GILFORD, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion is now apart of Live Nation. Live Nation Entertainment announced today that it has acquired an interest in the Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion (formerly Meadowbrook) in Gilford, NH.
Since opening in 1996, Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion has welcomed millions of fans, and continuously drawn top talent to its stage. Artists who visited the venue in 2017 include Luke Bryan, John Mellencamp, Chris Stapleton, Bryan Adams, Third Eye Blind, Florida Georgia Line and many more.
The executive team currently in place at the Pavilion, led by president Robert “R.J.” Harding and his wife Bridget, will continue to run day-to-day operations and will work with Ticketmaster to integrate its primary ticketing services.
Don Law, President of Live Nation New England said “We are thrilled to add the Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion to our venue portfolio, and to welcome R.J., Bridget, and their team to the Live Nation family,”
Law continued saying “The Pavilion is a very unique and special venue, and we look forward to helping grow an already outstanding business to bring the people of New England a world class entertainment lineup for many years to come.”
“Our focus over the past 22 years has been cultivating a unique concert experience here at Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion and we are extremely excited to advance that objective with a global partner like Live Nation,” said R.J. Harding, President, Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion.
The venue has received multiple awards and honors including Best Music Venue from the Academy of Country Music, Red Rocks Award from Pollstar, and Venue of the Year from the Country Music Association, as well as being named one of the 10 Best Concert Venues by USA Today.
Live Nation Entertainment (NYSE: LYV) is the world’s leading live entertainment company comprised of global market leaders: Ticketmaster, Live Nation Concerts, and Live Nation Media & Sponsorship. For additional information, visit www.livenationentertainment.com.
Story contributed by Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion Marketing Director Marci DeCarli.
https://www.wmwv.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/logo-1.jpg00Tonyhttps://www.wmwv.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/logo-1.jpgTony2017-12-19 14:00:532017-12-19 19:32:11Bank Of New Hampshire Pavilion Now A Part Of Live Nation
Left to right back: Doug Fagone from Cranmore Mountain; Kathy Bennett, Vice President Community Relations at Memorial Hospital; and Melissa Linne and Ray Gilmore from Cranmore Mountain. Left to right front: Adeline Oberg and Anastacia Spurlock from Bartlett Elementary School; and Maira Morgan and Abigail Hynes from Jackson Grammar School. ~ Photo Courtesy Of Melody Nester
NORTH CONWAY, NH – Memorial Hospital is making sure kids can ski and ride safely this winter regardless of their family’s ability to pay. Memorial hospital teamed up with local schools in order to ensure that local school children have appropriate helmets for their participation in the Eastern Slope Ski Club’s Junior Ski Program.
Cranmore Mountain helped out by sorting and distributing the over 200 helmets as part of the ESSC equipment pick up process. Kathy Bennett, Vice President of Community Relations for Memorial, said “We’re thankful to Cranmore for continuing to make this program possible by working with us on the distribution of helmets to the students. We couldn’t do it without them,”
Participating schools include Schools participating in the Safe Skier Initiative include Bartlett Elementary, K.A. Brett School in Tamworth, Conway Elementary, Freedom Elementary, Jackson Grammar School, John Fuller, Madison Elementary, Robert Frost Charter School and Pine Tree School.
To qualify for a free helmet, students must be enrolled in the school’s free/reduced rate meals program while others have the opportunity to purchase helmets at a significant discount.
The program is funded by Memorial Hospital’s Roger C. Clapp Memorial Ski Helmet Fund. Clapp, who passed away in 2013, was a hospital trustee for many years and a passionate lifelong skier.
To help ensure the future of the program, the Memorial Hospital Foundation created the Roger C. Clapp Memorial Ski Helmet Fund. Clapp, who passed away in 2013, was a hospital trustee for many years and a passionate lifelong skier. Family and friends made memorial donations to the fund and continue to encourage contributions to it.
NORTH CONWAY, NH – 4th and 5th graders around the nation are being invited to hit the New Hampshire slopes for less than a dollar. Ski New Hampshire and its 34 member ski areas kicked off the sale of their 4th & 5th Grade Snowsports Passport for the 2017-18 winter season. For just $30, children in these grades from any state can secure 34 lift tickets and trail passes to alpine and cross-country ski areas across the Granite State.
