New Hampshire
This N.H. college student turned his search for life advice into a new documentary: ‘My Disability Roadmap’
My Incapacity Roadmap is a brand new documentary movie from Harmony filmmaker Dan Habib and his son Samuel Habib. The movie follows Samuel, who’s in his early 20s, as he seeks steerage from incapacity activists on every thing from leaving house to courting.
Samuel is a school pupil with cerebral palsy and epilepsy. He drives a 350-pound wheelchair and makes use of a communication system.
“Nobody tells you be an grownup, not to mention an grownup with a incapacity,” Samuel says within the movie.
Samuel and Dan joined NHPR’s Rick Ganley to present him a preview of their new award-winning movie, which is taking part in all this week at Pink River Theatres in Harmony and on the New York Occasions web site starting Tuesday. Under is a transcript of their dialog.
Rick Ganley: Dan, we have had you on Morning Version earlier than to speak about one other one among your movies, Mr. Connolly Has ALS. That movie follows former Harmony Excessive College principal Gene Connolly’s ALS prognosis. Now this new movie, it is far more private. Samuel is the principle topic. How did you and Samuel resolve to make the movie collectively?
Dan Habib: Properly, Samuel truly was a marketing consultant on that movie, Mr. Connolly Has ALS, and he is been concerned about video and movie for years now. And, you understand, I mentioned, why do not we do one thing collectively, Samuel? And as we began brainstorming, I considered the truth that I have been telling the tales of different individuals with disabilities and attempting to do it sensitively, however I am not an individual with a incapacity. And it actually was time to place individuals with disabilities within the forefront. Samuel, at the start, he was prepared to inform his personal story. And we additionally determined the whole forged could be individuals with disabilities and even nearly all of the manufacturing and outreach crew are individuals with disabilities. So it is simply an effort to make it possible for persons are telling their very own lived expertise by means of Samuel’s personal eyes and cameras.
Rick Ganley: And Samuel, you actually made that time within the movie. What was probably the most difficult a part of creating the movie?
Samuel Habib: Establishing and getting all of the interviews achieved was probably the most difficult a part of creating the movie. We needed to fly or drive a good distance for the interviews. On our flight to Indianapolis, they turned my energy wheelchair on its facet each methods, and it bought broken each methods. On our journey to D.C., we had a six-hour flight delay, after which as we have been lastly boarding our airplane, one other passenger talked right down to me like I used to be a 3-year-old. I needed to curse at her, however did not. On our [New York City] journey I had a seizure. However we nonetheless bought the filming achieved on all of the journeys.
Rick Ganley: Can I ask you what among the elements of the movie that you just most loved?
Samuel Habib: I like to journey. So my favourite a part of making the movie was going across the nation with my dad, seeing new locations, filming with my GoPros, and assembly all of those cool adults with disabilities like Keith Jones, who’s a hip hop musician and human rights advocate. He’s hilarious.
Rick Ganley: There may be quite a lot of nice humor within the movie and I feel you actually carry that to mild. Dan, what about you? What have been your challenges and moments of pleasure in making the movie?
Dan Habib: Properly, as Samuel talked about, each time we get on the street, there is a new journey available. I imply, touring across the nation with a 350-pound wheelchair and quite a lot of medical tools provides is difficult, however I additionally assume ensuring we picked a really various group of individuals to speak to and interview. Samuel did quite a lot of analysis, and he actually needed to achieve out to individuals who expertise disabilities in quite a lot of alternative ways — whether or not it is several types of disabilities like autism, or one younger man, Andrew, has fetal alcohol syndrome, or whether or not it is totally different lived experiences round gender identification, round courting, round going to school and work, round race and ethnicity. In order that was a problem, however a extremely rewarding problem, to ensure the movie has as a lot variety and richness of expertise as potential.
Rick Ganley: And Samuel, I do know the mentors that you just do interview on this movie, they actually had highly effective recommendation. These are actually sturdy advocates. Is there one piece of recommendation that you just most took to coronary heart which will profit different younger adults with disabilities?
Samuel Habib: The recommendation I bought from one among my mentors, Maysoon Zayid, was you aren’t alone, discover your neighborhood. That was highly effective recommendation as a result of I’ve at all times had a powerful neighborhood, beginning with Beaver Meadow Elementary College. I’m persevering with to search out my neighborhood at NHTI Neighborhood School, within the incapacity rights neighborhood, and work on the Westchester Institute for Human Improvement and in my hometown of Harmony.
