A Wooster Square woman in an ongoing battle with her landlord will have to pay an extra $150 a month in rent — more than she’d like, less than the landlord sought.
In setting that rate, fair rent commissioners waded into a dispute that involved a promise to vacuum common areas in return for lowered rent, what prices renters should pay these days in gentrifying Wooster Square … and whether the tenant is wrecking a landlord’s valuable investment. Or whether her landlord is wrecking her life.
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Thomas Breen |
Dec 16, 2020 10:53 am
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At the same time that Yale New Haven Hospital workers received the first local dosages of a Covid-19 vaccine, housing advocates in Wooster Square broke ground on a project to help solve “another, longer standing curse in our society, one that gets much less attention” than the novel coronavirus.
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Brian Slattery |
Dec 15, 2020 11:04 am
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Dust Control’s “Your Idea of Success” starts with a churning guitar, a growling bass, before the drums begin to propel everything forward, and the singer hollers out his truth. It’s the kind of music that needs and finds a home in every city, and as the title of the album — “Live” at Never Get To Be Cool — Dust Control found its home at Never Get to Be Cool, or NG2BC, a DIY music space in the Wooster Square neighborhood that gave up its lease at the beginning of December, about a week after “Live” was recorded.
Dust Control’s album thus marks the end of a run for NG2BC, of over two years, about 150 shows, and who knows how many recording projects.
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Laura Glesby |
Nov 18, 2020 12:37 pm
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When a new drop-off center for people transitioning out of prison comes to Wooster Square in January, the program will have some friendly faces — and even a few potential new collaborators — in the neighborhood.
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joel schiavone |
Oct 26, 2020 1:14 pm
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(Opinion) When I first came back to New Haven in 1971 I was told by everyone to focus on the problems of the poor and the disadvantaged. Forty years later I see the mood of the City seems not to have changed. Affordable housing is critically important but there are several much larger issues which need to be the focus of our discussions, all of which conclude making the project financially successful for all income classes.
The current controversy over the Coliseum site is focused strictly on affordable housing, a subject which, by itself, is a nonstarter.
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Allan Appel |
Oct 26, 2020 1:07 pm
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A plan to fill in the long-vacant block bounded by Chapel Street, Ives Place,and East and Wallace streets with two large warehouses has received unanimous approval from the City Plan Commission.
The now-empty site of a factory by the Mill River that sent products to Home Depot could host warehouses for the delivery side of Home Depot, or another delivery-focused company like Amazon, by the summer of 2021.
Eric Mastroianni was mid-speech about his military record and his top issues when Roseann Iuvone stopped him to say what she really cared about: Cars nearly running her over in her own neighborhood.
Developers raised shovels full of dirt in Wooster Square Tuesday to celebrate New Haven’s continued market-rate apartment boom — while affordable housing advocates headed to Woodbridge to take on decades-old laws that enable suburban segregation.
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Karen Ponzio |
Sep 24, 2020 8:56 am
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Pizza, A Love Story — the movie that director Gorman Bechard calls “the quintessential New Haven film” — returns to the city for another party in the Sally’s parking lot, this one to celebrate its release on DVD and streaming services on Tuesday, Sept. 29.
Neighbors succeeded in getting two wooden benches installed in a Wooster Square mini-park — and now in some cases are expressing second thoughts, because of who sits on them.
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Thomas Breen |
Sep 15, 2020 2:30 pm
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The state fined New Haven Public Schools $14,200 following an inspection of Metropolitan Business Academy that found faulty fume hoods, a broken eyewash station, obstructed fire extinguishers, and improper storage of hazardous chemicals in several of the Water Street high school’s laboratory classrooms.
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Brian Slattery |
Sep 2, 2020 8:38 am
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On a sunny day, the trees above the frames on the wall on Wooster Street dapple the art those frames contain. For the latest installment of Studio Duda’s outside art gallery — begun in May as a response to the Covid-19 pandemic — this interaction with nature is particularly apt.
New Haven’s market-rate apartment boom continued apace as four different projects that would add 51 new units of housing across town — including in former ground-floor commercial and office spaces — won key city sign-offs.
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Ko Lyn Cheang |
Aug 6, 2020 1:26 pm
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Adrian Huq never got the opportunity to hug their friends or say goodbye to their teachers upon graduating this past June. It took a few days for it to hit that they would never be returning to school after students were forced to make a hasty departure from the campus when the public health situation worsened in the Spring.
A New Haven church has temporarily closed its doors and transitioned back to virtual services after at least 10 congregants tested positive for the Covid-19 virus, amid a feared citywide uptick.
The outbreak occurred among members of Iglesia Jesus Rey De Gloria on Grand Avenue.
Wearing a bright blue mask emblazoned with the words, “Medicare for All,” Justin Paglino wandered among shoppers of healthful greens to pitch them on helping a Green candidate run Congress on a universal health care platform.
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Sophie Sonnenfeld |
Jul 15, 2020 4:41 pm
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For the next few months, parking around Wooster Square will be tighter than usual thanks to a United Illuminating (UI) construction project that began Monday.
With adjustments made for the pandemic, LEAP is running its annual free summer program this summer for 340 children and teens in part virtually, in part in-person.
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Sophie Sonnenfeld |
Jul 5, 2020 12:15 pm
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On Independence Day, 15 indigenous people gathered in Wooster Square Park by the stone pedestal that until 11 days earlier had supported a statue of Christopher Columbus.
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Brian Slattery |
Jul 1, 2020 10:48 am
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During the removal of the statue of Christopher Columbus in Wooster Square on June 24, there was a moment that crystallized what it was all about. As city workers secured the ropes around the statue to lift it off its pedestal, it occurred to a few in the crowd that it looked a lot like a lynching, and in that visual echo, they found some restitution.