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Connecticut Giving Report 2019
CT Philanthropy Digest - July 2019
Response to Financial Challenges: Funder - Nonprofit Survey Report
Three Bills to Make Child Care More Affordable, Accessible
HARTFORD, CT -- Senate bills 931, 933, and 934 seek to ensure that affordability and accessibility do not stand in the way of families looking to provide this basic resource for their children.
CCP Policy Update: Bills That Would Have Levied Taxes on Nonprofits with Endowments - May 15, 2019
CCP Public Hearing Testimony Against "An Act Concerning Deposits in Lieu of Taxes"
CT Philanthropy Digest - April 2019
Want to Grow the Economy? Fix the Child Care Crisis (4/2/19)
Lamont: Private investors could fund toll start-up costs
CCP Policy Update (3/1/19)
Housing Vital to Reducing Recidivism for Returning Citizens
HARTFORD, CT -- Jay Williams, president of the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving, gives his perspective on recindivisim, talks about the Foundation's support of the new Reentry Welcome Center in Hartford and the Connecticut’s Commission on Equity and Opportunity's new report, and mentions a new documentary that "will help to bring the voices of returning citizens that are seldom heard to audiences."
CT Philanthropy Digest - February 2019
Lt. Gov. Bysiewicz Launches Connecticut Complete Count Committee to Help Prepare for 2020 Census
OEC Wins $8.5 M Federal Award to Advance Child Success
Despite Tax Changes, Charities Keep the Faith
HARTFORD, Susan Campbell writes about the possible effects the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act will have on charitable giving by individuals. She quotes CCP President Karla Fortunato and CCP's 2018 Connecticut Giving Report, and CCP Board Members Richard Porth, CEO of United Way of Connecticut, and Frances G. Padilla, president of Universal Health Care Foundation of CT.
CT Philanthropy Digest - December 2018
CT Philanthropy Digest - October 2018
What price do Connecticut residents pay for state and local government?
HARTFORD, CT -- Conventional wisdom is that the total price charged by the state and its local governments in Connecticut is one of the most burdensome in the country. A common measure upon which this conclusion is based is the total amount we residents pay in state and local taxes, relative to our aggregate personal income, i.e., our capacity to pay. On this basis, the Tax Foundation tells us that Connecticut ranks either first or second highest in the nation, depending on which of two analytic models it uses. However, taxes are not the only price paid to governments. Residents also pay a number of fees and other charges, separate and distinct from taxes. By Bill Cibes