Business & Economy
HHS Commissioner Lori Shibinette Resigns
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Lori Shibinette gave no reason at the Executive Council meeting Tuesday for her decision to take leave of the top post at Health and Human Services at the end of 2022.
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Financial issues and challenges faced by faced by NH companies and the economy as a whole.
Lori Shibinette gave no reason at the Executive Council meeting Tuesday for her decision to take leave of the top post at Health and Human Services at the end of 2022.
When Olivia Zink, Executive Director of Open Democracy, began planning the organization’s eighth annual Seacoast Democracy Walk, she probably had no idea it would attract so much attention.
Imagine yourself 150 feet above the valley floor hanging from a rope. Below you the winding path of the Baker River meanders through the quaint town of Rumney, N.H.
The entire museum will be open free of charge. Outdoor activities include live music, art activities, special performances, and programs
for visitors of all ages. Food trucks will be on hand, plus a beer and wine tent for 21+
The state ends the 2022 fiscal year with a more than $400 million revenue surplus on a cash basis, according to figures released by the Department of Administrative Services late Wednesday afternoon.
The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division has recovered $123,750 in back wages and liquidated damages for 40 workers of a Hampton Beach clothing retailer after finding the employer paid some employees cash off the books and paid straight time for overtime for hours over 40 in a workweek.
SB 422 and HB 103 were signed into law Friday. Both pieces of legislation, prime sponsored by Senate and House Democrats, will deliver dental benefits to New Hampshire’s Medicaid recipients.
Councilor Cinde Warmington pressed Gov. Chris Sununu on what he plans to do to protect abortion providers and their out-of-state patients at Wednesday’s Executive Council meeting.
To paraphrase revolutionary pamphleteer Thomas Paine, these are the times that try ratepayers’ souls. The arrival of 22 cent electricity on August 1 in New Hampshire is the biggest and scariest energy-related news to hit the Granite State in 26 years.