Their base pay? $200 per term. Their mileage? More than $10,000 for some N.H. lawmakers.
The lawmakers who serve in New Hampshire’s all-volunteer state Legislature famously receive a nominal salary: just $100 per year. But that doesn’t account for the bulk of the public money these 424 elected officials get for doing their job.
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State senators and representatives also receive mileage reimbursement to cover the cost of traveling to and from the State House in Concord. While their base pay has remained unchanged since 1889, their mileage rate has increased over time and now stands at 72.5 cents per mile, which can add up quickly.
In total, as of June 12, the Legislature had paid out $1.7 million in mileage to 417 lawmakers since the current two-year term began in December 2024, according to records analyzed by the Globe. While most had received about $3,300 or less in mileage, 24 had accumulated more than $10,000 apiece.
Some lawmakers commute much farther or more frequently than others, so the payouts vary widely. That said, the data reveal a couple of noteworthy outliers.
The Mileage Magnate
House Deputy Speaker Steven Smith has received more money via mileage reimbursements than any other state lawmaker this term. In fact, the $44,000 he’s gotten is more than double what anyone else has been paid for their mileage.
Smith, a Republican, said he needs to report to the State House “nearly every day” on account of his leadership role. That explains why he’s received mileage payments for 332 days since the current term began, more than anyone else in the House or Senate.
The other factor running up Smith’s tab is the distance he travels. He’s being reimbursed for 188 miles per round trip, even though online maps indicate he could drive from his home in Charlestown to Concord and back in 130 miles or less.
Smith said the seemingly shorter routes are “consistently affected by road and bridge closures, resulting in significant detours.” He said information documenting his near-daily commute has been reviewed and approved over the years under Republican and Democratic speakers alike.
“The mileage I submit is accurate and reflects the route I regularly travel between my home and the State House,” he said.
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The Aspiring Full-Timer
Representative Ellen Read, a Democrat from Newmarket, doesn’t represent the state’s farthest-flung communities. Still, she has racked up almost $19,000 in mileage this term, the third-highest amount paid to anyone in the 400-member chamber.
Read has been reimbursed for making her 96-mile trek to Concord and back on 279 days this term, which means she has claimed mileage far more often than any other state representative who doesn’t hold a leadership role in the House. (Read said the role she held as deputy ranking member of the Housing Committee, from which she was removed in April, had constituted a leadership post.)
Read, unlike Smith, doesn’t have a dedicated office in the State House. She has acknowledged using the House chamber, gallery, and anteroom as makeshift office space. But the speaker banned her from those areas on non-session days after she yelled an obscenity outside a committee hearing in April, as NHPR reported.
Read told the Globe she was unfairly targeted because of her work, and the number of bills she has introduced as prime sponsor makes her one of the state’s most prolific legislators.
“I get paid $100 a year to put in 16 bills and receive some of the worst harassment of any legislator in New Hampshire,” she said. “I go to that building as my place of work because I take the job seriously.”
The $10k Club
These are the 24 state lawmakers who had received more than $10,000 apiece in mileage reimbursement during the 2025-2026 legislative term, as of June 12, according to reports obtained and analyzed by the Globe:
- House Deputy Speaker Steven Smith, a Republican from Charlestown, had received $44,037 in mileage for 332 days.
- Representative Jared Sullivan, a Democrat from Bethlehem, had received $20,102 in mileage for 170 days.
- Senator David Rochefort, a Republican from Littleton, had received $19,507 in mileage for 160 days.
- Representative Ellen Read, a Democrat from Newmarket, had received $18,961 in mileage for 279 days.
- Representative Rick Ladd, a Republican from Haverhill, had received $18,440 in mileage for 168 days.
- House Minority Leader Alexis Simpson, a Democrat from Exeter, had received $16,604 in mileage for 261 days.
- Representative Marcel “Mike” Ouellet, a Republican from Colebrook, had received $16,577 in mileage for 85 days.
- Representative Lori Korzen, a Republican from Berlin, had received $15,375 in mileage for 94 days.
- House Deputy Minority Leader Laura Telerski, a Democrat from Nashua, had received $15,275 in mileage for 283 days.
- Representative Arnold Davis, a Republican from Berlin, had received $14,548 in mileage for 84 days.
- Senate Minority Leader Rebecca Perkins Kwoka, a Democrat from Portsmouth, had received $13,580 in mileage for 163 days.
- Senator Mark McConkey, a Republican from Freedom, had received $13,114 in mileage for 137 days.
- Senate Majority Leader Regina Birdsell, a Republican from Hampstead, had received $12,762 in mileage for 220 days.
- Senator Tim McGough, a Republican from Merrimack, had received $12,222 in mileage for 229 days.
- Representative Jonah Wheeler, a Democrat from Peterborough, had received $11,776 in mileage for 184 days.
- Senator James Gray, a Republican from Rochester, had received $11,767 in mileage for 222 days.
- Representative James Tierney, a Republican from Groveton, had received $11,736 in mileage for 74 days.
- Senator David Watters, a Democrat from Dover, had received $11,033 in mileage for 195 days.
- Representative Margaret Drye, a Republican from Plainfield, had received $11,018 in mileage for 110 days.
- House Speaker Pro Tempore James Kofalt, a Republican from Wilton, had received $10,922 in mileage for 183 days.
- House Speaker Sherman Packard, a Republican from Londonderry, had received $10,436 in reimbursement for 295 days.
- Representative Janet Wall, a Democrat from Madbury, had received $10,259 in mileage for 190 days.
- Representative Walter Spilsbury, a Republican from Charlestown, had received $10,137 in mileage for 92 days.
- Representative Kenneth Weyler, a Republican from Kingston, had received $10,107 in mileage for 161 days.
This story appears in Globe NH | Morning Report, a free email newsletter focused on New Hampshire, including great coverage from the Boston Globe and links to interesting articles elsewhere. Sign up here.
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