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It’s Your Money: What you need to know about filing your taxes in 2026

read more…: It’s Your Money: What you need to know about filing your taxes in 2026

It’s tax time, and boy are there a lot of things, big and small, you should know about filing this year.

There were a lot of changes with the tax bill pass last summer. On top of it, with the huge staffing cuts at the Internal Revenue Service this year, things will be a little chaotic. Don’t just take my word for it – National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins told Congress Wednesday that this year’s tax filing is going to “present challenges” because of the job cuts and other disarray at the IRS.

It’s Your Money Grocery Snapshot for February: One year later, yeah, prices are up

read more…: It’s Your Money Grocery Snapshot for February: One year later, yeah, prices are up

Thursday marked one year since my first Grocery Snapshot shopping trip. It came right after President Trump announced his plan for across-the-board tariffs. I made a handful of purchases of things I usually bought that I thought could be affected by tariffs, as well as some that may not be, and figured we’d track them for a year to see how, or if, the prices changed.

Cracks in the Facade: Imposter Syndrome and the pressure to be perfect

read more…: Cracks in the Facade: Imposter Syndrome and the pressure to be perfect

Imposter syndrome is not a clinical diagnosis, says Nicole Sublette, founder and clinical director of Therapists of Color New England. Instead, it describes “a persistent pattern of self-doubt, a fear of being exposed as inadequate and an inability to internalize accomplishments. I put imposter syndrome in the mental-health bucket as something tied to other experiences, not as a pathology,” she says.   

Liberty House receives $20K grant from Service Credit Union and Robert Irvine Foundation to support NH veterans

read more…: Liberty House receives $20K grant from Service Credit Union and Robert Irvine Foundation to support NH veterans

Liberty House was awarded a $20,000 grant from the Service Credit Union Impact Foundation and Robert Irvine Foundation to help New Hampshire veterans rebuild stability and self-sufficiency after significant life challenges.

Who really pays for business tax cuts in New Hampshire?

read more…: Who really pays for business tax cuts in New Hampshire?

Based on our research, the proposal would drain tens of millions of dollars from the state budget, could weaken funding for education, health care, and local services, and ultimately shift more costs onto families and property-tax payers, all while offering most businesses savings too small to meaningfully boost hiring or investment. Here’s what the data show, and why it matters for Granite Staters.

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