Rick Ganley: What about hopes and desires for the longer term?
Samuel Habib: I dream about getting married, having youngsters and making extra movies. I’m occupied with transferring to the College of New Hampshire sooner or later and touring across the nation and the world. I wish to go to the Soccer Corridor of Fame, Mount St. Helens, a Florida Gators recreation with my cousins, London and Europe.
Rick Ganley: Dan, how about you? Once you hear Samuel discuss issues he’d love to do and possibly make extra movies sooner or later, how does that make you’re feeling?
Dan Habib: Properly, I really like the thought of creating extra movies with Samuel. This has been an extremely significant course of to work with my 22-year-old son. And we’re truly going to be persevering with to work for the following yr on a feature-length model of the movie. So now we have one other yr of labor of filming and manufacturing, after which there’ll in all probability be one other yr or two of shows and screenings. And we’re already speaking about future concepts for the movie going ahead. When Samuel talks about all of the journey adventures he desires to take, I simply say, hold saving your cash, since you’ve bought to start out paying in your personal means on these journeys.
Rick Ganley: Samuel, what are you hoping that folks take away from this movie? What are your hopes and desires for it?
Samuel Habib: My purpose for the movie is that folks will not speak right down to individuals with disabilities. I would like everybody to know that folks with disabilities demand respect and rights. And I would like different younger adults with disabilities to have the identical alternatives that I’ve had for well being care, inclusive schooling, school, assistive expertise, jobs, making associates and unbiased dwelling. In September of 2021, I moved into my own residence, an addition on my mother or father’s place. I would like individuals to study from incapacity position fashions like Judy Heumann and Bob Williams. I wish to assist individuals learn to dwell a full life with a incapacity as they transition to an grownup by specializing in all the probabilities of relationships, work, schooling and incapacity rights.
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).
New Hampshire
Ayotte uses inaugural speech to praise NH, offer warnings
Gov. Kelly Ayotte used her first speech as New Hampshire’s 83rd chief executive Thursday to call for “common-sense cooperation” as the state tackles issues ranging from housing, to education, to the state budget.
In her roughly 45-minute long inaugural address, Ayotte simultaneously lauded New Hampshire as a model for the rest of the nation, but warned that pressing concerns — financial and otherwise — would require policymakers to make difficult decisions in the coming months.
You can watch Ayotte’s full inauguration speech here.
“I could not be more optimistic about our future, but at the same time we have real challenges that we have to take head on, if we want to keep our state moving in the right direction,” Ayotte told a crowd in the State House’s Representatives Hall that included current lawmakers and state officials, as well as several former governors, congressmen, and other political veterans.
“Whenever we talk about cuts, just like a family making hard decisions, there are things we can’t skimp on: protecting our most vulnerable and serving those most in need.”
Gov. Kelly Ayotte, forecasting upcoming state budget negotiations
Ayotte said she’s proud the state ranks high in categories including freedom, public safety, and taxpayer return on investment, but said slowing tax collections and the end of billions of dollars of federal aid dictates that the state “recalibrate” its spending.
“Whenever we talk about cuts, just like a family making hard decisions, there are things we can’t skimp on: protecting our most vulnerable and serving those most in need,” Ayotte said.
Ayotte’s speech was light on specifics — she called for few clear policy initiatives or spending cuts — but she did announce one new state initiative: a Commission on Government Efficiency, or COGE, to help identify ways to spend less state money. The committee will be led by former Gov. Craig Benson, who nominated Ayotte to be New Hampshire attorney general in 2004, and businessman Andrew Crews, a longtime political donor to Ayotte.
Ayotte told the Democratic leaders of the New Hampshire House and Senate that her door would always be open to them. She meanwhile asked GOP legislative leaders to “marshal our Republican majorities over the next two years to deliver on the promises we made to keep our state moving in the right direction.”
Ayotte called public safety her “absolute top priority” and said she expected Republicans to pass a ban this year on so-called sanctuary policies, which aim to protect undocumented immigrants from criminal penalties. She also said the state needs to further tighten its bail policies, and boost police retirement benefits to make it easier to recruit officers and keep them on the job.
