FAIRFIELD COUNTY
BUSINESS JOURNAL YOUR ONLY SOURCE FOR REGIONAL BUSINESS NEWS | westfaironline.com
July 1, 2013 | VOL. 49, No. 26
DREAM RIDE
FCBJ this week
state seeKs input on future of transportation, rail
uNemploymeNt Held steady at 8 percent in May as Connecticut added just 1,000 nonfarm jobs … 3
BY JENNIFER BISSELL jbissell@westfairinc.com
A
a stamFord advertisiNg-sales platForm hopes to tap into the demand for hyperlocal news … 6 greeNwicH aNd broNx developers are partnering to build what will be the first class-A office building to rise in Westchester in a quarter century … 15 coNcert series are alive and well in Fairfield County with the likes of The Wallflowers and Foreigner headlining summer kick-off shows … 19
WELCOME TO THE BIG TIME
BoBBy Valentine and linda McMahon laud fcBJ’s 40 UNDER 40 WINNERS
PAGE 9
MEDIA PARTNER
Clawing back
fisherMen support liMiting pesticides in effort to reViVe loBster industry BY PATRICK GALLAGHER pgallagher@westfairinc.com
lobstermeN aNd lawmakers hope a bill passed during the recent legislative session to restrict the use of certain pesticides will help revive a quintessential New England industry that has experienced a painful decline in Connecticut. The bill, H.B. 6441, will require the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) to establish a plan by
September to restrict the use or application of the pesticides methoprene and resmethrin — which have been found to impact the lobster population — near the coastline. The Long Island Sound has historically been home to some of the richest waters for lobster fishing, but over the past 15 years, lobster landings — the term for lobsters caught by fishermen — have fallen by 99 percent in the central and western portions of the sound, according to the DEEP.
mid investigations of a MetroNorth train collision and an employee fatality, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy is asking Connecticut residents to submit their dream public transportation initiatives as a way to increase public outreach on transportation issues. On a new interactive website, TransformCT.org, Malloy and the Connecticut Department of Transportation are asking users to submit feedback related to public transportation initiatives as the state builds a strategic vision for the future. By logging on with Facebook, LinkedIn or Google, the website is an attempt to solicit new ideas on how to improve the state’s bus lines, bike paths and rail infrastructure In just one day online, the state has already received a number of responses on the site, which is a positive sign, said Paul Mounds, Malloy’s director of government affairs. As the state looks for federal funding to build its Metro-North rail line from New Haven to Hartford and make other improvements, Mounds said the state is hoping to use the site as a way to show the state’s need for funding. But when it comes to future railroad improvements, Connecticut may already have a leg up on the regional competition in having its voice heard. James P. Redeker, commissioner of Connecticut’s Department of Transportation (DOT), was recently named chairman of the Northeast Corridor (NEC), which governs the
» on a roll, page 7
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2Prepping
for Steelpointe
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11 turning energy into jobs
» dream, page 6
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