New Hampshire
From beer to slaughterhouses: Earth Week in New England
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This 12 months for Earth Week, April 18, 2022 – April 22, 2022, NHPR and its associate stations within the New England Information Collaborative are sharing tales on how local weather change is impacting meals techniques in our area. And we’ll take a look at the ways in which New Englanders are adapting to a altering setting.
Meals techniques are the sum of the meals chain—from provide and manufacturing of crops, livestock, fish, and different agricultural merchandise to transportation, processing, retailing, wholesaling, in addition to the preparation of meals to disposal of waste.
On NHPR, search for reporting on-air Throughout Morning Version and All Issues Thought of in addition to on NHPR.org and the NHPR app, together with information from NHPR’s local weather change reporter Mara Hoplamazian on the slaughterhouse scarcity in New England, reported via the lens of a New Hampshire farmer who’s making an attempt to alter that – and begin a brand new form of slaughterhouse.
Additionally on NHPR, try By Levels, a local weather change reporting mission that tells tales of challenges and options in addition to particular person tales of resilience and wrestle, innovation and compromise, and of massive change by levels.
Different Earth Week tales from the Collaborative embody:
- New England’s maple syrup manufacturing and the way one Maine county is poised to develop into one of many final outposts of an trade weak to a altering local weather.
- The motion for New England beer to develop into totally native, and what this implies to the setting.
- How cities and cities throughout New England are exploring methods to get meals merchandise out of trash bins – and into compost bins.
The New England Information Collaborative is a consortium of 9 public media stations within the area working collectively to coordinate information protection, share reporting and advance finest practices in all facets of journalism. The NENC is a member of CoveringClimate Now, a world journalism collaboration devoted to protecting the local weather story.
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New Hampshire
Wood Partners Enters Rhode Island and New Hampshire
![Wood Partners Enters Rhode Island and New Hampshire](https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2419630/Wood_Partners_Logo.jpg?p=facebook)
Leading multifamily developer breaks ground on two luxury communities in new markets
BOSTON , June 17, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — National multifamily developer Wood Partners today announced the start of construction on Alta Altitude in Warwick, Rhode Island, and Alta Oak & Pine in Londonderry, New Hampshire, marking its entry into both states. These multifamily communities will bring more than 475 units of much needed housing to these markets that have seen a shortage of new development.
“We are consistently looking to develop in key growth markets that offer convenient transportation, access to a highly educated workforce and provide an unmatched residential experience,” said Mark Seck, Vice President for Wood Partners’ Boston office. “We are excited to add Rhode Island and New Hampshire to our rapidly growing portfolio of well-located, luxury multifamily communities.”
Wood Partners’ Alta brand features Class-A apartment living with premier amenities and unparalleled design. Residents can expect stainless steel appliances, quartz countertops and upscale finishes.
Alta Altitude in Rhode Island is designed as two four-story buildings containing 214 apartment homes with an expansive courtyard. The apartments are located within the City of Warwick’s “City Centre,” a 95-acre Master Plan that calls for more than 1.5 million square feet of office, retail, hotel, commercial and residential. Highly walkable, Alta Altitude is conveniently located just off Interstate 95 and adjacent to T.F. Green International Airport and the T.F. Green MBTA Train Station. Amenities at Alta Altitude will include a state-of-the-art fitness center, resident lounges, gaming and entertainment and a beautifully landscaped courtyard with resort style swimming pool, fire pits and grilling areas. The community broke ground in May 2024 and is expected to deliver first units in Summer 2025.
Alta Oak & Pine in New Hampshire comprises 11 three-story residential buildings and a stand-alone amenity building. The 264 units will be a mix of one-, two-, and three-bedroom floorplans. Located just off Interstate 93, the 11-acre site is part of the Woodmont Commons master development, which is approved for more than 1 million square feet of office, retail and residential. Premier amenities include a state-of-the-art fitness space, work-from-home lounge, game area, swimming pool, large greenspace, dog park and pet spa, and outdoor grilling, firepits and lounging areas. The community broke ground in May 2024 and is expected to deliver first units in Spring 2025.
For more information on Wood Partners and its communities, visit woodpartners.com.
About Wood Partners
Wood Partners is a national leader in the development, construction, and management of multifamily communities across the United States. The company has been involved in the acquisition and development of more than 100,000 multifamily homes with a combined capitalization of $21 billion. The company currently owns 80+ properties across the United States representing more than 25,000 units. Headquartered in Atlanta, Wood Partners has offices in 19 major markets covering development across 18 states nationwide. Wood Partners is consistently ranked as one of the five largest multifamily developers in the United States. For more information, visit woodpartners.com.
