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1 Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected] Where does it make the most sense to invest your marketing dollars? Referrals from other attorneys are a major source of new business for lawyers and law firms in New Hampshire. Advertising in Bar News, the state’s only publication about NH law and law practice, is the best way to let your colleagues know about your firm and the focus of your practice. Published by and for the New Hampshire Bar Association, NHBA members receive special pricing on Bar News advertising. 2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT 2 Pillsbury Street Suite 300 Concord, NH 03301 www.nhbar.org Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator EMAIL: [email protected] PHONE: 603.715.3263

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Page 1: Where does it make the most sense to invest your marketing ...€¦ · Published by and for the New Hampshire Bar Association, NHBA members receive special pricing on Bar News advertising

1

Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected]

Where does it make the most sense to invest your marketing dollars?

Referrals from other attorneys are a major source of new business for lawyers and law firms in

New Hampshire. Advertising in Bar News, the state’s only publication about NH law and law practice,

is the best way to let your colleagues know about your firm and the focus of your practice.

Published by and for the New Hampshire Bar Association, NHBA members receive special pricing on Bar News advertising.

2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT

2 Pillsbury Street • Suite 300 • Concord, NH 03301 • www.nhbar.orgAdvertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

EMAIL: [email protected] • PHONE: 603.715.3263

Page 2: Where does it make the most sense to invest your marketing ...€¦ · Published by and for the New Hampshire Bar Association, NHBA members receive special pricing on Bar News advertising

2

Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected]

Belknap 175Carroll 108Cheshire 141Coos 32Grafton 246Hills North 996Hills South 453Merrimack 1,191Rockingham 911Strafford 230Sullivan 63In-State 4,546Massachusetts 1,917Vermont 194Other 1,682Out-of-State 3,793TOTAL 8,339

Grafton

Coos

CheshireHillsborough

Strafford

Rockingham

Merrimack

Belknap

Sullivan

Carroll

Demographic information from the

2020 Membership Statistics Report

commissioned by the NH Bar Association.

Our Audience

LocationMembers consistently rate NH Bar News as one of the top member benefits and a trusted source of information about the New Hampshire legal community.

Age Gender

Location Income

38%

62%

GenderMale

Female

2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT

Age Gender

Location Income

4%18%

19%24%

35%61+

51–60

41–50

31–40

24–30

Age

Page 3: Where does it make the most sense to invest your marketing ...€¦ · Published by and for the New Hampshire Bar Association, NHBA members receive special pricing on Bar News advertising

3

Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected]

Randy ReisReis & Kirkland, Manchester

We have been advertising in the NH Bar News since 2006. This is the only advertising we do. For a reasonable price we have been able to remind our colleagues of the type of work we do. Other lawyers frequently mention seeing our ads in the Bar News, and we attribute many of our referrals to that advertising.”

“Testimonials

I have found advertising in Bar News to be a great way to let all my fellow Bar members know the type of work I do, and my willingness to work with them on cases. I would strongly advise using the Bar News to reach fellow lawyers both here in New Hampshire and throughout the region.”

Peter HutchinsHutchins Law Offices, Manchester

Kathy FortinArthur Greene Consulting, Manchester

Advertising in the NH Bar News provides the best means for Arthur Greene Consulting to reach our audience. It is a mainstay of our marketing efforts. We know that clients see our ads because they tell us... Bar News advertising is also an essential way for us to advertise for our clients’ needs.”

2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT

Page 4: Where does it make the most sense to invest your marketing ...€¦ · Published by and for the New Hampshire Bar Association, NHBA members receive special pricing on Bar News advertising

4

Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected]

2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT

NH Bar NewsThe monthly NH Bar News is the official publication of the NH Bar Association and features a variety of timely articles about the law, justice issues, courts and the legal community. It is sent to more than 8,300 people. Opportunities include:

• Display Advertising - Generate business and referrals with attractive color or black and white ads.

• Classifieds - Advertise job vacancies, products or services. Both display and line ads are available. Classified ads are also posted on www.nhbar.org.

NHBA e-BulletinMore than 7,500 members, business leaders, communications professionals and news organizations receive timely news and information in the weekly NHBA e-Bulletin. It is our most interactive publication, with high average open and click-through rates.

