N.H. House Judiciary life-issue hearings next week

Two bills to change New Hampshire’s policy of unrestricted abortion, along with bills to repeal the buffer zone law, bar public funding of abortion, and protect children born alive after attempted abortion, will be heard in the New Hampshire House Judiciary Committee on February 9 and 10.

These measures respecting human life and conscience may be voted on by the committee at any time after the hearings, without a separately-scheduled session.

To me, some of these bills clearly show better legislative preparation than others. Some show more broad-based support than others. Read them for yourself – then act.

The committee will accept testimony remotely. There is no public access to the Legislative Office Building. You can sign in electronically anytime before the hearings to register your opinion. In an earlier post, I summarized the new testimony and sign-in procedures. Here’s a quick review, followed by details of the hearings and links to the bills.

Continue reading “N.H. House Judiciary life-issue hearings next week”

Pro-life winners in New Hampshire Senate recounts

Three New Hampshire senators who voted to table a 2020 born-alive infant protection bill were voted out of office on November 3rd. Three recounts this week confirmed that pro-life senators will take their places.

In district 11, Gary Daniels (R-Milford) will return to the Senate after losing the seat two years ago to Shannon Chandley (D-Amherst). After an intense campaign, the margin of victory was 159 votes out of more than 34,000 cast. A mailer from the New Hampshire Democratic Party attacking Daniels for voting pro-life apparently didn’t boost Chandley as intended. (See The Attack Ad Told Me to Check the Facts – So I Did.) Daniels previously served two terms in the Senate after 9 terms in the House.

Kevin Avard (R-Nashua) unseated Melanie Levesque (D-Brookline) in District 12. Avard had served two terms before being ousted by Levesque in 2018. This time, Avard prevailed by 805 votes. The “singing Senator” will soon be back on the job.

District 9’s Jeanne Dietsch (D-Peterborough), a one-term senator, was beaten by Denise Ricciardi (R-Bedford), a newcomer to state-level politics. Hours into a recount on November 10, Dietsch withdrew her challenge when a hand count of ballots from the largest towns in the district failed to put a dent in Ricciardi’s 409-vote lead.

Regina Birdsell (R-Hampstead) of district 19, sponsor of the 2020 born-alive bill, was re-elected easily.

Republicans will have a 14-10 majority in the upcoming Senate term.

President signs executive order to protect vulnerable newborns

President Donald Trump on September 25 issued “Executive Order on protecting vulnerable newborn and infant children.” The order ties federal funds disbursed by the Department of Health and Human Services to compliance by health care providers with certain federal laws.

The order states, “It is the policy of the United States to recognize the human dignity and inherent worth of every newborn or other infant child, regardless of prematurity or disability, and to ensure for each child due protection under the law.”

The order refers to the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTLA), Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (a statute affirming rights for people with disabilities), and the federal Born-Alive Infants Protection Act. “The [HHS] Secretary shall, as appropriate and consistent with applicable law, ensure that Federal funding disbursed by the Department of Health and Human Services is expended in full compliance with EMTALA and section 504 of the Rehab Act, as interpreted consistent with the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act…”

Commentary on the order, by bioethicist Wesley J. Smith: “Trump Signs Order to Save Babies Who Survive Abortion”

House votes down born-alive protection bill

The New Hampshire House has defeated HB 1675-FN, a bill to provide enforceable protection for children born alive following attempted abortion. The vote was 177-131 on an “inexpedient to legislate” (ITL) motion.

The official record of the vote is at this site.

A YEA vote on that official record (remember, the motion was “inexpedient to legislate”) is a vote to kill the born-alive bill. Below is the full roll call, divided by county and town.

The vote was mostly along party lines, with most Democrats opposing the bill. The exceptions – the three Democrats who did not support “inexpedient to legislate” – were Reps. Nancy Murphy (D-Merrimack), Alan Turcotte (D-Allenstown), and Mark Vallone (D-Epping).

