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Page 9 - ஹில்ஸ்பரோ கவுண்டி உயர்ந்தது நீதிமன்றம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Nashua Police Arrest Woman After Investigating Shooting Incident

Reply Taryn Santiago, 42 is accused of shooting a gun at a car after police say a argument occurred (Nashua Police) NASHUA, NH - Nashua Police say they arrested Taryn Santiago, 42, of 145 Pearl Street, apartment #1, Manchester, New Hampshire on Monday. Nashua Police Lt Patrick Hannon said that on Sunday police officers responded to 28 Railroad Square for reported gunshots. Nashua officers learned that a vehicle had been shot multiple times after an argument between several individuals. The vehicle was unoccupied when it was shot and there were no injuries as a result of the incident. Nashua Detectives assigned to the Criminal Investigation Division were notified and furthered the investigation. Taryn Santiago, 42 of Manchester was identified as the person responsible for discharging a firearm at the vehicle according to police.

Ralph Jimenez: What did school funding report say? Nothing new

Ralph Jimenez: What did school funding report say? Nothing new Published: 12/20/2020 6:30:49 AM It’s axiomatic that the lowest rungs on the ladder are the ones that get stepped on the most. In New Hampshire, those rungs, for local taxpayers and schoolchildren, are and have been labeled Allenstown, Claremont, Franklin, Lisbon, and Pittsfield. In the three decades since the first of the Claremont school funding Supreme Court rulings, other communities have joined or perhaps even replaced some of those on the bottom. The pain of escalating and inequitable property taxes and underfunded schools is widespread. The communities at the top of the ladder, most of them Lakes Region and Seacoast towns or mountain redoubts, are unchanged.

All we need is a chance : Couple moved from courthouse tent facing uncertainty again, as state funds dry up

‘All we need is a chance’: Couple moved from courthouse tent facing uncertainty again, as state funds dry up Brandon (left) talks to a Granite House Recovery staffer about going to a respite bed. His girlfriend, Lexi, (center) took some convincing, but the two decided to go on Nov. 19. Now they say they have been told they need to find a new place to live by Dec. 31. Carol Robidoux / Manchester Ink Link Published: 12/14/2020 4:20:47 PM Brandon and Lexi were the first two people approached by a Granite Recovery Center outreach worker on Nov. 19. The organization was hired by the state to round up 22 people living in tents on the Hillsborough County Superior Courthouse grounds and move them to respite beds. The rest of the 70-plus people who declined the offer of alternative shelter were told to move along, their tents dismantled, their belongings loaded into trash bags.

All we need is a chance : Couple moved from courthouse tent facing uncertainty again, as state funds dry up

Email address: Leave this field empty if you re human: Brandon, left, talks to a Granite House Recovery staffer about going to a respite bed. His girlfriend, Lexi, center, took some convincing, but the two decided to go on Nov. 19. Now they say they have been told they need to find a new place to live by Dec. 31. File Photo/Carol Robidoux MANCHESTER, NH – Brandon and Lexi were the first two people approached by a Granite Recovery Center outreach worker on Nov. 19. The organization was hired by the state to round-up 22 people living in tents on the Hillsborough County Superior Courthouse grounds and move them to respite beds. The rest of the 70+ people who declined the offer of alternative shelter were told to move along, their tents dismantled, their belongings loaded into trash bags.

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