• Issue Sponsorships – Sponsors are listed weekly in a content block that includes a title with a hyperlink to your website and 30 words of text (max.).

DIGITAL ADVERTISING NOTE:

Listings in the e-Bulletin are featured in a content block each week. Listings should include a title with a hyperlink to your website and no more than 30 words of text. See sample below:

New Hampshire Bar Association

The NH Bar Association strives to support members of the legal profession and their service to the public and justice system. Contact us to learn more.

For print display ads, please send a PDF file with the following specifications. • CMYK Color Mode – A color profile is available on the Bar’s website for download if necessary. To ensure the

quality of your advertisement, please make sure that embedded images are also in CMYK Color Mode. • Resolution – Resolution for Bar News advertisements should be at a resolution of at least 300dpi. • Screen Tints – 15%

Opportunities

Periodical Postage paid at Concord, NH 03301

Supporting members of the legal profession and their service to the public and the justice system.January 15, 2020 Vol. 30, No. 8

THE DOCKETINSIDE

Opinions ............................ 4-5NHBA News ..................... 6-25Practice Area Section .....26-33

NH Court News ..............34-38Classifieds .......................39-41NHBA•CLE ......................43-47

Changes coming to the state’s therapeu-tic cannabis program, what criminal de-fense lawyers need to know about family law, and much more in this month’s practice areas. PAGES 26-33

All Things Cyber. A new, ongoing column will tackle the latest cyber- and informa-tion-security issues. PAGE 6

Congratulations are in Order. Awards to be presented at the February Midyear Meeting are announced. PAGE 2

Introducing: Committee Corner. Find out more about how the Bar’s committees can support you and your practice this year. PAGE 5

Q&A. A conversation with incoming NH Supreme Court Clerk of Court Timothy Gudas. PAGE 34

Health Law and Criminal Law

Benjamin Bryant was nine years old when he started using drugs. Since then, he has been led out of his high school in handcuffs and has robbed stores and broken into homes to feed his addiction. He has had pancreatitis and two heart surgeries owing to drug-related damage to his

body. He has been incarcerated multiple times in multiple states for offenses related to his us-age. But for 20 years, he says he had never been offered medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for his drug use.

BRYANT continued on page 21

In and out of jail and rehab for 13 years, Benjamin Bryant can now envision a new chapter. Medication-assisted treatment is the source of his hope. (Photo: Jim Vaiknora)

By Kathie Ragsdale

By Kathie Ragsdale

Edward Alkalay is in his element standing before a crowd — whether in a courtroom, a classroom or on a performance stage. The Albany, New Hampshire resident is a co-found-ing member of Conway-based Alkalay & Smillie, but also an experienced educator and a folk/country musician with two CDs to his credit. After growing up in Ardsley, New York, and getting a bachelor’s degree from the State University of New York at Albany, Alkalay came to Boston to pursue a musical career. He spent a couple of years as a street performer,

playing acoustic “Americana mu-sic” and writing many of his own songs. But the need for a steady income found him considering a different career path, and he was torn between the law and teach-ing. With the law, he says, “There’s a performance aspect to it. The same with teaching.” He ended up doing both.

Albany’s Alkalay is Trainer & PerformerPRACTITIONER PROFILE

ALKALAY continued on page 23

www.nhbar.org NEW HAMPSHIRE BAR NEWS WELLNESS SUPPLEMENT JANUARY 15, 2020 I

LIVING WELLin 2020

Published in partnership with NH LAWYERS ASSISTANCE PROGRAM

NEW HAMPSHIRE BAR NEWS WELLNESS SUPPLEMENT

Table of ContentsWhy Wellness for Lawyers? by Terri Harrington ............. II

How can law firms ensure families are supported in the workplace? ............................................................III

How can you help an impaired colleague? ......................IV

When is it time to retire? ................................................. V

Book Review: “The Magic Feather Effect” is an exploration into the unexplainable. ................................VI

