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The New Hampshire Supreme Court once again says the state has failed to fulfill its constitutional duty to fund an adequate education as ordered by the justices in the foundational ...
The two budget bills signed by Gov. Kelly Ayotte Friday are sprawling — House Bill 2, the policy bills, has 162 pages of new ...
From Pittsburg to Hollis, Gov. Kelly Ayotte and the state's five-member Executive Council are taking their "show on the road" ...
New Hampshire remains one of the lowest funders of public higher education in the country, according to 2024 data from the ...
The New Hampshire Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that the state is failing to spend enough money on public education. But the justices also said the Legislature and governor have the sole authority to ...
The New Hampshire Supreme Court on Tuesday affirmed a Superior Court's ruling that the state must drastically increase ...
Some believe the state Supreme Court got it right once again on education funding and taxes in its ConVal decision, but others say it fails to give lawmakers and the governor their due for education ...
For the first time since the landmark Claremont decision 32 years earlier, t Supreme Court, by a 3-2 decision, has found the state’s level of education aid to public schools to be constitutionally ...
But the ruling also reversed the trial court’s directive that the state immediately increase public school funding.
Casinos generating revenue from VLTs will now be taxed at 31%, with 35% sent to local charities working with casinos and addiction prevention.
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