The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Thumbs up, thumbs down

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Thumbs down to the still-unresolved crisis that has

led to a shortage of baby formula around the country, including in Connecticu­t. Studies have shown that women of color and lower-income families are more likely to use formula, and have been harder hit by the shortage. There are a variety of reasons, but when people have fewer financial resources and need to return to work soon after giving birth, formula is often a better solution. The nationwide shortage, then, has only exacerbate­d existing conditions. While the federal government has taken steps to alleviate the problem, shortages remain, and until they are solved will continue to make the job of raising a young child more stressful.

Thumbs up to Connecticu­t towns debating and

releasing plans for affordable housing. Thanks to a state law, every municipali­ty in the state needs to assess its housing situation and needs, and then release a plan for handing the ongoing affordabil­ity shortage. That’s a far cry from actually building the housing needed across Connecticu­t, but seeing where we are is a necessary first step. In recent months, towns and cities have been discussing their plans, allowing residents to see what the situation looks like and why so many consider it one of the state’s most pressing issues. The next step is taking concrete steps against the crisis.

Thumbs up to Connecticu­t Department of Energy and

Environmen­tal Protection bumping up starting salaries in hopes of luring more candidates for seasonal positions. While some state residents may not support increasing the salaries up to $17 an hour, it’s preferable to having to limit access to beaches, parks and campground­s. The challenge of finding summer help is not unique to Connecticu­t, but Memorial Day has passed and lifeguard jobs still need to be filled at Black Rock State Park in Watertown, Burr Pond State Park in Torrington, Indian Wells State Park in Shelton, Sherwood Island in Westport, Silver Sands State Park in Milford and Squantz Pond State Park in New Fairfield. The recruiting drive will continue through June 17.

Thumbs up

to COVID-19 transmissi­on showing signs

of slowing down in Connecticu­t. While we’ve still got a long way to go to return to the patterns seen before the recent spike, it’s encouragin­g to see the 1,137 daily cases over the most recent week drop from almost 1,600 over a sevenday period earlier in May. Additional­ly, the number of state residents hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 was more stable at the end of last week than it was in previous weeks. Such figures, of course, are skewed because more people are using at-home tests, the results of which are not typically reported. Still, after 27 months of living with COVID, we’ll take any positive signs we can get.

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