New Hampshire
For N.H. abortion providers, having a buffer zone law is one thing — using it is another
On one current Friday in Harmony, a gaggle of about eight protesters gathered on the sidewalk outdoors Equality Well being Heart, holding indicators that learn “Infants Are Murdered Right here” and “Pray to Finish Abortion.” They had been joined by one other group of round 10 volunteer clinic escorts, patrolling the sidewalk in rainbow pinnies.
“We’re attempting to dam cameras, block indicators,” defined Eileen Ehlers, a longtime clinic volunteer and the self-proclaimed “grandmother of the group.”
Fridays are when Equality Well being Heart often presents surgical abortions. Ehlers stated she’ll usually wrap an arm round sufferers arriving on the clinic and stroll them inside, to guard them from having to have interaction with the protesters. If protesters are yelling, generally she yells again, to drown them out.
“After we did not have interaction with them, they received bolder,” Ehlers stated. “They owned the airwaves. They received extra antagonistic, aggressive, insulting, and demeaning.”
One longtime protester, Patrice, who declined to offer her final title to NHPR, stated it’s been some time since she’s talked immediately with a affected person at this clinic, partially because of the heavy escort presence.
“They’ve gotten fairly intense right here,” she stated. “That is essentially the most hostile place that we might be. However we’re not going to cover our mild.”
Since 2014, New Hampshire has had a regulation on the books meant to maintain these sorts of confrontations — between anti-abortion protesters, clinic volunteers and sufferers — at bay. This “buffer zone” regulation permits reproductive well being facilities to create a protest-free zone as much as 25 ft round their well being clinics.
Previously eight years, the regulation has confronted criticism and authorized challenges from those that allege it stifles free speech; the same measure in Massachusetts was struck down by the Supreme Court docket.
Republican lawmakers have additionally repeatedly tried to overturn it. Gov. Chris Sununu vetoed the most recent repeal try final week, saying that he was unaware of any “occasion the place a person or group has been harmed by it.”
Certainly, it isn’t clear that New Hampshire’s buffer zone regulation has ever been used — at Equality Well being Heart or elsewhere.
Dalia Vidunas, Equality Well being Heart’s govt director, says the problem has been getting needed buy-in from native officers. After the state’s buffer zone regulation first handed, she stated she met with the mayor’s workplace, code enforcement officers and native police to determine how it will work in Harmony.
“I had really ordered the indicators, as a result of it’s important to have indicators up,” Vidunas stated, “after which we canceled that order. As a result of the town asks us to attend.”
Not eager to burn bridges with metropolis officers, Vidunas stated she stopped pushing for the buffer zone and took their recommendation to strive different approaches to managing protesters.
“We wished to be good neighbors,” she stated. “We wished to do what was in the very best curiosity of the group.”
The Harmony Police Division, when contacted by NHPR, stated they don’t implement buffer zones however would reply to particular incidents of felony exercise. They didn’t reply to particular questions from NHPR about whether or not they advised the clinic to strive different approaches. The mayor didn’t return NHPR’s request for remark, and the town administrator deferred to the police division’s assertion.
In lieu of organising a buffer zone, Vidunas stated Equality Well being Heart has relied extra closely on clinic escorts to have interaction immediately with protesters, if wanted. She additionally acquired permits that may permit her workers to take up area in entrance of their facility. With a vendor allow, workers might be on the sidewalk in entrance of the well being middle, providing pamphlets and bracelets.
Today, the sidewalk outdoors of Equality Well being Heart in Harmony is basically the one place within the state the place confrontations between anti-abortion protesters and clinic volunteers are nonetheless happening frequently. Deliberate Parenthood, which performs abortions in Keene and Manchester, hires a safety element for his or her clinics and makes it a coverage to not have interaction immediately with protesters. Lovering Well being Heart in Greenland, which additionally supplies abortions, stated they don’t use escorts as a result of their lengthy driveway presents a pure buffer.
However in the previous couple of years, Vidunas stated escorts and permits haven’t been sufficient. There’s one newer group of out-of-state protesters, she stated, who she describes as notably massive and loud.
Even verbal confrontations, Vidunas stated, can hurt sufferers. She remembers one lady who was known as a “assassin” and “the mom of a useless child” on her approach contained in the clinic final yr.
“She walked via our entrance door, after which she simply collapsed within the fetal place and stayed there, sobbing, for 20 minutes,” Vidunas stated. “This was a wished being pregnant… She was having a miscarriage.”
In the previous couple of months, Vidunas stated she has been in a holding sample, ready to see what would occur to the buffer zone regulation on the State Home. Now that the regulation seems to be staying in place, she’s hoping to strive as soon as once more to work with metropolis officers to place it into observe.
New Hampshire
Crash impacts traffic on I-95 northbound in NH
New Hampshire State Police responded to a crash Friday evening on Interstate 95 northbound in Portsmouth.
