Croydon family pleased as state allows tax dollars at religious schools >Croyden residents Dennis and Cathy Griffin are suing the N.H. Department of Education, saying that it is unconstitutional to exclude religious schools, like the one their grandson Clayton attends, from educational choice programs. Courtesy photograph
Modified: 7/17/2021 10:03:06 PM
CROYDON Dennis and Kathy Griffin’s grandson Clayton, a seventh grader at Mount Royal Academy in Sunapee, has been attending the Catholic pre-K-12 school for the past seven years. But this is the first year that tax dollars will be contributing to his tuition.
After the approval of New Hampshire’s Education Freedom Account program in late June and an update to the 2017 Croydon Bill in early July, New Hampshire religious schools are allowed to receive state money, in certain circumstances.
Families ready to use tax dollars at religious schools
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Grantham man with at-home care business sentenced for fraud, ordered to pay $1 million
Staff Report
Modified: 7/13/2021 8:22:25 PM
CONCORD A 72-year-old Grantham man has been ordered to pay $1 million in restitution after he was convicted of Medicaid fraud Tuesday, according to a news release from the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office.
Richard Wennerberg pleaded guilty to two counts of felony Medicaid fraud during a hearing in Merrimack County Superior Court Tuesday, the release said. A judge sentenced him to 12 months in prison, with a recommendation for administrative home confinement, and ordered him to pay the restitution.
The news follows an investigation the Attorney General’s office conducted into Wennerberg’s business, Alternative Care @ Home LLC, which is registered out of Hopkinton and provides licensed personal care services to Medicaid patients at their home. According to investigators, between 2015 and 2018 Wennerberg submitted claims for reimbursemen