Three Republicans joined the majority in rejecting the bill by supporting the ITL motion: Dennis Acton and Josh Yokela of Fremont, and Dan Wolf of Newbury.

Prime sponsor Rep. Katherine Prudhomme-O’Brien (R-Derry) welcomed to the visitors’ gallery Paula Page, an abortion survivor and New Hampshire resident, who was present for the vote. Speaking in favor of HB 1675, and against the ITL motion, were Reps. Prudhomme-O’Brien, Daryl Abbas (R-Salem), Dee Jurius (R-Meredith), Abigail Rooney (R-Milton), and Jeanine Notter (R-Merrimack).

Speaking in favor of the ITL motion, and against the bill, was Rep. Marjorie Smith (D-Durham), restating the arguments she made in committee.

The Roll Call

The New Hampshire General Court website provides a page where you can look up your representatives and their contact information. Saying thank you to the reps who opposed the ITL motion is certainly in order. 

Note that you may be represented in two districts due to “floterial” districts, which combine several areas in order to achieve proportional representation. For example, a resident of Freedom in Carroll County would be represented by state representatives in county district 3 AND district 7.

Voting in favor of the “inexpedient to legislate” motion, therefore killing HB 1675 (177 votes)

All are Democrats except where noted by (r). Towns listed in parentheses.

BELKNAP COUNTY 

  • District 3 (Laconia, all wards): David Huot

CARROLL COUNTY 

  • District 1 (Bartlett, Hart’s Location, Jackson): Anita Burroughs
  • District 2 (Chatham, Conway, Eaton, Hale’s Location): Harrison Kanzler, Stephen Woodcock
  • District 3 (Albany, Freedom, Madison, Tamworth): Jerry Knirk, Susan Ticehurst 
  • District 6 (Wolfeboro): Edith DesMarais
  • District 7 floterial (Albany, Bartlett, Chatham, Conway, Eaton, Freedom, Hale’s Location, Hart’s Location, Jackson, Madison, Tamworth): Edward Butler

CHESHIRE COUNTY 

  • District 1 (Chesterfield, Hinsdale, Walpole, Westmoreland): Michael Abbott, Paul Berch, Cathryn Harvey, Lucy Weber
  • District 5 (Keene ward 2): John Bordenet
  • District 6 (Keene ward 3): David Meader
  • District 7 (Keene ward 4): Sparky Von Plinsky
  • District 8 (Keene ward 5): Donovan Fenton
  • District 9 (Dublin, Harrisville, Jaffrey, Roxbury): Richard Ames, Douglas Ley
  • District 10 (Marlborough, Troy): Sandy Swinburne
  • District 12 (Richmond, Swanzey): Barry Faulkner, Jennie Gomarlo
  • District 13 (Winchester): Henry Parkhurst
  • District 16 floterial (Keene, all wards): William Pearson

COOS COUNTY 

  • District 2 (Dummer, Milan, Northumberland, Stark): Wayne Moynihan
  • District 3 (Berlin): Larry Laflamme, Henry Noel, Yvonne Thomas
  • District 5 (Carroll, Jefferson, Randolph, Whitefield): Edith Tucker

GRAFTON COUNTY 

  • District 2 (Franconia, Lisbon, Lyman, Monroe, Sugar Hill): Timothy Egan
  • District 3 (Bath, Benton, Easton, Landaff, Orford, Piermont, Warren): Susan Ford
  • District 5 (Lincoln, Livermore, Waterville Valley, Woodstock): Jerry Stringham
  • District 6 (Ellsworth, Groton, Orange, Rumney, Thornton): Kevin Maes
  • District 7 (Campton): Richard Osborne
  • District 8 (Hebron, Holderness, Plymouth): Sallie Fellows, Suzanne Smith, Joyce Weston
  • District 10 (Enfield): Roger Dontonville
  • District 11 (Canaan, Dorchester, Wentworth): Timothy Josephson
  • District 12 (Hanover, Lyme): Polly Campion, Mary Jane Mulligan, Sharon Nordgren
  • District 13 (Lebanon, all wards): Richard Abel, Susan Almy, Laurel Stavis, George Sykes
  • District 15 floterial (Bath, Benton, Easton, Haverhill, Landaff, Orford, Piermont, Warren): Dennis Ruprecht
  • District 17 floterial (Alexandria, Ashland, Bridgewater, Bristol, Enfield, Grafton): Joshua Adjutant