The passports also raise money for the Make-A-Wish New Hampshire program. This partnership has been in effect for over a decade to ensure that Make-A-Wish New Hampshire can continue to grant the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions, giving them hope, strength, and joy. For more information, visit nh.wish.org.
New this year Ski NH has launched a digital version of the Snowsports Passport with unique one-time-use vouchers, rather than a printed booklet. Passport purchasers will also receive a monthly email with deals and specials available at many of the participating ski areas.
Karolyn Castaldo, Communications and Marketing Manager for Ski New Hampshire. said “One of our missions as an organization is to come up with ways for more people to experience skiing and riding in the beautiful Granite State. The Snowsports Passport gives families that opportunity without breaking the bank. It also encourages existing skiers and snowboarders to try a new mountain, creating long-lasting memories and a better sense of all that New Hampshire has to offer,”
The 16 alpine ski areas include Abenaki Ski Area, Black Mountain, Bretton Woods, Cannon Mountain, Cranmore Mountain Resort, Dartmouth Skiway, Granite Gorge, Gunstock Mountain Resort, King Pine at Purity Spring Resort, Loon Mountain Resort, McIntyre Ski Area, Mount Sunapee Resort, Pats Peak, Ragged Mountain Resort, Waterville Valley Resort, and Whaleback Mountain. The 16 Nordic areas are Bear Notch Ski Touring Center, Bretton Woods Nordic Center, Dartmouth Cross Country Ski Center, Dexter’s Inn Trails by Norsk, Eastman Cross Country, Franconia Village XC Ski Center, Granite Gorge XC, Great Glen Trails, Gunstock Mountain Resort XC, Jackson Ski Touring Foundation, Loon Mountain Resort XC, Mt. Washington Ski Touring & Snowshoe Foundation, Nordic Skier Wolfeboro XC, Pine Hill Ski Club, Purity Spring Resort XC & Snowshoe Reserve, Ski Hearth Farm, Waterville Valley Adventure Center, and Windblown XC.
Passports are valid every day of the 2017-18 season, with the exception of these blackout dates: Tuesday, December 26, 2017 through Monday, January 1, 2018; Saturday, January 13 through Sunday, January 24, 2018; Saturday, February 17 through Monday, February 19, 2018; Saturday, February 24. Limit one (1) passport per student.
For more information and to purchase a 4th & 5th Grade Snowsports Passport go to skinh.com.
Ski New Hampshire is the statewide association representing 34 alpine and cross-country resorts in New Hampshire.
https://www.wmwv.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/logo-1.jpg00Tonyhttps://www.wmwv.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/logo-1.jpgTony2017-12-19 12:00:282017-12-19 19:50:544th And 5th Grade Snowsports Passport Now Available
Molly Jacobson, a recent graduate of UNH’s undergraduate wildlife and conservation biology program, was one of four researchers who studied the status of the state’s bumble bee population. Credit: Jeremy Gasowski/UNH
DURHAM, N.H. – In the first long-term study of New Hampshire’s bumble bee population, researchers with the New Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station at the University of New Hampshire have found three of the state’s most important bumble bee species have experienced drastic declines and range constriction over the last 150 years, with a fourth bee also in significant decline.
The research was conducted by Sandra Rehan, assistant professor of biological sciences at the University of New Hampshire; Erika Tucker, USDA research fellow and a postdoctoral researcher with the experiment station; Minna Mathiasson, a graduate student in biology; and Molly Jacobson, a recent graduate of UNH’s undergraduate wildlife and conservation biology program. The research results are part of the experiment station-funded project Sustainable Solutions to Problems Affecting Bee Health and are presented in Decline of bumble bees in northeastern North America, with special focus on Bombus terricola in the journal Biological Conservation.
“Wild bees, particularly bumble bees, are highly important pollinators for both agriculture and unmanaged ecosystems. They have experienced alarming declines in recent decades, and in order to effectively work towards their protection, information about their life histories, ecological roles, and distributional changes on a more local scale is needed,” according to Rehan and her colleagues.
The value of pollination to agriculture is estimated at more than $200 billion a year worldwide. The abundance of and diversity of pollinators are declining in many agricultural landscapes across the United States. Given this importance, widespread declines in pollinator diversity have led to concern about a global pollinator crisis. The National Research Council has called for regional, national, and international monitoring programs to allow tracking the status and trends of pollinators.
