Michael, a wanted man carrying a loaded stolen gun, got to meet six of his new Dwight neighbors at once, in a back alley. Unfortunately for him, they were six rookie cops.
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Melissa Bailey |
Mar 3, 2014 2:21 pm
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Melissa Bailey Photos
Benjamin Kwakombe, Rehoboth Bitege, Aekrama Ahmed, and Johnae McFadden.
New Haven’s first female mayor told her story on one school stage — and a young understudy portrayed the same historic part on a second school stage across town.
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Gilad Edelman
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Oct 14, 2013 2:53 pm
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Paul Bass Photo
Barber Cotten: Dwight already has enough liquor stores.
“If I am not for myself, who will be for me?” —Hillel the Elder, c.110 B.C. – 10 A.D.
In her bid for a variance to sell beer at a grocery store on the corner of Edgewood and Orchard, Bethzaida Davila would have done well to heed Hillel’s famous directive to be one’s own advocate.
Current state of “repairs” Friday morning, with no crews in sight.
Thomas MacMillan Photo
Johnson: Waiting on the feds.
Yet another bureaucratic hurdle has blocked New Haven’s efforts to recapture control of a troubled housing complex before winter sets in: the federal government shutdown.
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Melissa Bailey
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Sep 27, 2013 8:20 am
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After spending three years building a principal training program, Katie Poynter has jumped into the principal’s seat herself, leading an effort to raise morale and dipping test scores at Amistad Academy Middle School.
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Allan Appel
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Sep 20, 2013 12:55 pm
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Allan Appel Photo
The city moved forward this week on a plan to acquire the troubled Dwight Garden Co-op and work with tenants to find someone to repair the ailing housing development — ideally before winter sets in.
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Thomas MacMillan
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Sep 3, 2013 8:20 am
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Thomas MacMIllan Photo
“Your current alderman voted to sell streets to Yale,” Greg Smith told a Dwight neighbor during a front-porch aldermanic election pitch. He vowed to bring “healthy debate” to the Board of Aldermen, to push back against the labor-backed super-majority that sold off High and Wall streets to plug a budget hole.
His opponent, incumbent Alderman Frank Douglass, said he’s part of a team that has brought needed voices to local government.
Just as New Haven was ready to start fixing the mess a developer made of a longtime housing co-op, a judge has halted a crucial tax foreclosure sale — and may have postponed any further action for at least three more months.
LCI’s Johnson: Failed developer won’t get a dime from city.
A tax auction? Or a sale to a developer chosen by weary tenants?
Erik Johnson is weighing those two options for rescuing a battered housing co-op — and prized piece of New Haven property — now that city talks have broken down with a failed developer.
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Allan Appel
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Jun 17, 2013 8:18 am
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Aldermanic musketeers Walker, Douglass, Hamilton.
Their wards overlap. They can practically signal to each other from their houses, which are not more than five blocks apart. Their issues overlap too: public safety, jobs, and youth opportunities.
So the three first-term Democrat aldermen — West River’s Tyisha Walker, Dwight’s Frank Douglass, and Beaver Hills’ Evette Hamilton — decided to join hands Friday afternoon to announce the kick-off of their reelection campaigns. As a team.
A high-stakes competition has broken out among developers — one of whom has teamed up with a just-retired city official, another with the son of a mayoral candidate — for the chance to redevelop the Dwight Gardens townhouses on Edgewood Avenue.
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Melissa Bailey
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May 13, 2013 8:09 am
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Thomas MacMillan Photo
Chapel West developer Randy Salvatore beat the Korean government in a battle for an empty lot — and pledged to follow through on a promise to save a historic home from destruction.