NH Business Review
February 9, 2021
Not taxing a New Hampshire business’ Paycheck Protection Program money could cost the state as much as $135 million in revenue, estimated the state Department of Revenue Administration.
It was that estimate that was the focus of Monday’s hearing on Senate Bill 3, an attempt by Sen. Majority Leader Jeb Bradley, R-Wolfeboro, to mirror federal tax rules. Bradley called the bill a “clarification” that would just put the bill in line with federal intent, but the DRA indicated that it would be an expensive one.
“Congress made it clear that it was never intended to be taxable,” said Bradley. And since it never was, then not taxing would not be an actual revenue loss, he argued
MY CAMPUS: Cancer Center at Illinois Director Rohit Bhargava
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If
ROHIT BHARGAVA has a big idea â say, to launch a center where scientists work around the clock to revolutionize cancer treatments and technologies â itâs a good bet he came up with it somewhere in the vicinity of 405 N. Matthews Ave., Urbana.
Thatâs home to the Beckman Institute, where Bhargava seems to do his best thinking â in âmy office primarily,â he says, âbut also the cafe, walking to and from it to the garage, in its various conference rooms â¦â
An esteemed Founder Professor in Bioengineering and director of the Cancer Center at Illinois, Bhargava took us on a virtual tour of a few of his other favorite places on and around campus.
14, if you hadn t noticed, in my face. you can keep us all young then. james also provides on air political analysis for the tv station wmur. and the washington post called him the insider s insider for his coverage of new hampshire politics. so please join me in welcoming the panel today. let s take a look at what they brought. [ applause ] so greg, let s start with you. okay. all right. i brought two truth tests. first of all, thanks to dr. jamieson and the annenberg public policy center and mike for you for heading this panel. and i m glad that you picked three reporters that we have distinctly different names, you know, reality tag, truth test. it would have been bad if you had two reporters and they both had truth test. that would have been bad. we are a hearst station and fact checking, truth testing, whatever you want to call it, giving pointing out distortions and lies and mistruths is something that we have done in orlando since august of 2002. actually,
trespassing based solely on the defendant s immigration status. but if we re getting into semantics in a highly produced 30-second ad, every word counts, ayotte didn t actually stop anyone from making arrests if they wanted to continue making arrests. it should be noted that that new ipswich police chief is now supporting ayotte and issued a statement saying that he disagreed with the ad. checking out the truth for wmur political scoop, i m james bindle. so maybe that line on your bio is right. maybe most of it is false. thank you all for doing that. gosh, a whole bunch of follow-up questions. and one of the things i d like greg, you might want to address, is what about the viewership? what about the impact on the viewer? are is your audience receptive to these? do they get a reaction out of it? what does it do to your ratings? i ll get to the ratings in a second. a lot of what we do, people don t react to. i mean, i do stories every single day and i don t get a sin
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