Days
after the legislative session began, nearly 200 people filled the
Logislative Office Building with Connecticut For All coalition to
present the 2025 Equity Agenda - a roadmap for Connecticut to lift up
all of our community members. Lfocusing on different specific needs,
they all emphasized the need to take down the roadblacks of fiscal
austerity that are harming the people of Connecrticut despite a large
budget surplus.
The
coalition's recommendations include introducing fair tax structures
that ask the wealthiest residents to contribute their fair share
while expanding support for working families through targeted
investments in education, affordable housing, and healthcare. The
2025 Equity Agenda builds on years of grassroots advocacy, with
community, faith, and labor leaders at the forefront of this growing
movement.
“Year
after year we have returned to this building to do the work of the
people. We return inside of a
rhetorical
milieu of equity,” said State Senator Gary Winfield, “Because we
continue to fail to make the necessary investments in the very
programs that hit the root causes of inequity- housing, education,
healthcare, public services those words serve only as platitudes with
little if any meaning in the lives of the many who need them to be
our call to action. We cannot continue to allow our upside down tax
structure and irresponsible fiscal
policies
dictate our investment decisions and the chance at a better
Connecticut.”
“Our
constituents elected us this past November to be their voice at the
Capitol as we fight for the critical investments
our communities need, investments that have been drastically
underfunded for too long,” State Rep
Jillan Gilchrest, of West Hartford emphasized. “The legislature has
the power - and numbers - to make bold changes to our fiscal policies
and tax system so that they work for all of Connecticut and move our
economy forward in a positive growth direction,” she added.
“The
Equity Agenda represents a roadmap to a better future for Connecticut
- one where workers are valued and
protected, where families have the keys they need to thrive, and
where our state’s economic health is directly
tied to the strength in our communities,” said Rob Baril, President
of SEIU 1199, “For too long, working
families have had to make difficult choices while our state siphons
off billions and protects the ultra-wealthy
and corporations from paying their fair share. It’s past time for
our legislators to stand up and address
the issues that we elected them to fix.”
“Despite
undocumented immigrants contributing $406 million in annual
contributions to state and localtaxes,
most of us cannot see a doctor because of our status,” said
Valentina Diaz, member of CTStudents
for a Dream and HUSKY For Immigrants, “Connecticut residents should
be seeing our taxdollars
invested in the programs that support our communities, not paying an
old debt at an irresponsible rate
while watching our urgent needs multiply. How many more of us have to
needlessly suffer from preventable
illnesses and conditions until we see the modest investment we need?”
“The
reality is, the low pay makes it hard to attract and retain staff. I
often work 16-hour shifts because there simply
isn’t enough staff,” said Meriam Robinson, LPN, a Nursing Home
Worker at Trinity Health,
“My coworkers and I are burned out, mentally and physically. I’ve
gone from being someone who never
struggled with depression to now relying on medication just to cope
with the stress of this job. And yet, I
advocate for my residents, ensuring they get the food, care, and
resources they need, because if I don’tstand
up for them, who will?”
“Despite
dedicated educators, the limited resources, large caseloads, and
insufficient training widened my son’s
achievement gap while he attended New Haven Public Schools,” said
Jennifer Graves, VP of the New
Haven Federation of Teachers, Parent & Special Education Teacher,
“Even though his school
wanted him to succeed, they could not afford to do more. When we
transferred to our home district inNorth
Haven, he gained access to specialized programs and smaller classes
that transformed his schoolexperience,
displaying a stark disparity between two districts just 10 minutes
apart. Zip codes must no longer determine
educational opportunities.”
“When
looming cuts to federal funding, and an over-reliance upon fiscal
guardrails threaten our statebudget,
one common-sense solution would represent a direct investment in our
people – without a dollar being
spent,” said Zach Postle, leader with the CT Tenant Union, “For
over 40 years, Connecticut’s“Just
Cause” law has prohibited no-fault evictions against renters who
are 62 years or older, or have a disability,
and live in a building with 5 or more units. The simple question is,
why don’t we extend these protections
to everyone?”