Officials concerned about Medicaid law conflicts
Some state officials and lawmakers are concerned that New Hampshire’s incoming Medicaid premium system may conflict with provisions in Congress’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
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This year began where the last year left off: a new modern record for fewest bankruptcy filings in a month.
Only 41 New Hampshire individuals filed for protection in January, beating the previous record by four, and that was set in December.
January filings were 24 percent lower than in January 2021, 33 percent below last year’s average monthly total, and a third of what they were in in January 2020, before the pandemic disrupted the economy.
This January’s filings totaled a little more than a tenth of the 381 that were recorded in January 2010, during the Great Recession.
You would have to go back to 1987, before Congress made it harder to file for bankruptcy, to find any month with fewer filings. In January of that year, 39 bankruptcies were recorded, and in November there were 37.
Unlike December, January’s filings did include two businesses. Both filed for bankruptcy reorganization. They were:
Some state officials and lawmakers are concerned that New Hampshire’s incoming Medicaid premium system may conflict with provisions in Congress’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
A judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by more than 70 Hampton taxpayers who argued the town’s 2024 revaluation — which led to increased tax bills — was conducted unfairly and unlawfully.
Now that 2026 is underway, New Hampshire employers should turn their attention to the state’s new Parental Medical Leave law (PML). Effective January 1, 2026, most employers with 20 or more employees are required to provide unpaid leave to allow employees to attend childbirth-related medical appointments, postpartum care and pediatric visits during a child’s first year.
In 2024, computer programmers from DeepMind won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for developing an AI that predicts protein folding. If AI that is advanced enough to simulate protein folding (and allow programmers to win the world’s top chemistry prize) has arrived, is the law any more complicated? Why should lawyers invest time learning about various facets of the law to draft briefs or contracts, when they can task AI?
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New Hampshire Supreme Court Justice Anna Barbara Hantz Marconi will no longer take part in cases before the state’s highest court, telling her colleagues on the bench that she will instead focus on administrative tasks until she reaches the mandatory retirement age of 70 in February.
The post-closing process of integrating the acquired business, its employees, customers and systems into the buyer’s operations is critically important to future performance.