New Hampshire Senate, District 2
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Senator Deborah Reynolds (603) 271-3042
HOLDERNESS, N.H. The goal of bringing faster and better Internet service to all corners of New Hampshire is clicking into high speed with the signing of a bill that will lead to the hiring of a state director of broadband planning and development.
senator-deb-reynoldsSenator Deborah Reynolds (D-Plymouth) joined Governor John Lynch, business and community leaders last week at Town Hall as legislation was signed into law establishing the new position, which will be paid for with federal grant money.
The New Hampshire Division of Economic Development is expected to act promptly to fill the position. Rural communities like Holderness are among those expected to benefit from improved access to high-speed Internet services.
“This bill will help make broadband deployment one of our state priorities and assist in economic development throughout our state, especially in underserved areas,” Reynolds said.
Reynolds was the lead sponsor on Senate Bill 159 and has worked extensively to create a comprehensive plan for expanding broadband access across the state.
“Ensuring that every household and business in New Hampshire has access to affordable, high-quality broadband service has been my number one priority since coming to the Senate. This bill will allow New Hampshire to develop and implement a state-wide broadband plan that will create jobs, attract businesses, educate our children and help reduce healthcare costs through the use of telemedicine,” she said.
The director of broadband planning will work within the state Division of Economic Development. The director’s responsibilities will include developing a state telecommunications plan to bring broadband service throughout the state and to seek grants and investigate partnerships with the public and private sectors to advance that goal.
“This position is pivotal to expanding broadband access across New Hampshire. We already have applicants and we hope to begin interviewing candidates in the very near future,” said Chris Way, business services manager for the New Hampshire Division of Economic Development.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Contact: Senator Deborah Reynolds (603) 271-3569
Marjorie Rose, parent advisor (603) 667-1823
SENATE PASSES REUSABLE BAG RESOLUTION
CONCORD - A resolution promoted by a group of Hanover teenagers passed the Senate today with a 24-0 vote in support of encouraging the use of reusable shopping bags as an environmentally-friendly alternative to paper and plastic.
"I want to thank Kids for a Cooler Planet for bringing this forward and direct you to their terrific website www.kidsforacoolerplanet.com," said Senator Deborah Reynolds (D-Plymouth). "Looking at the website, I was struck by the fact that over 100 billion disposable plastic bags are used in the U.S. each year and the vast majority of them end up in landfills. I'm very proud of these students for drawing attention to this problem and promoting the use of reusable bags to reduce pollution and ease the burden on our landfills."
Four members of the group - Ellen Irwin, 16, Brian Kispert, 16, Jennifer Helble, 15, and Kyle Van Leer- were present in the Senate chamber when the Senate passed the resolution. HCR17 already passed in the House.
"Supporters of HCR17 believe that by passing this resolution, the New Hampshire Legislature will increase awareness of the problems disposable bags bring and will encourage more retailers to sell and promote reusable bags," said Senator Martha Fuller Clark (D-Portsmouth), who leads the Senate committee that recommended passage of the resolution.
The Hanover High School students formed Kids for a Cooler Planet as part of their effort to educate store owners and consumers about the importance of abandoning disposable plastic and paper bags in favor of reusable bags. They got Representative David Pierce (D-Etna) and Senator Reynolds to co-sponsor a resolution recommending reusable bags. The group is seeking similar support from Vermont lawmakers.
These students already have convinced Hanover and Norwich, VT merchants to make reusable bags available and the communities reduced disposable bag use by roughly 700,000 in the first year, the students said.
Senator Peter Burling (D-Cornish) said he expects the effort will reduce the number of plastic bags he sees blowing into the trees as he drives by the Lebanon landfill.
"What you are doing will change the quality of my life and I want to thank you for that," he told the students.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Contact: Senator Deborah Reynolds
(603) 271-3569
Marjorie Rose, parent advisor (603) 667-1823
CONCORD - After hearing from three teenagers from Hanover High School, the Senate Energy, Environment and Economic Development Committee voted 5-0 to recommend passage by the full Senate of House Concurrent Resolution 17, encouraging the use of reusable shopping bags.
"This isn't going to cost the government any money or require any regulation," said Jennifer Helble, 15 and a sophomore at Hanover High, presenting a winning argument from the start.
The Hanover students, not all of whom came to testify today, have create a group called Kids for a Cooler Planet and are committed to educating store owners and consumers about the importance of abandoning disposable plastic and paper bags in favor of reusable bags. The resolution reflects their effort to get the Legislature's endorsement and they're seeking similar support from Vermont lawmakers.
