Senators pass bills to protect businesses, children and promote passenger rail


CONCORD, NHย โ€“ The New Hampshire Senate passed bills on Thursday that ranged from noncompete clauses for low-wage earners to funding for the project development phase of the capitol corridor rail project.

The Senate also unanimously passedย SB 242, legislation that protects New Hampshire businesses from out-of-state jurisdictions attempting to impose a sales tax on them.

The legislation was a result of the controversial U.S. Supreme Court South Dakota v. Wayfair decision.

Sen. Jeb Bradley, R-Wolfeboro, said: โ€œI am pleased the New Hampshire Senate has unanimously sent a message to out-of-state jurisdictions that New Hampshire is a sales tax-free state and we will not subject our businesses to other stateโ€™s laws.โ€

โ€œI applaud Gov. Sununu and Attorney General MacDonald for working with the legislature to craft a bill with real protections for New Hampshire businesses.โ€

Senate Bill 197 to prohibit noncompete agreements for low-wage passed on a voice vote.

โ€œTodayโ€™s vote is a step toward eliminating hurdles for low-wage workers in New Hampshire by prohibiting their employers from requiring them to enter into noncompete agreements,โ€ Sen. David Watters, D-Dover, said in an email after the vote.

By a vote of 14-10, the Senate recommendedย SB 241ย ought to pass as amended. It enables New Hampshire to access federal funds to undertake an in-depth analysis of the financial, engineering, and environmental implications of expanding rail.

Sen. Melanie Levesque, D-District 12, said: โ€œPassenger rail is a key component to New Hampshireโ€™s efforts to grow our economy, ease traffic, improve commutes, and attract and retain young professionals.

โ€œTodayโ€™s Senate vote is a critical next step toward establishing passenger rail through the capitol corridor projectโ€”at no cost to New Hampshire taxpayers,โ€ Levesque said.

The Senate also unanimously passedย SB 174. It establishes June 19thย as Juneteenth, a day to reflect upon slaveryโ€™s relation to the State of New Hampshire.

Sen. Levesque said: โ€œFor slaves in America, July 4thย was not the day they became free. Nor was Abraham Lincolnโ€™s Emancipation Proclamation of 1863. In Galveston, Texas the news of the Emancipation Proclamation did not reach them for two and a half years.

โ€œJuneteenth recognizes the day those slaves were finally no longer held in bondage and all Americans were considered free; Iโ€™m proud of todayโ€™s Senate vote to guarantee New Hampshire observes this historic day each year,โ€ Levesque said.

Unanimously adopted wasย SB 14-FNย that recommended improvements to New Hampshireโ€™s Childrenโ€™s System of Care. It will establish a statewide childrenโ€™s mobile crisis response.

Sen. Dan Feltes, D-Concord, said it is a cost-effective childrenโ€™s system of care that will timely address the critical needs of children, thereby reducing significant mental health, special education, and child protection costs down the road.

โ€œItโ€™s encouraging to see such strong bipartisan support for this commonsense measure to protect New Hampshireโ€™s futureโ€”our children,โ€ Feltes said.


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