From Governor Lamont's Office <[email protected]>
Subject Governor Lamont Declares Stage 2 Drought Advisory for Fairfield, Middlesex, and New Haven Counties
Date October 7, 2025 4:18 PM
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Governor Lamont Declares Stage 2 Drought Advisory for Fairfield, Middlesex, and New Haven Counties [[link removed]]

Posted on October 7, 2025

(HARTFORD, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont today announced that he is declaring a Stage 2 drought advisory for Fairfield County, Middlesex County, and New Haven County due to below normal precipitation levels in these regions. Prior to today’s announcement, all counties in Connecticut were at Stage 1.

A Stage 2 drought advisory is an awareness stage, identifying an emerging drought event that could potentially impact water supplies, agriculture, and natural ecosystems. It is the second of five levels under the Connecticut Drought Preparedness and Response Plan [[link removed]], with Stage 1 being the lowest and Stage 5 the most extreme.

“The lack of rain over these last several months has impacted all of Connecticut, and in particular the regions around Fairfield, Middlesex, and New Haven counties,” Governor Lamont said. “The purpose of increasing these counties to Stage 2 is to raise awareness that as this lack of rain continues, there is a possibility that this emerging drought event could intensify.”

The decision to declare a Stage 2 drought advisory comes to the governor at the recommendation of the Connecticut Interagency Drought Workgroup [[link removed]], a state entity consisting of representatives from several state agencies who meet as necessary to assess drought conditions and make recommendations to the governor on the state’s response. The group met on October 2 and made a recommendation to increase these counties to Stage 2 based on an assessment of indicator data, including precipitation, surface waters, groundwater, reservoirs, soil moisture, vegetation, and fire danger conditions.

“We have experienced drier than normal conditions this summer and continuing into the fall,” Office of Policy and Management Undersecretary Martin Heft, chairman of the Connecticut Interagency Drought Workgroup, said. “Across New England, we have been witnessing drought conditions. We must begin early steps now to mitigate the potential for harm should the drought be prolonged.”

During this Stage 2 drought advisory, some action items that individuals and businesses in Connecticut are encouraged to voluntarily take to aid in minimizing future drought impact include:

Shutting down automatic outdoor irrigation; Minimizing overall water use by fixing leaky plumbing and fixtures; and Following any conservation requests issued by local water suppliers and municipalities.

Rainfall and droughts do not follow political boundaries, and impacts can be more severe at certain locations. Those who depend on private wells, fire or irrigation ponds, and other highly localized water resources should be especially mindful of local conditions, especially in places where previous droughts have affected supplies.

The most recent time any drought advisories were issued in Connecticut was on November 9, 2024, when all eight of the state’s counties reached Stage 2.

The five levels of drought advisories under the state’s drought plan are:

Stage 1: Below normal conditions Stage 2: Incipient drought Stage 3: Moderate drought Stage 4: Severe drought Stage 5: Extreme drought

The Connecticut Interagency Drought Workgroup consists of representatives from the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, the Department of Public Health, the Office of Policy and Management, and the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, with assistance from the National Weather Service and the United States Geological Survey.

More information on the workgroup and the state’s drought plan can be found online at [[link removed]].

Read on CT.gov [[link removed]]

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