Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Pool, created by the legislature in 1993 after the collapse of five large New Hampshire banks, is an investment option for New Hampshire public entities, including towns, cities, counties, and ...
The Pool was wisely created more than 30 years ago by our legislature after the state’s five largest banks failed.
Public notices are sometimes required to seek a new broadcast license from a national broadcasting authority, or a change to modification to an existing license.. U.S. broadcast stations are required to give public notice on the air that they are seeking a license renewal from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) or to notify viewers of the station's purchase by another party.
New Hampshire Division of Archives and Records Management; New Hampshire Division of Vital Records Administration; P. ... New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission; R.
Sep. 13—Nearly 2% of the approximately 43,500 people receiving public pensions through the New Hampshire Retirement System collect more than $75,000 a year, said system spokesman Marty Karlon.
The New Hampshire Division of Archives and Records Management, or NHDARM, is a division within the New Hampshire Department of State, responsible for the proper management and archival of other agencies' records and for the preservation of historic documents viewable to the public. The division is led by the State Archivist, a position ...
The New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission (NHPUC) is a government agency of the U.S. state of New Hampshire.Headquartered in Concord, it is a public utilities commission with jurisdiction over electric, natural gas, water and sewer utilities as defined by New Hampshire statute for matters such as rates, quality of service, finance, accounting, and safety.
The Royal Commission separated the territory of New Hampshire from Massachusetts and directed that a new government be organized in the Province of New Hampshire. A president and a nine-member council (representing the four towns of Portsmouth , Dover , Hampton and Exeter ) were appointed by the king from the 4,000 settlers of the seacoast area ...