To conduct their research, scientists analyzed 3,333 bumble bee specimens comprising 16 Bombus species dating to 1867. Bombus specimens for this study were made available from the UNH Insect Collection, as well as from field collections performed by the Rehan lab during summers of 2014–2016. This allowed researchers to track over time changes in abundance and distribution, with focus on species designated of greatest conservation need by N.H. Department of Fish and Game. Floral records also provided insight into the diet breadth of these species, which may affect their vulnerability.
Scientists found drastic decline in Rusty patch bumble bees (Bombus affinis),golden northern bumble bees (Bombus fervidus), and yellow banded bumble bees (Bombus terricola), as well as significant decline in half-black bumblebees (Bombus vagans), with data suggesting it has been ecologically replaced by Bombus impatiens over time. The rusty patch bumble bee, Bombus affinis, was the first bee listed as an endangered species in the continental United States earlier this year. This species is thought to be locally extinct in New Hampshire as was last collected in 1993. Among other species of greatest conservation need, Bombus fervidus has declined by 96 percent over the past 150 years, and Bombus terricola has declined by 71 percent. Bombus vagans has also experienced a significant decline of 42 percent in New Hampshire. The researchers suggest Bombus vagans receive future conservation consideration.
Their analyses also found a severe constriction of the geographic range of Bombus terricola to high elevation regions in the latter half of the 20th century, and its role as pollinator of several alpine plants necessitates immediate conservation action.
The study adds critical floral associations and demographic data for New England bumble bees and those undergoing national decline, to better inform management decisions and conservation efforts going into the future.
“Climate and land use change may be playing significant roles in the losses of northeastern
bumble bees, with many effects still unknown with continued alterations to precipitation patterns, temperature, phenology and availability of native flora. Studies on bumble bee declines are time-sensitive and crucial to understanding how wild bees are being affected by anthropogenic changes to the planet. These data are needed so that we may prevent vulnerable pollinators from going extinct with far-reaching ramifications within ecosystems,” the researchers said.
More information on the native bees of New Hampshire can be found on the bee lab’s educational website. This material is based upon work supported by the NH Agricultural Experiment Station, through joint funding of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, under award number 1004515, and the state of New Hampshire. The research also is supported by the UNH Hamel Center for Undergraduate Research.
Founded in 1887, the NH Agricultural Experiment Station at the UNH College of Life Sciences and Agriculture is UNH’s original research center and an elemental component of New Hampshire’s land-grant university heritage and mission. We steward federal and state funding, including support from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, to provide unbiased and objective research concerning diverse aspects of sustainable agriculture and foods, aquaculture, forest management, and related wildlife, natural resources and rural community topics. We maintain the Woodman and Kingman agronomy and horticultural research farms, the Macfarlane Research Greenhouses, the Fairchild Dairy Teaching and Research Center, and the Organic Dairy Research Farm. Additional properties also provide forage, forests and woodlands in direct support to research, teaching, and outreach.
The University of New Hampshire is a flagship research university that inspires innovation and transforms lives in our state, nation and world. More than 16,000 students from all 50 states and 71 countries engage with an award-winning faculty in top ranked programs in business, engineering, law, liberal arts and the sciences across more than 200 programs of study. UNH’s research portfolio includes partnerships with NASA, NOAA, NSF and NIH, receiving more than $100 million in competitive external funding every year to further explore and define the frontiers of land, sea and space.
Rochester, NH – Two people were injured Sunday after a fiery, early-morning crash in Rochester. According to WMUR-TV Police said 20-year-old Kylie Dulac of Barrington, was driving along Salmon Falls Road near Woodland Green at about 2:45 a.m. Sunday when the car went off the road and hit a tree.
When officers arrived, the car was on fire. An officer and bystander raced to pull a passenger to safety as the flames spread.
The passenger was taken to the hospital to be treated for serious, but non-life threatening, injuries. Dulac was treated for minor injuries.