More Resources and Tools ........................................... VIII

Inside: Special Wellness Supplement

Behind the Data, Stories of Addiction Show Recovery Isn’t a Straight Line

By Pat Grossmith & Sheryl Rich Kern

Late in August, a woman wrapped in a padded, quilted garment appears passed out on the floor of a locked cell at the Hillsborough Coun-ty House of Corrections, familiarly known as the Valley Street jail or just Valley. “It’s actually the safest place for her,” says jail Su-perintendent David Dionne. The woman, he explains, is detoxing. In another cell, an older woman, dressed in a green quilted suicide wrap with her hands cuffed in the back, is gingerly led out of her cell and walked to a room off an indoor basketball court. She stands in front of an oversized Hillsborough County Department of Corrections emblem and talks to a 9th Circuit Court — District Division — Manchester judge via a computer as a court bailiff looks on. She is granted personal recognizance bail, ensuring her release that day. These two women are among the 27 inmates — eight women and 10 men detoxing, and nine others on suicide watch — being closely observed by correctional officers. They account for 11 percent of the 245 people being detained this August day and, Dionne says, the number is a reflection of the opioid epidemic sweeping the state and, in particular, Manchester.

Expansion of Drug Treatment Services

Continues in County Jails

EXPANSION continued on page 16

“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

—George Santayana

Join us at the NHBA 2020 Midyear Meeting!

NEW HAMPSHIRE BAR ASSOCIATION

2020 Midyear Meeting February 21, 2020 H 8:45 a.m. – 4:45 p.m.

DoubleTree by Hilton Manchester Downtown

SEE PAGES 24 & 25Periodical Postage paid at Concord, NH 03301

Supporting members of the legal profession and their service to the public and the justice system.February 19, 2020 Vol. 30, No. 9

THE DOCKETINSIDE

Opinions ............................ 4-5NHBA News ..................... 6-21Practice Area Section .....22-31

NH Court News ..............32-37Classifieds .......................38-41NHBA•CLE ......................43-47

New Hampshire’s Infertility Insurance Law, Pro Bono Tax Payer Clinic, LLC agreements for S Corporations and more. PAGES 22-23; 26-30

The Business of Punishment. A first-hand account of life inside a privately operated prison. PAGE 20

Changes to Business Court. In July of 2020 Judge Mcnamara will be replaced by Judge Anderson who will carry on the important work of the Business Court. PAGE 32

Civic Education. Bar Association President Edward D. Philpot discusses the rewards of the Law Related Education programs. PAGE 2 Low-Income Tax Clinic. Barbara Heggie,

Coordinator of the low-income tax project, teaches a three day course to immigrants. PAGE 16

Insurance Law and Tax Law

By Kathie Ragsdale

While many industries across the state complain of workforce shortages and a paucity of young workers, the market for attorneys in New Hampshire appears stable – and may even be enticing young out-of-staters to practice here. Thoseinthefieldsaythat’sduetothethrivingeconomy,

comprehensive career initiativesofferedbythestate’s only law schooland the collegiality of the New Hampshire Bar. The state’s overalllegal services industry, including paralegals and legal assistants, has seen a slight decline in employment – from 4,400 in 2008 to 3,900

in 2018, according to the Economic and Labor Market Infor-mation Bureau of New Hampshire Employment Security. ButtheAmericanBarAssociation’s2019ProfileoftheLegalProfessionindicatesthenumberofattorneysinNewHampshire has grown by 3.7 percent to 3,523, since 2009. “FromwhereIsit,Ithinkwe’rejustaboutright,”saysEleanor MacLellan, assistant dean for career services at the University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce School ofLaw,thestate’sonlylawschool.“Asnewlawyersarecom-ing into the marketplace, others are retiring and we seem to be keeping the teeter totter pretty well even or a little bit in favorofanuptickinthemarket.”

Thriving State Economy Means Stable Market

for Attorneys

ECONOMY continued on page 18 PRACTITIONER PROFILE

By Kathie Ragsdale

Meegan Reis is probably the only attorney in New Hampshire who lives on a 40-acre farm once owned by a family accused of witchcraft, and aspires to create a practice that involves no time in court. ApartnerinthePortsmouthfirmofDwyer,Donovan&Reis,shehasapassionforalterna-tiveconflict resolutionanda loveof fairplaythat dates back to her childhood in West Hart-ford, Connecticut. Reis’syoungestsisterCourtney,now40,wasbornaquadriplegic at a time when there was little mainstreaming of handicapped students, and Reis remembers her mother, Marilyn Lawson, becoming “incredibly active in disability legislationandadvocacy.” “Thoughshewasn’talawyer,shewasverymuchin-volvedinfightingforCourtney,”shesays.

