Liberty Wins of 2012: Difference between revisions
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<strong>March 14th:</strong> [https://bills.nhliberty.org/bills/2012/CACR8 CACR8] signed. This amendment would clarify local control of the curricula, and also provides that the State may supplement the local funding of schools. Consistent with Part 1, Article 6 of the NH Constitution, the constitutional guarantee of independence from State interference in our schools, whether public or private. Allows the State legislature to supplement the educational provisions made by the towns and cities, resolving the Claremont crisis. This removes the Court from school funding and allows the Legislature to determine the amount of supplementary funding that is needed by individual towns and cities. | <strong>March 14th:</strong> [https://bills.nhliberty.org/bills/2012/CACR8 CACR8] signed. This amendment would clarify local control of the curricula, and also provides that the State may supplement the local funding of schools. Consistent with Part 1, Article 6 of the NH Constitution, the constitutional guarantee of independence from State interference in our schools, whether public or private. Allows the State legislature to supplement the educational provisions made by the towns and cities, resolving the Claremont crisis. This removes the Court from school funding and allows the Legislature to determine the amount of supplementary funding that is needed by individual towns and cities. | ||
<strong>Feb 1st:</strong> [https://bills.nhliberty.org/bills/2012/HB574 HB574] signed. This bill would repeal the law enacted post 9/11 that would allow the government to take private property during the state of emergency. This bill affirms Article 2 Part 1 of the NH Constitution that guarantees the natural rights of citizens to acquire, possess, and protect property. | |||
<strong>January 1st:</strong> [https://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2012/CACR0013.html CACR0013] signed. This constitutional amendment concurrent resolution prohibits an assessment, rate, or tax on income earned by a natural person other than taxes in effect on January 1, 2012 and adjustments to the rate of such taxes. | <strong>January 1st:</strong> [https://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2012/CACR0013.html CACR0013] signed. This constitutional amendment concurrent resolution prohibits an assessment, rate, or tax on income earned by a natural person other than taxes in effect on January 1, 2012 and adjustments to the rate of such taxes. | ||
Revision as of 05:12, 4 February 2026
June 22nd: HB146 signed. This is a jury nullification law.
June 18th: HB0574 signed. This bill prohibits the state from taking personal property owned or used by individuals or families during a declared state of emergency and also limits the provisions taken by the state in an emergency to those in excess of the reasonable needs of the owner and the owner’s household during the expected duration of the emergency.
June 7th: HB1402 signed. This bill exempts certain homestead food operations and homestead food products from licensure by the department of health and human services and allows for direct sales of raw milk products without a milk producer-distributor license for certain small scale dairy producer-distributors. Homestead food operations selling less than a maximum annual gross sales of $10,000 of food, excluding potentially hazardous food, from the homestead residence, at the owner’s own farm stand, or at farmers’ markets are exempt.
March 14th: CACR8 signed. This amendment would clarify local control of the curricula, and also provides that the State may supplement the local funding of schools. Consistent with Part 1, Article 6 of the NH Constitution, the constitutional guarantee of independence from State interference in our schools, whether public or private. Allows the State legislature to supplement the educational provisions made by the towns and cities, resolving the Claremont crisis. This removes the Court from school funding and allows the Legislature to determine the amount of supplementary funding that is needed by individual towns and cities.
Feb 1st: HB574 signed. This bill would repeal the law enacted post 9/11 that would allow the government to take private property during the state of emergency. This bill affirms Article 2 Part 1 of the NH Constitution that guarantees the natural rights of citizens to acquire, possess, and protect property.
January 1st: CACR0013 signed. This constitutional amendment concurrent resolution prohibits an assessment, rate, or tax on income earned by a natural person other than taxes in effect on January 1, 2012 and adjustments to the rate of such taxes.
