New Hampshire
Light Snow, Rain, And More Snow This Week In New Hampshire: Get Out
CONCORD, NH — Snow, rain, and more snow are expected this week in New Hampshire.
The National Weather Service issued a “hazardous weather outlook” on Sunday, warning of “warm, breezy, and rainy weather” on Tuesday before a cold front enters the state on Thursday.
“A combination of snowmelt and rainfall will likely result in some river and creek rises, with potential for ice movement,” the alert stated.
The alert was for Merrimack, Hillsborough, and Rockingham counties.
Expect snow showers early Monday, turning to rain, and running through the early afternoon. Temperatures will be between 25 and 50 degrees.
On Tuesday, forecasters call for partly sunny skies with highs in the low 50s. Overnight lows will be in the upper 30s, and rain is expected, too.
The rain will continue into Wednesday, with highs in the mid-50s and lows in the low 40s.
Rain and snow will make for a messy commute on Thursday, but then the sun returns.
The warmup is expected to continue into the weekend, forecasters said.
The latest weather conditions can be found on the front page of every Patch.com site in the United States, including the 14 New Hampshire Patch news and community websites covering Amherst, Bedford, Concord, Exeter, Hampton, Londonderry, Manchester, Merrimack, Milford, Nashua, North Hampton, Portsmouth, Salem, Windham, and Across NH. Local weather reports for New Hampshire are posted on Sundays and Thursdays. Alerts are published when needed.
Get Out, New Hampshire
Here’s a roundup of events around the Granite State this weekend.
Monday
Melted Crayon Art
Watercolor
Peace & Justice Conversations: Iran & The Mid-East Turmoil
New Hampshire
NH Forests: A Story of Revival and the Challenges Ahead: Business NH Magazine
New Hampshire
Missing Berlin Motorcyclist Found Dead After Route 2 Crash: New Hampshire State Police Roundup
06/19/2026 02:16, EAST KINGSTON, BOLDUC, NATHAN RICHARD (22); ASHFORD, CONNECTICUT, 635:1,I (BURGLARY-NIGHT / HOME / WEAPON), 635:1,V (BURGLARY TOOLS-POSSESSION), 637:7 (RECV STOLEN PROP; $1501+), 637:7 (RECV STOLEN PROP; $1501+), 634:2,II (CRIMINAL MISCHIEF).
06/15/2026 19:49, RAYMOND, KETCHEN, DANA CANNEY (63); BROOKLINE, 265-A:2,I(A) (DUI-IMPAIRMENT), 264:25 (CONDUCT AFTER ACCIDENT), 265-A:2,I(B) (DUI; ADULT>.08; MINOR>.02), 172-B:3 (PROTECTIVE CUSTODY-ALCOHOL), 265-A:44 (TRANSPORTING ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES OR MARIJUANA).
06/15/2026 21:05, GILFORD, SEXTON, JALEN R. (26); ALTON, 263:64,VI (DRIVE AFTER REV/SUS-SUBSQT), 263:64,IV (DRIVE AFTER REVOCATION/SUSPENSION; RECKLESS DRIVING), 263:1,II (LICENSE REQD; OP W/EXPIRED LICENSE W/IN 12 MONTHS OF EXPIRATION), 265:60 (SPEEDING 25 MPH OVER LIMIT OF 55 OR LESS).
06/16/2026 02:40, PORTSMOUTH, LANE, MICHAEL CORY (29); HUBBARDSTON, MA, 631:3 (RECKLESS CONDUCT), 265-A:2,I(A) (DUI-IMPAIRMENT), 265:79,I (RECKLESS OPERATION).
06/16/2026 17:16, GILFORD, COSTARELLI, ROBERT L. (55); EAST BRIDGEWATER, MA, 631:2-B,I(A) (DV; SIMPLE ASSAULT; BODILY INJURY OR PHYSICAL CONTACT), 634:2,III (CRIMINAL MISCHIEF).
New Hampshire
Concord City Manager Receives ‘Satisfactory’ Review, 2.5% Raise, But Sabbatical Request Gets Trimmed
Schultz said she “highly respects” Aspell, too, but there was a “dissonance between reality” when eyeing what the public and city employees were earning.
Ward 6 City Council Aislinn Kalob, too, would not be voting for the increase, saying it had been “heavily on my mind since we’ve had our nonpublic sessions,” which lasted about six hours of work. She appreciated Kretovic clearly outlining the job of city manager. But people were frustrated with the city manager, and she saw that in the comments in online forums.
“I do feel, after really digging into this, and learning about his job,” she said, “and thinking toward the future when, eventually, at some point, somebody new will be sitting in that seat, we are the ones who direct policy and he is the one that implements it… there is anger out there that should be directed more toward us.”
Kalob said, too, a room full of firefighters, upset about their contract, also made voting for the wage increase something she could not consider.
Michele Horne of Ward 2 echoed similar concerns to Schultz, saying there was significant “wage disparity” between the public and staff and the city manager. She also agreed with Kalob’s point that previous councils created this contract.
-
Nevada17 seconds agoNevada’s modern boomtowns are these fast-growing cities, study said
-
New Hampshire6 minutes agoNH Forests: A Story of Revival and the Challenges Ahead: Business NH Magazine
-
New Jersey12 minutes agoNJ Spine Doctor, Daughter, Granddaughter Killed In Plane Crash, Police Say
-
New Mexico18 minutes agoMcCauley Springs Fire Reaches 100% Containment
-
North Carolina24 minutes agoMassive great white shark spotted off NC coast. See where its headed
-
North Dakota30 minutes agoNeighbors, not competitors
-
Ohio36 minutes agoFormer Powell residents indicted in $9.3M Ohio Medicaid fraud scheme
-
Oklahoma42 minutes agoJ.D. PicKell: ‘Oklahoma is going to be a wagon once again’