Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Sizable Rochester water and sewer rate hikes proposed

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

June 11, 2009
Fosters

ROCHESTER — City residents could see significant increases in water and sewer rates if the City Council agrees with Utility Advisory Board recommendations for yearly increases through Fiscal Year 2015 made at Tuesday night’s council meeting.

The UAB advised the council raise the FY10 sewer rate to $5.95 per 100 cubic feet — or 748 gallons — and the water rate to $4.19 per 100 cubic feet, effective July 1. The recommendations represent 8 percent and 3.8 percent increases, respectively.

The UAB also proposed further yearly increases through FY15. The UAB proposed raising sewer by 8 percent each year through FY15 and water by 4 percent in FY11, 4.5 percent in FY12 and 5 percent each year thereafter through FY15.

This translates to significant rate increases for water and sewer customers. The quarterly cost for the average sewer customer in FY09 is $165.18. With proposed changes, the quarterly rate jumps to $178.40 in FY10 and will be $262.12 in FY15, according to UAB Chair Kevin Bridges.

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Final touches put on public campaign finance plan

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

November 23, 2008
Fosters

CONCORD — A hearing on setting up a quasi-publicly funded campaign financing system for the state was momentarily interrupted Friday when the chairman asked about students standing in the back of the room.

They were there with State Sen. Jackie Cilley, D-Barrington, who said some of her business students at the University of New Hampshire, after exploring the Statehouse, may be candidates one day.

“You won’t have to do what I do and beg for money every few years,” she told them.

That may be true if the Legislature adopts the plan by the New Hampshire Commission on Public Funding of Elections, which has been making changes to a draft report ahead of submitting the proposal to the governor, legislative leaders and the secretary of state on Dec. 1.

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E-mail calling employees ‘elitist’ for wanting raise has school paraprofessionals upset in Rochester

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

October 15, 2008
Fosters

ROCHESTER — The School District’s paraprofessionals are up in arms after an e-mail urging city councilors to vote down the group’s proposed contract renegotiation referred to them as “arrogant elitists.”

“My first reaction when I heard the comments was: ‘Who are these people? I don’t even know them, how are they judging me?’” said Roxanne Ajemian, a para-educator at Spaulding High School. “I think many people don’t know what we do and how much work it is.”

The e-mail that started the controversy was sent to councilors last week by Rob and Doris Gates, who claimed the requests made in the contract were “outrageous and far beyond reason.”

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It’s not the time to go for longer terms of office

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

October 14, 2008
Fosters

Longer terms for Rochester city councilors? Where is the consensus calling for it?

It was a topic raised at a recent “Meeting with the Mayor” — one of the monthly opportunities for Mayor John Larochelle’s constituents to confront him or simply converse with the city’s highest elected official. With only the mayor and three other persons in attendance, last month’s meeting seemed to fall into the conversational category.

Four-year terms for the mayor and city councilors and elected board members?

“If I had my way the terms would be four years,” Larochelle said, “but it would be on an alternating cycle so every two years half of the members would be up for re-election.

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Spending is a District 6 Issue

Monday, October 13th, 2008

October 13, 2008
Union Leader

ROCHESTER – How much–or more precisely, how little–the state should spend as the economy continues to sour is a prime issue in the election for senate District Six as challenger Fenton Groen seeks to unseat incumbent Sen. Jackie Cilley.

Cilley, a Barrington Democrat, says she hopes to retain the seat she won two years ago so she can address the oncoming economic issues the state is facing. As owner of the small business Horseshoes Plus in Barrington and an adjunct business professor at the University of New Hampshire, Cilley says she is uniquely qualified.

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