Keyword search: State House 2025
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
The New Hampshire Legislature advanced several key bills last week, including Republican overhauls on education funding, rollbacks on bail reform and more. Here’s what you need to know.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
House lawmakers passed what’s effectively a statewide ban on sexual content in K-12 schools on Thursday, which would also create a complaint and appeals process for parents to challenge books they feel are inappropriate.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Picture this: You’ve finished enjoying dinner and drinks at a restaurant, and you pour your alcoholic beverage into a to-go cup. You can bring it home or sip it as you wander around downtown.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Transgender-related legislation dominated the New Hampshire State House last week, with lawmakers advancing a handful of bills that could direct people to use the bathroom that corresponds with their biological sex, not their gender, as well as ban puberty blockers, hormone treatment and breast surgery for people under age 18.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
The House of Representatives shot down a bill that would expand end-of-life care options on Thursday with a split that was as close as it gets – but its fate isn’t sealed yet.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Rebuking last year’s veto by former governor Chris Sununu, the New Hampshire House of Representatives passed a bill on Thursday that would permit the separation of people based on biological sex in bathrooms and other areas.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Tedd Benson’s company has worked with the same Canadian supplier for over 20 years and uses a certain type of engineered wood to manufacture houses at its facilities in Keene and Walpole.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Gov. Kelly Ayotte notched a policy victory early in her political tenure.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Education Commissioner Frank Edelblut will depart from his role at the end of the current school year, Gov. Kelly Ayotte announced Thursday afternoon.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
The New Hampshire House of Representatives voted to remove income requirements for the state’s school choice program starting in July 2026 in a win for the Legislature’s increased Republican majority.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
State lawmakers heard an earful from constituents, advocates and local officials denouncing the state’s current school funding formula and Education Freedom Accounts this week.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
An attempt by Democrats to reaffirm access to abortion in New Hampshire seemed to fall flat with the Republican-led Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
The New Hampshire Senate and House of Representatives voted on over 200 bills last week, advancing many to the next stage of the legislative process. Here’s what you need to know.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
The New Hampshire Senate passed a parental bill of rights that would prohibit school districts from knowingly withholding or denying the existence of information about a parent’s child.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Ever wanted to order an alcoholic beverage delivered to your home? Under a proposed new law, you could.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
On one hand, Weare Rep. Ross Berry’s bill to fold New Hampshire’s independent Office of the Consumer Advocate into the state Department of Energy has the backing of Republican leadership.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Rosie Emrich spent the weekend mulling over what she wanted to tell lawmakers on Monday.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
In a quieter week for the New Hampshire Legislature during winter break, state leaders still made some big moves. Here’s what you need to know.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
This time of year, the New Hampshire State House and the Legislative Office Building are bustling with public hearings, committee meetings and voting sessions. Come summer, half of the legislative hub will close for 18 months or more for renovations, displacing senators, bill hearings and other public business until 2027.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
For Eric Pauer, a former board member of the Hollis Brookline Cooperative School District, school board elections are already deeply rooted in party politics. So, why not make it official?
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
In the State House this past week, cannabis legislation advanced through the House of Representatives while other legislative attempts by Democrats were shot down. Gov. Kelly Ayotte also had a direct message for the state’s prison system. Here’s what you need to know about New Hampshire government last week.
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