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Read MoreWith both a legislative deadline and the COVID-19 crisis bearing down, the New Hampshire House of Representatives met in a marathon two-day session this week that ended shortly before 4 a.m. Friday. Along the way, we dealt with hundreds of bills and managed to avoid the need to meet again next week. Here’s a long but hopefully helpful wrap-up.
Read MoreIn a week where many high profile bills cleared important House votes, the biggest news was that Granite Staters saw that members of our legislature who blow off mandatory sexual harassment training will actually be held accountable.
Read MoreLast week was a busy one for the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee. In a marathon executive session, we gave the green light on legislation that would outlaw “cyberflashing” and reduce the harshest penalties for certain drug crimes. Sadly, we also hit the stop button on a bill that would have required locking safety devices to be included in all commercial firearms sales. Here’s a quick wrap-up.
Read MoreLast week was one of the more interesting weeks for public hearings on legislation before the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee. On Wednesday, sponsors pitched their cases for several bills where privacy, technology, free-speech, and questions about ethics and responsibility all collided. Here’s the story.
Read MoreNew Hampshire has 400 state representatives in the state legislature. Regardless of party or seniority, we toil for $100 a year (plus mileage). While I may not be the most representative of state representatives, I thought that this week instead of posting about a particular piece of legislation, it might be helpful to take a moment and share what a typical week at the start of a new looks like while the legislature is in session.
Read MoreA busy and productive week in Concord as the legislature took votes on key priorities, including gun safety, fair elections, renewable energy and more. Here’s quick wrap-up.
Read MoreOn January 8, the New Hampshire House of Representatives kicks off the 2020 New Year by voting on bills that were “retained” (or delayed for consideration) in 2019. While many are non-controversial enough to be voted on by voice vote as a single block as part of the Consent Calendar, the House will debate dozens of more contentious bills. Here’s a preview:
Read MoreThe recent debate over whether bail reform is succeeding or failing in New Hampshire has also cast a harsh spotlight on New Hampshire’s unfair and outdated system to pay bail commissioners. While a separate committee is considering changes to the bail reform law itself, I served on a study committee that looked into the role of bail commissioners and how to ensure they are paid in a more reliable and timely way. Here’s a preview of what we decided and why.
Read MoreOn Wednesday, a compromise state budget was passed overwhelmingly in the New Hampshire House and Senate. This brought an end to a process that, at times, felt more like…well… passing a kidney stone. Here’s what it means for the state, for you, and for Portsmouth.
Read MoreEarlier this week, 51 of Governor Sununu’s 55 vetoes were sustained in a New Hampshire state legislature where’s a 2/3 majority in both chambers is required to override a veto. Here’s why the “failure” of these bills, most passed by large majorities that included members of both parties, is on the governor—not on the legislature.
Read MoreWith an October 1 deadline looming for a new state budget, a critical issue that hasn’t received much attention is the disastrous impact of Governor Sununu’s veto on funding for reproductive health for New Hampshire residents.
Read MoreAnother 9 people are dead after a mass shooting last night in Dayton after 20 were killed earlier in the day Saturday in El Paso. And neither toll counts the people in hospitals who may still die or who will spend years recovering from wounds. Here are six things you can do to help put public safety first.
Read MoreWhile New Hampshire has been fortunate to avoid the plague of mass shootings that have ended thousands of lives and wounded or terrorized countless others, counting on weak laws and good fortune is bad governing and poor risk management strategy.
Read MoreThanks to Gov. Sununu’s veto (not an uncommon occurrence these days) New Hampshire is now entering its third week without a budget for the 2019-2020 biennium. The good news? There appears to be some movement towards a compromise. The bad news? If posturing and gamesmanship emanating from the governor’s office could somehow be converted into snow, we’d by plowing six foot drifts of the stuff in 100 degree heat.
Read MoreOver the past few months, images of children caged in filthy, inhuman conditions have shocked many Americans and have triggered protests at Border Patrol and ICE detention facilities across the country. When I heard we had our own ICE adult detention facility just a few miles away from Portsmouth in Dover, NH, I jumped at the chance to take a tour. Here’s what I found.
Read MoreLast week was one of the more eventful weeks of 2019 in Concord. On Thursday, a flurry of controversial legislation was sent on to the governor for signature, including the state budget and bills to establish a state minimum wage, change the Medicaid work requirement, clean up surface water contamination at Coakley Landfill, and ban carrying firearms onto public school property. A day later we saw the state budget vetoed and NH DES issue tough new water quality standards for PFAS.
Read MoreThe EPA provided an update—and a genuine head-shaking moment—Tuesday night at Bethany Church in Greenland on the status of the Coakley Landfill.
Read MoreJune is Pride Month. It’s a time to celebrate lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people as well as to acknowledge their 50 year struggle to win equality. On Saturday, Portsmouth will celebrate with a noontime rainbow march from Market Square to Strawbery Banke, where Seacoast Outright will be sponsoring a full day of entertainment and activities.
Read MoreOf the many violations of social, legal, ethical, and moral norms committed over the last 2.5 years by the Trump administration, none is worse than the separation of child refugees from their parents and the imprisonment of those children in for-profit detention facilities where education is no longer available and sexual abuse is common.
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