She identified housing as another top issue and said the state needs to “get serious” by modeling good behavior to cities and towns, by enforcing a 60-day turnaround on state permits for new housing projects. She also promised to “strengthen new and existing partnerships” between the state, cities and towns and the private sector to get new housing units built.
Ayotte also highlighted education, and said while New Hampshire’s current rate of pupil spending was “wonderful,” lawmakers need to “keep it up” while simultaneously expanding the state’s voucher-like school choice program. Ayotte also promised to ensure students can learn and teachers can teach without distraction by banning cell phones in the classroom.
“Screens are negatively impacting our learning environments,” Ayotte said. “No more.”
On other issues, Ayotte promised to expand the state’s ranks of mental health providers, strengthen anti-suicide efforts, oppose a controversial landfill proposal in the town of Dalton, and veto any new abortion restrictions.
More digs at Massachusetts — but also a welcome
After framing her gubernatorial campaign last year as a rebuke of Massachusetts, Ayotte also used her inaugural address as another chance to take digs at the Granite State’s southern neighbor.
Ayotte criticized policymakers there for what she described as out-of-control spending, tax hikes, and lax immigration policies. But she did say New Hampshire welcomes Massachusetts residents as shoppers and visitors.
One of Ayotte’s biggest applause lines was addressed to Bay State business leaders.
“To the businesses of Massachusetts: We’d love to have you bring your talents to the Granite State,” she said. “We’re happy to show you why it’s better here.”
Ayotte extended a similar invitation to Canadian businesses, saying they would be especially welcome in New Hampshire’s North Country.
Lawmakers say they’re ready to get to work
Republicans in both legislative chambers will enjoy sizable majorities this session, and the party’s leaders say they’re ready to use those numbers to advance the policy goals Ayotte laid out Thursday.
House Majority Leader Jason Osborne praised the governor’s speech and said that along with the expansion of Education Freedom Accounts, his caucus will focus on “addressing issues of affordability across all sectors: housing, healthcare, electricity, you name it.”
He expressed optimism about Ayotte’s proposed COGE initiative to make government more efficient, but acknowledged that trimming the state budget could cause tension as lawmakers seek to protect their favorite programs.
“Everything we do is someone’s favorite pet project, so we’ve got to figure out who is going to get sent to the chopping block,” he said.
Osborne added that while his majorities are larger this session than last term’s near evenly split House makeup, he knows there will be disagreement within his own caucus.
“The more willing that we are to let people do their own thing, for things that are important to them, the more we’re going to be able to band together and get things done together, as well,” he said.
Sen. James Gray, a Republican from Rochester who leads the Senate Finance Committee, told reporters it was too early in the budgeting process to forecast where the state may trim to balance its books. He said he plans to work with Ayotte to advance her campaign promises.
With a 40-seat disadvantage, House Democrats will have little ability to set the legislative agenda this session, but Minority Leader Alexis Simpson of Exeter said she was grateful that Ayotte expressed a willingness to work across the aisle. She said Democrats would focus on ensuring any budget reductions don’t end up harming the state’s neediest residents.
“We feel these budget cuts at the state level will lead to higher costs at the local level, so we’re really working on making sure the vulnerable populations that Gov. Ayotte spoke about really are protected in this budget,” Simpson said.
Simpson also said she hoped for bipartisan collaboration on housing, mental health services and other issues.
Notable political faces fill the room
Thursday’s inauguration ceremony brought out a crowd of high profile political figures in the state, past and present.
Outgoing Gov. Chris Sununu received a sustained round of applause when he entered Representatives Hall, and was again thanked by Ayotte during her speech for his eight years of service to the state.
Others present included former Congressman Charlie Bass and Scott Brown, a former U.S. Senator representing Massachusetts and ambassador to New Zealand, who was also New Hampshire’s 2014 Republican U.S. Senate nominee. Also in attendance was former Gov. Maggie Hassan, who now serves in the U.S. Senate after unseating Ayotte in 2016.
Former Gov. Craig Benson was seated in the chamber, as was Manchester Mayor Jay Ruais, who entered the room to cheers.
Four of the five justices on the New Hampshire Supreme Court were in attendance, as were federal judges for the District of New Hampshire. New Hampshire Chief Justice Gordon MacDonald swore in Ayotte, while she was flanked by her husband and two children.
Members of the Executive Council were also sworn in during Thursday’s proceedings.
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