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Business owners hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic are asking for state lawmakers to reverse a cut to a small business assistance program in Gov. Chris Sununu’s proposed state budget.In Milford, the Coworking House is a haven for local entrepreneurs if they need workspace for a day or a month. There, New Hampshire s Small Business Development Center is like a guardian angel for the start-ups and the owner herself. I literally meet with them every single month,” Kristin Hardwick, co-founder of Coworking House LLC, said.Hardwick was upset to learn that help could be going away.Sununu s newly unveiled state budget calls for the UNH-based Small Business Development Center to have its $880,000 appropriation cut to just $50,000 in 2022, and then zero in 2023. I think it s outrageous. The Small Business Development Center does so much for myself, for the members of the coworking space, for so many small businesses across the state,” Hardwick said.The proposed cut would mean t ....
Nashua schools moving to hybrid model, welcoming some students back for the first time since March Updated: 10:19 PM EST Feb 14, 2021 Substitute staffing issues continue Updated: 10:19 PM EST Feb 14, 2021 Hide Transcript Show Transcript THROUGH THE SCHOOL YEAR BUT OFFICIALS CAUTION STAFFING CHALLENGES AND COVID CASES COULD CAUSE A SWITCH BACK TO REMOTE. LIKE FOR MANY SCHOOL DISTRICTS IT HAS BEEN A LONG YEAR FOR NASHUA. :03;33-:03;38 I CERTAINLY THINK IT S BEEN TIRING AND CHALLENGING AND FRUSTRATING. AND THERE HAVEN T BEEN CLEAR ANSWERS. BUT INTERIM SUPERINTENDENT GARTH MCKINNEY SAYS HIS TEAM, TEACHERS, STUDENTS AND THEIR PARENTS HAVE TAKEN THOSE CHALLENGES HEAD- ON. AND NOW THE DISTRICT IS READY TO MOVE TO HYBRID LEARNING. :01;02-:01;16 PRE- SCHOOL STUDENTS HAVE BEEN IN, KINDERGARTEN, FIRST GRADE STUDENTS, AND OUR CAREER AND TECHNICAL STUDENTS AT THE HIGH SCHOOL LEVEL HAVE BEEN IN. BUT A MAJORITY OF THE KIDS AT THE ....
Credit Hiveminder.com The Environmental Protection Agency has reached a deal to split the cost of cleanup for a hazardous waste site in Nashua with a business that aims to redevelop the property. The city and EPA have wanted to clean up and redevelop the riverfront site known as the Mohawk Tannery for more than a decade. The former leather-making facility left toxic sludge in the ground in a residential area. It’s been proposed as a Superfund for more than two decades. Now, the EPA says it plans to reimburse a developer, Blaylock Holdings LLC, $6 million to carry out a previously finalized remediation plan. ....
Commentary: Margaret Menge - School closings compound pandemic blues Margaret Menge FacebookTwitterEmail Things will get better soon, moms tell each other. But headlines from Chicago, where the teachers union has adamantly refused to return to work; to Nashua, New Hampshire, where desperate parents are mounting a recall effort to remove pro-union members from the school board offer little hope schools will reopen. President Biden’s chief of staff, Ron Klain, has appeared to back the union’s anti-reopen stance, saying schools should wait for millions in new federal spending before reopening. “President Biden has sent a plan to Congress that would make sure that a majority of our schools can be open within 100 days,” Klain said. We need Congress to pass that plan so we can do the kinds of things you need to do so that schools can be safe, so that teachers can be safe, so that students can be safe.” ....
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 ....