April 9 @ 8:30 am – 9:30 am
Join State Rep Kerry Wood and State Senator John Fonfara for coffee at Heirloom Market.
Questions or cannot attend but would like to speak with Kerry or John? Contact Allie Kyff at Allison.Kyff@cga.ct.gov

The Trump Administration has lost no time in deconstructing important government institutions, including the U.S. development agency, USAID. On Thursday, Rocky Hill Democrats hosted a speaker who shared an account of how swiftly shuttering USAID has hurt people abroad and the United States’ interests. With representatives from Rocky Hill, Durham, and Wethersfield present, we spent the evening sharing ways to take action to preserve our institutions.
USAID is an institution with global impact. To illustrate the support provided by the United States, Kristina Talbert-Slagle, the Chair of the Durham DTC, shared her experiences as the lead of a $15 million USAID award to help rebuild Liberia’s health system. Liberia, a small African country on the Atlantic coast, was one of the three countries most disastrously impacted by the Ebola crisis from 2014 to 2015. About 1 of every 12 healthcare workers in Liberia was killed by Ebola. The program headed by Talbert-Slagle, and the broader array of US-Funded support, enabled the building of a major hospital in Liberia’s capital city, the training and strengthening of the country’s health care workforce, and delivering critical, life-saving treatments.
Despite its outsized impact, Talbert-Slagle pointed out that funding for USAID makes up less than 0.7% of the U.S. gross national income. While claiming to save money for the American people, President Trump and Elon Musk have targeted less than a penny for every dollar spent. In exchange for their efforts, they strike at the health, safety, and prosperity of many people at home and abroad.
Talbert-Slagle described how the sudden, unplanned attempt to close USAID has impacted Liberians.
“We’ve had to issue layoff notices to 48 people in Liberia, many of whom are leading practitioners in the University of Liberia College of Health Sciences. That has been extremely painful. I can’t even begin to say how painful it has been…Food is rotting that’s supposed to be distributed to people. Medicines are expiring.”
The reality is that people will die as a result of the decision. During the Ebola crisis, thousands of people died of a disease that is relatively hard to spread. When a health-care system that still relies so heavily on aid from the U.S. and others loses support, it results in people losing the care that might have protected them from getting dangerously ill or treating them when they are sick.
As Talbert-Slagle illustrated, slashing USAID hurts the U.S. as well as our international partners, in several ways:
Right now, people are looking for a way they can stop the harm done by the Trump administration to USAID and other critical institutions. Last night, Democrats from Rocky Hill, Durham, and Wethersfield all agreed that the first step is to come together to take action. As a community who can write letters, join protests, mobilize mutual aid groups, and vote, we can grow a power base to protect ourselves and take back power at the federal level. Here are things you can do, today, to start making a difference.
If we work together at a local level, we can grow a powerful group that can take power at the local, state, and national level. And we can build community, which will be critical to keeping our loved ones prosperous and safe.
The Rocky Hill Dems want to offer a huge “thank you” to Kristina Talbert-Slagle for speaking with us, and we look forward to collaborating with Democrats from Durham, Wethersfield, and all over to make our country better.