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY 

  • District 1 (Antrim, Hillsborough, Windsor): Marjorie Porter
  • District 3 (Bennington, Greenfield, Hancock): Daniel Pickering
  • District 4 (Francestown, Greenville, Lyndeboro, Wilton): Jennifer Bernet, Kermit Williams
  • District 5 (Mont Vernon, New Boston): David Woodbury
  • District 6 (Goffstown): Cole Riel
  • District 7 (Bedford): Sue Mullen
  • District 8 (Manchester ward 1): Jeffrey Goley, Diane Langley
  • District 9 (Manchester ward 2):Israel Piedra
  • District 10 (Manchester ward 3): Patrick Long
  • District 11 (Manchester ward 4): Donald Bouchard, Nicole Klein-Knight
  • District 12 (Manchester ward 5): Amanda Bouldin, Andrew Bouldin
  • District 13 (Manchester ward 6): Kathy Desjardin
  • District 14 (Manchester ward 7): Mary Freitas, Mary Heath
  • District 15 (Manchester ward 8): Erika Connors
  • District 16 (Manchester ward 9): Barbara Shaw
  • District 17 (Manchester ward 10): Heidi Hamer, Timothy Smith
  • District 18 (Manchester ward 11): Patricia Cornell, Willis Griffith
  • District 19 (Manchester ward 12): Robert Backus
  • District 21 (Merrimack): Kathryn Stack
  • District 22 (Amherst): Megan Murray
  • District 23 (Milford): Paul Dargie, Joelle Martin, Peter Petrigno
  • District 26 (Brookline, Mason): Brett Hall
  • District 27 (Hollis): Michelle St. John
  • District 28 (Nashua ward 1): William Bordy, Bruce Cohen, Janice Schmidt
  • District 29 (Nashua ward 2): Paul Bergeron, Ray Newman, Sue Newman
  • District 30 (Nashua ward 3): Patricia Klee, Suzanne Vail
  • District 31 (Nashua ward 4): Fred Davis, Manny Espitia
  • District 32 (Nashua ward 5): Allison Nutting-Wong, Michael Pederson
  • District 33 (Nashua ward 6): Mark King, Frances Nutter-Upham
  • District 34 (Nashua ward 7): Catherine Sofikitis, Deb Stevens
  • District 35 (Nashua ward 8): Skip Cleaver, Latha Mangipudi, Laura Telerski
  • District 36 (Nashua ward 9): Martin Jack, Michael O’Brien
  • District 38 floterial (Antrim, Bennington, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsborough, Lyndeborough, Wilton, Windsor): Chris Balch, James Bosman
  • District 42 floterial (Manchester wards 1-3): Matthew Wilhelm
  • District 43 floterial (Manchester wards 4-7): Christopher Herbert
  • District 45 floterial (Manchester wards 10-12): Constance Van Houten

