
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The Claremont School Board has authorized a bank loan that will cover some daily expenses as the district faces a $1 to $5 million deficit. Meanwhile another New Hampshire town, Pittsfield, is also facing a budget shortfall of over a million dollarsAnd a federal judge temporarily blocked a state law that would cut funding for schools that pursue diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. The decision pushes off a deadline the Department of Education set for when schools need to report if they’ve had any contracts or policies involving DEI.We discuss these stories and more on this week’s edition of the New Hampshire News Recap.Guests:Jeremy Margolis, Concord MonitorSruthi Gopalakrishnan, Concord MonitorTop stories from around New Hampshire this week:Amid Claremont crisis, Pittsfield school district works to dig out of its own million dollar holePittsfield’s deficit, discovered early this year, is roughly $1.8 million and potentially bigger by percentage than Claremont’s. But as dire questions swirl in Claremont about whether schools will even remain open over the coming weeks, Pittsfield’s schools begin the year on less precarious footing.Federal judge temporarily blocks enforcement of New Hampshire’s DEI law for majority of districtsA federal judge on Thursday temporarily blocked the state of New Hampshire from penalizing school districts that fail to comply with the state’s new ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.Berlin murder to be first case reviewed by state’s domestic violence committeeThe committee’s role is to identify gaps in system responses and services, as well as key points for intervention, that—if addressed—could strengthen both the systemic and community response to domestic violence in New Hampshire.New Hampshire homes still expensive even as market begins to coolNew Hampshire’s housing market is slowly showing signs of cooling after years of being dominated by sellers, but even with the slowdown, record-high prices continue to put the dream of homeownership out of reach for many.More New Hampshire headlines:Whooping cough cases up in New Hampshire this yearJohn E. Sununu says he's considering another U.S. Senate runReport finds NH Army Nat'l Guard recruiter coerced young members into sexLawyers for NH Supreme Court justice facing charges wants AG removed from case, or be forced to testifyLabor Day protest in Concord fills downtown streets, State House lawn
By NHPR4.3
66 ratings
The Claremont School Board has authorized a bank loan that will cover some daily expenses as the district faces a $1 to $5 million deficit. Meanwhile another New Hampshire town, Pittsfield, is also facing a budget shortfall of over a million dollarsAnd a federal judge temporarily blocked a state law that would cut funding for schools that pursue diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. The decision pushes off a deadline the Department of Education set for when schools need to report if they’ve had any contracts or policies involving DEI.We discuss these stories and more on this week’s edition of the New Hampshire News Recap.Guests:Jeremy Margolis, Concord MonitorSruthi Gopalakrishnan, Concord MonitorTop stories from around New Hampshire this week:Amid Claremont crisis, Pittsfield school district works to dig out of its own million dollar holePittsfield’s deficit, discovered early this year, is roughly $1.8 million and potentially bigger by percentage than Claremont’s. But as dire questions swirl in Claremont about whether schools will even remain open over the coming weeks, Pittsfield’s schools begin the year on less precarious footing.Federal judge temporarily blocks enforcement of New Hampshire’s DEI law for majority of districtsA federal judge on Thursday temporarily blocked the state of New Hampshire from penalizing school districts that fail to comply with the state’s new ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.Berlin murder to be first case reviewed by state’s domestic violence committeeThe committee’s role is to identify gaps in system responses and services, as well as key points for intervention, that—if addressed—could strengthen both the systemic and community response to domestic violence in New Hampshire.New Hampshire homes still expensive even as market begins to coolNew Hampshire’s housing market is slowly showing signs of cooling after years of being dominated by sellers, but even with the slowdown, record-high prices continue to put the dream of homeownership out of reach for many.More New Hampshire headlines:Whooping cough cases up in New Hampshire this yearJohn E. Sununu says he's considering another U.S. Senate runReport finds NH Army Nat'l Guard recruiter coerced young members into sexLawyers for NH Supreme Court justice facing charges wants AG removed from case, or be forced to testifyLabor Day protest in Concord fills downtown streets, State House lawn

36,973 Listeners

3,524 Listeners

1,477 Listeners

8,634 Listeners

119 Listeners

138 Listeners

14,614 Listeners

2,539 Listeners

112,342 Listeners

32,355 Listeners

14,289 Listeners

15,218 Listeners

12,184 Listeners

803 Listeners

8,040 Listeners

5,758 Listeners

1,357 Listeners

327 Listeners

4,498 Listeners

12,304 Listeners

16,029 Listeners

2,137 Listeners

948 Listeners

5 Listeners

283 Listeners

3 Listeners

122 Listeners

38 Listeners