logo
Amy Hansen and Jeff Grip win Hampton Select Board seats: Election results

Amy Hansen and Jeff Grip win Hampton Select Board seats: Election results

Yahoo12-03-2025
HAMPTON — Amy Hansen and Jeff Grip won Tuesday's selectmen races for two open positions, while voters approved police union contracts and improvements to the town's safety pier.
Hansen, the current board chair, won her second straight term and a three-year seat with 1,972 votes, defeating Regina Barnes who had 763 votes and Brian Warburton who had 671. Grip won a two-year seat in a four-way race defeating Bruce Theriault's 756 votes, Derek Beaupre's 408 votes and Matthew Flynn's 401 votes.
'I'm a little speechless,' Hansen said Tuesday after the results were posted. 'I'm very excited and relieved the campaigning process is over.'
In the race for School Board, voters elected Sarah Elliott and Candice O'Neil. They defeated incumbents Ginny Bridle Russell and Leslie Shepard as well as Frank Bajowski.
In other contested races, a three-way race for two three-year seats on the Budget Committee was won by Fred Diana and Michael Plouffe. For the one-year seat on the Budget Committee, Aleksandra Ring defeated Mary Blackwell, Joseph Bamforth and Patrick Sheridan.
Matthew Saunders was elected to the Zoning Board while Sharon Mullen and Keith Lessard were re-elected to the town Planning Board.
In the race for town clerk, Cheryl Hildreth defeated Beth Frongillo by a vote of 2,010 to 1,121.
The town also voted 2,245 to 971 to approve the town's proposed $36.3 million operating budget, which was $67 less than the default budget.
Sixty-seven percent of the budget consists of wages ($15.6 million) and employee benefits ($8.7 million). Other items include $2.8 million in debt payments, $2.2 million for contracts, and $1 million for repairs and maintenance.
The school budget was approved by a vote of 2,229 to 1,081.
Also gaining approval were two three-year employee contracts: one for Hampton police officers and another for the department's sergeants. Both contracts feature adjustments to the current salary schedule, with a 6.5% wage increase in the first year, and a 3% increase in the second and third years. Additionally, the contracts address adjustments to health insurance and an increase in private detail wages, paid by outside vendors. The new contract also introduces Juneteenth as a holiday and provides a stipend for patrolmen assigned with a police K-9.
Voters also approved $300,000 from the town's unassigned fund balance to repair and upgrade the Hampton Public Safety Pier.
A citizens' petition request to amend the elderly property tax exemption program to increase an applicant's net assets from $250,000 to $367,000 to qualify was rejected. Four other citizens' petitions deemed illegal by the town attorney were also rejected, including one to regulate commercial businesses in the residentially zoned district at 17/17R Barbour Road.
For the first time in decades, voters rejected a citizens' petition for $52,958 to provide child benefit services for Hampton students who attend Sacred Heart School.
Voters have supported providing funding under RSA 198:49 to the Catholic school each year since 1975. The state law was created to allow non-public schools the means of attaining educational resources normally provided to public schools by the state.
None of the funds are used for religious purposes and are directly used to benefit the students from Hampton who attend the school.
The article, which was not recommended by the School Board or Budget Committee, was defeated by a vote of 1,345 to 1,961.
This article originally appeared on Portsmouth Herald: Amy Hansen re-elected to Hampton Select Board: Election results
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pueblo D60 board tables Varela's proposal to fast-track new West Side charter school
Pueblo D60 board tables Varela's proposal to fast-track new West Side charter school

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Pueblo D60 board tables Varela's proposal to fast-track new West Side charter school

The Pueblo School District 60 Board of Education voted 3-2 on Aug. 12 to remove an agenda item that could have eventually allowed Stephen Varela and Pueblo Choice Schools to open a new west side charter in 2026. A prospective charter school is required by state statute to submit an application to a local school board 18 months prior to opening. However, the quashed Aug. 12 agenda item asked the Pueblo D60 board to consider allowing Pueblo Choice Schools to apply before Oct. 1, 2025, and open in the fall of 2026. Kathy DeNiro, Dennis Maes and Bill Thiebaut were the three Pueblo D60 board directors to vote in favor of removing the agenda item on Aug. 12. The motion to remove was made by Maes and seconded by Thiebaut. "One has to ponder the urgency for fast-tracking this particular venture," Maes said on Aug. 12. "The decision to authorize charter school status is of great importance and should be given the time the statute contemplates to reach such a decision." Efforts to bring a new charter school to the west side follow the June 30 closing of the Chavez Huerta K-12 Preparatory Academy. Varela and others with Pueblo Choice Schools have advocated for a new school on the former Chavez Huerta site that would offer programs like baile folklorico, Chicano studies, a dual-immersion language program and early college. However, the charter school idea has been scrutinized by others — including former Pueblo D60 Board Presidents Barb Clementi and Tommy Farrell — who questioned Pueblo Choice Schools' desire to make an exception to the 18-month application deadlines, the planned involvement of for-profit ACCEL Schools, and the political motives of Pueblo Choice Schools. Farrell, who is campaigning this year to return to the Pueblo D60 board, released a statement on Aug. 7 opposing fast-tracking the charter school application for Pueblo Choice Schools. In his statement, Farrell said that the 18-month timeline ensures "careful review," that Pueblo D60 should be wary of for-profit models, that political ties should not influence board decisions, and that all students deserve "a quality education." "I share the concern for students in Pueblo's west side," his statement reads. "They deserve strong, stable, high-quality schools. But that outcome will not be achieved through rushed decisions or questionable partnerships. Real equity requires sustained investment in proven, community-rooted public education." Varela told the Chieftain on Aug. 13 that he and Pueblo Choice Schools were "not quite upset" by the board's decision. He also said that Pueblo Choice Schools is going to "keep pushing forward." "We're really excited to see something go into that area, the west side, and we think it's going to be a great opportunity for kids over there," Varela said. "We want to have continuity of education and support the educational mission." Pueblo D60 and Pueblo Transit: Pueblo D60 teams up with Pueblo Transit to help address alarming absenteeism Pueblo Chieftain reporter James Bartolo can be reached at JBartolo@ Support local news, subscribe to the Pueblo Chieftain at This article originally appeared on The Pueblo Chieftain: Why the Pueblo D60 board nixed charter school discussion on Aug. 12 Solve the daily Crossword

Vacant Mifflinburg Area School Board position to be placed on November ballot
Vacant Mifflinburg Area School Board position to be placed on November ballot

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Vacant Mifflinburg Area School Board position to be placed on November ballot

MIFFLINBURG — The Union County Republican and Democratic Committees have until Sept. 15 to file nomination certificates with the Union County Elections Office for the vacant school board director position in Mifflinburg. The resignation of Mifflinburg Area School Board Region 1 Director Joshua Moser was accepted at this week's public meeting. The position will be placed on the November election ballot as a two-year unexpired term because the resignation occurred more than 60 days before the next municipal election, according to Union County Board of Elections Director Laura Seward. The term will run Jan. 1 to Dec. 31, 2027. The parties have until 50 days before the election to file nomination certificates with the office, Seward said. Region 1 is comprised of Buffalo Township, Limestone Township, New Berlin Borough, and the precinct of Union-Independent. The school district intends to fill the position for the next four months. Qualified individuals interested in the position should submit a letter of interest to Tammy Boop, school board secretary, Mifflinburg Area School District, 178 Maple St., Mifflinburg, PA 17844, by 3 p.m. Aug. 22. School board members must be at least 18 years old and have been a resident in the district for more than one year. — JUSTIN STRAWSER Solve the daily Crossword

Battle brewing over CPS spending plan before Tuesday's hearing
Battle brewing over CPS spending plan before Tuesday's hearing

CBS News

time2 days ago

  • CBS News

Battle brewing over CPS spending plan before Tuesday's hearing

There's a new twist in the Chicago Public Schools budget battle, and it comes just days before the first day of class. The Sun-Times reports that a majority of school board members are refusing to approve the district's new spending plan, saying it is missing money for key financial obligations. Budget hearings begin Tuesday, but the fight over how to spend nearly $9 billion has already started. According to the Sun-Times, 11 of the 21 board members sent a letter to the interim CEO, saying they wouldn't sign off on the budget unless it included a pension payment and loan repayment. CPS leaders revealed their budget proposal on Wednesday. They said that it closes a $734 million deficit through a mix of cost-cutting and new revenue. The cuts include hundreds of teachers, lunchroom staff, and crossing guards, as well as 1,200 custodians. The budget includes money for academic programs, facility upgrades, and staff retention. But not the pension and loan payments the board wants added, according to the Sun-Times. The dispute comes as school starts Monday for more than 300,000 students, and with budget hearings set to begin Tuesday. The board's final vote on the budget is expected on Aug. 28, which could stretch the standoff well into the start of the school year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store