"The United States consumes 100 billion plastic bags annually," explained Ellen Irwin, 16, who started the group after seeing reusable bags used in Australia. It takes 12 million barrels of oil to make those 100 billion plastic bags, she explained. Furthermore, paper bags don't provide a real environmental alternative because their manufacture contributes heavily to air and water pollution.
These students have already convinced Hanover and Norwich, VT merchants to make the reusable bags available and the communities are seeing a marked reduction in the use of plastic as a result, the students said.
John Dumais, president of the New Hampshire Grocers Association, spoke in support of the bill encouraging the switch to reusable bags.
"It reduces our costs frankly, and that cost goes directly back to the consumers," he said. "We're totally and fully supportive of this."
Michael Guilfoy of the state Department of Environmental Services said his department also supports the resolution. "We definitely think you're doing a great thing here," he told the students.
The student presentation, which included the dumping of 500 plastic bags on the committee room floor, quickly won the hearts of the Senate committee members. "This was a wonderful presentation, very factual, very data-driven, a very, very nice job," said Senator Jacalyn Cilley (D-Barrington).
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Contact: Senator Iris Estabrook (603) 271-3042
CONCORD - The Senate voted 15-9 today for the new education funding plan, sending it on to the Senate Finance Committee for additional review.
"Senate Bill 539 is a new beginning in the long story of school funding in many ways," said Senator Iris Estabrook (D-Durham), the bill's sponsor. "First and foremost, it is constitutional. We worked within the constraints of the court's unique rulings - to pay for the first and last dollar of adequacy and to avoid any consideration of property wealth."
The bill calls for $3,450 per pupil for "universal" costs, such as teachers and supplies, and "differentiated" aid of $675 per pupil requiring instruction in English as a Second Language along with two tiers of funding for special education students depending on the level of services received.
Senate Bill 539 also creates a five-step plan for directing additional aid to schools with greater concentrations of students receiving free or reduced-price lunches. Schools targeted to receive this "differentiated" aid will be asked to apply it to one or more programs that have proven successful in raising academic achievement for economically disadvantaged students. State aid under this system will be aimed at individual schools as opposed to previous plans which targeted aid at the district level.
"Though Senate Bill 539 directs resources to our most challenged schools, its spreadsheet results are in many instances a significant departure from past results," Estabrook said, explaining the reason behind creating a second level of aid apart from adequacy called "fiscal capacity disparity aid."
The fiscal capacity disparity aid directs additional dollars to communities facing the double whammy of lower family incomes and lower property wealth.
The total cost of providing an adequate education for every public school pupil under this plan stands at roughly $914 million. Another $48 million was added in fiscal capacity disparity aid.
The Senate will vote again on the plan once the Senate Finance Committee comes forward with its recommendations. Once the bill passes to the House, that body also is expected to look closely at the funding plan and make potential changes.
"This plan is the result of a lot of hard work by the Joint Legislative Committee on Costing an Adequate Education and sets us on the path to meeting the July 1 deadline set by the New Hampshire Supreme Court. But we understand this is just the beginning and we look forward to further refining this plan to best meet the needs of all our communities," said Senator Joseph Foster (D-Nashua), a co-sponsor of the plan.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, March 10, 2008
Contact: Senator Kathy Sgambati (603) 271-3074
CONCORD - The Senate Health and Human Services Committee voted 4-1 today to send a bill to the full Senate that would ensure that young teenagers facing an unexpected pregnancy get information and support from a trained counselor.
Senate Bill 527 would require clinics and doctors to provide information and counseling for pregnant teens under age 17 as they grapple with the decisions that follow from an unintended pregnancy. Where appropriate, counselors would encourage teens to speak to their parents or other family.
"This legislation is not about limiting choice or placing obstacles in the path of young women. It does not require parental notification. It mirrors best practices in most of our state's doctor offices and clinics. It's about making sure an adult is involved in protecting the health and safety of our adolescents," said Senator Kathleen Sgambati (D-Tilton), who sponsored the bill.
The legislation has the support of Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, the largest reproductive health care organization in New Hampshire. It is co-sponsored by senators Bob Odell, Maggie Hassan, Jacalyn Cilley, Deborah Reynolds, Joseph Foster, and Betsi DeVries.
The committee members were not unanimous in their support for the legislation but agreed the bill deserved to advance to the Senate floor for a full discussion.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Contact: Senator Betsi DeVries (603) 271-2104
CONCORD - The Senate passed legislation today designed to help certain agencies that provide affordable housing in New Hampshire.
