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Trained staff provide counseling and support before, during, and after disasters and refer people to local disaster-related resources for follow-up care and support.
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2155 Main Street, Bethlehem, NH 03574
Local police department for the Town of Bethlehem
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74 Lockehaven Road, Enfield, NH 03748
Health inspection for the Town of Enfield
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207 South Main Street, Newmarket, NH 03857
With eight convenient locations, Exeter Hospital rehabilitation offers comprehensive physical and occupational therapy for all orthopedic and musculoskeletal conditions. Our therapists continually strive to develop their expertise in orthopedics through high level training and certification including hand therapy and orthopedics.
Whether it is pre- or post-surgical, patients receive a dynamic rehabilitation treatment plan tailored to meet individualized needs. Programs may include functional activities, strengthening/conditioning, home exercises, or even aquatic therapy.
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44 Lafayette Road, North Hampton, NH 03862
Local post office
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2 Main Street, Amherst, NH 03031
In New Hampshire, people with little or no income may be entitled to financial help from their town or city.
New Hampshire law (RSA 165) requires each town or city to have a local welfare program to help people who are in need of financial assistance in meeting their basic living needs. The role of local town or city welfare is to relieve and maintain residents of their towns/cities whenever a person is unable to support themselves.
Each New Hampshire town has a town or city welfare office, usually located within the Town or City Office. This is a separate resource from State Welfare/Dept. of Health and Human Services that provide long term assistance.
Local town or city welfare programs are required to provide financial assistance for basic necessities such as food, shelter, rent, mortgage payments, heat, electricity, gas, water, necessary clothing, transportation, and prescriptions. Basic telephone service may be paid if necessary for health and safety reasons.
Towns and Cities must also help with "maintenance" items such as paper products, household supplies, diapers, etc..
Towns and cities should pay security deposits if necessary to obtain housing. Necessary medical costs should be paid if there is no other way to obtain essential medical services.
The town or city may decide that a certain expense, such as a car payment, is not necessary. This may happen when a reasonable lower cost option is available, such as public transportation.
The town or city should issue a written decision on your application within 3 to 5 days of your application. If there is an emergency, the town should make a decision immediately. The written decision should tell you how much and what kind of help the town will give.
You can't be denied assistance just because:
*You have lived in town only a short time
*You have received help in the past, or have not repaid help you received in the past
*The town or city says they don't have enough money in the budget
*You receive other state or federal assistance (However if you receive APTD or OAA, speak with 603 Legal Aid for further information
If you think that your request for help has been wrongly denied, call 603 Legal Aid for assistance. You have the right to appeal and request a hearing. If you have questions about this process, please call 603 Legal Aid for assistance.
**Whenever any person, a resident in this state, who served in the armed forces of the United States dies and did not leave sufficient estate to pay the expenses of his funeral, or was an assisted person, the overseers of public welfare shall cause him to be decently buried at the expense of the municipality in which he died. Funds received from the Department of Veterans Affairs towards burial expenses shall be retained by the municipality. The municipality shall make a request to the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide a suitable monument.**
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Medical Care Expense AssistanceUtility Service Payment AssistanceVeteransMemorials/MonumentsBurial/Cremation Expense AssistancePrescription Expense AssistanceUndesignated Temporary Financial AssistanceGas Service Payment AssistanceRental Deposit AssistanceElectric Service Payment AssistanceRent Payment AssistanceProperty Tax Payment AssistanceMortgage Payment AssistanceWater Service Payment AssistanceTelephone Service Payment AssistanceAt Risk/Homeless Housing Related Assistance ProgramsFood VouchersHeating Fuel Payment Assistance
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233 Atlantic Avenue, North Hampton, NH 03862
Call for details of holiday programs
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Address unavailable
Court diversion program for juvenile offenders.
To be accepted into the program, the offender must first admit their guilt. They will then be given a contract of specific consequences to complete which may include requirements such as performing community service, signing a ParentTeen Contract, paying restitution, writing letters of apology, writing research papers, completing education courses related to their crime, or performing in home drug testing under parental supervision. The intent is to positively impact a young offender’s life, helping them set a new path.
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54 Flanders Road, Warner, NH 03278
Volunteers are always needed to help at the organizational level for administration, organization, strategic planning, marketing, yard sales and financial development at the board level or on committees. When we have an active home build, we need volunteer and professional help with Habitat for Humanity houses. Jobs for all skill levels are available, no one will be turned away!
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139 Iron Works Road, Concord, NH 03301
Hotline for suspected crimes involving drugs - 1-800-NAB-DOPE
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1070 Holt Avenue, # 1400, Manchester, NH 03109
Volunteers needed for all areas of service. Training and support provided.
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121 Belmont Road, Lakes Region Family Center, Laconia, NH 03246
The agency provides services to eligible households to assist with home heating and electric costs. It also provides services that will help to lower your energy expenses and make your home warmer and healthier.
- The Fuel Assistance Program provides low-income households with assistance for heating their homes in the winter months.
- The Electrical Assistance Program provides income-eligible households with a discount on their electrical bill. Discounts are effective for one year after enrollment and can range from 8%-76%.
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1606 Dover Road, Epsom, NH 03234
Public library for the Town of Epsom.
Services includes: computers which patrons may use for word processing and Internet access; audiobooks on CDs; Delivery to Shut-Ins for Volunteers to either bring books to the borrower or bring the borrower to the library.
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1 Main Street, Brookline, NH 03033
In New Hampshire, people with little or no income may be entitled to financial help from their town or city.
