The U.S. has dramatically increased infrastructure spending since the bipartisan infrastructure law passed in 2021—but many Americans are still driving on deteriorating roads. A new analysis from Construction Coverage finds that highway and street construction spending surged roughly 25% in recent years, reaching nearly $150 billion annually—yet more than 1 in 8 major U.S. roads are still classified as being in poor condition nationwide. The report ranks every state based on the share of major roads in poor condition using the latest federal roadway data and reveals a stark regional divide in infrastructure quality.
The leader of the Sununu Youth Services Center resigned a day after a legislative committee investigating potentially improper restraint and s…
At graduation ceremonies at New Hampshire's community college system this weekend, over 340 nursing students had a spouse, a child or a friend…
The New Hampshire Senate approved House Bill 1422 Thursday, sending the legislation to Gov. Kelly Ayotte for final approval. The bill, sponsor…
The Common Man Roadside franchise is expanding again, this time on Manchester Street, less than a mile away from their sit-down restaurant in …
BRISTOL — Superintendent Paul Hoiriis will be leaving the Newfound Area School District at the end of the academic year, the second member of …
CONCORD — A bill passed through the Statehouse, under review by state senators, would end the longstanding requirement for annual vehicle insp…
DOVER — A Somersworth resident was charged after being found naked and fleeing the scene of an accident and disrupting highway traffic Sunday …
A Geddes Building Mover truck carrying a retro silver diner car passes exit 20 on Interstate-93 in Tilton on Monday morning. The diner was tra…
A Geddes Building Mover truck carrying a retro silver diner car passes exit 20 on Interstate-93 in Tilton on Monday morning. The diner was tra…
