New initiative seeks workers and tourists to Monadnock region
The collaborative has some 475 members spread across communities in the region and representing a broad range of business, health care and education interests.
Sections
Extras
Connect With Us
Four hundred more people were employed in New Hampshire’s construction industry in April, a gain of 1.4 percent from a year ago, according to an analysis by Associated General Contracts of federal data.
AGC, using Labor Department figures, reported that there were 28,000 people employed in construction in the Granite State in April. The 1.4 percent increase was the second largest percentage increase in construction employment in the U.S., according to AGC.
Year over year, the state has gained 1,600 construction jobs since April 2017, when 26,400 people were employed in the industry, AGC reported – a 6.1 percent gain and the 11th best in the U.S.
Meanwhile, AGC said that while firms in most states were adding employees, it cautioned that relatively few young workers appear to be entering the construction industry.
“The collective cultural fixation on urging every student to go to college and seek office jobs means relatively few young adults are ever encouraged to consider careers in construction,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, CEO of AGC.
The collaborative has some 475 members spread across communities in the region and representing a broad range of business, health care and education interests.
Fidelity Investments announced Wednesday that New Hampshire is one of four Fidelity sites that will transition to a full-time, on-site schedule beginning in September
Business and event happenings around the state of NH
The Latest is a roundup of the comings and goings of the movers and shakers in NH's business community
North Country Healthcare on Monday, April 13, released a report summarizing feedback from a series of community listening sessions held earlier this year across the region, highlighting widespread concern about access to care, staffing and communication, along with strong support for keeping local hospitals open.
Morrison Hospital Association, a nonprofit senior care provider in northern New Hampshire, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection April 10, citing mounting debt — including a nearly $23 million federal loan — and lingering financial effects from the COVID-19 pandemic.
After two choppy years for dealmakers, 2026 is starting with a very different tone, one that many business owners have been waiting for. While the past few years brought tariff swings, interest rate volatility and a cautious lending environment, the fundamentals are shifting in a way that increasingly favors sellers, especially those in the lower-middle-market (LMM).
New Hampshire should be a place where businesses have every structural advantage to compete and grow — built on the workforce, infrastructure and policies that make it the best state in the nation to…
State Sen. Cindy Rosenwald, who represents Nashua and serves as the Senate deputy minority leader, announced earlier this month she won’t seek re-election in November, putting a cap on a 22-year career in state politics.