The crash happened near Exit 5 and closed the highway in the northbound direction, but police said around 7:45 p.m. that one lane had reopened.
Authorities did not have any word on injuries.
Drivers are being asked to avoid the area if possible. Delays and detours are expected.
No further details were immediately available.
New Hampshire
NH Butterfly Monitoring Network Offers Online Trainings
CONTACT:
Heidi Holman, NH Fish and Game: 603-271-2461
Haley Andreozzi, UNH Cooperative Extension: (603) 862-5327
January 10, 2025
Concord, NH — Butterflies serve as important biodiversity indicators for ecosystem health and provide food for many speciess, such as migrating birds. There are more than 100 typess of butterflies in New Hampshire, but data on their presence and distribution is limited. With butterflies using forests, fields, wetlands, and backyards all over the state, volunteer observations are critical to providing a landscape view of these species.
A five-part online training series hosted by the NH Butterfly Monitoring Network will provide information on butterflies in New Hampshire, butterfly biology and identification, and how to get involved with the Network. The NH Butterfly Monitoring Network is a collaborative effort with a goal of engaging volunteers in counting and identifying butterflies across New Hampshire. Data collected by volunteers can contribute to the understanding of long-term trends in butterfly populations and inform conservation actions for both common and declining species.
Webinars in the series will include:
February 12, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Intro to New Hampshire Butterflies
Mark Ellingwood, Wildlife Biologist and Volunteer with the Harris Center for Conservation Education
February 26, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Wetland Butterflies of New Hampshire
Rick Van de Poll, Ecologist and Certified Wetland Scientist
March 12, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Butterflying New Hampshire’s Woodlands
Levi Burford, Coordinator of the Errol Butterfly Count
March 26, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Identifying New Hampshire’s Grassland Butterflies
Amy Highstrom, Coordinator of the Lake Sunapee Butterfly Count, and Vanessa Johnson, NH Audubon
April 9, 6:30–7:30 p.m.: Become a Volunteer Guide with NH Butterfly Monitoring Network
Haley Andreozzi, UNH Extension
All butterfly enthusiasts are welcome, with or without prior experience. For more information and to register for the session(s) you are interested in, visit nhbutterflies.org.
The NH Butterfly Monitoring Network is led by the NH Fish and Game Department and UNH Cooperative Extension with collaboration from partners statewide, including NH Audubon, Tin Mountain Conservation Center, the Harris Center for Conservation Education, and Ausbon Sargent Land Preservation Trust.
New Hampshire
Cooper scores 20, UAlbany beats New Hampshire
Posted:
Updated:
ALBANY, NY (NEWS10) — A strong second half powered the UAlbany women’s basketball team to their third conference victory in as many contests on Thursday night.
COACH COLLEEN MULLEN: “To start the game, New Hampshire had great defensive intensity and pace. Once we settled in and started moving the ball, we were able to capitalize with our inside-out game. In the second half, we had solid offensive execution and grinded out multiple defensive stops. This was a great team win on both ends.”
KEY STATS
- Graduate student Kayla Cooper led the team with 20 points, six rebounds, three steals, and three assists while shooting over 50% from the field.
- Fellow graduate student Jessica Tomasetti followed with nine points and five rebounds. The point guard also shot 50% from the field.
- Junior Gabriela Falcao tallied a team-high two blocks.
- As a team, the Great Danes totaled nine steals with 19 points off turnovers.
- The UAlbany defense did not allow any singular Wildcat to surpass seven points.
HOW IT HAPPENED
- Graduate student Lilly Phillips scored the first basket of the game after a combined four scoreless possessions.
- That defensive nature continued throughout the rest of the half.
- New Hampshire gained a 9-5 lead within four minutes of action but the Great Danes quickly answered to tie the score in the next two minutes.
- UAlbany ended the quarter with a one-possession advantage, 14-11.
- Throughout the second quarter, the Great Danes allowed just two field goals for five Wildcat points.
- Four different Great Danes scored in a defensive quarter to make it a 24-16 game at halftime.
- The second half was a different game – UAlbany nearly doubled its score from the first half in the third quarter alone.
- The Great Danes began the third with a 12-2 scoring run. Ten of those points were scored in just two minutes and 23 seconds.
- Kayla Cooper and Jessica Tomasetti combined to score 10 additional points and close the third quarter with a 22-point advantage, 46-24.
- Cooper and Tomasetti scored all but three of the 22 points in the third quarter. Cooper tallied 12 alone.
- Following two fourth-quarter layups from senior Laycee Drake and Phillips, the Great Danes held a 26-point lead.
- UAlbany continued to extend their lead throughout the next seven minutes of action. The largest lead of the contest came with 1:24 left – 29 points (59-30).
- The Wildcats got the final say to make it a 27-point decision, 59-32.
NEXT: The Great Danes will close out the week at home against Maine on Saturday (Jan. 11).
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