2034 Goals Get Clearer
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| Aug 1, 2024 1:23 pm |What will New Haven look like in ten years? On Tuesday night, Vision 2034 hosted its fourth workshop to help answer this question.
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| Aug 1, 2024 1:23 pm |What will New Haven look like in ten years? On Tuesday night, Vision 2034 hosted its fourth workshop to help answer this question.
A rehab facility fired Alder Ron Hurt as a therapist after a months-long sexual and romantic relationship between him and a patient came to light.
Continue reading ‘Alder Fired From Drug Rehab Job After Sexual Relationship With Patient’
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| Jul 26, 2024 3:42 pm |A former city housing official will spearhead new efforts to convert blighted properties into affordable housing through a quasi-public land bank.
The city is on track to forgive over $10,000 of interest on the city’s last non-pornographic movie theater owner’s unpaid tax bills it left behind when it left town.
Continue reading ‘Fleeing Theater Gets Going-Away Tax Present’
Composting for up to 20 schools. Energy upgrades for over 200 homes. Bike education for every third grade student. Four hundred new street trees.
Those are among the plans for a potential $20 million federal grant to build out New Haven’s climate resilience infrastructure.
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| Jul 23, 2024 9:03 am |A digital Water Street billboard and a series of Shubert Theatre Playbills might soon feature ads from the Livable City Initiative — as part of the city’s new marketing strategy to spread awareness of its housing and anti-blight resources.
One hundred and sixty eight more apartments took a big step closer to coming to Wooster Square, after the project’s new co-development team won permission to modify a plan last approved in 2021.
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| Jul 18, 2024 3:19 pm |A green, landscaped, public-welcoming entry point to Yale’s northeastern campus is coming to Science Hill — as part of a Yale Bowl-sized redevelopment project, including a massive new lab and classroom building, newly approved by the City Plan Commission.
Continue reading ‘Science Hill Build-Up Cleared For Takeoff’
City Plan commissioners approved a plan to convert up to 65,000 square feet of industrial space on Lenox Street into self-storage units — after deciding that that controversially quiet use fit better at a former factory in the Heights than at a former factory in Newhallville.
A new indoor track, roof, locker rooms, and scoreboard are all one step closer to coming to the Floyd Little Athletic Center — as alders endorsed accepting nearly $8.8 million in state funds to make those planned improvements a reality.
Continue reading ‘$8.8M In Repairs Readied For Floyd Little’
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| Jul 17, 2024 9:35 am |Dr. Ann Garrett Robinson knows how to advocate for a street corner name. In 2022, she made sure that New Haven’s first known Black resident, Lucretia, would have a place among official city signage.
On Monday, she returned to City Hall to join 20 friends and neighbors in calling for a corner of her own.
Continue reading ‘Neighbors Turn Out For "Dr. Robinson Way"’
(Updated) As a group of unhoused activists on Rosette Street held a press conference denouncing the city’s bid to shut down their backyard tiny homes, a state marshal arrived with a cease-and-desist letter from the Elicker administration — ordering the group to vacate the “illegal” dwelling units in 24 hours.
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| Jul 10, 2024 11:45 am |Highway drivers won’t get to enjoy / be distracted by another electronic billboard by the Q Bridge, now that the zoning board has turned down an Ohio-based firm’s outdoor advertising application.
Former city Chief Administrative Officer Michael Carter is back in town to do the work of the Board of Education’s suspended chief of operations (COO), at least for the next three months.
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| Jul 8, 2024 9:09 am |Fewer syringes in public spaces.
An Ohio-based advertising firm seeking to erect another billboard by the Q Bridge has run into a “spectacular” roadblock, in the form of an expanded highway and a decades-old zoning map.
Continue reading ‘Billboard Builder Seeks "Spectacular" Relief’
Alders signed off on selling a long-vacant, city-owned duplex next to Yale New Haven Hospital for $6,000 to a local veterans housing nonprofit that plans to rehab the property into six affordable rentals.
New Haven Adult Education’s planned move from the Hill to Newhallville took a key step forward, as the zoning board cleared the way for the city to build a new 4,500 square-foot addition to the back of a derelict building on Bassett Street.
Liam Brennan’s elderly parents will be able to live just steps away from their grandchildren — while maintaining the independence of residing in their own detached home — now that the city’s zoning board has approved the conversion of the former mayoral candidate’s backyard garage into a two-story accessory dwelling unit (aka “ADU”).
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| Jun 28, 2024 10:20 am |A recent pair of resignations has left the city looking to fill two vacancies in a four-person program designed to combat overdoses by building relationships with people who use drugs and guiding them towards safe housing, medical care, and other supportive services.
Continue reading ‘OD Prevention Workers Sought After 2 Resignations’
The same hackers who stole $6 million from the city last year also obtained access to birth dates, Social Security numbers, financial account numbers, and other “personal information” of hundreds of city employees, retirees, and contractors.
Continue reading ‘Cyberattack Exposed "Personal Info" For 400+’
Two and a half years after the city adopted a law designed to require affordable housing to be built as part of New Haven’s market-rate construction boom, the city’s “Inclusionary Zoning” law hasn’t yet created a single new reduced-rent place to live.
Most of the 50 “IZ” affordable apartments approved so far appear to be indefinitely held up by the high cost of borrowing money — even as other, non-“IZ” affordable developments move ahead.
Continue reading ‘No "Inclusionary" Apartments Built So Far’
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| Jun 17, 2024 10:56 am |In order to operate a soon-to-be-renovated four-story hub of meals, healthcare, and gathering for unhoused clients, Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen (DESK) is going to need an elevator.
And in order to dig an elevator shaft, the organization first needs to shore up the foundation of the parking garage next door.
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| Jun 7, 2024 9:01 am |The leaky roof of 794 Dixwell Ave. will soon get fixed, with the help of $300,000 from the city, in time for a new all-boys charter school to open there in the fall.
Continue reading ‘Alders Fund Clifford Beers, Charter School Roof Repairs’
Two abandoned factory buildings in the Hill are each a step closer to revival as housing, after alders approved a tax break and a zoning change on Monday night.
Continue reading ‘Factories-To-Housing Tax Break, Rezoning OK'd’