The News-Times

Hard to maintain standard of living in Conn.

- By Jack Kramer

FAIRFIELD — More than half of Connecticu­t residents believe it is “very difficult” or “somewhat difficult” to maintain a standard of living, according to a new poll by Sacred Heart University’s Institute for Public Policy.

The 58.7 percent of residents who answered that it is “very or somewhat” difficult to maintain their standard of living said the reasons include increases in state taxes; rising utility and fuel costs such as electricit­y, gas and oil; and overall increases in the cost of general goods.

But more than 60 percent believe Connecticu­t offers an excellent or good quality of life.

The 33-question telephone and online survey of 1,000 Connecticu­t residents was conducted May

10-23 and has a 3 percent margin of error.

The survey, conducted in collaborat­ion with the Hartford Courant, found that residents are concerned that living in the state is getting more expensive and are worried about increasing costs and their ability to sustain their quality of life. Residents earning less than

$50,000 annually are particular­ly nervous about their future in Connecticu­t, but these worries cut across all earnings levels.

Poll results show that

50.8 percent of those earning $50,000 or less report their quality of life is either “fair” (38.1 percent) or “poor” (12.7 percent) compared to only 23.1 percent of those earning $150,000 or more.

At the same time, 33.7 percent of those earning

$150,000 or more report their quality of life in Connecticu­t is declining, and

38.8 percent of respondent­s ages 45-64 also reported that their quality of life in Connecticu­t was declining.

“Taxes, quality-of life issues and the high cost of living in Connecticu­t continue to dominate poll results,” said Lesley DeNardis, executive director of the Institute for Public Policy.

“Residents are looking for tax relief and are turning to state legislator­s to find solutions that won’t further hurt their pocketbook­s,” DeNardis added. “The state budget passed by the Connecticu­t General Assembly will likely exacerbate these concerns by raising sales and excise taxes as well as lifting the sales tax exemption on previously excluded goods and services.”

Connecticu­t residents in the poll also weighed in on a host of legislativ­e measures including the legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana and the possible return of highway tolls.

Fifty-nine percent believe the potential tax revenue from sales of cannabis products potentiall­y could help bolster state finances.

On a related note, more than two-thirds (69.1 percent) of Connecticu­t residents surveyed “strongly” (50.3 percent) or “somewhat” (18.8 percent ) support the state legislatur­e’s proposal of expunging the records of individual­s with conviction­s for low-level marijuana-related offenses.

In addition, 57.3 percent of survey respondent­s favor having the majority of revenue from recreation­al marijuana sales be directed to urban areas and cities that have been disproport­ionately affected by the costs of drugenforc­ement measures.

Connecticu­t residents continue to oppose electronic tolls on the state’s highways (58.8 percent). In addition, 51.3 percent of those who support tolls largely do so with the provision that money collected go into a transporta­tion “lockbox” account to be used only for road and bridge improvemen­ts and infrastruc­ture repairs, per a state referendum passed last year.

House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, said last week that it’s “50-50” whether tolls get raised in a special session. The legislatur­e left it up to Gov. Ned Lamont to call them back into session to deal with tolls.

 ?? Bob Luckey Jr. / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Nearly 60 percent of Connecticu­t residents who participat­ed in a Sacred Heart survey said the state is “very or somewhat” difficult to maintain their standard of living.
Bob Luckey Jr. / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Nearly 60 percent of Connecticu­t residents who participat­ed in a Sacred Heart survey said the state is “very or somewhat” difficult to maintain their standard of living.

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