Across New Hampshire|News|
House Gives Initial Approval To Expand Medicaid For Immigrants, Pregnant Women
The House also decided to increase funding for charter schools and public schools with students on the free and reduced lunch programs.

The House also decided to increase funding for charter schools and public schools with students on the free and reduced lunch programs.

The founder of the org that convinced thousands of like-minded politically active libertarians to move to NH is running for office.
The state Senate essentially killed the latest minimum wage bill, SB 144, along party lines.
A high rate of vacancies for plow drivers and increased rates are among the concerns impacting the transportation department right now.
Portsmouth Journalist Roger Wood: A New Hampshire non-profit group is making its fourth trip to Ukraine in less than a year.
Quinn pushed Gun Line employees to rush through background checks on gun buyers, started a campaign of retaliation against a staffer.
Members say Goldstein's “absentee leadership has led to retaliatory and unjust treatment of union members.”
The House turned down an attempt to raise the minimum wage in New Hampshire to $15 an hour over three years.
Republican Executive Councilor David Wheeler of Milford was confronted by Councilor Cinde Warmington, D-Concord, about his silent voting.
By a nearly two-to-one majority, the House gave initial approval to a bill legalizing the recreational use of marijuana for adults.
The former fire chief of the town of Unity; a Lempster Fire Department volunteer; veterans, Knights of Columbus members, and more.
Rayno: Ed Dupont of Durham, who left this earth last week, was one who left a legacy and had a profound effect on the state he loved.
Portsmouth journalist Roger Wood talks with state Sen. Rebecca Perkins Kwoka, D-Portsmouth.
Davidow: There are people alive today, even in Manchester, who don’t remember William Loeb. I am not one of them.
Some say the program needs guardrails as it has cost nearly $30 million the first two years instead of the estimated $3.1M when proposed.
James Dale was killed at a prison on Feb. 13. He was convicted of raping and killing a Contoocook girl in 1997 but denied the crimes.
A bill expanding background checks to employees or volunteers of non-public educational services that take state money drew opposition.
The Boston Globe is petitioning to obtain the names and addresses of the 12 jurors and five alternates in the case.
Walking along the Ammonoosuc River here with Kodi, I contemplate the peaks and valleys of my days recently, reflecting on just the past few.
As the Russian war against the people of Ukraine nears its first anniversary, New Hampshire residents, businesses are making a difference.