The Winsted Journal - January 30, 2015

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Turning Back the Pages - April 30, 2026

125 years ago —
April 1901

The Canaan creamery has been incorporated with a capitalization of $50,000 and is doing an extensive business. They have recently added the manufacture of fancy cheese for which they have large advance orders.

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Bears return to Salisbury

Bears return to Salisbury
Provided

Salisbury resident Tim Moyer captured recent black bear activity near his property, noting it was his first sighting of the season.

A second bear appeared briefly, he said, but “didn't stay around for too long.”

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AI tax targets the wrong signal

AI tax targets the wrong signal

As Connecticut lawmakers debate Senate Bill 515, they are asking a question more states will soon face: As artificial intelligence changes work, what happens to workers whose jobs change or disappear?

The bill would create a “workforce and productivity gap” surcharge. If a company’s payroll falls while each remaining worker appears to produce more, the state could impose a new tax. Companies that keep staffing steady and use “collaborative technology” meant to help workers rather than replace them would be exempt.

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America’s wartime economy

America’s wartime economy

In April, the White House asked Congress for $1.5 trillion more in defense spending for 2027. This is a 40% increase over the Pentagon’s spending in fiscal year 2026. Half the funding will come from cuts to education, housing, and health programs. Welcome to the war economy.

While the stock market celebrates another two-week extension of a cease-fire between the U.S. and Iran, the wars are not over. There will be more, in my opinion, and preparing for them will cost money. The Pentagon needs $4.5 billion to replenish its Tomahawk cruise missile stockpile. The Navy wants more boats, and the $250 million in planes and helicopters we lost rescuing two downed flyers need to be replaced.

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Sharon officials advance development plan, focus on downtown, walkability and safety

The Sharon Farm Market grocery store is a centerpiece of the Sharon Shopping Center, which was proposed as the town’s “uptown” commercial hub during an April 22 meeting.

Alec Linden

SHARON – Town officials are moving forward with an update to Sharon’s Plan of Conservation and Development (POCD), a state-mandated document that will guide land use and growth over the next decade. At an April 22 meeting, the Planning and Zoning Commission focused on economic development – one of three core priorities identified for the update, alongside conservation and farmland preservation, and housing.

Officials and residents centered their discussion on the importance of preserving the unique tranquility of the downtown, with plans to accentuate the existing infrastructure and improve walkability. Some even proposed the creation of a farmer’s market at Veterans Field.

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After punishing winter, towns confront costly road repairs

Cornwall highway department foreman James Vanicky, left, and David Dwyer from Seymour Sealing Service of Wallingford, check the viscosity of a layer of crack sealer during a 1.5-mile road resurfacing project on Dibble Hill Road last Friday.

Debra A. Aleksinas
After 38 years, you kind of know what’s under the roads. It’s like tree rings. You can track its history.

CORNWALL — Local road crews are tackling winter damage across the Northwest Corner, but with tight budgets, small staffs and rising costs, towns are feeling the strain as the spring repair season begins.

On a steep, narrow stretch of Dibble Hill Road, the smell of hot oil hung in the spring air as a crew worked methodically along the winding route, sealing over a winter’s worth of cracks and scars left behind by snowplows, ice and relentless freeze-thaw cycles.

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