With no certainty as to how long the pandemic will last or the stay-home orders will remain in place, Realtors still say they remain optimistic that whatever slowdown the market experiences, it will be short lived.
Creatives around the Granite State are still making an effort to document life during the pandemic. Historians say that will be important when — eventually and inevitably — life returns to normal.
Hospitals and many medical practices rely on big-ticket surgeries, scans and other procedures to subsidize the patient care that doesn’t bring in revenue.
The closure of my daughter’s school district through at the time was going to be March 27, (it changed the next day to April 3 and then again to May 4) with the implementation of remote learning to begin on March 23. It was clear now, I was set to be a one on one kindergarten teacher.
The first batch of the roughly 45 tons of personal protective equipment that touched down at Manchester-Boston Regional Airport Sunday afternoon will soon be on their way to Granite Staters “on the frontlines of this (COVID-19) crisis,” Gov. Chris Sununu said.
Not since World War II has there been a global crisis of this magnitude. Too many people are dying and not enough people are being tested. No family will be left untouched.
The city council voted to reinstate the assistant fire chief position, discussed the cost estimate for the Mason Street Bridge renovation and received an update on COVID-19 efforts at its meeting Monday night.
This is the second in a series of columns in Law in the Marketplace with practical tips on using federal and New Hampshire laws and orders to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic.
Many of us are working from home these days, and that’s opened up a whole new world of questions.
A con artist had viewed a company’s website, which listed names of employees and their email addresses, then pretended to be the owner, asking each employee to make a donation to help disabled veterans in hospice and palliative care during the coronavirus.
Most of us have never experienced anything quite like this moment. But Sharon Eng and her husband, who today own a manufacturing company in Belmont, happened to find themselves in the middle of another disease outbreak, on the other side of the world, in 2003.
Universities and colleges are sending updated guidance to families on how to fill out the U.S. Census, in light of confusion over student residency during campus closures caused by the coronavirus.
Dartmouth College is postponing its graduation ceremonies this spring because of the coronavirus pandemic and is telling seniors it may hold a formal ceremony in June 2021.
Yet another wave of New Hampshire businesses scrambled to set employees up to work remotely, after the governor issued a stay-at-home order and the closure of in-person activities for nonessential businesses beginning Friday evening, March 27.