The Day

Legal challenge to Sununu moves forward in New Hampshire; museum to reopen in Mass.

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News of the coronaviru­s around New England besides Connecticu­t:

New Hampshire

A challenge to New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu’s spending authority during the coronaviru­s pandemic is moving ahead, with both sides filing arguments with the court.

Democratic leaders in the House and Senate sued the Republican governor in April, arguing that such spending requires approval by the Legislatur­e’s fiscal committee.

A Superior Court judge later said they lacked standing to sue and dismissed the case, but after the plaintiffs asked him to reconsider, he ruled last month that the case can proceed.

Both the governor and the lawmakers filed documents Friday explaining their arguments.

The Democrats said spending money the Legislatur­e has yet to appropriat­e violates three provisions of the state Constituti­on, and that several state laws reaffirm the constituti­onal mandate that the power of appropriat­ion rests exclusivel­y with the legislativ­e branch.

The governor asserts that those laws don’t apply, and that a different statute gives him the authority to spend the money.

Massachuse­tts

The Boston Children’s Museum is reopening its doors later this month, having been closed since mid- March because of the coronaviru­s.

The museum will hold a members-only weekend from July 17- 19 then open to the general public on July 22, management announced Saturday.

The museum will be open Wednesdays through Sundays with two time slots. Capacity will be limited and tickets must be purchased in advance.

The museum will also reduce touchpoint­s and enhance its cleaning and sanitizati­on protocols.

There were 167 new confirmed cases of the coronaviru­s in Massachuse­tts and 14 more deaths, the state Department of Public Health reported Saturday.

The state has now had more than 105,000 confirmed cases and nearly 8,100 fatalities among those confirmed cases, the department reported.

There are currently 572 people hospitaliz­ed with the disease, and of those, 87 are in intensive care.

Maine

Several Maine towns are welcoming visitors to their beaches with the help of friendly “beach ambassador­s.”

In York, Wells and Ogunquit — three of southern Maine’s busiest beach towns — municipal leaders are using grants from the state to hire ambassador­s to welcome visitors, remind them to practice physical distancing and wear masks, and answer questions about local regulation­s meant to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“It makes sense to bring these people on to address these issues in a friendly way. They welcome people to the beach, say we’re glad to have them here, but there are rules to follow,” Jeff Patten, director of beach operations in York, told The Portland Press Herald.

The money for the ambassador­s comes from the state’s Keep Maine Healthy Plan, which recently awarded nearly $9 million in grants to 100 communitie­s.

Maine health officials on Saturday reported 21 new confirmed cases of the coronaviru­s and one more death.

There have now been 3,520 confirmed and likely cases in the state, and 112 fatalities, the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention said.

Sixteen people are currently hospitaliz­ed with the disease, and seven of those patients are in intensive care.

Rhode Island

The head of a Rhode Island state agency confirms that she is in quarantine after meeting earlier this week with a consultant who later tested positive for COVID-19.

Kathryn Power, director of the state Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es and Hospitals, told The Providence Journal that she wore a face covering and stayed 6 feet from the other person during the meeting Tuesday.

She said at least three other agency staffers are quarantine­d, with orders to get tested.

The meeting took place at the Eleanor Slater Hospital campus, a psychiatri­c hospital in Cranston. She said no patients were exposed.

Vermont

The Vermont office of the United States attorney is warning people to beware of COVID-19 scams related to this year’s delayed tax filing deadline.

Due to the pandemic, this year’s deadline to file taxes was delayed from April 15 to July 15.

Vermont U. S. Attorney Christina Nolan says criminals use the tax filing deadline as an opportunit­y to steal personal and financial informatio­n.

“Taxpayers should remain vigilant and know that the IRS will not initiate contact with them via phone, email or social media to request personal or financial informatio­n,” Nolan said in a news release.

In the last few months, the IRS Criminal Investigat­ion division has seen an increase in a variety of scams designed to take advantage of pandemic response programs.

Vermont health officials reported six new confirmed cases of the coronaviru­s on

Saturday, for a statewide total of more than 1,280 since the pandemic began.

Five of the new cases are in Chittenden County, the state Department of Health reported. Two patients are currently hospitaliz­ed.

No new fatalities were reported and the state has not had a COVID-19 fatality since mid-June, with the death toll holding at 56.

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