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Evacuations underway after barge slammed into Pelican Island bridge in Galveston, causing oil spill; Regional program helps Chicago-area communities become 'EV Ready'; MI leaders mark progress in removing lead water lines; First Amendment rights to mass protest under attack in Mississippi and beyond.

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Speaker of the House Johnson calls the Trump trial 'a sham', federal officials are gathering information about how AI could impact the 2024 election, and, preliminary information shows what could have caused the Francis Scott Key Bridge crash.

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Americans are buying up rubber ducks ahead of Memorial Day, Nebraskans who want residential solar have a new lifeline, seven community colleges are working to provide students with a better experience, and Mississippi's "Big Muddy" gets restoration help.

NH Public-School Building-Aid Requests Outweigh State Funds

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Tuesday, August 8, 2023   

20% of New Hampshire public-school students attend classes in buildings that have not been updated in the past 35 years, according to a new report. A decade-long moratorium on state aid for school buildings was lifted last year exposing an unprecedented backlog of requests.

Carly Prescott, policy analyst with the New Hampshire School Funding Fairness Project, said without adequate state funding, towns are forced to consider raising local property taxes, which many low-income communities simply cannot afford.

"The longer that we continue to neglect these buildings that are so vital to our communities, the projects will get more expensive and students will continue to be displaced," she explained.

That includes nearly 90 students in Rochester, where the local school board voted to permanently close an elementary school last week after it was deemed structurally unsafe.

State lawmakers allocated some $80-million for school building aid beginning next year, yet half of those funds will go to building projects requested before the moratorium. Prescott said several schools found to contain asbestos and lead have not received any aid in the past fifteen years and could still go empty-handed.


"People often argue that public schools aren't, like, a safe place, or that they need to be safe, and schools are literally telling the state that we have these harmful chemicals and nothing is happening with it," she continued.

The 2023 legislative session saw multiple proposals for increases to building aid but ultimately only a modest increase in the budget was passed in June. Prescott remains hopeful the report's findings will help state lawmakers better understand the need for building aid and which students are most impacted.


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