The Day

Niantic & East Lyme Restaurant Week to span two weeks

More than 20 restaurant­s offering special deals from March 4 to 14

- By ERICA MOSER

Niantic Main Street is holding Niantic & East Lyme Restaurant Week from March 4 to 14 this year, featuring varying deals from more than 20 restaurant­s, pizzerias, cafes, delis and bakeries.

“With restaurant­s in need now more than ever due to the ongoing pandemic, Niantic Main Street felt the need to extend its annual Restaurant Week,” the organizati­on said in a news release. President Dan Walsh said this is “a great way to give thanks to the restaurant­s who keep serving through it all.”

Eateries are offering prix fixe menus, discounts and free items with purchases, and diners also can win $500, $250 or $50 in gift cards to participat­ing places.

To enter, download and print the passport at bit.ly/2PkkyGJ, visit any of the listed participat­ing eateries during Restaurant Week and get a passport stamp. Each stamp equals one entry for the grand prize drawing of a $500 gift card.

After getting food from as many restaurant­s as you’d like, drop the passport into a box at one of the restaurant­s. Winners will be randomly selected on March 22.

So, what restaurant­s are participat­ing, and what deals are they offering?

Castello of Niantic is offering a $21 prix-fixe menu including a glass

The Connecticu­t Coalition to End Homelessne­ss has announced that the Committee on Housing will hold a public hearing on Thursday, March 4, on S.B. 194, an Act Establishi­ng a Right to Housing, which is proposed legislatio­n “expressing the state’s commitment to progressiv­ely implement policies to respect, protect, and fulfill a right to affordable, decent, safe, and stable housing.”

“The bill would require state agencies and municipali­ties to consider the impact on the right to housing when adopting or revising policies and regulation­s,” the news release states. “Although the bill does not direct the state to take specific policy actions to achieve the right to housing, it declares the state’s intention to advance the right and requires considerat­ion of the right to housing in government­al decision making.”

Sarah Fox, director of policy at the Connecticu­t Coalition to End Homelessne­ss, called the bill “a first strong step in building not only the political will but also the proper policy stances to eliminate homelessne­ss.”

“We have an opportunit­y to make Connecticu­t the first state in our nation to recognize housing as a human right,” Fox added.

The bill also calls for a committee to analyze Connecticu­t’s approach and identify the needs of people who are more at risk of facing homelessne­ss or housing insecurity, the release states.

“Protected groups named specifical­ly in the legislatio­n include individual­s currently experienci­ng homelessne­ss; individual­s with disabiliti­es; individual­s with past or current involvemen­t in the criminal justice system; individual­s from historical­ly marginaliz­ed racial and ethnic groups; individual­s from historical­ly marginaliz­ed groups based on sexual orientatio­n, gender identity, or gender expression; survivors of sexual violence, domestic violence, dating violence, stalking and sexual traffickin­g; refugees and immigrants; and veterans,” the release states.

The proposal “would also designate an employee of the Department of Housing as the Housing Advocate, responsibl­e for collecting data on and responding to issues raised by DOH benefits recipients in regard to the right to housing,” the release states.

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