News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files
FIFA World Cup

State Senate votes on pressing bills during second day of special session

State senators voted on bills that were advanced in the House Wednesday, like curbing Immigration and Customs Enforcement activity, approving a bill to save Waterbury Hospital and the all-important affordable housing bill.

Mark Sudol

Nov 13, 2025, 5:00 PM

Updated

Share:

Top Stories

The Connecticut General Assembly continued its special session Thursday hitting some of the key issues of our state.

State senators voted on bills that were advanced in the House Wednesday, like curbing Immigration and Customs Enforcement activity, approving a bill to save Waterbury Hospital and the all-important affordable housing bill.

The Connecticut House approved a compromise housing bill on Wednesday that limits parking requirements and makes it easier to convert commercial properties to apartments.

House Democrats and Republicans were locked in a seven-hour debate during Wednesday's special session, arguing over a reworked bill that passed on mostly party lines.

Leaders of the state Senate weighed in on many of the issues facing our state right now.

"What we're seeing is and what we've seen since Jan. 20 is just chaos and confusion and cruelty to the American people and also to the people of the state of Connecticut. We've had a shutdown that is now the longest in our country's history," said state Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff.

"This is monumental what the Democratic Party in this state is looking to do in relation to zoning. This is statewide zoning. There is nothing more to it than that," said state Senate Minority Leader Stephen Harding.

Lawmakers voted Thursday to set setting aside half-a-billion dollars in case there's another federal government shutdown or we see other major cuts from Congress.

Gov. Ned Lamont can only spend that money on things like food benefits and home heating assistance.

All bills that passed the House are expected to pass the Senate. That means the bills could be on the governor's desk Friday for him to sign.

Top Stories

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices