Londonderry should be shining brighter this Christmastime, thanks to citizens who stepped up to save their fellow residents from having to unnecessarily spend public dollars.
Big credit goes to Eric Turcotte. He didn’t like the initial town council response to the town common needing new holiday lights. The council was prepared to enter into a contract with a private firm to install new lights.
That seemed wasteful to Turcotte, who runs a tree service business. He put the word out on social media, seeking volunteers to help him do the work at no charge.
He got a positive response. Not only did townspeople step forward. Town departments also pitched in to help, according to a story by Union Leader Correspondent Julie Huss.
When people can step up and save their town some money, it’s worth a try, Turcotte said.
The new lights will be shining for the Rotary Club’s annual Christmas on the Common event Sunday afternoon, Dec. 8 (3 to 6 p.m.)
Much social and media air time was spent last week on the matter of which restroom a certain new member of the U.S. Congress will be permitted to use. Liberals and their press pool pals seem not to have learned much from the recent presidential election.
State Sen. Sharon Carson of Londonderry will lead that important body in the new legislature. That is good news for the taxpayers in particular and Granite Staters in general.
What happened to all the buses? We expected fleets of them pouring over our border from Massachusetts on Election Day in order to keep Donald Trump from victory. Trump in fact didn’t carry New Hampshire, but it was close.
The president-elect has announced the formation of a new body to cut down on the number and size of existing government departments and government waste.
Whereas it has long been our custom to commemorate November 11, the anniversary of the ending of World War I, by paying tribute to the heroes of that tragic struggle and by rededicating ourselves to the cause of peace; and
We have a hunch that both state and local governments are going to face some financially tougher times in the next two years. The watchword ought to be to spend on “needs not wants” as a former governor used to say.
This Monday is Veterans Day, Nov. 11. If you see a veteran today (or any day, for that matter) thank him or her for their service. Some of them will shrug it off as no big deal but most of them, we think, will appreciate it.
The 2024 presidential contest puts Americans in a spot they have no wish to be in — a choice between a man many have rejected and a woman most of the country can’t remember voting for in any contest (Hint: you likely never have). We cannot endorse either Kamala Harris or Donald Trump. That t…