New Hampshire
Ayotte Vetoes Three Bills, Signs 18 Others
By PAULA TRACY, InDepthNH.org
CONCORD – The governor announced Friday she signed into law 18 bills passed by the legislature, including ones related to cyanobacteria and Senate Bill 619, establishing procedures for expedited court hearings and disposition of confiscated animals.
Gov. Kelly Ayotte, a Republican, also vetoed three bills including one enabling alternative treatment centers to operate a greenhouse cultivation location.
“I do not support expanding the cultivation of marijuana in our state. For this reason, I have vetoed SB 468,” she wrote in her veto message.
Also vetoed was HB 1072 relative to employer notice of department of labor investigations.
“While this bill is the product of thoughtful conversations and important considerations, it unnecessarily restricts the Department of Labor’s critical authority to swiftly respond to emergent situations where employers have failed to pay wages to their employees. New Hampshire families depend on timely paychecks, and we cannot delay the Department’s ability to react in those circumstances,” she wrote.
HB 1643, relative to the report of a guardian ad litem, was also vetoed.
“The role of the guardian ad litem is to assist the court in determining the best interests of the child. To that end, under current law guardians ad litem are directed by the court to gather information and, only if specifically requested by the court, make certain recommendations relating to parenting plans, schedules, and decision-making responsibilities. Ultimately, the court is responsible for making determinations relative to a child’s welfare. This bill would strip the authority of the court to request a guardian ad litem provide recommendations for consideration by the judge and limits information available to the court, which could impede its ability to ensure the best interests of a child,” Ayotte wrote.
The three vetoes will be returned to the Senate and the House in the fall to see whether they are sustained or overridden.
Ayotte did sign the following bills which are now law:
HB 656 — Relative to the authority of local school districts to accept federal grants.
HB 1073 — Clarifying when the secretary of state shall complete the registry of New Hampshire decentralized autonomous organizations.
HB 1381 — Extending the time of the party filing period.
HB 1425 — Relative to the development of an online wetlands permit processing system.
HB 1495 — Allowing a reimbursement anticipation note to be used as collateral in certain circumstances.
HB 1549 — Establishing that titles, bills of sale, and identification documents are required only at initial registration or transfer of ownership.
SB 499 — Relative to the membership, duties, and reporting requirements of the traffic safety commission.
SB 500 — Relative to restroom access for certain commercial motor vehicle operators.
SB 505 — Relative to applications for guide licenses and repealing the fee for temporary registration of nonresidents relative to OHRVs.
SB 516 — Relative to certain unclassified positions in the department of health and human services.
SB 595 — Relative to rulemaking for transient non-community water systems.
SB 598 — Establishing the cyanobacteria mitigation loan and grant fund task force.
SB 600 — Requiring the governor to submit and present a quarterly fiscal year budget report about the general and education trust funds to the general court fiscal committee.
SB 610 — Allowing the insurance commissioner to approve innovative short or long-term care policies.
SB 619 — Establishing procedures for expedited court hearings and disposition of confiscated animals.
SB 633 — Relative to donations received by the granite patron of the arts fund.
SB 644 — Requiring background checks for solid waste and hazardous waste facility owners.
SB 655 — Relative to employee leasing companies, workers’ compensation coverage options, and a minimum wage exemption for minor league baseball players.
New Hampshire
Suspected gunman in Hampton Beach shooting was in U.S. Navy
The suspected gunman in a shooting in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, in the hours after July 4 was an active-duty member of the U.S. Navy, officials said Monday.
The New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office had previously identified the man who shot a man and woman, then himself, early Sunday morning as 21-year-old Tyshawn Cooper. Cooper died by suicide in a confrontation with police.
Cooper worked on the USS Hampton as an information systems technician (submarines), second class, according to an update from prosecutors and state and local police on Monday. He was living in New Hampshire for the military assignment — the submarine has been at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard.
If you or someone you know is in crisis, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline or chat live at 988lifeline.org. You can also visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources for additional support.
Cooper was not on duty at the time of the shooting, a spokesman for the Navy told NBC10 Boston Monday.
“We are deeply saddened by this event and extend our heartfelt condolences to the victims and their families. The Navy is cooperating fully with the New Hampshire State Police, who are leading the investigation into the circumstances of the shooting,” the statement said.
The USS Hampton, an attack submarine, is named for four cities with the name Hampton, including New Hampshire’s.
The man, 23, and woman, 25, remained hospitalized on Monday, officials said.
The Naval Criminal Investigative Service was reviewing the incident along with state police and prosecutors, according to officials’ update.
Officials haven’t yet said what’s suspected to have led to the shooting, first reported on Ocean Boulevard about 1:19 a.m. Sunday. Officers then encountered Cooper near P Street and Ashworth Avenue, according to the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office. During that interaction, the suspect pulled out a handgun and shot himself in the head. At the same time, an officer fired their weapon.
The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner ruled the cause of death was a gunshot wound of head and that the manner of his death was suicide.
Though the officer’s shot was not the cause of death, the Attorney General’s Office will conduct a use of force investigation.
New Hampshire
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Inmate Who Failed To Return To Concord Transitional Housing Unit In June In Custody: Follow-Up: Eric Wollen, who previously lived in Nashua, was placed on escape status by the DOC after failing to return to the North End unit June 11.
Missing Man Found Due To Drug Sale Charges | Indictments | Staycation, Simplified | More: PM Patch NH: Also: How to win an argument with an 800 lb. steer; Goodlander joins “Promise to America” effort; gun threat-domestic violence case update.
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Gunman Dead After Double Shooting Near Popular Hampton Beach, New Hampshire AG Says
New Hampshire
One seriously injured in small plane crash in Newport, NH
One person was seriously injured in a small plane crash in Newport, New Hampshire, on Sunday.
Newport police and fire responded to Parlin Airfield shortly after 1 p.m. Sunday for a reported plane crash. When they arrived, they said they found a private, single-engine plane in a wooded area off the end of the grass runway.
An off-duty Newport police employee had witnessed the crash, and assisted Newport fire personnel in removing the pilot from the plane. The pilot sustained serious, but non-life-threatening injuries and was flown by medical helicopter to Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon.
The pilot’s name has not been released. They were the only one in the plane at the time of the crash.
The cause of the crash is under investigation by the Federal Aviation Administration, with assistance from local, state and federal authorities.
Anyone who may have witnessed the crash or has further information is encouraged to contact police at 603-863-3232.
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