New Hampshire law (RSA 165) requires each town or city to have a local welfare program to help people who are in need of financial assistance in meeting their basic living needs. The role of local town or city welfare is to relieve and maintain residents of their towns/cities whenever a person is unable to support themselves.
Each New Hampshire town has a town or city welfare office, usually located within the Town or City Office. This is a separate resource from State Welfare/Dept. of Health and Human Services that provide long term assistance.
Local town or city welfare programs are required to provide financial assistance for basic necessities such as food, shelter, rent, mortgage payments, heat, electricity, gas, water, necessary clothing, transportation, and prescriptions. Basic telephone service may be paid if necessary for health and safety reasons.
Towns and Cities must also help with "maintenance" items such as paper products, household supplies, diapers, etc..
Towns and cities should pay security deposits if necessary to obtain housing. Necessary medical costs should be paid if there is no other way to obtain essential medical services.
The town or city may decide that a certain expense, such as a car payment, is not necessary. This may happen when a reasonable lower cost option is available, such as public transportation.
The town or city should issue a written decision on your application within 3 to 5 days of your application. If there is an emergency, the town should make a decision immediately. The written decision should tell you how much and what kind of help the town will give.
You can't be denied assistance just because:
*You have lived in town only a short time
*You have received help in the past, or have not repaid help you received in the past
*The town or city says they don't have enough money in the budget
*You receive other state or federal assistance (However if you receive APTD or OAA, speak with 603 Legal Aid for further information
If you think that your request for help has been wrongly denied, call 603 Legal Aid for assistance. You have the right to appeal and request a hearing. If you have questions about this process, please call 603 Legal Aid for assistance.
**Whenever any person, a resident in this state, who served in the armed forces of the United States dies and did not leave sufficient estate to pay the expenses of his funeral, or was an assisted person, the overseers of public welfare shall cause him to be decently buried at the expense of the municipality in which he died. Funds received from the Department of Veterans Affairs towards burial expenses shall be retained by the municipality. The municipality shall make a request to the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide a suitable monument.**
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Electric Service Payment AssistanceRent Payment AssistanceRental Deposit AssistanceProperty Tax Payment AssistanceMortgage Payment AssistancePrescription Expense AssistanceUtility Service Payment AssistanceAt Risk/Homeless Housing Related Assistance ProgramsFood VouchersMedical Care Expense AssistanceGas Service Payment AssistanceHeating Fuel Payment AssistanceTelephone Service Payment AssistanceWater Service Payment AssistanceUndesignated Temporary Financial AssistanceBurial/Cremation Expense AssistanceMemorials/MonumentsVeterans
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Address unavailable
24 hour crisis/support line for domestic and sexual violence survivors or those who are concerned for someone
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1120 Main Street, Dublin, NH 03444-0277
Health inspection for the Town of Dublin, NH
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30 Pillsbury Street, Concord, NH 03301
Palliative care can help patients of all ages during and after curative treatment at any stage of their illness. The goal is to improve quality of life while considering a patient’s unique needs.
Our palliative care core team includes a palliative care physician and/or nurse practitioner, nurse, social worker, and spiritual counselor. They partner with you, your loved ones, and your doctor from your primary treatment team to address your physical, emotional, social, and spiritual needs to improve symptoms such as:
- Pain
- Shortness of breath
- Fatigue
- Constipation
- Nausea
- Loss of appetite
- Difficulty sleeping
- Depression
- Stress
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630 Dartmouth College Highway, Haverhill, NH 03765
Local post office
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112 S. State Street, Concord, NH 03301
Impaired driver care management program includes screening/intake, evaluation with LADC if needed, 20 hour education class, and case management (2x monthly check in) if needed. Chrysalis can provide the counseling (aftercare) if required, in house as well.
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149 Emerald St Suite T, Keene, NH 03431
New Hampshire Vocational Rehabilitation (NHVR) is an agency that helps persons with disabilities help themselves to get a job, keep the job, and develop a life time career. NHVR has seven regional offices throughout the state designed to assist persons who have physical, mental, emotional and learning disabilities.
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8 Whitten Street, Allenstown, NH 03275
Our early learning centers benefit from qualified early childhood teachers with decades of experience in the field and a strong understanding of and passion for early childhood development. Early learning spaces are completely separate from Boys & Girls Club after school programs, with a few exceptions (such as the use of a gym while the older children are at school).
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9 Townsend West, Nashua, NH 03063
ASD’s middle school program provides younger students the chance to explore, whereby design all students are exposed to aerospace, physics, environmental science, engineering, computer science, biology, and chemistry.
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One Elliot Way, Manchester, NH 03103
The Elliot’s Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP) and Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) provide individual and group-based treatment of co-occurring substance use and mental health disorders. PHP and IOP are for individuals who need care that is more intensive than individual outpatient programs but not as intensive as residential treatment.
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1 Parkland Drive, Derry, NH 03038
The New Hampshire Health and Human Services Division of Public Health Services (DHHS) program provides free breast and cervical cancer screenings to women who meet certain eligibility requirements.
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120 Main Street, Suite 5C, Colebrook, NH 03576
We offer: 24 hour crisis line intervention; 24 hour hospital accompaniment; 24 hour police accompaniment; Court support services; Women's education and a support group; Men's education group; Emergency transportation; Information and referrals; Community education and Medical advocacy
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Temporary Restraining OrdersDomestic Violence Support GroupsCrime Victim Accompaniment ServicesIndividual AdvocacySexual Assault IssuesDomestic Violence IssuesSelf Advocacy SupportSpecialized Information and ReferralPeer CounselingSexual Assault/Incest Support GroupsLegal Issues Education/Information
