The Connecticut Bar Association has trimmed its paid staff by more than 25 percent, blaming financial stresses caused in part by the need for new air conditioning and other infrastructure in the association’s New Britain headquarters, as well as the cost of replacing “inadequate” software.

The staff will shrink from 24 people to 17. Alice Bruno, a well-known Connecticut lawyer and former deputy chief clerk of the New Haven Judicial District who became CBA executive director earlier this year, politely but adamantly declined to offer any information about the jobs that had been eliminated. She asserted that the CBA would continue to provide all current services.

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