| | Display: News - Images - Sections This week in NH Business ReviewMore of Page 2 »CONCORDCONCORD: New Hampshire restaurants statewide can resume indoor dining at full capacity, Gov. Chris Sununu said.  Analysis: ‘Rich’ Gen X’ers are moving to NH, tooBut while New Hampshire is nowhere near as popular a destination for Gen X’ers as states in the South and West, it, Maine and Delaware are the only Northeastern states to crack the top 20 on a list compiled by personal finance technology company SmartAsset.  More of Page 4 »TAKE5Eighty-eight percent of employees currently working from home due to Covid-19 would not want to risk returning to their workplace if there were rising cases of Covid-19 in their area..  20 New Hampshire firms named to 2020 Inc. 5000Named the 157th fastest-growing U.S. firm was Forcivity of Manchester, which provides software consulting and system integration services to clients in the manufacturing, high-tech and nonprofit sectors..  THE BOTTOM LINEBiotechnology entrepreneur and Dartmouth engineering professor Tillman Gerngross has raised $50 million in venture capital for his newest company, Adagio Therapeutics,...  ABOUT TOWN1. Franklin Savings Bank made a $2,500 to the Liberty House’s Mission Renovate & Restore campaign, which aims to raise $250,000...  Covid’s effect on technologyIn the initial chaos of Covid-19, everyone had to adjust quickly to new ways of interacting with technology. The pandemic impacted every area of life from work, leisure and community involvement to parenting and school.  You can’t make this stuff up• President Trump, appearing on Fox News (where else?) said he was withholding money from the U.S. Postal Service in order to keep it from being able to deliver mail-in ballots.  Making a case for unionsWe’ve heard in recent years the oftused terms “wealth inequality” and its subset, “income or wage inequality.” Quantifiable evidence showing a multidecade trend toward wealth inequality has been presented by left-leaning economists...  Reaching out to a remote workforceWe are a digital society, and many have been balancing flexible work schedules that mix working from home, other remote locations and, more recently, a possible or occasional office appearance.  What is the net effect of net metering in NH?The board members wanted to know why my company, an employee-owned benefit corporation that brings solar to schools and nonprofits, was proposing to put panels on only half their spacious roof.  Paul McEachern’s tireless fight for us allDuring two out of the four times Paul McEachern ran for governor of New Hampshire, he steadfastly refused to take the pledge of no new taxes. He felt the total reliance on property taxes was an unfair tax system and that it really amounted to an income tax in disguise.  Cleaning up, and down“In essence, the whole world didn’t know how to move forward,” said owner Pablo Fleischmann. Then the company, and many of its customers, slowly moved forward. “I kept the business limping along. There was such a hesitation. Now there seems to be a rush.”.  Three NH homes win annual green building competitionWhether it’s building in a flood plain or designing a smaller footprint, homeowners are working with architects and builders throughout new Hampshire to construct creative, energy-efficient homes that meet their unique challenges and vision for a comfortable home.  Diversity in the workplaceCreating a diverse and more inclusive workplace can lead to constructive discussions and better outcomes, according to professionals prioritizing resources toward that effort.  More data sought on NH arrestsThe commission also recommends police agencies dedicate an officer to community policing, continue to recruit more officers from minority communities and provide training on pronoun inclusion related to transgender and gender-nonconforming populations.  Law firms help boost civil legal aidThe partnership will bring attorneys from Mclane Middleton, sheehan Phinney Bass & Green, and rath, young and Pignatelli to work at NHLA on housing and benefits cases, helping low-income families avoid homelessness and remain financially stable..  Can you make high-risk employees telework?Q. Our company wants to protect those workers who may be at higher risk for severe illness if they get Covid-19. As we in NASHUA crease REGION our numbers in the office, may we require higher-risk employees to telework in order to avoid exposing them to the virus?.  Juvenile defense ‘gravely undervalued’An assessment newly released by the National Juvenile Defender Center says legal representation for young people in New Hampshire is “gravely undervalued,” leading to inadequate access to attorneys and unnecessary rates of probation and court involvement.  New state property tax formula proposedThe Commission to Study School Funding got its first look this week at how a statewide property tax could be applied to fulfill the state’s constitutional obligation to fund an adequate education with taxes equal in valuation and uniform in rate throughout the state.  Merger creates affordable housing development powerA Maine-based regional nonprofit housing and community development corporation is expanding its footprint across northern New England with a merger with a similar Vermont organization, with the goal of expanding access to capital for the creation of...  Kane acquires giant distribution operation near manchester airportThe kane Company Inc. of Portsmouth and a fund managed by Dra advisors llC, a new york-based investment firm, have teamed up to acquire The Manchester logistics Center, a nearly 725,000-square-foot distribution and logistics facility near Manchester-Boston regional airport in Manchester.  NH gets $39.5m in federal affordable housing aidThe funding, announced by all four members of new Hampshire’s congressional delegation, includes $19.3 million through the Community Development Block Grant program, which can be used to expand community health facilities, child care centers, food...  THE LATESTU.S. Cellular has promoted Evan Travers to store manager at its West Lebanon location at 285 N. Plainfield Road...  Criminal defense lawyer joins Shaheen & GordonVogelman, who has more than 45 years of trial experience as a criminal defense lawyer, is the only fellow of the American Board of Criminal Defense Lawyers in New Hampshire. For over 30 years, he has trained law students and lawyers in trial advocacy nationwide.  Q&A INTERVIEWLee Morin, a University of New Hampshire graduate and manchester native, was aboard the international space station in 2002. He currently works at the Johnson space center,...  FLOTSAM&JETSAMNo further proof is needed of the loooong road the GOP under Trump has in order to travel to reach out to voters of color than this photo taken earlier in Aug. at the opening of the Black Voices for Trump office in Tallahassee, Fla.  Loading writers... Loading ads... Loading comments... New Hampshire sets rules for taxing PPP payments All of the grants businesses have received or will receive from the state and federal governments are taxable by the state of New Hampshire, but none of the government-backed loans will be, the state Department of Revenue Administration announced Tuesday. The total includes the more than $2.5 billion that state businesses received through the federal Paycheck Protection Program and Emergency Injury Disaster Loan program as well as $300 million from the state’s Main Street Fund for small businesses, the Self-Employed Livelihood Fund and other state-controlled federal grants for healthcare providers, farms and day care centers. If the state were to tax all that at the current 7.7% business profits tax rate, that could amount to a $200 million windfall for state coffers. Of course, taxes are a lot more complicated than that. Businesses will still be able to deduct their expenses, including expenses they wouldn’t have incurred anyway, like paying wages to workers they would have laid off, and that means they could, in effect, end up not paying any taxes on the money. Federal income tax rules work in reverse for the PPP program: Businesses won’t be taxed on the income, but they can’t deduct the expenses that it paid for. Things get even more complicated for companies that don’t make a profit, and presumably a lot won’t given the anticipated drop of income because of the pandemic. (A recent NH Business Review analysis based on PPP and Main Street applications shows that businesses expect a combined $2.5 billion drop of revenue this year as opposed to last.) But the money spent on wages will be counted as part of a company’s enterprise value base, which is taxed under the business enterprise tax at a rate of 0.6%. There are no deductions under the BET, but there are thresholds which result in many small business paying no taxes at all. — BOB SANDERS |