MERRIMACK COUNTY 

  • District 1 (Andover, Danbury, Salisbury): Kenneth Wells
  • District 4 (Sutton, Wilmot): Thomas Schamberg
  • District 5 (New London, Newbury): Karen Ebel, Dan Wolf (r)
  • District 6 (Bradford, Henniker): Roderick Pimentel
  • District 7 (Warner, Webster): Clyde Carson
  • District 9 (Canterbury, Loudon): Howard Moffett, George Saunderson
  • District 10 (Concord ward 5, Hopkinton): David Luneau, Mel Myler, Mary Jane Wallner
  • District 12 (Concord ward 2): Connie Lane
  • District 13 (Concord ward 3): Beth Richards
  • District 14 (Concord ward 4): James MacKay
  • District 15 (Concord ward 6): Ryan Buchanan
  • District 16 (Concord ward 7): Timothy Soucy
  • District 18 (Concord ward 9): Kristina Schultz
  • District 19 (Concord ward 10): Christy Bartlett
  • District 20 (Chichester, Pembroke): David Doherty, Dianne Schuett
  • District 23 (Bow, Dunbarton): Samantha Fox, Mary Beth Walz, Gary Woods
  • District 25 floterial (Andover, Danbury, Salisbury, Warner, Webster): David Karrick
  • District 27 floterial (Concord wards 1-3, 4-7): Arthur Ellison, Rebecca McWilliams
  • District 28 floterial (Concord wards 8-10): Katherine Rogers

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY 

  • District 10 (Fremont): Dennis Acton (r)
  • District 11 (Brentwood): Liz McConnell
  • District 17 (Newfields, Newmarket): Michael Cahill, Charlotte DiLorenzo
  • District 18 (Exeter): Skip Berrien, Gaby Grossman 
  • District 19 (Stratham): Debra Altschiller
  • District 21 (Hampton): Patricia Bushway, Renny Cushing, Michael Edgar, Tom Loughman
  • District 22 (North Hampton): Jim Maggiore
  • District 23 (Greenland, Newington): Dennis Malloy
  • District 24 (New Castle, Rye): Jaci Grote, Kate Murray
  • District 27 (Portsmouth ward 3): Peter Somssich
  • District 28 (Portsmouth ward 4): Gerald Ward
  • District 29 (Portsmouth ward 5): David Meuse
  • District 31 floterial (Greenland, Newington, North Hampton, Portsmouth ward 3): Tamara Le
  • District 33 floterial (Brentwood, Danville, Fremont): Josh Yokela (r)
  • District 36 floterial (Exeter, Newfields, Newmarket, Stratham): Patricia Lovejoy

STRAFFORD COUNTY 

  • District 4 (Barrington): Cassandra Levesque, Matthew Towne
  • District 5 (Lee): Jeffrey Salloway
  • District 6 (Durham, Madbury): Timothy Horrigan, Cam Kenney, Marjorie Smith, Janet Wall 
  • District 7 (Rochester ward 1): Timothy Fontneau
  • District 8 (Rochester ward 6): Donna Ellis
  • District 11 (Rochester ward 4): Chuck Grassie
  • District 14 (Dover ward 2): Kristina Fargo
  • District 15 (Dover ward 3): Linn Opderbecke
  • District 17 (Dover wards 5-6, Somersworth ward 2): Peter Bixby
  • District 18 (Rollinsford, Somersworth wards 1, 3, 4, 5): Gerri Cannon, Wendy Chase, Cecilia Rich
  • District 19 floterial (Dover wards 1-2): Peter Schmidt
  • District 20 floterial (Dover wards 3-4): Thomas Southworth
  • District 23 floterial (Rochester wards 2-3): Sandra Keans

SULLIVAN COUNTY

  • District 1 (Cornish, Grantham, Plainfield, Springfield): Brian Sullivan
  • District 3 (Claremont ward 1): Andrew O’Hearne 
  • District 4 (Claremont ward 2): Gary Merchant 
  • District 9 floterial (Cornish, Croydon, Grantham, Newport, Plainfield, Springfield, Sunapee, Unity): Linda Tanner
  • District 10 floterial (Claremont wards 1-3): John Cloutier

Voting against the “inexpedient to legislate” motion, HB 1675 (131 votes)

All are Republican except where noted by (d). Towns are in parentheses.

