July 1, 2026

CT Construction Digest Wednesday July 1, 2026

Lamont signs law in Norwich to stop pay to contractors violating wages 

Matt Grahn

Connecticut is taking a step to make sure workers are paid fairly.

On June 30, Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont signed Public Act 26-17, which enables the State Comptroller to issue a stop work order and withhold state funds to contractors that are not properly paying their employees.

The bill was signed on the construction site for Greeneville Elementary School, which is one of the four new elementary schools being built in Norwich. The State of Connecticut is reimbursing the city for 80% of the project, and the law applies to “any place where the state is making a payment,” Lamont said.

Wage theft can take many forms

It matters because wage theft can take many forms, from money taken from base pay, to money not given in benefits, Kimberly Glassman, director of compliance and government affairs for the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 478, said.

Local 478 also has a presence in the Norwich school building project, with 10 to 20 union members working at each site daily, Glassman said.

What do state leaders think of the Greeneville site’s progress?

Lamont is impressed with how quickly the work is going.

“They told me that the walls went up in the last two weeks, so a lot of progress is happening,” he said.

During the bill signing, Norwich Mayor Swarnjit Singh touted the importance of using union labor and the value of project labor agreements.

“We are on time and on budget,” he said.

After the bill signing, Singh said its possible the Greeneville School building could be complete as soon as the first quarter of 2027, he said.

“They’re not wasting any time,” Singh said.

State Rep. Derrel Wilson attended the original Greeneville School as a kid, and still lives in Greeneville. He was credited as being one of the driving forces for getting the workers bill passed.

“It’s exciting seeing this revitalization for our neighborhood, seeing active construction and watching individuals rebuild our community,” Wilson said.


Norwalk nears first milestone in Yankee Doodle Garage project, but roughly 2 years of work remain

Shaniece Holmes-Brown

 NORWALK — The first phase of construction at Yankee Doodle Garage in Norwalk is 95% done and officials are planning a ribbon cutting to celebrate.

However, officials said there are two more phases of construction and likely two more years of work to do on the garage at 10 Burnell Blvd..

Assistant Parking Director Bryan Lutz told the city's parking authority that the first phase of the project is 95% complete and said the property is going to "look really, really sharp" after some stenciling work is done. He said there are plans to host a ribbon cutting to show off the results of phase one, but the date hasn't been announced yet.

"This phase of the project really represents the most visible transformation to date, and we want to highlight the improvement to the public and celebrate this milestone," Lutz said. "It's likely the most positively received project Park Norwalk has delivered, and ribbon cutting would be an excellent opportunity for the community to see the impact firsthand."

Jim Travers, director of Transportation, Mobility and Parking in Norwalk, said Tuesday morning that the first phase of the project at the garage was aesthetic improvements, which included new lighting, removing older trees and painting various areas throughout. He said it will be finished within the next two weeks and cost about $600,000, which was funded through the city's parking authority budget. 

"The aesthetic improvements that took place really came out of the community meetings that we had as part of the Wall Street District Revitalization project, where people were concerned about the garage," he said. "They didn't feel safe, it was run down, you know, it was showing its age."

But there's more work to do. The second phase of the project could start some time in 2027, Lutz said. Officials said that phase is likely to cost about $2.7 million.

Travers said Tuesday morning that the second phase, to repair the concrete structures of the garage, will take about one year to complete.

"When you go through the garage, you'll see where there's flaking of concrete, so they have to chip that away," he said. "We have to sometimes get to the bottom structure, where maybe water has infiltrated, and then we just have to repair the rebar that's in the concrete. This is just really normal concrete maintenance that makes sure that the structure stays there for another 50 years."

The city's parking authority, which is funding the entire three-phase project, approved the funding allocation for the second phase on June 24, choosing Middletown-based Frank Capasso and Sons, Inc. as the contractor.

Travers said the cost of the third and final phase — adding crown molding on the top and bottom of the garage — could be about $1 million. But he said the cost isn't definite given inflation rates.

"I would hesitate to say what the next one is, because we aren't going out to bid for the next one for another year, and what we're seeing right now is costs are increasing at an exorbitant rate that I've never really even seen before," he said. "So, it is very hard to estimate what (the) cost is going to be."

Travers said the entire Yankee Doodle Garage project is on schedule to be completed by its fall 2028 deadline.

Lutz also said during the June 24 meeting that work at the Haviland Parking Lot, which started last year, will be finished in August. He said the concrete repairs were completed and a new staircase was installed. He said the remaining work to be done is applying waterproof sealant and restriping the facility.

Due to this work, Lutz said that the parking lot will be closed for two weeks from Aug. 3 to Aug. 17. He said there will be signage to redirect both monthly permit holders and hourly users to the nearby Maritime Garage in the meantime. Lutz added that monthly permit holders can use the aquarium parking at no additional cost.

