Connecticut Post

Thumbs up, thumbs down

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Thumbs up to the first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine being administer­ed in Connecticu­t. Health care profession­als at Hartford Hospital were among the first nationwide to receive the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccinatio­n as shipments arrived across the nation on Monday after the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the vaccine for emergency use Friday night. People on the front lines of the health crisis and those who are most vulnerable will rightly have the first access to the vaccine, which should roll out for everyone over the course of 2021. It’s not the end of the road by any means, but finally people can start to see better news on the horizon.

Thumbs down to the sobering data about hospitals in the state reaching capacity in the final days of autumn. Stamford Hospital and St. Mary’s Hospital in Waterbury were at 90 percent total occupancy at the end of last week, as COVID numbers continue to rise in the state. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention pointed to Connecticu­t at the top of the list in the nation of the number of daily cases per 100,000. Officials can only theorize that Thanksgivi­ng gatherings and returning college students fueled the additional cases, a cautionary tale about holiday plans for the weeks ahead.

Thumbs up to Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, who is stepping down from his longtime position to take a job in the Lamont administra­tion. Not only is Boughton a good choice to serve as commission­er of the Department of Revenue Services, but the move shows the kind of cross-party cooperatio­n that is all too rare in politics today. Boughton is a Republican, and has served in his position since 2001, making him his city’s longest-serving mayor. He is leaving the job to work in the administra­tion of Ned Lamont, a Democrat. Had primary voters acted differentl­y in 2018, Boughton and Lamont could have faced each other in that year’s gubernator­ial election. Now they will work together.

Thumbs down to Connecticu­t being cited in a new report for underser ving minority students. An update on the execution of the federal Ever y Student Succeeds Act drew the opinion of one expert that “Connecticu­t is taking the flexibilit­y in the E SSA law to the extreme.” State officials bristled at the accusation, but it’s a solid argument that more than nine schools in the state need more support for groups such as Black and Latino students. No data is perfect, but ever yone needs to be on the same page regarding classroom equality.

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