OIB media partner Chris Powell, who has written about Connecticut government and politics for decades, highlights Bridgeport’s dramatic drop in murders in his latest column.
For decades Bridgeport has been Connecticut’s worst concentration camp for the poor, easily defeating Hartford, New Haven, and Waterbury for murders, mayhem, wretched poverty, and depravity. State government has taken the city seriously only in regard to the pluralities it produces for Democrats despite its seemingly eternal wretchedness.
But the other day Bridgeport’s veteran journalist, author, and historian, Lennie Grimaldi, broke on his internet site, OnlyInBridgeport.com, what he fairly suggested could be Connecticut’s story of the year, though it is yet to be told elsewhere. That is, Bridgeport, long considered the state’s crime capital, having experienced 50 or more murders per year back in the 1990s, had only three in 2025, far below the year’s totals in New Haven (16) and Hartford (11). Other major crimes in the city are down too.
Meanwhile Bridgeport’s population is rising again and has surpassed 150,000, securing its status as the state’s largest city.
Grimaldi speculates that the improvement results in part from federal and local police action against gangs, improvements in housing projects, and more community engagement by the police. One must hope it’s not just a fluke.
Maybe the city’s old geographic advantages are reclaiming some appeal too. It has an excellent harbor and is developing a commercial and residential project there. It’s on the Metro-North and Amtrak rail line as well as Interstate 95, only slightly less convenient to New York City than prosperous Stamford but more convenient to New Haven’s higher education and medical institutions. The Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater downtown is a regional draw and a soccer stadium may be built. The city has a university and a community college.
But as with Connecticut’s other cities, Bridgeport’s overwhelming problem remains its demographics, its concentration of poverty, its lack of a large, self-sufficient middle class that can staff a more competent, less selfish municipal government, a government that remains compromised by excessive Democratic patronage and absentee ballot scandals.
And then, of course, there are the thousands of fatherless children in the city’s schools, many of them virtually illiterate and demoralized because of neglect at home. State government finally has taken note of the dysfunction of Bridgeport’s school system and is intervening somewhat, if not enough. But education will always be mostly a matter of parenting.
While the city’s property taxes remain nearly the highest in the state, property taxes are high in all Connecticut’s cities, in large part because of state government’s refusal to let cities control labor costs and its failure to insist on better results for the huge amount of state funding cities receive.
Mayor Joe Ganim may be doing as well as a mayor in Connecticut can do under urban circumstances. At least he seems to have put his corruption behind him, having been convicted and jailed after his first stint as mayor.
Neither Bridgeport nor Connecticut’s other cities can repair themselves on their own. Their futures will be determined mainly by how much the state wants its cities to do more than manufacture poverty while keeping the desperately poor and their pathologies out of the suburbs — whether the state ever wants to examine and act seriously against the policy causes of poverty, which were operating long before Donald Trump became president.
It should not require a Ph.D. to see that subsidizing childbearing outside marriage with various welfare benefits and then socially promoting fatherless children through school, leaving them uneducated in adulthood and qualified only for menial work, has not led them to self-sufficiency and prosperity but rather to dependence, generational poverty, and mayhem. Only the poverty administrators prosper from such policy.
Indeed, Connecticut seems to think that instead of two parents every child should have a social worker and a probation officer, as well as a “baby bonds” account with the state treasurer’s office to ease the burdens to be faced after being raised without two parents.
The “baby bonds” are new but the rest of it is old and just makes poverty worse.


Sounds good! Here’s the catch: In 2024 we had 13 homicides and 5 in 2025. What will be the headlines if in 2026 we end up with 10 homicides? What if we end up with 15 or 20?
Of course that will never happen, but if it does, I’m sure the mayor will have an explanation or just act as if.
Lennie, they’re killing themselves:
AI Overview
Yes, despite some recent polls showing fewer people drinking overall, data indicates a significant rise in heavy drinking and alcohol-related harms in the U.S., especially accelerating during the pandemic and continuing afterward, with alarming increases in alcohol-related deaths and emergency department visits, particularly for women and younger adults. While Gallup data from mid-2025 suggests a drop in overall drinking, this contrasts with steep increases in risky consumption and severe health outcomes seen in studies from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) (NIAAA) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (CDC).
Key Trends Showing a Rise:
Increased Heavy Drinking: Heavy drinking surged during the pandemic and remained elevated in 2022, with a 20% jump from 2018-2020, particularly affecting women and younger adults (under 50).
Surge in Alcohol-Related Deaths: The death rate from alcohol use increased by 70% between 2012 and 2022, with spikes during the pandemic years (2019-2020).
Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease (ALD): Deaths from ALD are rising, with a significant increase in patients needing transplants, making it a leading reason for liver transplants in the U.S..
Emergency Department Visits: Visits for alcohol-related substance use disorders are increasing and account for nearly half of all SUD-related ED visits.
Who is Most Affected?
Women: Saw a larger spike in heavy drinking and alcohol-related liver disease deaths compared to men.
Adults Under 50: Especially at risk for increased heavy drinking.
All Age Groups: Alcohol-related deaths rose across all age demographics during 2020-2021, including young people.
Contrasting Data (But Not Necessarily Contradictory):
A Gallup poll in August 2025 found fewer Americans reported drinking alcohol at all, but this is alongside growing concerns about alcohol’s health impacts, suggesting a shift in consumption patterns rather than a decline in severe problems.
In summary, while fewer Americans might be drinking occasionally, the data strongly points to a rise in heavy, risky drinking and severe health consequences, making alcoholism a significant and growing public health crisis in the U.S..
Pandemic-era increase in alcohol use persists – Keck Medicine of USC
Nov 10, 2024 — Pandemic-era increase in alcohol use persists. Refer a Patient Request an Appointment 800 USC-CARE Donate myUSCchart. November. 11, 2024. 14:00 PM. …
Keck Medicine of USC