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New Hampshire needs a budget that works for its public schools

Email address: O P I N I O N THE SOAPBOX Stand up. Speak up. It’s your turn. As someone who spent her entire career working with students, parents and teachers, I have witnessed firsthand the difference a quality education can make in the life of a child and the impact that a first-rate school can have on the future of an entire community.  That’s why I’m so disappointed in the version of the state’s Fiscal Year 2022-2023 budget that the House Finance Committee has produced and why I will work to improve it when the full House of Representatives votes on it in the days ahead.  For, while that budget commits an additional $100 million to the Education Trust Fund, the means by which the state pays for education aid to cities and towns, it completely misses the target in how it uses those scarce dollars.

Maryland Casinos Break Revenue Record With Spike in March

Maryland Casinos Break Revenue Record With Spike in March Maryland’s six commercial casinos combined to set a single-month record with $169.2 million in revenue in March, a month when coronavirus-related capacity limits began to disappear. One year on from the COVID-19 pandemic, which shut down casinos around the country, the financial figures for March are welcome news in the Old Line State. That March figure $169,179,016, to be exact was an increase of $43 million from the February revenue of $126,208,025. Maryland casinos can now operate at full capacity with two exceptions: MGM National Harbor in Oxon Hill and Horseshoe Casino Baltimore. Both of them raised their capacity limits from 25% to 50% in March. The state’s other four casinos now can run at 100% capacity, albeit with some empty spaces at slot machines and gaming tables to continue meeting social distancing guidelines.

Rayno: Heated battles expected this week in New Hampshire House

Rayno: Heated battles expected this week in New Hampshire House Gary Rayno “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” is the opening line of Charles Dickens’ classic novel “A Tale of Two Cities.” Although it was written about the French Revolution, it could have been written about three days in April for the New Hampshire House. Another description may be “three days in hell” as the nearly 400-member House works its way through 331 bills in order to meet its already delayed crossover deadline. Scheduled to meet from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at the NH Sportsplex in Bedford, the three long days may not be enough time given the contentious issues legislators face.

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