Meegan Reis Settles Conflict with Compassion and Skill Reis’smotherwasalsoactiveinprisonreform and anti-discrimination work, sometimes posing as a single mother to visit rentable apart-ments to collect data on her reception compared to that of the black applicants who followed her. Because of that influence, Reis says,she knew from the time she was a girl that she wanted to go to law school and become a public defender. She did so – with additional roles added into the mix. After attending Lafayette College in

Easton,Pennsylvania,Reiswentontograduatecumlaudefrom the T.C. Williams School of Law at the University of Richmond in Virginia. Afterlawschool,sheclerkedforajudgeinRichmondfor a year, after which she and her husband moved to New

REIS continued on page 15

WE THE PEOPLE ontinued on page 3

Hollis Brookline High School students proudly display their first place trophy for the We the People state finals held at the State Legislative office building, January 10th. Hollis Brookline edged out long time state champion Milford High School and John Stark Regional High School. We the People is a program of the national Center for Civic Education and has been sponsoreed by the New Hampshire Bar Association since 1987. (Photo by: Robert Zielinski)

WethePeople:HelpingtoBuildaCivilSocietyBy Kathie Ragsdale

Jubilant students from Hollis Brook-line High School were all smiles as they hoisted a trophy signifying theirfirst-placefinishatthisyear’s“WethePeople”statefinalsheldattheStateLegislativeOfficeBuildingJan.10. TeacherTrevorDuval,whocoachedthe winning students, said it was es-pecially gratifying to edge out arch-rival Milford High School, which has won 18 state finals in the last 22

years under the direction of teacher DaveAlcox, afriendandformercolleagueofDuval’s. Hisstudents,Duvalsaid,were“quitegiddy”overthewin. A program of the national Center forCivicEducation,WethePeoplehasbeen sponsored by the New Hampshire Bar Association since 1987, according to RobinE.Knippers,theBar’sLawRelatedEducation coordinator.

Theprogramseekstobuildstudents’understanding

“We are attracting great talent that has moved away and wants to come back to New Hampshire.”

Cathleen Schmidt

“You leave those hearings saying, ‘We’re in good hands for the future.’”

Howard Zibel

NHBA Annual MeetingJune 19 - 21, 2020 AC Hotel by Marriott Portsmouth Downtown Waterfront

SAVE THE

DATE

Committee Corner. Find out what the benefit’s of the NHBA’s Dispute Resolution Committee are. PAGE 5

All Things Cyber. Taking action against cy-ber threats . PAGE 6

Midyear Meeting Honorees. Meet the five attorneys being awarded on Febru-ary 21st. PAGE 8

Periodical Postage paid at Concord, NH 03301

Supporting members of the legal profession and their service to the public and the justice system.March 18, 2020 Vol. 30, No. 10

THE DOCKETINSIDE

Opinions ............................ 4-5NHBA News .......... 6-18,24-25Practice Area Section .....19-33

NH Court News ..............34-39Classifieds .......................39-42NHBA•CLE ......................43-47

Preserving New Hampshire’s Past

Members of the Oral History Project Committee-John Lewis, Carol Ann Conboy and Greg Smith. (Photo by Scott Merrill)

By Kathie Ragsdale

Many current New Hamp-shire practitioners have no memory of the days when client communi-cation was done by FAX, judges and lawyers were often golf bud-dies and the number of women on the bench could be counted on one hand. But the New Hampshire Supreme Court Society is work-ing to preserve the recollections of those who do, and to chronicle the changes that have occurred in the state’s legal profession over the past several decades. Its Oral History Project is building a library of recorded in-terviews with senior members of the bar and bench to conserve their experi-ences and insights as a means of fostering “greater understanding of the legal system and its role as a force for good in today’s society,” according to the website devoted to the project. Building on work started by the New Hampshire Bar Foundation, which recorded some 50 interviews with senior lawyers, judges and court staff through the 1990s, the Supreme Court Society launched the Oral

History Project in 2011, according to Gregory Smith, former New Hampshire attorney gen-eral now in private practice at McLane, Graf, Raulerson & Middleton. Smith chairs the society’s Oral His-tory Project Committee, which also includes former Supreme Court Justice Carol Ann Conboy, former Superior Court Justice John Lewis and Senior Assistant Attorney General Anthony Galdieri.