BELKNAP COUNTY 

  • District 2 (Gilford, Meredith): Harry Bean, Deanna Jurius, Jonathan Mackie
  • District 3 (Laconia wards 1-6): Richard Beaudoin, Peter Spanos, Franklin Tilton
  • District 4 (Sanbornton, Tilton): Dennis Fields, Timothy Lang
  • District 6 (Belmont): Michael Sylvia
  • District 8 floterial (Alton, Barnstead, Gilmanton): Raymond Howard

CARROLL COUNTY 

  • District 5 (Brookfield, Effingham, Ossipee, Wakefield): Lino Avellani, Ed Comeau
  • District 6 (Wolfeboro): John MacDonald
  • District 8 floterial (Brookfield, Effingham, Moultonborough, Ossipee, Sandwich, Tuftonboro, Wakefield): William Marsh

CHESHIRE COUNTY

  • District 11 (Fitzwilliam, Rindge): John O’Day

COOS COUNTY 

  • District 1 (Clarksville, Colebrook, Columbia, Dixville, Errol, Millsfield, Pittsburg, Stewartstown, Stratford, + 7 other incorporated areas): Michael Furbush
  • District 4 (Dalton, Kilkenny, Lancaster): Kevin Craig
  • District 7 floterial (Carroll, Dalton, Dummer, Jefferson, Kilkenny, Lancaster, Milan, Northumberland including Groveton, Randolph, Stark, Whitefield): Troy Merner

GRAFTON COUNTY 

  • District 1 (Bethlehem, Littleton): Erin Hennessey
  • District 4 (Haverhill): Rick Ladd
  • District 9 ( Alexandria, Ashland, Bridgewater, Bristol, Grafton): Edward Gordon, Vincent Paul Migliore

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY 

  • District 2 (Deering, Weare): Keith Erf, Gary Hopper, JP Marzullo
  • District 6 (Goffstown): Joe Alexander, Barbara Griffin, Michael Gunski, Fred Plett
  • District 7 (Bedford): Linda Camarota, David Danielson
  • District 13 (Manchester ward 6): Larry Gagne
  • District 19 (Manchester ward 2): Kendall Snow 
  • District 20 (Litchfield): Ralph Boehm, Richard Lascelles
  • District 21 (Merrimack): Richard Barry, Richard Hinch, Robert L’Heureux, Nancy Murphy (d), Jeanine Notter
  • District 22 (Amherst): Reed Panasiti
  • District 25 (New Ipswich, Sharon, Temple): Paul Somero
  • District 26 (Brookline, Mason): Jack Flanagan
  • District 37 (Hudson, Pelham): Bob Greene, Tony Lekas, Hershel Nunez, Lynne Ober, Andrew Prout, Andrew Renzullo, Kimberly Rice, Jordan Ulery
  • District 39 floterial (Deering, Goffstown, Weare): John Burt
  • District 44 floterial (Litchfield, Manchester wards 8-9): Mark McLean, Mark Proulx

MERRIMACK COUNTY 

  • District 2 (Franklin wards 1-2, Hill): Werner Horn, Dave Testerman
  • District 3 (Franklin ward 3, Northfield): Greg Hill 
  • District 20 (Chichester, Pembroke): Brian Seaworth
  • District 21 (Epsom, Pittsfield): James Allard, John Klose
  • District 22 (Allenstown): Alan Turcotte (d)
  • District 24 (Hooksett): Frank Kotowski, Thomas Walsh, Michael Yakubovich
  • District 26 floterial (Boscawen, Canterbury, Franklin ward 3, Loudon, Northfield): Howard Pearl
  • District 29 floterial (Allenstown, Epsom, Pittsfield): Carol McGuire

