Middletown, CT|News|
Planned $100 Million UConn Fitness Center Getting Mixed Reactions
The proposal would increase student fees between $400 and $500 annually, which has riled some UConn students.

I was born and raised in Connecticut, with the exception of a brief stint in Vermont in the late 1960s when my dad decided to move my Mom back to her home state for a time. After graduating from Norwich Free Academy I took three years off from school to work and then went to college, first at Eastern Connecticut State University and then at UConn. I finished college in 1985 and immediately went to work for the Journal Inquirer, a daily newspaper in northcentral Connecticut. I covered towns, and later health care, for the JI, a still-independently owned newspaper that prided itself on its scrappiness and on trouncing the big-city paper, the Hartford Courant, on a regular basis.
After seven years I moved on to The Day newspaper in New London. I worked there for 18 years in a variety of jobs, including covering communities, business and the issues related to the national story of emerging Native American tribes and the gaming enterprises they sought to develop. I worked for a time as the paper's enterprise reporter, doing longer, investigative pieces, and just before I left to come to Patch I was the paper's Custom Publications editor, overseeing the production of The Day's magazines and two of its weekly special sections, Home Source and Wheels.
I became an associated regional editor for Patch in December.
I've lived in East Hampton since 1986 with my husband. We have two children, ages 23 and 16, and a really, really crazy dog we adopted two years ago from the local pound who has pretty much ruined all our living room furniture.
I love the news delivery business and believe deeply in the mission and purpose of the Fourth Estate. No democracy can thrive without an independent press. With the advent of the Internet and social media newspapers and other print media have seen a demoralizing decline in readership and community news has suffered greatly as a result. That's why I'm so happy to see the development of online local news sources like Patch. These hyper-local sites are filling the void left by the contraction of newspaper coverage in towns.
My beliefs: I'm registered as a Democrat, but my voting record is all over the map. I don't much like sports (mostly because I think professional athletes are overpaid and spoiled) but I'll follow UConn basketball and football. I love dogs and we've adopted two in the last 10 years. Our most recent one was found wandering in a wooded area, the victim, we believe, of abandonment. He's crazy and has ruined my living room furniture because my family and I lack the fortitude to make him stay off the couch and big comfy club chair.
The proposal would increase student fees between $400 and $500 annually, which has riled some UConn students.

The national program is run by the Drug Enforcement Agency.
Dog trainer Mary Ellen Walsh returns to Patch for a live chat this Thursday at noon to take more reader questions about all things canine!
The proposal would increase student fees between $400 and $500 annually, which has riled some UConn students.
Dog trainer Mary Ellen Walsh returns to Patch for a live chat this Thursday at noon to take more reader questions about all things canine!
These folks who passed recently either lived in the area or had family or friends here.
They're here, and they're just waiting to hatch. An historic huge swarm of cicadas is just underground and it's almost time for them to emerge.
Adam Bowles created a charity to help earthquake victims in Haiti.
It's easy to make your own, costs less and is better for the environment!
The legislation could have a floor vote by Thursday.
The group, which lobbies on behalf of the state's municipalities, says the latest budget figures show towns losing even more than what Gov. Dannel P. Malloy had proposed.
Reduce your carbon footprint and join in local activities to help the planet.
CareerCast.com, a career website, ranked 200 jobs from best to worst — what's the worst job you ever had? Or the best? Tell us in the comments.
In this year’s rankings by U.S. World & News Report, East Hampton ranked 32nd out of nearly 200 high schools in the state and earned a Silver Award, ranking it as a “Best High School” nationally.
After initially rejecting the project last month, the finance board agreed to a revised proposal on Monday. The Town Council will vote on it tonight.
The State Supreme Court will tackle a case this week that questions the legality of the state's abolition of the death penalty, which leaves the punishment in place for those currently on death row.