By Kathie Ragsdale

Paul Fitzgerald is a home-grown La-conia practitioner who has spent decades combining a love of community with a love of the law. A city resident since the age of 2, Fitzgerald has represented multiple mu-nicipalities and government entities but has also served as mayor of Laconia, chair of the Laconia Police Commission and board member of the Greater Laconia-Weirs Beach Chamber of Commerce. He is also secretary and past president of the board of trustees of the Mount Wash-ington Observatory and was co-founder of the Laconia Motorcycle Week Association, which helped transform the annual, once-raucous motorcycle event into the more organized celebration that it is today. “I think it’s important,” he says of

civic participation. “Lawyers have a lot of training and a lot of experience that can help in the pub-lic service area. You can bring those ideas to bear in a positive fashion. And I think it’s important that we participate in so-ciety.”

An interest in the law came naturally to him, Fitzgerald says. His parents had many friends in Laconia who were attorneys or judges and his brother is retired Superior Court Judge Edward J. Fitzgerald III. So after graduating from St. Michael’s College in northern Vermont, where he took some

PRACTITIONER PROFILE

ORAL HISTORY continued on page 15

FITZGERALD continued on page 12WTP continued on page 8

A Love of Community and the Law

“Prejudice is ignorance and unless we make people accountable...unless we stop it at a young age, it’s going to continue to fester.”

—Karen Korematsu(Full story: Page 24)

Electronic wills, death taxes and the effects of the Secure Act on trust and estate planning. PAGES 19-23; 26-33

Pro Bono Honor Roll. See who is taking on pro bono cases around the state. PAGE 14

Bar Foundation News. 2020 Justice Grant Awards. PAGE 10

Midyear Meeting. NH Bar Association President Edward D. Philpot calls the Midyear Meeting a success. PAGE 2

MYM Photos and More. Gender equality breakfast, speeches, programs, and award recipients. PAGES 24-25

Trust and Estate Law

Committee Corner. The Lawyer Referral Services Committee is creating relationships with clients. PAGE 4

All Things Cyber. Taking action against cyber threats. PAGE 6

In Memorium. Long time New Hampshire attorney and Superior Court Judge Arthur E. Bean passes away at the age of 101. PAGE 11

Veterans Track Court. A program committed to getting veterans back on track. PAGE 34

By Scott Merrill

A mandatory civ-ics education program in every state where students learn basic constitutional rights isn’t a requirement, not yet. Although, if those who participated in this year’s We the People program are going to be shaping the laws of the future, it certainly could be. Nathanial Sar-tel, a student at John Stark Regional High School who plans to study Civil Engineer-ing next Fall, thinks there is a lack of civics education that leads to an uneducated voting populace and low voter turn-out. “I did a project last year on civic edu-cation and engagement that got me think-ing and I made a Bill that called for civic

In a Polarized World Students Find Hope education. I just think more people should be educated on basic constitutional rights.” His teacher, Trevor Duval, joked, “this is why we keep him around.” We the People is a program of the National Center for Civic Education that has been sponsored by the New Hamp-shire Bar Association since 1987. Accord-ing to some of the students taking the class this year, in-cluding those from Hollis-Brookline, Milford High School and John Stark Re-

gional High School, the class has changed their perception about the role of politics and their sense of civic responsibility. It has

Midyear Meeting

Hollis -Brookline High School students Josh Ide, Lily Coady, Nathanial Sartel, and Mary Martin. (Photo/Scott Merrill)

Karen Korematsu, speaking after the showing of And Then They Came For Us: The Perils of Silence. Korematsu, whose father was interred at a Japanese-American prisoner of war camp during WWII, directs the Fred T. Korematsu Institute. (Photo/Kailah Millen)

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Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected]

2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT

Placement W H1. Full Page 10” 13.63”

2. Junior page 7.46” 10”

3. 1/2 Vertical 4.92” 13.63”

4. 1/2 Horizontal 10” 6.75”

5. 1/4 Vertical 4.92” 6.75”

6. 1/4 Horizontal 10” 3.25”

7. 1/8 Horizontal 4.92” 3.25”

8. 1/16 Vertical 2.38” 3.25”

