The scant attendance meant there was no threat to the 25-person maximum capacity limit announced in a handwritten sign on the meeting hall door due to COVID-19 restrictions. The meeting did not include a .
April 7, 2021
Forget the think tanks and ivory towers of academia, or the centers of commerce and finance – the clean energy future that we need will succeed, or fail, bit by bit, in contentious meetings in small rural townships across the midwest and heartland, where clean energy projects are sited, or not, thru the ordinances passed by earnest but often overwhelmed township boards and planning commissions, who must contend with opposition that are a minority, but very loud, shrill, and often deliberately intimidating.
The meetings get a little animated, as this unusually vivid narration of a recent meeting from the Greenville, Michigan, Daily News.
Gay Army veteran welcomes chance to reclaim medal bbc.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bbc.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Taxis waiting outside Bournemouth Station in the morning rush hour. .. CONTROVERSIAL plans by BCP Council to “deregulate” the taxi trade have moved a step forward after winning the support of its licensing committee. Members of the committee gave their backing to three new policies on Thursday, saying the scrapping of a cap on licence numbers would improve standards. But industry leaders said they were “horrified” at the proposal and that it could cost drivers tens of thousands of pounds. The policies are being drawn up as part of the council’s legal requirement to have a new conurbation-wide approach in place by April.