Travers said Tuesday morning that the overall cost of the Haviland improvements is $1.8 million.

"There's never a good time, but given where we are, the middle of August is probably the best time because this is where more people are going away on vacation," he said. "Your trips downtown to city center are slightly less than if we did it like in a peak time, so we think the timing is the best time to do it in, but it's also necessity."


Middletown voters to decide $35M bond for downtown parking garage

Cassandra Day

MIDDLETOWN — Big changes are on tap for parking in downtown Middletown over the next few years.

The city will be asking voters in November to consider an estimated $35 million bond request to help build a new municipal parking garage to replace the one demolished in 2018.

The garage project, proposed for behind the Main Street police station, is estimated at between $60 million and $80 million, Mayor Gene Nocera said Tuesday. The $35 million bond is expected to pay for the city’s portion of the project, he added. 

Officials are hoping a developer will come in to build townhouses and apartments along deKoven Drive, and share some of the garage cost, since some of the parking would be for those residents, according to Nocera.

"Right on the (Connecticut) River will be very attractive for housing," he said.

In addition, some 100 more spaces will be created at Harbor Park once the Harbor Drive on ramp is closed as part of the state’s routes 9 and 17 project, according to Nocera.

Between $10 to $12 million, the remainder of a $55 million 21st Century Infrastructure Development Bond, Nocera said, will be used for Harbor Park, and to build a double-deck parking structure on the Melilli Plaza lot off Route 66.

The bond request was approved by voters in 2020 to fund public parking, riverfront redevelopment, acquisition and development of city-owned parcels and buildings, creation of a recreation center, and citywide road paving.

While construction is underway beginning in the fall, a good deal of the Melilli spaces will be inaccessible, Nocera said. A parking “swing space” will be offered behind the Main Street police station, shared between police and the public.

He expects a request for proposals for that project to be sent out soon. 

The city paid $3 million in 2024 for the Attention to Detail vehicle customization property at the corner of deKoven and Dingwall drives, where the new lot will be built. 

The plan is to erect a temporary parking lot on the Attention to Detail site, Nocera said. Later, that site would be redeveloped and include the municipal garage, as well as the townhouses and apartments.

"That's five years out — but we have to start planning for that,” the mayor said.

The city is in the concept stage, and will be looking for a developer to also build townhouses there.

To attract one, the parking structure needs to be in place first, however, he explained. A developer is “not going to come if we don't have parking,” Nocera said.

To create even more parking, he explained, all of Court Street will eventually be made one way proceeding west — from Main Street to deKoven Drive.

Inadequate parking has frustrated people for quite a while, Nocera said.

“Parking is a real issue for our community, and if we're going to continue to grow and sustain our growth and the enthusiasm around Main Street and our businesses, we have to get aggressive about planning this in a real way.”


New Britain OKs Design for $70M Jefferson Elementary Renovation

Luke Feeney

NEW BRITAIN — The Board of Education adopted design plans for Jefferson Elementary School on Monday as part of a $70 million state-funded effort to renovate the building.

The school was built in 1956 and had 337 students enrolled last fall. 

“The building’s infrastructure has outlived its life expectancy,” New Britain Alderman Robert Smedley told CT Examiner.

Smedley presented the board with two design options during its meeting. The board ultimately chose the second proposal, which he said improves traffic flow throughout the building and relocates the kindergarten wing closer to the main office, making student drop-off and pickup easier for parents.

The project — being jointly designed by architect firm Keastle Boos Associates, the city’s Facilities Department and Jefferson Principal Shamel Lewis — includes installing air conditioning throughout the building, modifying programming space, and upgrades to classrooms and technology.

“This has been about six years in the making. Our students deserve new, clean, updated state of the art facilities,” Smedley said.

Construction is expected to begin in 2028, with the school slated to reopen in fall 2030. During construction, students will attend Holy Cross School, which has served as a temporary campus for other district projects. 

The money for the project comes from a wide-ranging 2021 law that approved state funds for dozens of school construction projects across Connecticut. The funding — which comes with a 95% state reimbursement rate — also covered renovations for Chamberlin and Holmes elementary schools.

In a statement, Superintendent Tony Gasper thanked the city and state, and expressed excitement for the changes.

“The Jefferson renovation will transform one of our oldest school buildings into a bright and vibrant learning space, just like the soon-to-be-completed Holmes School renovation. Students and teachers will benefit from modern spaces, technology, resources, and furniture that make the school a welcoming place for students, staff, and families,” Gasper wrote.

Chamberlain opened its new building in August 2023 and cost around $40 million. The construction for Holmes, similar to Jefferson, cost around $70 million. The new building is set to be open on Stanley Street this September.