9. Classified Display (large) 2.38” 2.63”

10. Classified Display (small) 2.38” 1.25”

1X 3X 6X 9X 12XFull Page $1530 $1460 $1390 $1325 $1260

Junior $1170 $1120 $1065 $1015 $ 960

1/2 Page $ 770 $ 715 $ 690 $ 620 $ 575

1/4 Page $ 510 $ 470 $ 460 $ 450 $ 395

1/8 Page $ 215 $ 210 $ 205 $ 195 $ 190

1/16 Page $ 125 $ 120 $ 115 $ 110 $ 95

* There is an additional fee of $50 for placement of color ads. Preferred placement of an ad is available for an additional 20% of the total placement cost.

For print display ads, please send a PDF file with the following specifications.

• CMYK Color Mode – A color profile is available on the Bar’s website for download if necessary. To ensure the quality of your advertisement, please make sure that embedded images are also in CMYK Color Mode.

• Resolution – Resolution for Bar News advertisements should be at a resolution of at least 300dpi.

• Screen Tints – 15%

8

4

109

612

7

5

3

Headings: Positions Available • Positions Sought • Request for Proposals • Office Sharing • Office Space • Services • For Rent • For Sale • Will Search Prices are per issue/month. Classified line ads placed three or more issues receive 20% discount on regular prices. Ads are posted online for 30 days.

Ads need to be prepaid. (Checks made payable to NHBA; credit cards also accepted.) Classifieds line ads appear in a paragraph format. Ads can only be emailed, faxed or mailed. Ad text cannot be taken by phone. If the advertiser would like to contiune the ad, please contact the NHBA and provide prepayment. Ads may be edited. The NHBA reserves the right to reject advertising.

1X 3X 6X 9X 12XLarge $115 $105 $100 $95 $90Small $ 80 $ 75 $ 70 $65 $60

Words 0-20 21-40 41-60 61-80 81-100 100+ ($25)Rate $50 $80 $105 $130 $155 $1.30/word

Classified Display AdsClassified AdsClassified Line Ads

Bar News Display Ads

Rates effective June 1, 2019

Professional Announcements

Full Page $1165

Half Page $ 595

Quarter Page $ 400

Eighth Page $ 230

Lawyers on the Move

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Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected]

2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT

Sponsoring one of the NH Bar Association’s annual membership meetings, education seminars or events enhances visibility for your business.

Midyear Membership MeetingFebruary 5, 2021

Doubletree by Hilton Manchester, NH

EXHIBITOR SPACE: $550

PROGRAM ADVERTISING (B&W/COLOR)

1/4-Page 1/2-Page Full Page

$225 $275 $325

Annual Membership MeetingJune, 2021

AC Marriott Portsmouth Downtown Waterfront, NH

EXHIBITOR SPACE: $450

PROGRAM ADVERTISING (B&W/COLOR)

1/4-Page 1/2-Page Full Page

$125 $175 $225

NHBA•CLE ProgrammingThe NH Bar Association Continuing Legal Education Department organizes regular education sessions for association members that draw large numbers of attorneys and other legal services professionals. Two annual programs in particular attract large crowds. Practical Skills regularly draws 100-150 attorneys; Developments in the Law draws more than 200.

Full-Day Exhibitor Space $195Distribution of Flyers in Lieu

of Exhibitor Space $195

Exhibitor space includes two lunches for attendees. Call meeting registrar at 603.715.3260 for information today.

Annual Quid Pro Bono Golf Tournament

August 12, 2021Held annually at the finest private golf courses in the state, the Quid Pro Bono Golf Tournament offers many ways for advertisers and sponsors to get their names in front of our members, all while supporting a great cause! The tournament, which raises money for legal services, is normally held in August.

Tee/Pin Sponsorships $400

Contest Sponsorships $650

Other Sponsorship Opportunities AvailableFor more information about opportunities and rates,

contact the Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator at 603.715.3263 or [email protected].