The road was closed for several hours while authorities extinguished the blaze and investigated the accident. Police said it appeared that speed was a factor in the crash.
https://www.wmwv.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/logo-1.jpg00Tonyhttps://www.wmwv.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/logo-1.jpgTony2017-12-18 11:58:532017-12-18 18:56:562 Injured In Fiery Rochester Car Accident
Bank Of New Hampshire Pavilion Now A Part Of Live Nation
GILFORD, NH – Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion is now apart of Live Nation. Live Nation Entertainment announced today that it has acquired an interest in the Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion (formerly Meadowbrook) in Gilford, NH.
Since opening in 1996, Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion has welcomed millions of fans, and continuously drawn top talent to its stage. Artists who visited the venue in 2017 include Luke Bryan, John Mellencamp, Chris Stapleton, Bryan Adams, Third Eye Blind, Florida Georgia Line and many more.
The executive team currently in place at the Pavilion, led by president Robert “R.J.” Harding and his wife Bridget, will continue to run day-to-day operations and will work with Ticketmaster to integrate its primary ticketing services.
Don Law, President of Live Nation New England said “We are thrilled to add the Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion to our venue portfolio, and to welcome R.J., Bridget, and their team to the Live Nation family,”
Law continued saying “The Pavilion is a very unique and special venue, and we look forward to helping grow an already outstanding business to bring the people of New England a world class entertainment lineup for many years to come.”
“Our focus over the past 22 years has been cultivating a unique concert experience here at Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion and we are extremely excited to advance that objective with a global partner like Live Nation,” said R.J. Harding, President, Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion.
The venue has received multiple awards and honors including Best Music Venue from the Academy of Country Music, Red Rocks Award from Pollstar, and Venue of the Year from the Country Music Association, as well as being named one of the 10 Best Concert Venues by USA Today.
Live Nation Entertainment (NYSE: LYV) is the world’s leading live entertainment company comprised of global market leaders: Ticketmaster, Live Nation Concerts, and Live Nation Media & Sponsorship. For additional information, visit www.livenationentertainment.com.
Story contributed by Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion Marketing Director Marci DeCarli.
Memorial Hospital Helping ESSC Kids Ski Safe
Left to right back: Doug Fagone from Cranmore Mountain; Kathy Bennett, Vice President Community Relations at Memorial Hospital; and Melissa Linne and Ray Gilmore from Cranmore Mountain. Left to right front: Adeline Oberg and Anastacia Spurlock from Bartlett Elementary School; and Maira Morgan and Abigail Hynes from Jackson Grammar School. ~ Photo Courtesy Of Melody Nester
NORTH CONWAY, NH – Memorial Hospital is making sure kids can ski and ride safely this winter regardless of their family’s ability to pay. Memorial hospital teamed up with local schools in order to ensure that local school children have appropriate helmets for their participation in the Eastern Slope Ski Club’s Junior Ski Program.
Cranmore Mountain helped out by sorting and distributing the over 200 helmets as part of the ESSC equipment pick up process. Kathy Bennett, Vice President of Community Relations for Memorial, said “We’re thankful to Cranmore for continuing to make this program possible by working with us on the distribution of helmets to the students. We couldn’t do it without them,”
Participating schools include Schools participating in the Safe Skier Initiative include Bartlett Elementary, K.A. Brett School in Tamworth, Conway Elementary, Freedom Elementary, Jackson Grammar School, John Fuller, Madison Elementary, Robert Frost Charter School and Pine Tree School.
To qualify for a free helmet, students must be enrolled in the school’s free/reduced rate meals program while others have the opportunity to purchase helmets at a significant discount.
The program is funded by Memorial Hospital’s Roger C. Clapp Memorial Ski Helmet Fund. Clapp, who passed away in 2013, was a hospital trustee for many years and a passionate lifelong skier.
To help ensure the future of the program, the Memorial Hospital Foundation created the Roger C. Clapp Memorial Ski Helmet Fund. Clapp, who passed away in 2013, was a hospital trustee for many years and a passionate lifelong skier. Family and friends made memorial donations to the fund and continue to encourage contributions to it.
Those looking for more information or who wish to donate can go to www.memorialhospitalnh.org/waystogive.
4th And 5th Grade Snowsports Passport Now Available
NORTH CONWAY, NH – 4th and 5th graders around the nation are being invited to hit the New Hampshire slopes for less than a dollar. Ski New Hampshire and its 34 member ski areas kicked off the sale of their 4th & 5th Grade Snowsports Passport for the 2017-18 winter season. For just $30, children in these grades from any state can secure 34 lift tickets and trail passes to alpine and cross-country ski areas across the Granite State.
