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GORHAM â New Trails Bureau Chief Craig Rennie of the state Department of Natural and Cultural Resources met on Monday evening with select board members Chairman Mike Waddell and Adam White as well as Town Manager Denise Vallee. Vice Chair Judy LeBlanc had said she would not be present. Rennie was accompanied by District I supervisor Clint Savage of Gorham, who acted as interim chief for seven months after former chief Chris Gamache resigned. Rennie took up his new duties on May 21, after heâd left his post at the Department of Environmental Services Wetlands Bureau. He met with Waddell earlier that day to discuss how very responsive ATV enthusiasts have been to the new riding routine. As hoped, ATVers have been parking above the black trestle on Route 16 and have not been loading and unloading them on the state-owned parking lot on Route 2. ....
WHITEFIELD â North Country residents and conservation groups will rally Wednesday, July 14, at White Mountain Regional High School to urge the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services Wetlands Bureau to reject a pending permit for a 189-acre landfill in Dalton adjacent to Forest Lake State Park. A public hearing begins at 3 p.m. at the high school to hear testimony on Casella Waste Systems Inc.âs proposal for a sprawling landfill it estimates will eventually bury 468,000 tons of garbage â 49 percent from out-of-state annually. A rally will be held at 2 p.m. before the full hearing. âWe expect a large crowd to show up for the July 14 hearing,â said North Country Alliance for Balanced Change board of directors President Eliot Wessler. âNorth Country people see that a large Vermont corporation is trying to ram another landfill down their throats, and they donât like it. Thousands of people, not only from ....
The great New Zealand labour shortage might not exist The odd thing about all the reports about a labour shortage in New Zealand is that the data says hundreds of thousands of people are looking for work. Help wanted signs are sprouting up across New Zealand, from halal butchers in Auckland to veterinary clinics in Southland, as businesses sound the alarm about a growing labour shortage in the country. The government says this is good news, indicating growing pains in an economy that’s rapidly recovered from a Covid-19 downturn. Businesses contend that a closed border has choked off the supply of foreign labour that once worked in the country’s kitchens and fields, leading some to close their doors. ....
GORHAM â ATV traffic on Lancaster Road (Route 2) to the state-owned parking lot on the edge of the Presidential Rail Trail has been reduced substantially, reported select board member Judy LeBlanc at Monday eveningâs biweekly meeting on June 14. LeBlanc explained that she lives in the neighborhood in which many residents have complained they are badly affected by ATV enthusiasts off-loading and re-loading their OHRVs and gunning their vehicles as they speed off to reach Jericho Mountain State Park in Berlin. Noise levels are also far less. A short stretch of trail alongside the lot up the bridge that replaced the historic pony truss bridge was also paved by the state Trails Bureau, reducing airborne dust. ....
CONCORD â Craig Rennie has been appointed chief supervisor for the N.H. Bureau of Trails. N.H. Commissioner of Natural and Cultural Resources Sarah Stewart announced that Rennie will take over the position formerly held by Chris Gamache, who retired last fall. The Trails Bureau chief supervisor is responsible for management of the bureauâs 1,000 miles of wheeled off-highway recreational vehicle trails, over 300 miles of state-owned rail-trails, and 7,422 miles of snowmobile trails. The chief supervisor also supports the multiuse trail system in the state for hiking, cycling, equestrian and sled dogs. âNew Hampshireâs trail systems attract motorized and non-motorized enthusiasts each year, providing abundant opportunity to explore our great outdoors,â said Stewart. âManaging our trail network and supporting local trail user clubs is an important contributor to our tourism industry and to the high quality of life Granite Staters enjoy.â ....