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Malloy Seeks to Cut 25 State Boards, Commissions

The proposal will be included in the governor's legislative package for the upcoming 2012 regular session of the General Assembly.

 

Gov. Dannel Malloy announced on Tuesday a proposal to eliminate 25 of Connecticut's Boards and Commissions in an effort to shrink the size of its government, according to a statement released by his office.

“Over the years when these boards and commissions were first created by statute, most of them served a worthwhile purpose for their time, however many either no longer fit today’s needs, or their functions can be or already are served by another state body that already exists,” Malloy said in the statement. “It’s incumbent upon us from time-to-time to review and reconsider whether these state boards and commissions are still serving their original purpose, are duplicative, or have completed their tasks.”

The Adult Literacy Leadership Board, the Board of Directors of the Lower Fairfield County Conference/Exhibit Authority, the Child Daycare Council and the Student Financial Aid Information Council are among the boards and commissions on the list for elimination. (The complete list can be found in the statement released by Gov. Malloy's office.)

Malloy's proposal also includes two mergers: the Commission on Uniform Legislation into the Connecticut Law Revision Commission, and the Special Contaminated Property Remediation and Insurance Fund Advisory Board into the Brownfield Remediation Liability Workgroup.

Related Topics: Malloy and connecticut debt

Amo Probus

12:59 pm on Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Ho, ho!!
Malloy gets a jump on republicans that talk about shrinking government but do nothing once voted in...so starts the democratic wing of the tea party

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CDR West

9:31 pm on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Unless your koolade is laced with great economic insight, I should think we'd ALL welcome a "democrat wing" of what you refer to as the "tea party". Fiscal restraint is not a republican monopoly, dude.

Eric Cameron

7:53 am on Thursday, February 9, 2012

Makes for a great headline but does anyone know how much money this actually saves? I do not see anything referencing the estimated annual savings this will generate.

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CDR West

9:25 pm on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Nail head! This is either a bit of political flim flam or a mere (but sincere) "tidying-up" event. I suspect these "agencies" were dis-funded years ago which, while it makes good press, actually does clean up the organizational chart. Since I speak from ignorance of the state budget line items for these "bodies", I'd appreciate hearing from authoritative folks on the economic impact of the governor's initiative.

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