Sponsorships and Exhibiting

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Advertising and Sponsorship Sales Coordinator

PHONE: 603.715.3263 EMAIL: [email protected]

2020-2021 MEMBERS MEDIA KIT

All advertising is subject to approval by the publisher. The publisher reserves the right at any time to decline any advertising which it feels may be inappropriate.The following is a non-exclusive list of advertising that is unacceptable to the publisher:

• advertising relating to alcoholic beverages or tobacco products;

• advertising by or on behalf of political candidates;• advertising relating to contests, lotteries, or the offering

of prizes based on chance, unless first cleared by the US Postal Service, and unless written proof of compliance with the laws of New Hampshire is supplied;

• advertising that may imply NH Bar Association endorsement, recommendation, support or approval unless prior endorsement, recommendation, support or approval has been awarded by the NH Bar Association;

• advertising for products or services that are illegal or whose movement in interstate commerce is illegal;

• advertising that contains unlawful discriminatory language;• advertising that violates or may encourage or enable

another to violate the NH Supreme Court Rules of Professional Conduct.

Advertising may not in subject matter, content, material or design, jeopardize the mailing status of the publication. The publisher reserves the right to require clearance from the US Postal Service.

Advertising Conditions

Contract YearAdvertising must be inserted within one year of the first insertion to earn the frequency discounts.

Copy AcceptanceAdvertisements will only be accepted on a prepaid basis. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject all advertising copy at its discretion. Placement is subject to publisher’s choice except for paid preferred positions at an additional 10% charge.Costs incurred by the publisher for production work done on advertisements will be charged to the advertiser. When change of copy is not received by the closing date, copy run in previous issue will be inserted.

Advertising ResponsibilityStaff of New Hampshire Bar News must be notified in writing within 10 days of receipt of publication of any errors in advertising or printing flaws. Otherwise billing for said advertising will be held indisputable.

7

Bar NewsPractice Area SectionsNH Bar News features a special content section each month that is dedicated to a specific area or areas of law. This helps you pick the advertising placements that are best for you and your business.

June Municipal & Governmental Law and Intellectual Property Law

July Federal Practice, Bankruptcy, International

August Workers’ Compensation Law and Personal Injury Law

September Environmental & Natural Resources, Telecommunications, Energy & Utilities Law

October Alternative Dispute Resolution

November Family Law & Children’s Law

December Business Law & Business Litigation

January Criminal Law & Health Law

February Tax Law & Insurance Law

March Trust & Estate Law

April Labor & Employment Law

May Real Property Law

Bar NewsAdvertising DeadlinesContract/Copy Conditions

Conditions and Deadlines

Issue Date

Ad Reservation Date

Final Ad Copy Due

June 17, 2020 June 1, 2020 June 8, 2020

July 15, 2020 June 29, 2020 July 6, 2020

August 19, 2020 August 3, 2020 August 10, 2020

September 16, 2020 August 31, 2020 September 4, 2020

October 21, 2020 October 5, 2020 October 9, 2020

November 18, 2020 November 2, 2020 November 9, 2020

December 16, 2020 November 30, 2020 December 7, 2020

January 20, 2021 January 4, 2021 January 11, 2021

February 17, 2021 February 1, 2021 February 8, 2021

March 17, 2021 March 1, 2021 March 8, 2021

April 21, 2021 April 5, 2021 April 12, 2021

May 19, 2021 May 3, 2021 May 10, 2021

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OfficersPresident Daniel E. Will

President-Elect Richard C. Guerriero Jr.Vice President Sandra L. CabreraSecretary Robert E. Howard, III

Treasurer Peter E. Hutchins

Lisa M. English (public sector governor)Jason B. Dennis (out-of-state governor)

Governors-at-LargeCatherine E. ShanelarisChristine M. Hanisco Kathleen M. Mahan

Kristin G. FieldsJames A. Shepard

County GovernorsJesse W. Friedman (Belknap)

Leslie Leonard (Carroll)Joseph D. Steinfield (Cheshire)

Scott J. Whitaker (Coos)Marcie A. Hornick (Grafton)

Leslie C. Nixon (Hillsborough North)Donald H. Sienkiewicz (Hillsborough South)

Jonathan M. Eck (Merrimack)Susan A. Lowry (Rockingham)

Christopher T. Regan (Strafford)Geoffrey M. Gallagher (Sullivan)

Jennifer L. Parent (ABA Association Delegate) Russell F. Hilliard (ABA State Delegate)

Heather A. Cherniske (ABA Association New Lawyer Delegate)

2020-2021 NH Bar Association Board of Governors