community

The State We're In: Proposed Asphalt Plant Raises Concerns Among Nashua Residents and Community Members

The State We're In: Proposed Asphalt Plant Raises Concerns Among Nashua Residents and Community Members

On this week’s episode of The State We're In, we discuss a proposed asphalt plant near downtown Nashua and the concerns of residents and community members around it. Joining us to talk about the issue are Gabriela Lozada, a reporter from New Hampshire Public Radio who has been following the issue, Heidi Trimarco, a staff attorney with the Conservation Law Foundation, and community organizer Kristy Besada. 

What happens when local news goes dark

What happens when local news goes dark

According to studies cited by Lauren McKown at Report for America, which provides funding for reporters to tackle pressing issues and missing areas of local coverage: Just 17 percent of what’s in a local newspaper is local news – the rest is wire and national reports. Roughly 36,000 reporters were let go during COVID-19, and hardest hit were outlets in rural communities and communities of color.

Missing children: NH doesn’t track pre-school kids; community has a role to play in protecting the vulnerable

Missing children: NH doesn’t track pre-school kids; community has a role to play in protecting the vulnerable

With a search for 7-year-old Harmony Montgomery ongoing for weeks now, the question still being asked, but for which the answer remains elusive, is how does a child go missing for more than two years and neither police nor child protection services know about it?

“The more provocative question would be who noticed the child when she wasn’t missing,” said Moira O’Neill, Director of the New Hampshire Office of the Child Advocate, which has oversight for the state Department of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF). She is not seeking reappointment to her post which expires on Jan. 31, 2022.

Recovery Community Pushes Ahead As State Reopens

Recovery Community Pushes Ahead As State Reopens

On Tuesday, June 1, Keith Howard, executive director of Hope for New Hampshire Recovery was excited. For the first time in more than a year, Howard announced, the Manchester nonprofit would be holding indoor recovery meetings, doing away with COVID precautions like temperature taking, social distancing, and — most significantly — mask requirements.

NH nonprofits look to contactless giving for end-of-year fundraising as community need grows

NH nonprofits look to contactless giving for end-of-year fundraising as community need grows

As Jeremiah and Kathryn Eisley fight to keep their red kettles out this year, COVID-19 is fighting back.

The Eisleys, who run the local Salvation Army in Rochester, NH, are determined to keep this year’s red kettle campaign — long an icon of holiday giving — alive during the pandemic.

They came prepared: the Salvation Army established guidelines to keep volunteers and donors safe, as well as options for contactless giving.