By Credit search: Monadnock Ledger-Transcript
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
Ever wanted to order an alcoholic beverage delivered to your home? Under a proposed new law, you could.
By ASHLEY SAARI
The Jaffrey-Rindge School Board continued conversations Tuesday about possible scenarios depending on the outcome of the vote on the budget March 11, including an option that preserved teaching positions, and one that focused on maintaining athletics and co-curriculars.
By ASHLEY SAARI
Jersey Bartley, 18, of Rindge, is set to go to Framingham State University, where she'll be pursuing a degree in criminology.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Rosie Emrich spent the weekend mulling over what she wanted to tell lawmakers on Monday.
By ASHLEY SAARI
Residents of Hancock heard from candidates for various town offices, including the contested Select Board race, during a forum Sunday at the Hancock Library.
By ASHLEY SAARI
In one corner, a group of students fries mozzarella sticks. In another, the stovetop bubbles with boiling water for macaroni. On the countertop, the blender whirs with ingredients for a smoothie.
By ASHLEY SAARI
Candidates for multiple town offices, including School Board and library trustee, stated their cases during Jaffrey’s candidate forum Thursday evening at Jaffrey Woman’s Club.
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
While the federal Department of Government Efficiency has come under fire in the past month for sweeping layoffs and cuts to government services, New Hampshire’s version of the effort has sought to assure the public that it is looking at things with a more fine-toothed comb.
By ASHLEY SAARI
On Wednesday afternoon, Jenny Greenwood, who turns 96 in July, received Mason’s Boston Post Cane, awarded to the oldest citizen in town, in a revival of the tradition.
By ASHLEY SAARI
What’s the difference between drilling into a plank of oak, pine or cherry wood?
By ASHLEY SAARI
Jaffrey has awarded its traditional Boston Post Cane – held by the oldest resident in town – to Eleanor McQueen, who is about to celebrate her 99th birthday.
By ASHLEY SAARI
White boards and brick facades, tall bell towers and hundreds of years of history.
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 ASHLEY SAARI
The parent company of a Greenville manufacturer and its president and owner have pleaded guilty in federal court to knowingly discharging acidic water into the Souhegan River, with sentencing set for June 23.
By BILL FONDA
Mi Jalisco was open Tuesday, the day after the Mexican restaurant in the Peterborough Shopping Plaza closed because Customs Enforcement officers conducted a search for the chef, according to co-owner Genaro Quezada.
By CHARLOTTE MATHERLY
Mackenzie West, who moved to New Hampshire last year, is doubting her future in the Granite State because of Republican-led bills surrounding transgender issues.
By BILL FONDA
A family member’s heart had stopped beating, and he had no pulse.
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