Media Contact:
Addy Kundla
The Wilbert Group
[email protected]
SOURCE Wood Partners
New Hampshire
Joe Kelly Crashes NH-01 GOP Primary – NH Journal
![Joe Kelly Crashes NH-01 GOP Primary – NH Journal](https://nhjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/JKL-filing-e1718590522878.jpg)
Joe Kelly Levasseur signs up to run in NH-01 GOP primary, June 14, 2024.
It took until the last day of filing, but MAGA finally made the GOP primary ballot in New Hampshire.
On Friday afternoon, Manchester Alderman-at-Large Joe Kelly Levasseur formally entered the First Congressional District Republican primary. He told NHJournal he did it for one reason: To support Donald Trump.
“One hundred percent to be with Trump and to help him get his agenda through,” Levasseur said when asked why he’s running. “Stop the lawfare, stop the impeachments, stop the Democrat hit pieces on this guy. He needs allies, he doesn’t need milquetoast Republicans. He needs real, hard-core ‘America First’ Republicans in Congress.”
Levasseur is joining a field that already features businessman and military veteran Chris Bright, business owner Hollie Noveletsky, and former Executive Councilor Russell Prescott. Bright and Noveletsky are first-time candidates, while Prescott came in fourth in the 2022 GOP primary for this seat. He plans to inject a surge of Trumpian politics into what he sees as a sleepy race for the nomination.
“They’ve been running for months and months. Nobody’s been talking about it or hearing about it,” Levasseur said of the rest of the GOP field. And while he also described Noveletsky and Prescott as “very serious candidates who got in early,” he says his entrance into the race will help them.
“I think they’re going to benefit by me getting in,” Levasseur told WFEA radio host Drew Cline on Friday. “I think it’ll add a lot more energy and it will certainly focus a lot more [attention] over to this side of the district,” meaning Manchester as opposed to the seacoast.
“A lot of people know me and I think there’ll be a lot more attention on this race,” Levasseur said.
Greg Moore with Americans for Prosperity New Hampshire described Levasseur’s decision “the only real spice added during the filing period” for the September primaries. “The rest was pretty well baked into the cake.”
Not that everyone is happy about Levasseur’s decision. A frequent candidate, a combative media presence, and an outspoken member of the GOP’s populist wing, Levasseur has plenty of enemies on both sides of the aisle.
“He’s Karoline Leavitt without the money or good looks,” one New Hampshire Republican activist told NHJournal on background.
Levasseur has run for office several times before, including a narrow loss to Chris Pappas in the 2016 Executive Council race. Two years later, Pappas was elected to Congress. He’s also run for state Senate and House of Representatives, and he was elected Hillsborough County Register of Probate in 2014.
One unintended consequence of Levasseur’s candidacy could be its impact on the race for governor. Levasseur says he plans to make Manchester — and the Democrats’ poor performance there — a central part of his campaign. Which means plenty of negative attacks on former Mayor Joyce Craig.
“I want to give Joyce Craig the credit she’s due,” Levasseur told NHJournal. “She really is responsible for turning Manchester from blue to red.”
Republicans have a functioning majority on the board for the first time since 1998.
New Hampshire
State expands eligible abuse for YDC payment, ups settlement caps • New Hampshire Bulletin
![State expands eligible abuse for YDC payment, ups settlement caps • New Hampshire Bulletin](https://newhampshirebulletin.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/formellaydc.jpg)
The state has broadened who can seek payment for abuse while at the former Youth Development Center.
Gov. Chris Sununu signed Senate Bill 591 Friday, which immediately expands the type of abuse eligible for payment but also increases settlement payment caps and gives individuals six more months to submit claims.
Under the new law, lawmakers added $60 million to the original $100 million Youth Development Center settlement fund to expand and increase compensation to victims.
Until Friday, the state considered claims for only sexual and physical assault, and it capped awards at $1.5 million for sexual assault or a combination of sexual and physical assault and at $150,000 for physical abuse alone.
Now, there is an additional cateogry for “egregious” sexual abuse, defined as “wanton or cruel” abuse, that goes beyond what most victims experience. Those claims would be capped at $2.5 million.
Also new is a category for “other” abuse, which could include unlawful restraint, confinement, strip searches, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The two attorneys who represent nearly 1,000 former YDC residents have encouraged them to sue the state rather than settle because of limits on payments and eligible abuse. The attorneys told lawmakers they’d encourage their clients to settle instead under the bill.
In a statement Friday, Attorney General John Formella, whose office oversees the settlement process, thanked lawmakers, the governor, and the two attorneys who represent nearly 1,000 former YDC residents for supporting the legislation signed into law Friday.
“As we move forward, we are committed to working closely with (the fund’s administrator), plaintiffs’ counsel, and, most importantly, the victims themselves, to ensure that the implementation of these changes is conducted with fairness, respect, and efficiency,” Formella said. “Together, we are dedicated to providing victims with the justice and closure they deserve.”
Claims, which will now be accepted until May, can be filed via the Attorney General’s website, ydcclaims.nh.gov.
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