Category: Local

  • Talented and Tested — Why a Young Democrat is Supporting Luke Bronin and Why You Should Too

    Talented and Tested — Why a Young Democrat is Supporting Luke Bronin and Why You Should Too

    Opinion Piece: this article reflects the opinion of the author and not necessarily that of the Democratic Town Committee.

    I grew up in Rocky Hill, and while I’ve watched friends and former classmates head off to what they imagine as greener pastures in Boston, New York, or even all the way to the West Coast, I’ve been proud to call this town home for nearly twenty-six years. I’m a Rocky Hill Eagle Scout, I serve on our town’s Sustainability Task Force, and this past November I had the honor of being elected to local office. My roots here run deep and district-wide, shaping how seriously I take the question of who should represent us in Congress.

    For many folks in my generation, politics can feel like a choice between stale promises and reckless experiments, if it feels like a choice at all. We’re handed a paradox: told to pick either experience or energy, either someone who knows how government works in theory or someone who actually wants it to work in practice. Luke Bronin cuts through that paradox. A dad, veteran, and former mayor of Hartford — now running for Congress in Connecticut’s 1st District — Bronin brings both real governing chops and a sense of urgency that meets the current political moment.

    When Bronin took office as mayor in 2016, Hartford was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. Past administrations had kicked the can down the road, piling up debt and leaving the city with one of the most precarious balance sheets in the country. Bronin did not sugarcoat the crisis, nor did he walk away from it. Instead, he led negotiations that helped retire more than half a billion dollars of city debt, stabilized finances, and put Hartford on a path where investing in schools, housing, and neighborhoods became possible again.

    That willingness to walk straight into the storm rather than duck is the throughline of Bronin’s career. He guided Hartford through the pandemic, keeping city services running while deploying relief dollars into housing, youth jobs, and public health. Among many other community-centered initiatives, he launched the Hartford Youth Service Corps in 2016 to pay young people for community work and provide a ladder to opportunity. Hence, it’s not an exaggeration to say that Luke Bronin is a man who has experienced all kinds of weather and is still not afraid of storms, as the famous historian and political scientist Clinton Rossiter wrote of the Framers. Indeed, Bronin has governed in real time, under real pressure, with real consequences for working families.

    However, this portrait would not be complete without looking beyond the capital, for Bronin is, above all, a public servant with an invaluable outlook on the nation. Before becoming mayor, Luke served in the Obama Treasury Department, where he helped create the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to protect Americans from predatory lending and financial abuse. He later became Deputy Assistant Secretary for Terrorist Financing and Financial Crimes — the kind of role where you see exactly how corruption and financial games at the top (e.g., President Trump’s current “pay-to-play” administration) can hollow out trust in democratic institutions. Back home in Connecticut, as Governor Dannel Malloy’s general counsel, he worked on some of the most challenging statewide issues we’ve faced: common-sense gun safety laws, clean energy initiatives, and the push to end chronic homelessness among veterans.

    So when Luke talks about tax policy and economic fairness, it’s not from a think-tank PowerPoint. It comes from years of experience combined with sharp political instincts. His recently unveiled proposal on taxation is simple and compelling: the code is broken and unfair, tilted toward billionaires and special interests, while working- and middle-class families get squeezed.

    Bronin’s ideas on tax fairness, I think, instantiate his approach to governance. Although tax policy is far from a flashy left-versus-right culture-war agenda item, it is, in many ways, the most pragmatic and direct path to steering wealth back toward middle- and working-class Americans while chipping away at the multigenerational debt that burdens so many households. Bronin has issued a clarion call for a tax code that is fair and fiscally sustainable, one that fully funds essential public goods — from Social Security to healthcare, housing, and infrastructure development — by asking those who earn the most to pay their fair share.

    If anyone understands how tax policy affects municipalities, it’s a former mayor of Hartford. During Bronin’s years as mayor, he was outspoken about the absurd reality that more than half of Hartford’s property is tax-exempt, leaving a smaller base to carry an enormous mill rate that punishes small businesses and homeowners. That experience gives him a uniquely granular understanding of what property taxes, state aid formulas, and federal policy really mean for cities and towns across our district.

    In other words, one can be sure that Bronin’s calls for tax reform are more than sloganeering. It is a sensible and urgent policy change informed by first-hand experience with bad tax structures that choke off opportunity at the neighborhood level. Add to that his service as a U.S. Navy intelligence officer deployed to Afghanistan on an anti-corruption task force, and you get the picture: a leader shaped by encounters with hard places and hard problems. Luke has seen what happens when the rule of the well-connected replaces the rule of law, and he’s carried that lesson into his commitment to protecting democracy, defending the Constitution, and keeping government worthy of people’s trust.

    As a young Democrat, I do not want to support someone merely because they vote “the right way” on a checklist of issues. I want someone who has already done the unglamorous work of governing — balancing budgets, saying no when it’s easier to say yes, and still finding the courage to invest in people and in community. Luke Bronin is that kind of leader: talented and tested, progressive and pragmatic, a man who has experienced all kinds of weather and is still not afraid of storms.

    That’s why I’m supporting him, and why you should too.

  • Serve on Rocky Hill’s Boards and Commissions

    Serve on Rocky Hill’s Boards and Commissions

    The Rocky Hill Democratic Town Committee invites interested residents to apply for appointment to a variety of town boards and commissions. These bodies play a vital role in local governance, helping to shape policy, guide development, and ensure that our community’s needs are represented with integrity and expertise.

    Service on a commission is an opportunity to contribute meaningfully to public life, strengthen civic institutions, and uphold the values of transparency, accountability, and good governance. We encourage residents from all backgrounds, professions, and experiences to consider applying.

