StateImpact NH

Reporters Amanda Loder  and Rachel Gotbaum travel the state to report on how business and economic issues affect you. Read reports and listen to them on NPR member stations.

For more, visit the StateImpact NH website.

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StateImpact
12:51 pm
Thu February 16, 2012

Seven Takeaways From The Carsey Institute's Report On Raising Wages For Home Care Workers

By far, our most popular post to date is a map we created using federal data on which states offer minimum wage and overtime guarantees to home health workers, and which don't.

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StateImpact
3:03 pm
Tue February 14, 2012

Key House Committee Considers Expanded Gambling Bill

The debate over the economic impacts of HB 593 (or "The Casino Bill," if you will) continues. As Kevin Landrigan of the Nashua Telegraph reports, discussion of the bill continued Monday, when the House Ways and Means committee listened to about three hours of public testimony:

"The state stands to lose $150 million of existing tax receipts to Massachusetts casinos if efforts to expand gambling in New Hampshire sit idle.

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StateImpact
11:32 am
Tue February 14, 2012

How State Budget Cuts Affect Your Property Taxes

A new report finds that Granite State communities are leaning more and more heavily on property taxes. Examining data from 2007–2010, the New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies found:

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North Country
10:09 am
Tue February 14, 2012

When It Comes To Help From The Feds Coos Does Well

Coos County residents receive far more help in federal funds than the national average, according StateImpact NH, a project between NHPR and NPR.

StateImpact’s Amanda Loder examined a recent story in The New York Times that investigated how much help various counties nationwide get from the federal government.

Loder found in New Hampshire Coos County stands out, with residents receiving an average of $10,896 per capita in benefits, compared to $6,583 nationally. 

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StateImpact
11:49 am
Mon February 13, 2012

Where NH Residents Depend On Government Benefits The Most

Perhaps unsurprisingly, small government–at all levels–is something of a signature issue in the "Live Free or Die" state.

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StateImpact
11:58 am
Fri February 10, 2012

For Profit Cancer Center Comes To NH to Make Its Case to Lawmakers

Cancer Treatment Centers of America is eyeing a spot in New Hampshire. The for profit chain wants to build a hospital in the Northeast. CTCA successfully lobbied Georgia to change its regulations so a specialty hospital could be built in that state. The company is hoping lawmakers in New Hampshire will make similar changes.

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Liveblog: House Right to Work
1:35 pm
Thu February 9, 2012

Liveblog: Right To Work House Committee Hearing

Liveblog: House Right to Work
12:53 pm
Thu February 9, 2012

We’re Liveblogging Today’s House Right To Work Hearing!

Michael Sauers / Flickr

Today at 1:30, the resurrected Right To Work bill comes up for public hearing at the Labor, Industrial and Rehabilitative Services Committee.  Given union reaction to the legislation last year, and to other bills targeting collective bargaining this session, it promises to be an eventful hearing.

And we’ll be liveblogging it at Representatives hall, shortly before the hearing begins.

So please feel free to follow our liveblog or just check in periodically right here on our homepage.

Liveblog: House Right to Work
12:12 pm
Thu February 9, 2012

Three Things To Expect At Today's Right-To-Work Hearing

The House Labor, Industrial and Rehabilitative Services Committee has already heard a number of controversial bills targeting collective bargaining. And unions have responded in force. This afternoon, tensions promise to be particularly high between Republicans and organized labor as the committee holds a public hearing on the resurrected so-called "Right To Work" legislation.

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StateImpact
3:55 pm
Wed February 8, 2012

Home Foreclosures Spiked In December

A new report released by the New Hampshire Housing and Finance Authority shows home foreclosures spiked in December 2011–up 35 percent from that November.

Jane Law of the Housing Authority says foreclosures have been declining since their peak in 2010, and December's jump might be an anomaly,

"The biggest factor is just mortgage companies are just kind of clearing out some inventory before the end of the year, which is the end of their tax year usually."

Law says while there were two percent fewer foreclosures over the course of 2011 than in 2010, the recovery in the home market will be slow.

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StateImpact
3:31 pm
Tue February 7, 2012

Tracing The Great Recession And Recovery Through Help Wanted Ads

After years of speculation on a "jobless recovery," finally, things could be looking up–at least for the moment. This week, the Bureau of Labor statistics reported some serious gains on the national jobs front for January, with the creation of 243,000 jobs.

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StateImpact
5:45 pm
Mon February 6, 2012

Some Key Arguments For--And Against--Making PSNH Sell Off Its Generating Facilities

One of the big issues in the New Hampshire business community this legislative session is the push to continue deregulating utilities. The state's current power regulation model is something of a hybrid between old-fashioned regulation and deregulation.

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StateImpact
2:59 pm
Thu February 2, 2012

How Dodd-Frank Regulations Affect You (Trust Us, They Will)

One of the key consequences of the economic collapse a few years ago was the passage of a massive piece of legislation called the "Dodd-Frank Act." The bill was co-sponsored by (now-retired) Democratic Senator Chris Dodd of Connecticut and (soon-to-be-retired) Democratic Massachusetts Representative Barney Frank. In a nutshell, their idea was to prevent another massive financial crisis by more heavily regulating key players in the financial industry.

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StateImpact
2:15 pm
Wed February 1, 2012

Breaking Down NH's Manufacturing Economy By County

Given that manufacturing got prominent play in the State of the State address and is a key piece of President Obama's new jobs initiative, StateImpact's in full-on data-slicing mode.

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StateImpact
11:33 am
Wed February 1, 2012

Why The Telephone Pole Tax Matters

We'll admit it: The telephone pole property tax sounds like a dry topic for the 2012 Legislative session at first glance.

And at second glance, for that matter.

But fortunately for us, John Toole of the Eagle-Tribune took a third look, rustled up some sources, facts, and stats, and managed to make the story not only interesting, but also compelling. We highly recommend you check out his article.

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