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NHPR Morning Edition host Rick Ganley spoke with NHPR President and CEO Jim Schachter about what the cuts mean for the station’s future.
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The vetoes include a bill that would have rolled back civil rights protections for transgender people in the state and a bill that would have allowed parents to request books be removed from their child’s school.
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State lawmakers voted to pass a two year spending plan for the state this week.
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Today, nearly 5% of New Hampshire’s population is Hispanic. But when Ana Hebra Flaster’s family came to Nashua from Cuba in 1967, they knew only a few Spanish-speaking people in their neighborhood.
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First responders rescued hikers suffering from heat-related illness and hypothermia over the last week.
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As we near the end of the current legislative session, we have an update from the State House with NHPR's senior political reporter Josh Rogers.
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Roughly 70% of elementary school students in Berlin aren’t reading at their grade level. Some teachers are saying that’s because of how those students are taught to read.
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This is the last week of the school year for many students and teachers across New Hampshire. But for one educator, school is out for summer indefinitely.
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As the New Hampshire Legislature approaches the end of this year's session, first-term Gov. Kelly Ayotte can point to political success on a number of issues.
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It’s been a tricky budget cycle for lawmakers. We explain what’s in the Senate’s nearly $16 billion budget, which passed on Thursday.
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In the 1800s, over 120 men disappeared while trying to find the Northwest passage. In his new book, Mark Synnott traces the clues as to what happened to the crew as he also sails the Arctic passage where they disappeared.
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The CEO and public figurehead of Market Basket has been put on administrative leave, rekindling memories of a different intra-family squabble in 2014 that shook the company to its core. We talk about this story and more on this edition of the New Hampshire News Recap.