Smedley said students, parents and staff have had an overwhelmingly positive response to previous renovations, and he expects Jefferson’s upgrades to also be well-received.

“It’ll be a great, positive thing for the community in that neighborhood as well,” Smedley said.

A 2024 graduate of the University of Connecticut, Luke Feeney covered the Gilgo Beach murders, the 2025 Ryder Cup, as well as local and statewide politics on Long Island prior to joining CT Examiner in 2026.


Montville asked to give school road to developer of large retail project

Jack Lakowsky

Montville — A July 20 public hearing will be the next in a series of steps to determine if a developer will take control of a town road that leads to Mohegan Elementary School so it can build a "large-format" retail operation.

If approved, PTA Lane would no longer be a public road and the town would no longer be responsible for maintaining it.

Asking for control of PTA Lane is Johnston, R.I.-based real estate developer Dominic Carpionato, senior vice president of Carpionato Group, which owns 6 million square feet of of offices, apartment buildings, retailers and hotels worth $1.5 billion between across southern New England. The company owns an especially large cluster of properties between central Rhode Island and North Attleborough, Mass., according to company information.

Planning Director Dennis Goderre on Tuesday said the town still has not received detailed plans for the project.

On Tuesday, Carpionato said his company and the town are "working closely to help it realize its longstanding vision to expand its commercial tax base and relieve the residential tax burden."

He added the proposed discontinuance of PTA Lane has been reviewed by town staff, and that planned improvements to Golden Road, which would become the primary way to get to Mohegan school if the town transfers ownership of PTA Lane, would improve traffic for parents, staff and school buses.

The group's attempt to build a 114-room hotel, coupled with a large-format retailer and 100,000 square foot industrial operation on undeveloped land in Southington was rejected in April by that town's Planning and Zoning Commission.

The group is also looking to build about 270 apartments in Glastonbury, and is a main player of the redevelopment of the former UConn campus in West Hartford, which shut down almost 10 years ago.

A concept plan for a new “large-format retail” development in Uncasville calls for the permanent closure of PTA Lane, a side road that leads off Route 32 to Mohegan School, to make room for the project.

Town documents contain few details about the local development, other than that it would house retail businesses on 24 cares of undeveloped land at 87 PTA Lane.

Town officials have said the proposal conforms with the town’s Plan of Conservation and Development, pointing to potential growth in property tax revenue.

“The benefit is there,” Mayor Leonard Bunnell has said about the conceptual plan.

Carpionato wants the town to abandon PTA Lane to allow for better traffic circulation and a more cohesive design. He said the project would entail improvements to infrastructure, utilities and landscaping. The town is requesting a thorough traffic study from the firm.

Project engineer Kevin Solli told the Planning and Zoning Commission in March that the town’s symbolic approval of the road transfer is the first of many steps before the project can be approved.

Solli said Carpionato, who bought the land last year, would build a new playground at Mohegan School.

“This is an opportunity for a significant investment,” Solli said.

Changes in accessing Mohegan Elementary School

Chief of Police Wilfred Blanchette endorsed the project in a February memo to Bunnell, saying he believes it aligns with the town’s goals.

However, Blanchette wrote, “the closure of PTA Lane would eliminate a key access route to the school, leaving Golden Road as the primary entrance exit.”

Blanchette said this could create several safety risks, including limited access for emergency vehicles, traffic congestion, risks to pedestrian and child safety, and an increase in 911 calls from the area.

A town review said that if PTA Lane is closed, traffic on Golden Road, which would take the diverted traffic, could get backed up.

To alleviate this, Superintendent of Schools Diane Vumback has suggested that Golden Road be widened to accommodate buses and vehicles during peak hours, in the morning and in the late afternoon.

Golden Road should be redesigned with a right turn lane for staff members and buses, a middle lane for student arrivals and departures, and a left lane for exiting school property, Vumback said.

Vumback also suggested adding and expanding parking areas and converting the school’s rear parking lot into a designated pickup and drop-off area.

Vumback and the Board of Education asked that the district’s needs “be carefully considered to ensure the continued safety and wellbeing of our students and families, as well as the efficient and effective execution of our daily operations.”


Lamont, Elliott talk housing, transportation and energy in online forum

Mark Pazniokas

Josh Elliott used an online policy forum Monday to frame his Democratic primary challenge to Gov. Ned Lamont as the choice between the status quo and a gamble on radical change. 

Elliott, 41, a state representative from Hamden, sketched in broad strokes his aspirational vision of a very different Connecticut: a state with no property tax, sharply higher income taxes on the wealthy, and possibly highway tolls.

“I would eliminate the property tax entirely, have one tax and one tax alone, and that would be the income tax,” Elliott said. “Everything else is regressive, and I want to move away from regressive taxation.”

