By Credit search: Valley News Correspondent
By PATRICK O’GRADY
LEBANON — Martha Solow exemplified the adage: “Democracy is not a spectator sport.”
By PATRICK O’GRADY
NEWPORT — The Selectboard is seeking public support for an $11.1 million budget this year, after voters rejected the board’s proposal last year.
By KATE ODEN
HANOVER — While attaining a master’s at Yale during the COVID-19 pandemic, Emily Sigman began tapping the Norway maples in the backyard of her New Haven, Conn., home.
By NICOLA SMITH
LEBANON — On a brisk March morning a small group, still wearing down jackets and winter hats, gathered in the parking lot of Lucky’s Coffee Garage in Lebanon to listen to U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas talk about why he is considering a run for the U.S. Senate in the wake of Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen’s announcement this month that she will not seek a fourth term in 2026.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
CLAREMONT — A divided School Board voted to leave the district’s policy on transgender and gender non-conforming students in place for the time being while a committee consults with the board’s attorney for possible revisions.
By BEN HOOKE
They’ll need to find some more space on the walls of Windsor High School’s gym. The Yellowjacket girls are champions again.
By LUKAS DUNFORD
PLAINFIELD — The future of education was a point of contention during Saturday’s annual School District and Town meetings.
By ADRIANA JAMES-RODIL
LEBANON — Late last month, Headrest — a Lebanon-based nonprofit that serves residents in crisis or dealing with substance use disorders — announced in a news release it was closing two programs due to staffing challenges.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
NEWPORT — With two incumbents stepping aside, three candidates are running for two, three-year terms for the School Board in the March 11 annual school meeting election.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
CLAREMONT — A neighboring property owner of Granite State Packing is asking the Zoning Board of Adjustment to rehear the company’s request for a variance for a slaughterhouse across from the city’s airport.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
CROYDON — The future of the Croydon Village School will be up for debate at the annual school meeting on Saturday, March 15.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
CLAREMONT — Three candidates are looking to replace two outgoing Claremont School Board members in the March 11 election.
By ADRIANA JAMES-RODIL
HANOVER — For now, at least, research activities at Dartmouth College and Dartmouth Health officially continue as normal in spite of mixed messages from the Trump administration about the future of the federal grant programs that support much of the work.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
BROWNSVILLE — Glenn Seward was a West Windsor Selectboard member when Ascutney Mountain Resort closed in 2010 due to financial problems and unsuccessful efforts by the owners, MFW Associates, to find a buyer.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
CLAREMONT — Riverbank Church will have a permanent home this spring after buying an old armory on Winter Street.
By ULLA-BRITT LIBRE
WEST LEBANON — The owners of Happy Dumpling, which opened in the Powerhouse Plaza in November, hope the concept of the fast-food-style Chinese restaurant will take off.
By LUKAS DUNFORD
LEBANON — The Storrs Hill Ski Area drew big crowds for its first season of free skiing over the weekend. The hill’s opening had been delayed from the originally scheduled Dec. 23 due to unseasonable weather.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
CLAREMONT — The Zoning Board of Adjustment deliberated less than 10 minutes at its meeting Monday before unanimously approving a variance for a pig slaughtering operation at Granite State Packing on Sullivan Street, adjacent to the Claremont airport.
By PATRICK O’GRADY
NEWPORT — The School Board will hold a public hearing Thursday on its proposed $22.29 million budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1.The budget presents a 1.2%, or $407,000, increase from this year’s default budget of $21.88 million that was...
By MAGGIE CASSIDY
Just about every morning for decades, longtime Hartland Selectboard member Tom White woke up and drove the town’s roads. “Every day he was out in his Cadillac, whether it was rain, snow or shine, just driving around, noticing things that I hadn’t...
By PATRICK O’GRADY
CLAREMONT — The City Council voted 9-0 this week to appropriate $1.24 million to repave Washington Street, a heavily traveled four-lane road that runs through the heart of the city’s commercial district.Wednesday’s vote came more than a year after the...
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