Something is just not right : New Haven mayor on tax-exempt property hitting $8.5 billion in city
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The entrance to Yale University s Old Campus across from the New Haven Green photographed on February 9, 2021.Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less
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The entrance to Yale University s Old Campus across from the New Haven Green photographed on February 9, 2021.Arnold Gold / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less
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Davenport College at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., Wednesday, March 10, 2021.Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less
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NEW HAVEN Here’s what Mayor Justin Elicker, city Budget Director Michael Gormany and others trying to balance the city budget are up against: tax-exempt property in New Haven now represents nearly 60 percent of the grand list on which the coming fiscal year’s budget is based, the city’s acting assessor says.
Something is just not right : New Haven mayor on tax-exempt property hitting $8 5 billion in city
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Safest place in the city : COVID-19 cases in nursing homes drop 89% as residents get vaccinated
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New federal data offers a glimmer of hope in what has been the darkest and deadliest corner of the pandemic.
The number of COVID-19 cases and deaths at America s nursing homes has dropped significantly since December as millions of vaccine doses have been shot into the arms of residents and staff.
The weekly rate of COVID-19 cases at nursing homes plummeted 89% from early December through the second week of February. By comparison, the nationwide case rate dropped 58% and remains higher than figures reported before late October.
Nursing home cases are at the lowest level since May, when the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services began requiring the nation’s more than 15,500 facilities to report cases each week. The 3,505 new cases reported the second week of February are nearly half as many recorded the week before and just one-tenth as many counted in one December week, the highest of the pandemic.