No sale: NH decides to lease not sell redeveloped I-95 welcome centers
Officials say it's a win for the state, and for Hampton, as the state makes a push for proposals from developers/operators
Sections
Extras
Connect With Us
To the editor:
The N.H. Opinions article by Mark Fernald regarding who’s responsible for the federal deficit (“Who’s to blame for the federal deficit?” Nov. 5-18 NHBR), comes at a time when I was pondering the even larger issue: Why are we, as a nation, in the fix we find ourselves?In 1945, the U.S. was the premier nation in the world. We were the reigning military, economic, industrial, financial and social country in the world. All free societies looked up to us.Since then, over the past 65 years, we have lost most of that advantage. We are forced to buy most of our oil from nations that hate us, trade for consumer and industrial goods with nations that dislike us or that are ambivalent at best, and we are a debtor nation.The responsibility for our fix can be laid at the collective feet of all the government officials that have guided our nation since 1945. The sum total of their judgments have put us where we find ourselves today.Do I have a solution to the problem? No, I don’t, but they say that recognizing a problem is the first step to solving it.Donald Bradley
Plainfield
Officials say it's a win for the state, and for Hampton, as the state makes a push for proposals from developers/operators
Only 5.6% of the buildable land in New Hampshire has access to both water and sewer systems. When it comes to much-needed residential construction in the state, that represents an opportunity and a challenge, according to presentations Oct. 29 during…
A new report from America’s Health Rankings found that 10.2% of adults in New Hampshire have previously been diagnosed with cancer, and the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows 9,016 cancer cases were reported in NH in 2022.
For families navigating both retirement planning and long-term care, the life-expectancy exception offers a powerful opportunity to preserve wealth across generations.
One Big Beautiful Bill Act further complicates the picture
Five home-grown innovations — including two medical systems, workforce software, a parts ID marker for manufacturing and a video tracker for ski racers — are vying for the 2025 Product of the Year from the NH Tech Alliance.
The district recently received an unexpected $2 million bill from the risk pool that administers its health insurance, part of a debt shared by dozens of school districts across the state
Nicole Bluefort shares her journey into New Hampshire and how she has made a name for herself in the legal field
Albany International develops and manufactures components using advanced materials for the paper and aerospace industries. Its two main businesses are Machine Clothing, which produces custom belts for paper production, and Albany Engineered Composites, which supplies advanced composite parts for the aerospace industry.