Hope Damon
Serving as: NH House Sullivan County District 08
These objective, nonpartisan measures are used to show this legislator's activities at the Statehouse in 2025. The measures are not intended to present a ranking or rating of any kind. Average is that of all state elected officials in this chamber. Gov. Ayotte is still in the process of signing and vetoing 2025 bills, so the number of prime sponsored bills that became law may increase.
Session days attended
Party unity score/partisanship
Participated in official roll call votes
Bills sponsored (as prime sponsor)
Prime sponsored bills that became law
Voting Record
HB 1 (2025)
State budget bill. The governor presented her proposal for the next state budget February 13. Click here to read a summary of the budget process.
HB 10 (2025)
Establishes a Parental Bill of Rights. The bill requires schools to adopt a policy to promote parental involvement in the public school system. The bill also establishes a right to sue schools that violate the law.
The final version of this bill requires schools to respond to parental inquiries "regarding any and all matters related to their minor child," within ten days.
The final Senate version of this bill also does not require parents to give written consent to any medical procedure or treatment; that provision was removed after much debate.
HB 148 (2025)
Adds an exception to state anti-discrimination laws for bathrooms, locker rooms, sports, prisons, hospitals, and treatment centers to classify individuals based on biological sex.
HB 198 (2025)
Removes the legal penalties for possessing and using marijuana and cannabis-infused products for those over age twenty-one. This bill does not include any mechanism for legal sales or taxation.
HB 238 (2025)
Right-to-work bill that prohibits collective bargaining agreements that require employees to join or contribute to a labor union.
HB 282 (2025)
Increases the maximum compensation for first responders' critical injury benefits from $500,000 to $1,000,000.
HB 324 (2025)
Prohibits K-12 schools from making "any material that is harmful to minors" available to students. The bill defines this material to include various content related to sex. This bill also requires school boards to adopt complaint resolution policies to address complaints regarding harmful material by parents or guardians.
HB 357 (2025)
Removes the authority of the Department of Health and Human Services to require vaccinations beyond those in state law. This bill specifically notes that the requirements for chickenpox, Hepatitis B, and Hib vaccinations will expire in 2026.
The House added the text of this bill to SB 60.
HB 377 (2025)
Makes it a felony to provide hormone treatments and puberty blockers to a minor unless a minor is "born with a medically verifiable disorder of sex development."
The Senate amended the bill to allow doctors to continue hormone treatments and puberty blockers started prior to January 1, 2026.
The Senate amended the bill to also recognize Children's Environmental Health Day, similar to SB 184.
A conference committee of representatives and senators agreed to those Senate amendments.
HB 53 (2025)
Allows qualifying medical marijuana patients and caregivers to grow marijuana at home. There would be limits on the size of the growing operation.
The House added the text of this bill to SB 118.
HB 56 (2025)
Requires sales and transfers of firearms to take place through licensed dealers. Those dealers are required to perform background checks. This bill also establishes a 3-day waiting period for firearm transfers. The bill includes some exceptions, such as transfers between immediate family members.
HB 60 (2025)
After six months of renting, this bill adds the expiration of the term of the lease or tenancy as grounds for an eviction.
The Senate amended the bill so that it will only take effect if there is a 4% vacancy rate in the state. The amended bill also increases in the minimum lease term to twelve months before eviction.
A conference committee of representatives and senators agreed on a final version of the bill. Landlords could evict without cause after twelve months, and the law would take effect regardless of the vacancy rate.
HB 649 (2025)
Removes the requirement for physical safety inspections and on-board diagnostic tests for passenger vehicles and eliminates funding for the Motor Vehicle Air Pollution Abatement Fund.
SB 14 (2025)
Sets a mandatory minimum sentence for supplying fentanyl. The minimum starts at three years and six months and goes up for higher quantities.
The House amended the bill to also increase penalties for dealing fentanyl to a person who overdoses and dies, similar to SB 15. The amendment also decreases the penalty for possessing 3/4 of an ounce or less of psilocybin (magic mushrooms) to a misdemeanor.
SB 228 (2025)
Modifies the scope and capacity limits of community solar projects. Generally speaking, this bill increases the size of projects that can participate in net energy metering. The bill also allows nonprofit educational institutions and public housing authorities to operate as “municipal hosts” for net metering.
The Senate added some of this bill to HB 710.
SB 284 (2025)
Limits zoning laws to require no more than one parking spaces per residential unit, with exceptions for certain workforce housing and multi-family developments.
The House amended the bill to remove those exceptions.
SB 287 (2025)
If an absentee voter asks for a ballot to be mailed to an address other than the address shown on the voter checklist, this bill adds additional verification requirements. In particular, the voter must show a copy of their photo ID to the clerk or include a notarized signature on their absentee ballot application. If an absentee voter does not complete either step, "his or her signature on the application for an absentee ballot shall be compared to his or her signature on the absentee ballot affidavit on election day in the same manner as other voters."