The goal of Senate Bill 199 sponsored by Senator Betsi DeVries (D-Manchester) is to assist certain agencies and developers who provide rent-restricted housing to New Hampshire workers and families but who must pay property taxes based on the market value, which assumes the property brings in market-value rents.
The legislation would require assessors to look at the actual income potential for certain affordable rental properties instead of the higher market rate.
"It is in the best interest of New Hampshire to encourage private investment in solving the affordable housing issues. If we're going to succeed in expanding our stock of affordable housing, it has to be a public-private partnership," DeVries said.
Any qualifying property would be required to have a deed restriction that ensures rents remain permanently affordable and would have to be financed through federal tax credits.
"This is a narrow group of properties," DeVries said. It would apply to about 14 properties in Manchester, including several run by Families in Transition, she said. Families in Transition provides transitional housing and support for homeless individuals and families in Manchester and Concord.
"Both businesses and families know how difficult it is to find decent and reasonably-priced housing," said Senate President Sylvia Larsen (D-Concord), who serves on the board for Families in Transition. "This bill makes sense to help meet that critical need."
Senate co-sponsors include Deborah Reynolds, Harold Janeway, Maggie Hassan, Martha Fuller Clark, Jacalyn Cilley and Peter Burling.
CONCORD - Senators praised the House today for voting to limit the interest rates charged on payday and title loans.
House Bill 267 passed by a vote of 207-124. Senator David Gottesman (D-Nashua) was a co-sponsor of the bill, which sets a 36 percent cap on interest rates for small loans. The legislation now heads to the Senate.
"I think it is time we put some limitations on an industry that has descended upon our state and taken advantage of our vulnerable citizens to make an unreasonable profit for their shareholders. Not only do the cash-strapped borrowers pay the costs of these loans, but our local and state welfare offices also absorb these costs, so in a sense, we are all paying," Gottesman said.
"It's just taking advantage of people who can ill afford to pay these usurious rates," said Senator John Gallus (R-Berlin). "We have to do some kind of cap. We need to remedy the unintended consequences when we removed our state's 24 percent interest rate cap in 1999."
The legislation has the support for the Attorney General, the state Banking Commissioner and the New Hampshire Local Welfare Officers Association.
"This is an important consumer protection measure that will help families avoid getting trapped in a cycle of debt," said Senator Deborah Reynolds (D-Plymouth).
"Payday lenders target those who can least afford to pay back the extraordinary fees and interest charges. Consumers can too easily get trapped in a never-ending cycle of debt," said Senator Kathleen Sgambati (D-Tilton).
Gottesman is sponsor of a Senate version of the same legislation, Senate Bill 472, which has bipartisan support with 14 senators named as co-sponsors.
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Contact: Senator Deborah Reynolds
603) 271-3569
PLYMOUTH - Senator Deborah Reynolds (D-Plymouth) welcomed Governor John Lynch on a visit to the Whole Village Family Resource Center today, where she pledged to work with him to expand children's access to health insurance.
"I am very pleased that Governor Lynch has been able to visit this great facility in District 2 that has helped so many children and families," said Reynolds, who serves on the board of directors for the Whole Village Family Resource Center.
Reynolds joined the governor on his visit to the center to highlight their shared commitment to the expansion of New Hampshire's Healthy Kids program. The Legislature voted this year to expand the successful program to cover 10,000 additional eligible children but actions by the Bush administration have created new and onerous restrictions.
"Healthy Kids is a New Hampshire program and New Hampshire should be allowed to set its own priorities for covering its children," Reynolds said. Lawmakers, including Lynch, are urging President Bush and congressional leaders to undo the new restrictions so states have the freedom to operate their children's health insurance programs as they see fit.
"We all recognize that solving the health insurance coverage issue is among the state's top priorities. I will continue to work with Governor Lynch to expand affordable health for our families and children", Senator Reynolds said.
Reynolds also supported the new law that expanded health insurance coverage for young adults through age 25 who remain as dependents, and to allow for the continuance of family health insurance coverage for divorced couples.
Reynolds' districts includes Alexandria, Ashland, Bath, Benton, Bridgewater, Bristol, Campton, Canaan, Center Harbor, Dorchester, Easton, Ellsworth, Groton, Haverhill, Hebron, Holderness, Landaff, Lyme, Meredith, Monroe, New Hampton, Orange, Orford, Piermont, Plymouth, Rumney, Sanbornton, Thornton, Warren, Wentworth and Woodstock.