With the legislative session over and the governor signing - and even vetoing - bills almost daily, I wanted to highlight several, and provide a full list of new laws that take effect on July 1st.
You can find a list of all bills that passed the 2025 session by clicking the red button below.
The Cost of Energy
A major piece of legislation we took up concerned the high cost of energy in our state.
Senate Bill 4 is a comprehensive plan that creates savings of more than $100 million in the public benefits, places $100 million of Covid debt on bond, and securitizes storm costs which is projected to save about $90 million off the bill providing an overall decrease of about $300 million from ratepayers’ bills. It also requires the Office of Consumer Council (OCC) to study the public benefits charges.
While not the comprehensive energy policy overhaul I would have liked, I did support the bill and hope to see even more positive changes to help save you even more money in the future.
Housing and HB5002
Following an 11-hour debate and despite strong bipartisan opposition, the House passed an omnibus housing bill that has the potential to undercut local zoning and take away local control in favor of Hartford mandates.
House Bill 5002, priority legislation for the majority party, creates unrealistic fair share housing requirements for each town, requires town zoning to allow for as of right conversion of commercial lots for certain residential development, prohibits towns from including minimum parking requirements on certain housing developments, and allows developers to recover attorneys’ fees from towns in certain circumstances in 8-30g appeals, among other concerning provisions. It also combined various bills and sidestepped normal procedural requirements for consideration of legislation.
I voted against this bill because it’s another massive overreach from Hartford. Zoning requirements should be set locally, and not be forced onto our towns by Hartford mandates.
I'm pleased to note that Governor Lamont vetoed this bill, and I look forward to debating a substantially different proposal during a fall special session!
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