Hartford Business Journal

HBJ030926UF

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2 HARTFORDBUSINESS.COM | MARCH 9, 2026 Biz Briefs Tom Curtin | CEO, ext. 124, tcurtin@hartfordbusiness.com Editorial Greg Bordonaro | Editor, ext. 139 gbordonaro@hartfordbusiness.com Drew Larson | Web Editor, ext. 121 alarson@hartfordbusiness.com Beat: Energy Michael Puffer | Staff Writer, ext. 145 mpuffer@hartfordbusiness.com Beats: Real Estate, Economic Development, Banking & Finance David Krechevsky | Staff Writer, ext. 702 davidk@hartfordbusiness.com Beats: Health Care, Bioscience, State Government Harriet Jones | Staff Writer, ext. 145 hjones@hartfordbusiness.com Beats: Manufacturing, Cannabis, Professional Services Michael Juliano | Staff Writer mjuliano@hartfordbusiness.com Beat: Fairfield County Stephanie R. Meagher | Research Director Heide Martin | Research Assistant Steve Laschever | Photographer Business Tom Curtin | Publisher, ext. 124, tcurtin@hartfordbusiness.com Jessica M. Quinn | Associate Publisher, ext. 137 jquinn@hartfordbusiness.com Emily Paskind | Senior Accounts Manager, ext. 133, epaskind@hartfordbusiness.com Sadie Bride | Senior Accounts Manager, ext. 141, sbride@hartfordbusiness.com Michael Olender | Senior Accounts Manager, ext. 140, molender@hartfordbusiness.com Destiny Cyr | Operations & Administrative Specialist, ext. 138 dcyr@hartfordbusiness.com Tracy Rodwill | Human Resources Manager trodwill@nebusinessmedia.com Production Bartosz Zinowko | Production Director, ext. 147 bzinowko@hartfordbusiness.com Events Kathryn Pelletier | Events Manager, ext. 136 kpelletier@hartfordbusiness.com Tel: (860) 236-9998 | Fax: (860) 570-2493 Copyright 2020. All rights reserved. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: 446 Main St, Suite 201 Worcester, MA 01608 Subscriptions Annual subscriptions are $150.00. To subscribe, visit HartfordBusiness.com, email circulation@ hartfordbusiness.com, or call (508) 755 - 8004 x242 Advertising For advertising information, please call (860) 236-9998. Please address all correspondence to: Hartford Business Journal, 100 Allyn Street, Suite 3, Hartford, CT 06103 Stay Connected For breaking and daily Greater Hartford business news go to: www.HartfordBusiness.com HBJ on Twitter: @HartfordBiz HBJ on Facebook: www.facebook.com/HartfordBiz HBJ on Linkedln:www.linkedin.com/company/the-Hart- ford-Business-Journal Daily e-newsletters: HBJ Today, CT Morning Blend: www.hartfordbusiness.com/enewsletters Hartford Business Journal (ISSN 1083-5245) is published bi-weekly, 27x per year — including two special issues in November and December — by New England Business Media, LLC, 100 Allyn Street, Suite 3, Hartford, CT 06103. Periodicals postage paid at Hartford, CT and at additional entry points. The PeoplesBank Arena in Hartford. HBJ Photo | Greg Bordonaro Lawmakers revive tax credits for commercial-to-housing conversions Connecticut lawmakers are again weighing incentives aimed at converting underused commercial buildings into housing. Senate Bill 254, before the Housing Committee, would create a state tax credit equal to 10% of qualified conversion costs for office, retail, hotel and industrial properties. Credits would be capped at $30,000 per unit for for-profit owners and $50,000 for nonprofits, with a $3 million annual statewide limit. Eligible expenses would focus on construction-related costs, excluding most soft costs. The proposal, which needs approval by the House, Senate and Gov. Ned Lamont, would take effect July 1, 2026. Hartford HealthCare joins PeoplesBank Arena as Founding Partner Hartford HealthCare has signed on as the first "Founding Partner" of the recently renamed PeoplesBank Arena, adding another major Connecticut brand to Hartford's primary sports and entertainment venue. Oak View Group, which manages the city-owned arena, announced the part- nership but did not disclose financial terms. The agreement follows the arena's rebranding last year under a 10-year naming-rights deal with PeoplesBank. Hartford HealthCare will receive prominent in-venue branding and visibility. The partnership comes after the facility's roughly $140 million renovation, which upgraded seating, concourses and building systems in an effort to boost event bookings and downtown activity. Yale New Haven Health reports operating loss amid statewide hospital pressures Yale New Haven Health recorded a $196.8 million operating loss for fiscal 2025 as expenses outpaced revenue, according to its audited financial statement. The state's largest health system reported $7.58 billion in operating revenue, while salaries, benefits and supply costs drove total expenses higher. Despite the deficit, investment gains kept overall results positive. The disclosure came as the Office of Health Strategy's latest statewide analysis shows persistent hospital strain. OHS reported that Connecti- cut's 27 acute-care hospitals posted a combined operating loss of nearly $505 million in fiscal 2024, reflecting rising costs and ongoing reimburse- ment pressures across the sector. Yale New Haven Health CEO Christopher O'Connor. Contributed Photo Stanley Black & Decker to close last New Britain manufacturing plant T oolmaker Stanley Black & Decker will close its last remaining manufacturing plant in New Britain, ending more than 180 years of production in the "Hardware City." The Myrtle Street facility, which makes single-sided tape measures, will shut down due to a structural decline in demand, the company said. About 300 workers will be affected. Corporate headquarters operations will remain in New Britain. Stanley employs roughly 600 people in the city between the plant and headquarters. The company, which has faced sales pressure and tariff-related costs, is in the midst of a multiyear restructuring that has included cost cuts, product changes and other plant closures. Stanley Black & Decker's headquarters in New Britain. Contributed Photo

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