The Day

Internet outage postpones Capitol meetings

- By CHRISTOPHE­R KEATING

Key committee meetings were postponed and some work ground to a halt Tuesday at the state Capitol as the internet was knocked out unexpected­ly.

With no internet at the governor’s office, employees were using “hot spots’’ on their cell phones in order to check websites and obtain informatio­n. There was no direct impact on Gov. Ned Lamont, who was holding meetings in person and by telephone, a spokeswoma­n said.

The impact was widespread as the outage prevented the use of credit cards in the cafeteria at the Legislativ­e Office Building in Hartford. Customers were forced to use cash instead and a state employee said it felt like it was 1995 instead of 2023.

The outage inconvenie­nced 400 people who had been scheduled to testify in person or via Zoom at the housing committee public hearing on rent stabilizat­ion that is known as “cap the rent.’’ The proposal would impose a 4% rent cap on housing providers — causing both support and opposition. The meeting was eventually restarted by mid-afternoon, but some expected speakers had headed home by that time.

Confused state employees initially had no explanatio­n for the outage, but then the state Department of Administra­tive Services provided details.

“This morning a tripped electrical breaker at one of the state’s data centers has caused an unexpected widespread, on-going outage,’’ the department said. “Anyone operating on the state network has been impacted by slow or impaired connection. A cross-functional team under DAS’s Bureau of Informatio­n Technology Solutions (BITS) is working to diagnose and address the issue.’’

The BITS team was later credited with “quick solutionin­g’’ and restoring power that allowed activities — including the housing committee hearing — to resume.

By mid-afternoon, the administra­tive services department announced, “This issue has been resolved. Thank you for your patience on this matter, and to our BITS team for quick solutionin­g.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States