Feature
Philanthropies Promise $500 Million to Help Local News Across U.S.
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InDepthNH.org has also helped create a new national organization of small news outlets with 17 initial members called the Alliance of Nonprofit News Outlets.
InDepthNH.org (https://indepthnh.org/tag/paula-tracy/)
InDepthNH.org has also helped create a new national organization of small news outlets with 17 initial members called the Alliance of Nonprofit News Outlets.
InDepthNH.org is pleased to announce that with 50 years of experience, Roger Wood was honored at the New Hampshire Press Association awards banquet Thursday with its Lifetime Achievement 2023 award for his work in broadcast radio news and public affairs.
Here at InDepthNH.org, we understand and insist on reporting unbiased news. And we know that, these days, the news can feel especially unpredictable and makes you wonder in New Hampshire who is really putting the money behind it and what they expect to get from it.
Despite protestations from the public that environmental concerns for the summit of Mount Washington are not considered more important than concerns for visitors and business interests at 6,288 feet, the commission overseeing the 60-acre state park unanimously approved a revised 10-year master plan Friday.
Besides Manchester, Dover and Concord, protests were planned in Exeter, Hanover, Keene, Lancaster, Plymouth and Portsmouth.
Roger Wood talks with Paula Tracy, a veteran journalist in newspaper, radio and television, about her career, accomplishments and thoughts about the future of journalism in New Hampshire.
Paula Tracy said about the Lifetime Achievement award: “This is really the audience I would want to be respected by; people who do this job on a daily basis and know how hard it is.”
At InDepthNH.org, we are getting ready for NHGives June 7 at 5 p.m. to June 8 at 5 p.m. and need you to help us make it the most successful fundraiser ever by providing a match donation.
A $100 million settlement fund to compensate children who were sexually and physically abused while incarcerated by the state moved one step closer to passage Tuesday, but counsel to the 500 plus victims opposes it.