News

A new law gives Gov. Kelly Ayotte and Attorney General John Formella significant power to decide how much victims are compensated for abuse they suffered at the state’s former youth detention center.
Enlisting college instructors to teach high school classes will expand “pathways” for students to get critical courses and trade skills, Gov. Kelly Ayotte said in signing the bill (HB 90). House ed ...
Calling it a “system that is not broken,” Gov. Kelly Ayotte vetoed legislation to allow any city or town to hold partisan school district elections. House chair urged lawmakers to let school races be ...
BERLIN, N.H. (WCAX) - A murder-suicide in Northern New Hampshire is shining a new light on victims of domestic violence. A ...
From Pittsburg to Hollis, Gov. Kelly Ayotte and the state’s five-member Executive Council are taking their “show on the road” ...
BERLIN — City councilors voted 7-0 to send a letter to Gov. Kelly Ayotte and Executive Council to request a special election ...
Medicaid cuts at the state and federal levels have providers across New Hampshire concerned and searching for ways to cushion ...
The state’s $16 billion budget for the next two years two-year confirms something Concord officials had long dreaded: no ...
The investment trust proposal has received the endorsement of Housing Action New Hampshire, which supports affordable housing ...
Activists against a proposed landfill in New Hampshire are vowing to fight on after another stalemate at the State House over ...
New Hampshire's largest public university system is dismantling its diversity, equity and inclusion program for new hires and ...
Gov. Kelly Ayotte signed groundbreaking legislation on Independence Day that will let cities and towns create “social ...