The passports also raise money for the Make-A-Wish New Hampshire program. This partnership has been in effect for over a decade to ensure that Make-A-Wish New Hampshire can continue to grant the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions, giving them hope, strength, and joy. For more information, visit nh.wish.org.
New this year Ski NH has launched a digital version of the Snowsports Passport with unique one-time-use vouchers, rather than a printed booklet. Passport purchasers will also receive a monthly email with deals and specials available at many of the participating ski areas.
Karolyn Castaldo, Communications and Marketing Manager for Ski New Hampshire. said “One of our missions as an organization is to come up with ways for more people to experience skiing and riding in the beautiful Granite State. The Snowsports Passport gives families that opportunity without breaking the bank. It also encourages existing skiers and snowboarders to try a new mountain, creating long-lasting memories and a better sense of all that New Hampshire has to offer,”
The 16 alpine ski areas include Abenaki Ski Area, Black Mountain, Bretton Woods, Cannon Mountain, Cranmore Mountain Resort, Dartmouth Skiway, Granite Gorge, Gunstock Mountain Resort, King Pine at Purity Spring Resort, Loon Mountain Resort, McIntyre Ski Area, Mount Sunapee Resort, Pats Peak, Ragged Mountain Resort, Waterville Valley Resort, and Whaleback Mountain. The 16 Nordic areas are Bear Notch Ski Touring Center, Bretton Woods Nordic Center, Dartmouth Cross Country Ski Center, Dexter’s Inn Trails by Norsk, Eastman Cross Country, Franconia Village XC Ski Center, Granite Gorge XC, Great Glen Trails, Gunstock Mountain Resort XC, Jackson Ski Touring Foundation, Loon Mountain Resort XC, Mt. Washington Ski Touring & Snowshoe Foundation, Nordic Skier Wolfeboro XC, Pine Hill Ski Club, Purity Spring Resort XC & Snowshoe Reserve, Ski Hearth Farm, Waterville Valley Adventure Center, and Windblown XC.
Passports are valid every day of the 2017-18 season, with the exception of these blackout dates: Tuesday, December 26, 2017 through Monday, January 1, 2018; Saturday, January 13 through Sunday, January 24, 2018; Saturday, February 17 through Monday, February 19, 2018; Saturday, February 24. Limit one (1) passport per student.
For more information and to purchase a 4th & 5th Grade Snowsports Passport go to skinh.com.
Ski New Hampshire is the statewide association representing 34 alpine and cross-country resorts in New Hampshire.
UNH Researchers Find Drastic Decline In N.H.’s Bumble Bees
Molly Jacobson, a recent graduate of UNH’s undergraduate wildlife and conservation biology program, was one of four researchers who studied the status of the state’s bumble bee population. Credit: Jeremy Gasowski/UNH
DURHAM, N.H. – In the first long-term study of New Hampshire’s bumble bee population, researchers with the New Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station at the University of New Hampshire have found three of the state’s most important bumble bee species have experienced drastic declines and range constriction over the last 150 years, with a fourth bee also in significant decline.
The research was conducted by Sandra Rehan, assistant professor of biological sciences at the University of New Hampshire; Erika Tucker, USDA research fellow and a postdoctoral researcher with the experiment station; Minna Mathiasson, a graduate student in biology; and Molly Jacobson, a recent graduate of UNH’s undergraduate wildlife and conservation biology program. The research results are part of the experiment station-funded project Sustainable Solutions to Problems Affecting Bee Health and are presented in Decline of bumble bees in northeastern North America, with special focus on Bombus terricola in the journal Biological Conservation.
“Wild bees, particularly bumble bees, are highly important pollinators for both agriculture and unmanaged ecosystems. They have experienced alarming declines in recent decades, and in order to effectively work towards their protection, information about their life histories, ecological roles, and distributional changes on a more local scale is needed,” according to Rehan and her colleagues.
The value of pollination to agriculture is estimated at more than $200 billion a year worldwide. The abundance of and diversity of pollinators are declining in many agricultural landscapes across the United States. Given this importance, widespread declines in pollinator diversity have led to concern about a global pollinator crisis. The National Research Council has called for regional, national, and international monitoring programs to allow tracking the status and trends of pollinators.
