Concord has implemented a 1,000-foot limit on new dead-end streets to protect resident safety during severe weather events. Deputy City Manager Matthew Walsh explains that longer dead-end roads could trap residents and homes during emergencies, making this restriction necessary for community protection.
Original (en)
Concord has a restriction when it comes to new dead-end streets: no more than 1,000 feet. That limit is in place for resident safety, argues Deputy City Manager Matthew Walsh. If the city approves longer dead-end roads, and developers build housing on those roads, residents could become trapped during severe weather events and the homes […]
Published
Apr 28, 2026, 03:00 PM UTC
15d ago
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· click + to trackUnited States rejected overtures in Concord Hospital [4 sources]
What’s possible for us in New Hampshire, and who decides? Earlier this year, during the height of town meeting season, the Concord Monitor reported that the health insurance bill for Bow and Dunbarton schools had jumped 16%. “It’s a part of the budget that we don’t have any control over,” Duane Ford, business administrator for SAU 67, told the Monitor’s Sruthi Gopalakrishnan.
NH lawmakers again consider giving convicts more time to prove their innocence CONCORD, N.H. — New Hampshire state law allows convicts three years to request a new trial. After that, they lose the right.
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