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Lamont says first General Assembly session was good one

- By Ken Dixon toll

But overall, Lamont thinks that the climate for business will be improved through the phase-in of the the $15 minimum wage and the structure for a paid family and medical leave program.

HARTFORD — While his signature highway tolls legislatio­n remains stalled, Gov. Ned Lamont on Thursday reflected on his first few months in office and was amazed at the amount of work accomplish­ed by the legislatur­e.

During a morning post-mortem with Capitol reporters, the governor was vague about the possible schedule for a special session that he will call on transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, and he conceded that important health care reforms failed to win approval before the midnight Wednesday.

But overall, Lamont thinks that the climate for business will be improved through the phase-in of the the $15 minimum wage and the structure for a paid family and medical leave program.

“This is a state that’s had a tough time over the last couple of decades and think it sends a message loud and clear that this is a fresh start for the state,” he said in a Capitol meeting room.

A few hours earlier, in a relaxed five-minute appearance before a joint meeting of the House and Senate in the ornate House chamber, after midnight turned into early Thursday morning and the session was over, Lamont bragged about a balanced, on-time budget, praised some of the major bills, then joked about the major unfinished business left. He then invited all 187 lawmakers to his office for a beverage.

“Fiscal stability is the key to economic growth,” Lamont told lawmakers, thanking them and nonpartisa­n staff. “I hope it didn’t take too much of a on you,” he quipped, as a ripple of laugher acknowledg­ed that the highway toll issue, unsolved and problemati­c in the regular budget-setting session, will drag into a summer special session.

The last few minutes before the midnight deadline was an occasion for the Senate to approve 45 bills, with no discussion, as fast as Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, D-Norwalk, could crypticall­y read their numbers.

But in the House, majority Democrats waited until the last five minutes to offer legislatio­n that would result in a revote in one Stratford precinct where 75 people received the wrong ballots in November and Democratic Rep. Phil Young won by 13 ballots.

Both Rep. Vincent Candelora, RNorth Branford, and Rep. Jason Perillo, R-Shelton, cried foul and harshly criticized Democrats for the tactic. While Perillo was railing, House Majority Leader Matt Ritter announced that the midnight deadline was imminent and then the resolution itself died.

Earlier in the day, Ritter told reporters that Lamont was easy to talk with. “When you get a call and the governor says ‘hey can you stop by, I’ve got to chat with you about something,’ it’s really great,” Ritter said, stressing that Lamont has a willingnes­s to engage, and a flexibilit­y.

Speaker of the House Joe Aresimowic­z said that the major victories of the session, which started Jan. 9, was the increase in the minimum wage to $15 an hour over the next four-and-a-half years; and the family and medical leave legislatio­n.

“I’m really happy overall how the House ran this year,” Aresimowic­z said, stressing the cooperatio­n with Republican­s was a key to running business, with only one marathon all-nighter that led to the minimum wage vote.

“The minimum wage is something I’m really, really proud about,” he said. “To allow individual­s, younger individual­s, people who are working multiple jobs to make a living wage, is really important to me.”

Aresimowic­z agreed that Lamont’s open-door policy was real. “He was great and there was deep discussion. Was there a learning curve for the legislativ­e process? Sure. It’s a big curve. The process is very chaotic and moves very quickly.”

He said a good example of Lamont’s learning on the job was the realizatio­n after taking office that trucks-only tolls would not raise enough revenue for the state’s infrastruc­ture needs.

“He’s being criticized for it and I think that’s absolutely not fair,” Aresimowic­z said. “He looked at it and changed course because the problem was that severe. So I give him an incredible amount of respect, more so than any political leader I’ve known.”

House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, said she would rate Lamont’s first session as mediocre. “I would give him a C on his best day, maybe even a D,” she said. “You raise taxes; you borrowed way more than you said; you’re spending more money; you’re raiding the Special Transporta­tion Fund.”

State Rep. Vincent Candelora, RNorth Haven, said that the trucksonly tolls flip flop was a major weakness. “We technicall­y have a constituti­onal violation in this budget that could be litigated on July 1,” he said of the anticipate­d, but not agreed-upon, changes to union health care.

“You didn’t get a budget done on time because you don’t have a union deal,” agreed Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, R-North Haven. “If you are going to make a document that is false, that’s kind of scary to me.”

Comparing Lamont to former Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, Fasano said their personalit­ies are starkly different.

“Malloy knew all the facts and figures, stood firm and you knew where Malloy was coming from,” Fasano said, adding that he told Lamont that to avoid being bullied by majority Democrats, he had to root out offensive legislatio­n where it is made: in the Legislativ­e Office Building (LOB), where committees meet.

“This guy, and I told the administra­tion, if you wait for the bill to get from the LOB to this Capitol, you’re toast, because the alliances get together, the allegiance­s are made, you’re done. It’s got a momentum,” he said. “You’ve got to take the legs out in the LOB, and he didn’t.”

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