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY 

  • District 2 (Candia, Deerfield, Nottingham): Alan Bershtein, James Spillane, Kevin Verville 
  • District 3 (Raymond): Michael Costable , Kathleen Hoelzel, Kevin Pratt 
  • District 4 (Auburn, Chester, Sandown): Jess Edwards, Jason Osborne, Tony Piemonte, Chris True 
  • District 5 (Londonderry): Al Baldasaro, Tom Dolan, Betsy McKinney, Sherman Packard, Douglas Thomas 
  • District 6 (Derry): Brian Chirichiello, David Love, David Milz, John O’Connor, Stephen Pearson, John Potucek, Katherine Prudhomme-O’Brien 
  • District 7 (Windham): Joel Desilets, Mary Griffin, Walter Kołodziej, Charles McMahon 
  • District 8 (Salem): Daryl Abbas, Arthur Barnes, Fred Doucette, Robert Elliott, Betty Gay, John Janigian, John Sytek 
  • District 9 (Epping): Mark Vallone (d), Michael Vose 
  • District 12 (Danville): Scott Wallace
  • District 13 (Hampstead, Kingston): Dennis Green, Joseph Guthrie, David Welch, Kenneth Weyler 
  • District 14 (Atkinson, Plaistow): Debra DeSimone, Robert Harb, Norman Major, Peter Torosian 
  • District 15 (Newton): Charles Melvin
  • District 16 (East Kingston, Kensington, South Hampton): Dan Davis
  • District 19 (Stratham): Patrick Abrami
  • District 20 (Hampton Falls, Seabrook): Aboul Khan 
  • District 32 floterial (Candia, Deerfield, Northwood, Nottingham): Terry Roy 
  • District 34 floterial (Atkinson, Hampstead, Kingston, Plaistow): Mark Pearson
  • District 35 floterial (East Kingston, Kensington, Newton, South Hampton): Deborah Hobson

STRAFFORD COUNTY

  • District 1 (Middleton, Milton): Peter Hayward, Abigail Rooney 
  • District 2 (Farmington): James Horgan, Joseph Pitre 
  • District 3 (New Durham, Strafford): Michael Harrington, Kurt Wuelper
  • District 6 (Durham, Madbury): Judith Spang 
  • District 9 (Rochester ward 2): Steven Beaudoin
  • District 24 floterial (Rochester wards 4-5): Mona Perreault 

SULLIVAN COUNTY 

  • District 2 (Croydon, Sunapee): Gates Lucas 
  • District 5 (Claremont ward 3): Walter Stapleton 
  • District 6 (Newport, Unity): John Callum, Skip Rollins 
  • District 7 (Acworth, Goshen, Langdon, Lempster, Washington): Judy Aron 
  • District 8 (Charlestown): Tom Laware 
  • District 11 floterial (Acworth, Charlestown, Goshen, Langdon, Lempster, Washington): Steven Smith

Absent/not voting

Speaker of the House Stephen Shurtleff was presiding and did not vote.

BELKNAP COUNTY

  • District 1 (Center Harbor, New Hampton): Harry Viens
  • District 2 (Gilford, Meredith): Glen Aldrich
  • District 5 (Alton, Gilmanton): George Feeney, Peter Varney 
  • District 6 (Belmont): John Plumer 
  • District 7 (Barnstead): Barbara Comtois
  • District 9 (Belmont, Laconia wards 1-6): Charlie St. Clair

CARROLL COUNTY

  • District 2 (Chatham, Conway, Eaton, Hale’s Location): Thomas Buco
  • District 4 (Moultonborough, Sandwich, Tuftonboro): Glenn Cordelli, Karel Crawford
  • District 5 (Brookfield, Effingham, Ossipee, Wakefield): Bill Nelson

CHESHIRE COUNTY

  • District 2 (Alstead, Marlow, Surry): John Mann
  • District 3 (Gilsum, Nelson, Stoddard, Sullivan): Daniel Eaton
  • District 4 (Keene ward 1): David Morrill
  • District 11 (Fitzwilliam, Rindge): John Hunt
  • District 14 floterial (Dublin, Fitzwilliam, Harrisville, Jaffrey, Rindge, Roxbury): Craig Thompson 
  • District 15 floterial (Marlborough, Richmond, Swanzey, Troy, Winchester): Bruce Tatro 
  • District 16 floterial (Keene wards 1-5): Joe Schapiro