SB 295 (2025)
Removes the household income limit to participate in the Education Freedom Account (EFA) program.
The Senate amended the bill, adding a 10,000 enrollment cap for the EFA program. If there are 9,000 EFA applicants in a year, the enrollment cap would increase by 25%.
SB 62 (2025)
Prohibits state and local government from blocking law enforcement participation in a federal 287(g) program. That program allows local law enforcement to perform some immigration enforcement duties.
The House amended the bill to add the text of SB 71, which prohibits state and local governments from adopting "sanctuary policies," which prohibit or impede law enforcement cooperating with federal immigration enforcement.
Completed our 2024 State Candidate Survey
Position on Issues
Other| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Do you support the “Education Freedom Account” program, which gives students access to the per-pupil share of state school funding to spend on private school or home school expenses?
"I do not support the current version of the voucher program because there is no accountability, no separation of church and state, and no background checks to assure that children are safe. We need to continue to improve public education so that the majority of students thrive in their local community schools. That said, I do recognize that for a small number of students, their needs might be better met outside of public schools."
Against| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire ban abortions during the first trimester (e.g. after 6 weeks gestation)?
"Abortion is a very personal, private decision that should remain between the woman and her provider. There is no room for government in medical decision making. We should do better a better job of education and making access to contraception easy and affordable so there are fewer unintended pregnancies. There are extremely few abortions after 24 weeks - they occur when the life of the mother is at risk or the fetus will not survive. These are heart-wrenching decisions that belong only with the family, not the legislature."
Against| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire ban abortions during the second trimester (e.g. after 15 weeks gestation)?
"Abortion is a very personal, private decision that should remain between the woman and her provider. There is no room for government in medical decision making. We should do better a better job of education and making access to contraception easy and affordable so there are fewer unintended pregnancies. There are extremely few abortions after 24 weeks - they occur when the life of the mother is at risk or the fetus will not survive. These are heart-wrenching decisions that belong only with the family, not the legislature."
Against| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should NH add an income tax on earned income?
"NH is justifiably proud of our lack of income tax. We already have difficulty attracting and retaining residents that businesses need to provide services. Income tax would diminish our ability to attract growth."
Against| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should NH add a broad-based sales tax?
"Sales taxes are regressive taxes that hurt middle and low income people while not effecting the wealthy significantly. This is not a good choice for NH."
Against| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire lower business taxes?
"Taxing successful businesses is a reasonable approach to obtain some of the needed state revenue."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire add a tax on capital gains?
"A capital gains tax would generate a significant amount of needed revenue for the state while not adversely effecting low and middle income earners."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire government do more to address climate change?
"NH is far behind our neighboring states in responding to climate change. It has and will continue to cost us dearly as our energy costs rise while we ignore utilizing a variety of clean energy sources. The severe road damages from repeated flooding, the adverse impact on our ski and lakes tourism industry, cyanobacteria episodes in so many lakes - these are all consequences of not addressing climate change. We can do much better!"
Undecided| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Do you support giving voters who register without ID on Election Day a ballot that only counts if they return identifying documents to the state before a deadline?
"I value our existing free, fair and safe elections. The issue of fraudulent voter access has been hugely exaggerated. I could only support requiring documents for a ballot to count if the deadline was feasible in the context of how long it actual takes to receive those documents. The real issue here is voter suppression not fraudulent voting."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should the state do more to encourage municipalities to remove zoning barriers to housing development?
"I serve on the NH House Special Committee on Housing. Our critical shortage of housing throughout the state must be addressed with a careful balance of respecting local control while prudently increasing state housing incentives for ADUs, duplexes and small, attractive developments that fit well with the neighborhood where they are located. Legislation must include waivers to state level zoning if a project would exceed the local capacity for water, sewer, safety services, etc."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Do you support legislation to expand the net energy metering system capacity cap from 1 MW to 5 MW for all residential and commercial customers in New Hampshire?
"We should be incentivizing residential, commercial, and municipal solar. Net metering expansion is essential to doing that. I have no expectation that solar will be our primary fuel source but it certainly could be providing much more than currently."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire guarantee the right to access abortion before 24 weeks?
"Abortion is a very personal, private decision that should remain between the woman and her provider. There is no room for government in medical decision making. We should do better a better job of education and making access to contraception easy and affordable so there are fewer unintended pregnancies. There are extremely few abortions after 24 weeks - they occur when the life of the mother is at risk or the fetus will not survive. These are heart-wrenching decisions that belong only with the family, not the legislature."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should the state increase funding for child care providers?