    Appointments are made on a partisan basis, and several seats designated for Democratic appointments are open at this time. Unaffiliated residents can also apply. 

    Applicants should be registered voters in Rocky Hill and prepared to attend regular meetings and participate collaboratively in commission work. Prior experience is welcome but not required—what matters most is a commitment to public service and a willingness to engage thoughtfully in town matters.

    Affordable Housing Committee 

    Purpose: Work with the Town Council and other Town Boards/Commissions, Staff, and quasi-public / nonprofits in a Council appointed position to: advocate and oversee affordable housing efforts, educate the community about affordable housing. raise awareness of what the Town is required to do, and assist in managing the Special Housing Fund, if established. Maintain and update the Affordable Housing Plan every five (5) years as required by law. 

    Committee Page

    Commission on Inclusion and Innovation 

    Purpose: proactively building intergroup community relationships through the efforts of Town residents and business owners.

    • Promote productive dialogues amongst the diverse facets of our community.
    • Facilitate community-wide education programs that build awareness.
    • Engage Town residents who do not normally have an opportunity to serve as appointed or elected officials.
    • Base Commission’s goals and priorities on community input, facts and data analytics.
    • Model best practices in navigating difficult conversations

    Commission Web Page

    Economic Development Commission 

    Purpose: Cultivate long-term economic growth by fostering a clear & business-positive environment that encourages a growing, sustainable & diverse tax base.

    Commission Web Page

    Fair Rent Commission 

    Purpose: A fair rent commission has the authority to receive and investigate rent complaints, issue subpoenas, hold hearings, and order landlords to reduce rents for specific reasons. When a commission finds that rental housing does not meet the local or state health or safety requirements for housing, the commission may suspend rent payments until the housing is brought into compliance. Also, a commission may order a landlord to stop any retaliation against a tenant who makes a complaint to the commission.

    Commission page

    Insurance Committee 

    Purpose: The procurement, management and control of all insurance and bonding requirements, other than employee benefits, and unless otherwise provided for by law, for the Town of Rocky Hill shall be vested in an Insurance Committee consisting of three electors of the Town who shall be appointed by the Town Council. Review an analysis with the town ‘s insurance company representative, all workers compensation and property and liabilities-auto-property claims, as well as updates on the town’s safety committee activities and programs.  

    Committee page

    Library Board of Trustees 

    Purpose: Review new library policies and “act in an advisory capacity to the Library Director.”

    Board page

    Local Housing Authority 

    Purpose: The housing authority in Connecticut is a quasi-public agency responsible for providing safe, sanitary, and affordable housing. Its functions include:

    • Entering into contracts and making or repealing bylaws, rules, and regulations.
    • Investigating housing conditions and proposing ways to improve them.
    • Constructing, reconstructing, improving, altering, or repairing housing projects.
    • Establishing and revising rents or charges.
    • Investing funds held in reserves or trust funds.
    • Selling or leasing housing projects with the approval of the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management.
    • Financing the sale of state housing projects.
    • Providing for the management of state housing projects

    Authority page

    Open Space and Conservation Commission

    Purpose: The Commission shall advise and make recommendations to the Town Manager, the Council, and other boards and commissions of the Town regarding the development and conservation of natural resources, including water resources within the territorial limits of the Town, and shall have such powers and perform such other duties as are conferred upon it by the Connecticut General Statutes, the Council and the Town Manager.

    Commission page

    Parks and Recreation Advisory Board

    Purpose: The Department of Parks and Recreation shall have charge of all parks, park and recreation properties, and of all recreational activities, including aquatics and senior citizen programming. The Department shall provide ordinary care and maintenance of park grounds and buildings and all public grounds, including Board of Education grounds by agreement with said Board. The Advisory Parks and Recreation Board shall study the parks and recreation facilities and programs of the Town and shall meet with the Director of Parks and Recreation on a regular basis to advise with respect to the development and use of the Town’s parks and recreation program. The Director of Parks and Recreation shall be appointed by the Town Manager and shall make rules for the use of parks, public grounds and recreation facilities consistent with the ordinances of the Town and the Connecticut General Statutes. 

    Board page

    Personnel Review Board 

    Purpose: The Personnel Review Board shall hear appeals from any action pertaining to any disciplinary action suspending, demoting or removing any full-time employee or regular part-time employee (working 20 hours or more weekly on an annualized basis) and not represented by a bargaining unit and report, in writing, to the person taking the action appealed from its findings and decisions therein… Board shall report, in writing, the recommended decision on disciplinary actions to the appointing authority

    Board page

    Planning and Zoning Commission

    Purpose: The Planning & Zoning Commission is an elected commission responsible for the use of land and buildings in the Town. The commission updates and maintains the zoning code which decides what can be built in town, and reviews building applications. The Commission is also responsible for updating the Plan of Conservation and Development every ten years.

    Commission page

    The rocky hill community center building

    Public Buildings Commission 

    Purpose:  In the case of any construction or remodeling of a Town building where the cost will exceed $1,000,000, the Council shall grant to the Commission, by resolution, those duties and powers as it deems appropriate, including but not limited to review of preliminary and final plans in consultation with staff. In all other cases, the Council may, in its discretion, grant to the Commission, by resolution, those duties and powers as it deems appropriate under the circumstances.

    Commission page

    Sustainable Rocky Hill CT Task Force 

    Purpose: The Sustainable Rocky Hill task force is an advisory body appointed by the Town Council to:

    • Advance goals to continue accreditation by Sustainable CT and participate in other state and federal sustainability initiatives.
    • Explore and promote issues related to sustainability, enabling full participation and accessibility for all residents.
    • Facilitate a range of community-based education programs and forums for exchange that promote civic engagement and communication about sustainability in Rocky Hill.

    Task force page