COOS COUNTY

  • District 1: John Fothergill
  • District 6: William Hatch

GRAFTON COUNTY

  • District 1 (Bethlehem, Littleton): Linda Massimilla 
  • District 12 (Hanover, Lyme): Garrett Muscatel 
  • District 14 floterial (Bethlehem, Franconia, Lisbon, Littleton, Lyman, Monroe, Sugar Hill): Elaine French
  • District 16 floterial (Canaan, Dorchester, Ellsworth, Groton, Orange, Rumney, Thornton, Wentworth): Francesca Diggs

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY

  • District 1 (Antrim, Hillsborough, Windsor): Jim Fedolfi
  • District 5 (Mont Vernon, New Boston): Donna Mombourquette 
  • District 7 (Bedford): Linda Gould, John Graham
  • District 9 (Manchester ward 2): Linda DiSilvestro
  • District 10 (Manchester ward 3): Jean Jeudy
  • District 15 (Manchester ward 8): Mark Warden 
  • District 16 (Manchester ward 9): Joshua Query 
  • District 21: Rosemarie Rung, Wendy Thomas 
  • District 22 (Amherst): Julie Radhakrishnan 
  • District 23 (Milford): Charles Burns
  • District 24 (Peterborough): Peter Leishman, Ivy Vann 
  • District 25 (New Ipswich, Sharon, Temple): Timothy Merlino
  • District 30 (Nashua ward 3): Sherry Dutzy
  • District 31 (Nashua ward 4): David Cote
  • District 32 (Nashua ward 5): Dan Toomey 
  • District 33 (Nashua ward 6): Kenneth Gidge
  • District 34 (Nashua ward 7): Greg Indruk 
  • District 36 (Nashua ward 9): Linda Harriott-Gathright 
  • District 37 (Hudson, Pelham): Alicia Lekas, Russell Ober, James Whittemore 
  • District 40 floterial (Hollis, Milford, Mont Vernon, New Boston): Kat McGhee
  • District 41 floterial (Amherst, Bedford): Laurie Sanborn 
  • District 42 floterial (Manchester wards 1-3): Jacqueline Chretien
  • District 43 floterial (Manchester wards 4-7): Benjamin Baroody, Richard Komi
  • District 45 floterial (Manchester wards 10-12): Jane Beaulieu

MERRIMACK COUNTY

  • District 3 (Franklin ward 3, Northfield): Joyce Fulweiler
  • District 6 (Bradford, Henniker): Beth Rodd 
  • District 8 (Boscawen): Robert Forsythe
  • District 17 (Concord ward 8): Safiya Wazir 

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY

  • District 1 (Northwood): David Coursin
  • District 4 (Auburn, Chester, Sandown): Becky Owens
  • District 5 (Londonderry): David Lundgren, Anne Warner 
  • District 6 (Derry): Mary Eisner, Phyllis Katsakiores, James Webb 
  • District 8 (Salem): Edward DeClercq, Everett McBride
  • District 17 (Newfields, Newmarket): Ellen Read
  • District 18 (Exeter): Lisa Bunker, Julie Gilman 
  • District 20 (Hampton Falls, Seabrook): Max Abramson, William Fowler
  • District 25 (Portsmouth ward 1): Laura Pantelakos 
  • District 26 (Portsmouth ward 2): Rebecca McBeath
  • District 30 floterial (Portsmouth wards 1-2, 4-5): Jacqueline Cali-Pitts
  • District 37 floterial (Hampton, Hampton Falls, Seabrook): Jason Janvrin