Lamont and Elliott had separate 45-minute conversations Monday with Pete Harrison, the Connecticut director of the Regional Plan Association, the research and advocacy group for the New York metro area.

The governor, who is seeking his third term, went first in an appearance that exposed the pros and cons of incumbency: Lamont has a record, and his focus seemed to rest more on defending the past than outlining a future. Elliott was free to riff on possibilities.

The Regional Plan’s housing campaign in Connecticut, which originally was branded as Desegregate CT and now is called Pro-Homes CT, put the group in conflict with Lamont. He vetoed a housing reform measure it sought, then he negotiated a revised version with broader support.

“This bill had buy-in from mayors and first selectmen,” Lamont said, his oft-repeated rationale for the veto and revisions. “I just think that it’s very important that the folks who are going to be implementing this are at the table. You know, the first round we really didn’t have mayors or first selectmen on board.”

Lamont’s view of Connecticut’s progress on increasing the stock of housing at all price points during his eight years in office is rosier than Harrison’s or Elliotts. In one question, Harrison noted that realtor.com gave Connecticut a grade of F when it comes to balancing affordable housing against the high the cost of living.

“Other states —  red, blue, purple — are driving ambitious pro-homes agendas with substantive zoning reform laws,” Harrison said. “realtor.com just gave Connecticut an F grade for the second year in a row and categorized us as the ‘stagnant bottom.’”

What additional zoning reforms are needed to “move the needle?” he asked.

“Well, let’s start with what we did in the housing bill,” Lamont said. “We’re speeding up permitting and making real reforms that make it easier for you to build housing, especially in commercial areas, as of right.” Lamont’s use of the phrase “as of right” means a property owner can act without obtaining special approval from local land use boards.

Neither candidate had a detailed response to Harrison’s question about how the state would better provide transit to the 30% of households where no one owns a car.

“RPA believes buses should be the top priority for enacting this vision, but currently we have a very disjointed network of 17 systems with limited frequency connections and unintegrated fare boxes,” Harrison said. “How will you create a fast and fair bus network?”

Elliott talked about bringing local leaders and agencies together. Lamont said his commissioner of transportation is currently trying to do just that.

Throughout his conversation with Harrison, Lamont ignored Elliott. 

But the challenger mentioned the incumbent in his first minute, faulting Lamont for vetoing the first, stronger version of the housing bill. Elliott said it was emblematic of their differences.

“Ned Lamont is a status quo manager, where I am a reformer,” Elliott said.

Elliott did not offer a framework for how he could eliminate the property tax, the primary source of revenue for cities and towns. His pitch for a 4% increase in the income tax on millionaires would not come close to covering the lost revenue.

To increase funding for transportation, the challenger adopted a proposal the governor made in the disastrous opening months of his first term: highway tolls. Lamont pitched the idea without a fully fledged plan for what it would accomplish, and his approval rating dropped to the bottom rank of U.S. governors.

Elliott, as it turns out, thought it was a good idea, if poorly conceived. Like Lamont, Elliott likes the idea of relying on out-of-state truckers and motorists passing through the state to pay for a portion of the upkeep on its highways and aging bridges.

“So, I’m pro-tolls. I’m still pro-tolls, even 10 years, eight years later, however long it is, because what I think it needed was a better messenger,” Elliott said.

Elliott said tolls are regressive and would be considered only as part of a larger tax reform package.

While the governor has abandoned tolls, he told Harrison the state still is making progress on speeding up rail travel using funding obtained through the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure law passed during the first year of the Biden administration.

Connecticut is replacing rail bridges whose conditions forced trains to slow their speeds.

“Thanks to the bipartisan infrastructure bill, we’re redoing most of these major rail bridges and car bridges,” Lamont said.

Both candidates said the political environment for addressing climate change has grown more complicated, given the Trump administration’s opposition to green energy. Lamont touted Connecticut and Rhode Island prevailing in fending off the president’s efforts to kill the nearly completed off-shore Revolution Wind.

“We got it open, so those turbines are beginning to turn,” he said. “We’re making enough carbon-free power for about 300,000 homes between us and Rhode Island.”

But Elliott criticized Lamont for not going forward with the purchase of power from another wind project with Massachusetts and Rhode Island because of its high price.

“Now both of those states kept on moving forward, and they’re bearing the benefit of that, and we aren’t. We need to be willing to make these investments now,” Elliott said.

Ryan Fazio, the Republican nominee for governor, will take questions from Harrison on the same topics at 11 a.m. on July 9. To watch, register with the RPA or watch on CT-N.

The conversations with Lamont and Elliott were live-streamed on CT-N and are available to watch on the site’s archive by clicking on Lamont or Elliott. The Democrats are scheduled to debate on July 22 on WTNH.