A new law opens nursing licensing to military personnel. Will it bring in new workers? >Kathy Yurek, 53, of Cornish, N.H., extends her arm to receive the COVID-19 vaccine by Matt Prugger, a medic in the New Hampshire National Guard at the Heater Road armory on Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021, in Lebanon, N.H. Yurek is a hairstylist and has direct contact with clients. ( Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Jennifer Hauck
Modified: 7/8/2021 9:45:11 PM
Thanks to a newly signed bill, military personnel can apply for a nursing assistant license as part of a new effort to fill empty shifts in hospitals and nursing homes across the state.
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By now, debates over the big-ticket items in the New Hampshire state budget are well established.
There’s Gov. Chris Sununu’s push for a continued decrease in business taxes: a plan to bring the business profits tax from its present 7.7% to 7.5%, completing its arc from 8.5% in 2015.
There’s Sununu’s proposal to create a Department of Energy to centralize energy policy priorities that are currently spread among multiple agencies, and his preference for one-off school infrastructure funding as a way to reduce inequality.
And there are other, more controversial pieces added by the House last month. One would prevent Planned Parenthood from taking state money without first physically separating its abortion services. Another would ban “divisive concepts” relating to white supremacy and the concept of structural racism from being taught in New Hampshire schools and state-run workplaces.
Unpacking the NH state budget: from tax reductions to red-listed bridges
A deeper look at what s in the policy trailer bill
May 4, 2021
By now, debates over the big-ticket items in the New Hampshire state budget are well established.
There’s Gov. Chris Sununu’s push for a continued decrease in business taxes: a plan to bring the business profits tax from its present 7.7% to 7.5%, completing its arc from 8.5% in 2015.
There’s Sununu’s proposal to create a Department of Energy, by merging the Public Utilities Commission with the Department of Environmental Services and the Office of Strategic Initiatives to encourage cohesive policy, and his preference for one-off school infrastructure funding as a way to reduce inequality.