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Updates

State House Updates

Update: House Starts to Act on Senate Bills

It’s been a busy two weeks in the New Hampshire House of Representatives. Bills that originated in the Senate (you can identify them by the “SB” prefix instead of the usual “HB”) continue to receive public hearings in House committees. On Thursday, the House met as a body to start voting on them. During this session, we also voted to “concur” with several bills that originated in the House, but were approved with amendments in the Senate. Here’s a quick recap

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David Meuse
Understanding NH’s Public School Funding Crisis

If you follow the news—or the New Hampshire state legislature—at some point you’ve probably heard about the state’s public school funding crisis. If you live in a community like Portsmouth, you’re probably asking “What crisis?”. But if you live in a community more dependent on state education funding, like Berlin or Claremont, you live in crisis mode every day.

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David Meuse
The House Budget: Solutions Instead of Bandaids

On Thursday, the New Hampshire House of Representatives approved a $12.9 billion state budget along party lines. To make a long story short, it’s a balanced and responsible budget that addresses pressing problems, like mental health and public school funding, while avoiding both a sales tax and an income tax AND providing property tax relief. But it does include a 5% tax on capital gains. Learn more about how it works, who would be affected, and why it’s an idea whose time has come.

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David Meuse
House Passes Gun-Free School Zones, Cannabis Legalization, and More

On Thursday, several bills passed by the New Hampshire House of Representatives earlier in this session, but referred back to a second House committee for additional review, made the trip back the House floor for new votes. With the deadline to act on all non-budget bills also falling on Thursday, we knew we were in for a long day. Here are the highlights.

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David Meuse
Deja Vu—Concord-Style

This coming Thursday, April 4, is the deadline for the New Hampshire House of Representatives to act on non-budget bills originating in the House. If some of them sound familiar, there’s a reason for that. Several have already been voted on—and passed—by the full House. But once passed, they were referred to an additional committee for more work. On Thursday, these bills boomerang back onto the House floor with new committee recommendation and the full House must vote on them once

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David Meuse
Update: Gun-Free School Zones and Protection for Vulnerable Adults

After a long day of contentious public hearings on Tuesday, the Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee voted by identical 12-8 margins on Wednesday to approve bills enforcing gun-free school zones and other protecting vulnerable adults. A third bill, approved 18-2, raises the fines for violations by off-road recreational vehicles and snowmobiles. All three bills now head to the full House for a vote before moving on to the Senate.

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David Meuse
Update: 4 House Sessions in 7 Days

We’ve hit the stretch where those of us who are members of the New Hampshire House really start earning our $100/year salaries. Last Thursday, we voted on dozens of important bills and this week we meet on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday to vote on hundreds more. The heat is on because this coming Thursday is the deadline for the House to act on bills that aren’t required to be considered by a second committee. Crossover day—the deadline for all bills to be voted on by the full House—is also looming on March 28. Here are the highlights of the week that was—and a preview of the week ahead.

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David Meuse
Update: ERPO and Other Key Votes by the Criminal Justice Committee

With the full legislature meeting 4 times in the next week, House committees were busy this week making recommendations on dozens of key bills. On Wednesday, the Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee voted on two important gun violence prevention bills, a bill to criminalize possession of dog fighting and cock fighting paraphernalia, a bill to increase the penalty for crop theft, and more. Here’s what we decided.

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David Meuse
Pearls, Symbols and Citizens

After this week’s controversy over pearl-wearing legislators, it’s time for ALL New Hampshire legislators to consider hitting the “pause” button when it comes to donning symbols when conducting public hearings, holding executive sessions, and voting on bills.

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David Meuse
The House Acts on Safe School Zones, School Funding, and More

This week was the deadline for bills that need to be referred to other committees (sometimes referred to as “early bills”) to be acted on by the New Hampshire House of Representatives. The result was a flurry of important bills that either moved on the the next step, were killed for this session, or were “retained” for further committee work and reintroduction in 2020. I also made my first floor speech.

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David Meuse
Preview: A Big Week for Big Bills

This is an absolutely huge week in Concord. Not just for public hearings—but also for executive sessions where committees will hold votes on recommendations to the full legislature. Here are some of the highlights

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David Meuse
Cannabis Legalization Hearing: A Preview

On Tuesday February 5th at 1 p.m. in Representatives Hall, HB-481-FN, a new cannabis legalization bill will receive its first public hearing before the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee. Unlike some bills which are simply slightly edited, reanimated versions of bills that died in the previous session, HB-481-FN is an all-new bill that addresses many of the concerns and recommendations identified in a 264-page report by a state marijuana study commission chaired in 2018 by Rep. Patrick Abrami.

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