To conduct their research, scientists analyzed 3,333 bumble bee specimens comprising 16 Bombus species dating to 1867. Bombus specimens for this study were made available from the UNH Insect Collection, as well as from field collections performed by the Rehan lab during summers of 2014–2016. This allowed researchers to track over time changes in abundance and distribution, with focus on species designated of greatest conservation need by N.H. Department of Fish and Game. Floral records also provided insight into the diet breadth of these species, which may affect their vulnerability.
Scientists found drastic decline in Rusty patch bumble bees (Bombus affinis),golden northern bumble bees (Bombus fervidus), and yellow banded bumble bees (Bombus terricola), as well as significant decline in half-black bumblebees (Bombus vagans), with data suggesting it has been ecologically replaced by Bombus impatiens over time. The rusty patch bumble bee, Bombus affinis, was the first bee listed as an endangered species in the continental United States earlier this year. This species is thought to be locally extinct in New Hampshire as was last collected in 1993. Among other species of greatest conservation need, Bombus fervidus has declined by 96 percent over the past 150 years, and Bombus terricola has declined by 71 percent. Bombus vagans has also experienced a significant decline of 42 percent in New Hampshire. The researchers suggest Bombus vagans receive future conservation consideration.
Their analyses also found a severe constriction of the geographic range of Bombus terricola to high elevation regions in the latter half of the 20th century, and its role as pollinator of several alpine plants necessitates immediate conservation action.
The study adds critical floral associations and demographic data for New England bumble bees and those undergoing national decline, to better inform management decisions and conservation efforts going into the future.
“Climate and land use change may be playing significant roles in the losses of northeastern
bumble bees, with many effects still unknown with continued alterations to precipitation patterns, temperature, phenology and availability of native flora. Studies on bumble bee declines are time-sensitive and crucial to understanding how wild bees are being affected by anthropogenic changes to the planet. These data are needed so that we may prevent vulnerable pollinators from going extinct with far-reaching ramifications within ecosystems,” the researchers said.
More information on the native bees of New Hampshire can be found on the bee lab’s educational website. This material is based upon work supported by the NH Agricultural Experiment Station, through joint funding of the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, under award number 1004515, and the state of New Hampshire. The research also is supported by the UNH Hamel Center for Undergraduate Research.
Founded in 1887, the NH Agricultural Experiment Station at the UNH College of Life Sciences and Agriculture is UNH’s original research center and an elemental component of New Hampshire’s land-grant university heritage and mission. We steward federal and state funding, including support from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, to provide unbiased and objective research concerning diverse aspects of sustainable agriculture and foods, aquaculture, forest management, and related wildlife, natural resources and rural community topics. We maintain the Woodman and Kingman agronomy and horticultural research farms, the Macfarlane Research Greenhouses, the Fairchild Dairy Teaching and Research Center, and the Organic Dairy Research Farm. Additional properties also provide forage, forests and woodlands in direct support to research, teaching, and outreach.
The University of New Hampshire is a flagship research university that inspires innovation and transforms lives in our state, nation and world. More than 16,000 students from all 50 states and 71 countries engage with an award-winning faculty in top ranked programs in business, engineering, law, liberal arts and the sciences across more than 200 programs of study. UNH’s research portfolio includes partnerships with NASA, NOAA, NSF and NIH, receiving more than $100 million in competitive external funding every year to further explore and define the frontiers of land, sea and space.
Story submitted by UNH Media Relations
2 Injured In Fiery Rochester Car Accident
Rochester, NH – Two people were injured Sunday after a fiery, early-morning crash in Rochester. According to WMUR-TV Police said 20-year-old Kylie Dulac of Barrington, was driving along Salmon Falls Road near Woodland Green at about 2:45 a.m. Sunday when the car went off the road and hit a tree.
When officers arrived, the car was on fire. An officer and bystander raced to pull a passenger to safety as the flames spread.
The passenger was taken to the hospital to be treated for serious, but non-life threatening, injuries. Dulac was treated for minor injuries.
The road was closed for several hours while authorities extinguished the blaze and investigated the accident. Police said it appeared that speed was a factor in the crash.