Rindge Zoning Board approves special exceptions for 52 new housing units off Route 119
The Rindge Zoning Board approved two special exceptions for connected development projects, which plan for a total of 52 new housing units off of Route 119.
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A lot fewer people are losing their homes in the Granite State.
Both foreclosures and foreclosure auction notices plummeted again in May, this time by 37 percent compared to May 2013, according to data released by the New Hampshire Housing Finance Authority.
Some 172 foreclosures deeds were filed – 18 percent less than April — and less than half the number filed in May 2012. That brings the total for the year to 1,019, which is 20 percent of the total recorded in the first five months of 2012.
Meanwhile, the 247 foreclosure action notices (representing homes going through the foreclosure process, but not necessarily ending in a foreclosure), was 10 percent lower than April. Year-to-date, that represents a 33 percent drop from 2013 and a 63 percent decline from 2010, the heart of the recession.
Meanwhile, 5.5 percent of homeowners were behind in their mortgage payments. That’s less than the 9 percent delinquency rate at the recession’s height, but still above the 4 percent rate before the recession began.
The Rindge Zoning Board approved two special exceptions for connected development projects, which plan for a total of 52 new housing units off of Route 119.
Costco officials revealed plans to open an 820-parking space membership warehouse club, 16-pump fuel station and tire center at the future Seacoast Landing, the first known tenant of Torrington Properties’ plan for the former Mall at Fox Run and Newington Park Shopping Center.
Concord has a restriction when it comes to new dead-end streets: no more than 1,000 feet.
During the last three months, hundreds of thousands of Granite Staters filed federal income taxes for Tax Year 2025.
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The New England Council recently hosted a forum in Boston exploring some of the incredible innovation in our region focused on the early detection of diseases. We heard about some of the remarkable advances in technology that are enabling earlier detection of everything from cancer to Alzheimer’s disease.
In medicine, we are trained to diagnose problems at their source. If a patient presents with symptoms, we look beyond the surface to understand the underlying cause. The same principle applies to our health care system — and right now, the diagnosis is clear.