Summer Dance is the only program currently available to out-of-state residents.
Hunting and fishing licenses were imposed on out-of-state residents in 1901.
The campaign has drawn 15,000 queries from out-of-state residents and several hundred retirees have settled in the state.
But as out-of-state residents, they cannot register their displeasure by voting.
Legislators realized long ago that out-of-state residents - who, after all, vote in other states - were an easy mark.
Many of the plans allow out-of-state residents to invest, although they may not necessarily get the same tax benefits.
Tuition for out-of-state residents was raised by $750 last June, in response for a state request, to $3,950 a year.
Under the increase, state residents would pay $3,130 a semester, and out-of-state residents $6,260.
Forms for out-of-state residents who work in Connecticut will not even be ready until the end of the month.
A three-day fishing license costs $17 for an out-of-state resident.