Top Stories
A dozen states have laws allowing guns on college campuses, but backers and critics agree the bill now before the state Senate may be the most sweeping proposal of its kind.
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The average refund so far is $350 more than last year at this time, despite projections that it would be closer to $1,000 due to Republican-led tax changes as part of the Big Beautiful Bill Act.
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President Trump recently called for the federal government to take control of how elections are run. But in the U.S., states run their own elections. Civics 101 host Hannah McCarthy explains who’s in charge and what “nationalizing” elections could look like.
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Democrat Rep. Ellen Read said she’s being targeted by Republican leaders who want to silence her.
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The National Weather Service issued an alert for possible severe wind and thunderstorms in the southwest part of New Hampshire late this afternoon and early evening. Temperatures will climb to the 70s in many parts of the state.
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Granite State favorites return this weekend, from Discover Wild NH Day to the Made in NH Expo.
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Co-location incubates N.H.’s small business economy and attracts international businesses to Durham.
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A former high-ranking executive at Dartmouth Health in Lebanon is alleging “unlawful and retaliatory termination” by CEO Joanne Conroy in a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court of New Hampshire.
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State officials are set to decide this week on a $36 million design contract to rebuild the New Hampshire State Prison for Men next to its current site in Concord.
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Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is responsible for a huge share of intel collected by the U.S. Lawmakers and civil liberties advocates are worried it enables warrantless spying on U.S. citizens.
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A student’s home district would cover special education costs but their new district would pick up the cost for other accommodations.
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A federal judge in Concord ordered Old Dutch Mustard Co. to establish environmental compliance and ethics programs after the owner pleaded guilty to knowingly discharging a pollutant without a permit.
A New Hampshire town finds out their water has been contaminated by a chemical. Their most basic question — whether the water is safe to drink — doesn’t have a clear answer.
Stories from the New England News Collaborative