"Child care is a fundamental need for an economically thriving society. It keeps children safe and healthy, helps them develop skills for success in school which reduces future special education costs. Currently 16,500 parents in NH are not working because they are unable to access childcare. Meanwhile, skilled child care providers earn, on average, $13 hourly or $27,040 annually which is not a livable wage. Most child care providers do not make a livable wage to support their own families. We are watching the available child care slots decrease as providers leave for more sustainable work."
Against| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Do you support New Hampshire’s current system of public school funding, with about two-thirds of total funding coming from local property taxes?
"We are long overdue to improve state funding of public education. The courts have repeatedly ruled that we are violating our state constitution by not adequately funding education. Despite considerable efforts to improve both the adequacy formula and the structure/funding of special education, the legislature did not appreciably improve education funding this session. It is critical to controlling local property taxes and to quality education that we increase state funding of education. NH is a woeful last in country for state education funding. Inadequate state funding of education means communities lack resources for other significant needs - roads for instance."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire legalize the recreational use of marijuana by allowing home-growing and private use without sales?
"All of our neighboring states allow recreational marijuana - we are sending revenue across our borders. There is no safety net in NH to assure a person is purchasing marijuana that is not contaminated. We should carefully legalize and regulate marijuana sales. Profits should be distributed to prevention of substance use disorder, increasing treatment options including supporting recovery houses and public education. The statute should include restriction on advertising, especially to young people. There should be a limit on the number of retail outlets in any community."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire legalize the recreational use of marijuana by licensing growers and private retail locations?
"All of our neighboring states allow recreational marijuana - we are sending revenue across our borders. There is no safety net in NH to assure a person is purchasing marijuana that is not contaminated. We should carefully legalize and regulate marijuana sales. Profits should be distributed to prevention of substance use disorder, increasing treatment options including supporting recovery houses and public education. The statute should include restriction on advertising, especially to young people. There should be a limit on the number of retail outlets in any community."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire legalize the recreational use of marijuana by establishing state-run cannabis stores?
"All of our neighboring states allow recreational marijuana - we are sending revenue across our borders. There is no safety net in NH to assure a person is purchasing marijuana that is not contaminated. We should carefully legalize and regulate marijuana sales. Profits should be distributed to prevention of substance use disorder, increasing treatment options including supporting recovery houses and public education. The statute should include restriction on advertising, especially to young people. There should be a limit on the number of retail outlets in any community."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire raise the minimum wage?
"It is essential to our civilized society that all adults are able to provide for their family's basic needs with an adequate income from full time work. NH minimum wage follows the federal requirement which has not changedsince 2009. At $7.25/hour, a full time employee earns just $15080 per year. You could easily need all of that or more just for housing and have nothing left for food, healthcare, transportation, child care etc. Not paying a livable wage to hard-working Granite Staters creates more expense for government, as people then turn to food assistance programs, lack health care (which ultimately costs more when medical crises happen). People earning minimum wage cannot afford childcare which leads to neglect or the person not working at all in order to care for their children."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire add legal protections for residents of other states who travel here for health care related to abortion or gender transition?
"The overturn of Roe v Wade and the subsequent restrictions on abortions in many states has created an environment that threatens health care providers. This will result in less pregnancy care as providers decide it isn't worth the risk to practice in states where their medical license could be at risk simply for providing life-saving care. It is completely unacceptable for women to have different legal access to healthcare contingent on their zip code. We should be protecting women who travel to NH for abortions and we should be protecting abortion providers."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should New Hampshire repeal the ban on abortion after 24 weeks gestation?
"Abortion is a very personal, private decision that should remain between the woman and her provider. There is no room for government in medical decision making. We should do better a better job of education and making access to contraception easy and affordable so there are fewer unintended pregnancies. There are extremely few abortions after 24 weeks - they occur when the life of the mother is at risk or the fetus will not survive. These are heart-wrenching decisions that belong only with the family, not the legislature."
Against| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should NH require local law enforcement to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement?
"Local law enforcement in most communities work very hard to be trusted and connected with the people they serve including with immigrant populations. It isn't the responsibility of local law enforcement to be adjunct federal immigration officials. We should be welcoming legal immigrants as our business community sorely needs their work. Unless you are native American, you are an immigrant or descended from one."
For| Read My Position
Citizens Count Issue Survey, 2024
Should NH pass stricter gun control laws?
"I strongly support Second Amendment rights AND I equally value the need for firearm safety. It isn't an either/or situation. We can have both reasonable firearm safety measures and also have gun ownership. The vast majority of citizens appreciate this. Suicide is the leading cause of death by firearm. Simply increasing the waiting period for gun ownership to 5 days and enforcing it in all sales or transfers of firearms would greatly reduce these tragedies."