Stamford Advocate

Lamont taps Boughton to lead infrastruc­ture planning

- By Liz Hardaway

Gov. Ned Lamont has designated state tax commission­er and former Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton as his senior infrastruc­ture advisor.

Boughton, the state Department of Revenue Services commission­er, will coordinate multiple agencies to administer funds from the Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act, Lamont’s office said Thursday.

Connecticu­t is expected to receive about $6 billion of the $1 trillion in allocation­s. Those funds will go toward transporta­tion improvemen­ts, internet access and other initiative­s.

While serving as Lamont’s senior advisor, Boughton will remain the state’s tax commission­er. Boughton was the mayor of Danbury for nearly 20 years before he resigned to become the tax commission­er in 2020.

“My experience as a mayor and commission­er have shown me the importance of whole-government collaborat­ion, and I look forward to working with my colleagues and other stakeholde­rs across the state to address infrastruc­ture needs, create good-quality jobs, and position Connecticu­t to make the most of this historic allocation of funds,” Boughton said.

Lamont said Boughton’s work will help transcend various state department­s.

“He’s going to be my special adviser to help tie all this together, so over the next five years, we don’t have 150 different small programs going on,” Lamont said in Meriden Thursday. “It ties together so we can make a transforma­tive difference going forward.”

He added that Boughton’s knowledge of local and state government­s will provide a “unique and necessary perspectiv­e that I know will be successful as we put these federal dollars to work from this historic bipartisan legislatio­n.”

While Boughton was mayor, he renamed Danbury’s sewage plant after comedian John Oliver. The “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” host poked fun at the Connecticu­t city, prompting the name change.

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