STRAFFORD COUNTY

  • District 12 (Rochester ward 5): Mac Kittredge
  • District 13 (Dover ward 1): Casey Conley
  • District 16 (Dover ward 4): Sherry Frost
  • District 17 (Dover wards 5-6, Somersworth ward 2): Susan Treleaven, Kenneth Vincent
  • District 21 floterial (Dover wards 5-6, Rollinsford, Somersworth wards 1-5): Catt Sandler 
  • District 22 floterial (Rochester wards 1 and 6): Peg Higgins
  • District 25 floterial (Barrington, Lee): Amanda Gourgue

SULLIVAN COUNTY

  • District 1 (Cornish, Grantham, Plainfield, Springfield): Lee Oxenham

House, Senate Votes coming March 11 and 12

The New Hampshire House will vote on more than 300 bills in a two-day session March 11 and 12. The Senate will meet the same days, with a somewhat less formidable agenda.

Don’t let them say they never heard from you.

If you have time Please MAKE the time to let your reps and senator know how you’d like them to vote on the bills I mention below. Don’t assume someone else or some organization will get the message across for you.

Look up your House member here. From there, you can link to a rep’s contact page. If you’re telephone shy (I am), send an email, but do it before Tuesday the 10th. They’re going to be slammed with messages.

Look up your Senator here. From there, you can link to a contact page. There’s an office number where you can leave your message.

Senate: SB 486, abortion insurance mandate

SB 486 will force some health insurance plans that cover maternity benefits to cover abortion as well. Committee recommendation is “ought to pass,” party-line vote. Thumbs down on that: SB 486 deserves an “inexpedient to legislate” vote.

Testimony at the hearing affirmed that most health insurance policies written in New Hampshire already cover abortion. That’s not enough for abortion advocates. They say “parity” demands that abortion coverage be mandated, since abortion is health care, too.

Only it isn’t.

For another view, you can read Planned Parenthood’s glowing endorsement of the bill.

House: HB 1659-FN, assisted suicide

A committee has recommended Interim Study (IS) on the assisted suicide bill. Ordinarily, I might be content with IS on a dangerous bill. Not this time. Now is the time for an emphatic NO to anything that implies assisted suicide is state-approved medical care. I’m going to ask my reps to vote “inexpedient to legislate” on HB 1659-FN.

By the way, you can skip the FNs when you communicate with your reps. It’s a designation for “fiscal note.” The bill number alone will be enough to confirm what bill you’re talking about.

I have heard both in committee and in casual conversations that some supporters of the bill are irritated that it’s being called an assisted suicide bill. They prefer the official title, “relative to patient directed care and patient’s rights with regard to end-of-life decisions.” I’ll continue to call the bill what it is: assisted suicide legislation.

I posted statements of some opponents of the bill here and here.

House: HB 1675-FN, born-alive infant protection

How can a committee recommend that a born-alive bill be killed? We’ve already seen the Senate kill such legislation this year, but couldn’t the House get it right?

Not if House members heed the Judiciary Committee’s “inexpedient to legislate” recommendation. Brace yourself for the anti-HB-1675 speech from committee chair Rep. Marjorie Smith (D-Durham).

So here we are: I am going to ask my state representatives to toss out the committee recommendation and instead vote “ought to pass” on HB 1675-FN.

House: HB 1678-FN, eugenic abortion

A few minutes after voting ITL along party lines on the born-alive bill, the Judiciary Committee also gave thumbs down to HB 1678-FN, which would penalize abortion providers who provide an abortion strictly for reasons of sex selection or genetic anomaly. One Republican, Ned Gordon of Bristol, joined the committee Democrats in voting ITL, so now this recommendation can be touted as “bipartisan.”

And so what? Again, I’m going to ask my reps to flip the committee report and instead vote “ought to pass” on HB 1678-FN.

Keep At It

In a spirit of peace and persistence, in spite of the likely math, make the calls or send the emails. The legislators are burdened with a huge agenda (a self-imposed burden, to be sure), and debate fatigue is sure to go along with it. They’re getting paid a hundred bucks a year to process all that information. Help them out with your short & sweet message. Thank them for their service.

Remember – don’t let them say they never heard from you.