Bury or Stop Northern Pass

Dear Governor Hassan,

We applaud your efforts to date to defend New Hampshire's natural and cultural heritage from the proposed Northern Pass transmission line. Please join us in making sure that our children and grandchildren can pass this vital heritage on to their children and grandchildren. Please ask Northeast Utilities and Hydro-Québec either to bury the entire project in New Hampshire or stop it altogether.  

Everywhere we look we see proposals for new high-voltage, direct current transmission lines.  In Maine, Vermont, and New York, new north-south high-voltage direct-current lines are being proposed completely underground or underwater; even Hydro-Québec itself is advancing an underground transmission project to connect with New York. Everywhere we look we see new, innovative underground transmission technology proposals.  Everywhere except New Hampshire.

Governor Hassan, before you host the New England Governors and the Eastern Canadian Premiers here in New Hampshire this July, please make it clear that New Hampshire welcomes each of them to our magnificent state. But please also convey the message that we will insist on smart, well-planned energy projects that advance a clean energy future and we will not welcome any overhead extension cords like Northern Pass that provide little benefit to the state, at the expense of our natural and scenic resources.

Sincerely,

Recent Signatures

  • James Duckworth
    11 yearsLynnfield MA
  • Bill Freeland
    11 yearsLittleton NH
  • William Lahaye
    11 yearsCandia NH
  • Barbara Astone
    11 yearsLittleton NH
  • Bruce Perlo
    11 yearsSugar Hill NH
  • Annette FInkelstein
    11 yearsCity AZ
  • Laura Deming
    11 yearsSalisbury NH
  • Michelle Pilon
    11 yearsBillerica MA
  • Barbara Fahey
    11 yearsHolderness NH
  • Bruce Hanelt
    11 yearsColumbia NJ
  • John Mullin
    11 yearsWindham NH
  • Edward Duke
    11 yearsdunbarton NH
  • Anne Marie Van Coesant
    11 yearsRochester NH
  • Mary Hunt
    11 yearsStow MA
  • Benjamin Wheatley
    11 yearsAuburndale MA
  • Riddell Roger
    11 yearsQuincy MA
  • Laura McDaniel
    11 yearsOrford NH
  • Alex Wolf
    11 yearsNew York NY
  • Anne Sullivan
    11 yearsAshland NH
  • Brian Potvin
    11 yearsMarblehead MA
  • Anne Fischer
    11 yearsWind Gap PA
  • Cynthia Sopka
    11 yearsAllentown PA
  • robin konrad
    11 yearsyork PA
  • Mark Rogers
    11 yearsNewtonville MA
  • Thomas Pratt
    11 yearsHanover MA
  • Jennifer Valentine
    11 yearsTucson AZ
  • Virginia Doyle
    11 yearsSanbornton NH
  • Carole Gerrior
    11 yearsSaugus MA
  • Marni Hoyle
    11 yearsBethlehem NH
  • Ed Lang
    11 yearsLincoln MA
  • Deborah Bloomer
    11 yearsnewmarket NH
  • kelly moher
    11 yearsManchester NH
  • Cindy Greenwood
    11 yearsClarksville NH
  • Cynthia Mariano
    11 yearsAmesbury MA
  • Judy Budge
    11 yearsEast Andover NH
  • martha steenburgh
    11 yearspike NH
  • Justin Page
    11 yearsNewport NH
  • Jill Augustine
    11 yearsChester Springs PA
  • Jane Kavanaugh
    11 yearsRye Beach NH
  • Mo Baxley
    11 yearsLaconia NH
  • Jennifer Dougan
    11 yearsFranklin NH
  • Jeffrey Langille
    11 yearsVentura CA
  • Michael Parkin
    11 yearsBethlehem NH
  • Curtis Carmichael
    11 yearsMilford NH
  • Anna Eshelman
    11 yearsFreedom NH
  • Dianne Monahan
    11 yearsNew Durham NH
  • Mary Jane Higgins
    11 yearsBrighton MA
  • Judy Luther
    11 yearsArdmore PA
  • Ed Loch
    11 yearsBedminster PA
  • Amanda Simoneau
    11 yearsManchester NH
  • Janine Janine Palmer
    11 yearsOld Lyme CT
  • Jean Mollack
    11 yearsNew Britain PA
  • Sheila Murphy
    11 yearsBirmingham AL
  • John Buzdygon
    11 yearsQuakertown PA
  • Timothy Ridley
    11 yearsKeene NH
  • Jon Wilkinson
    11 yearsLancaster NH
  • Terri Hudson
    11 yearsKeene NH
  • Arianna Varuolo-Clarke
    11 yearsLyndonville VT
  • Susan MacLaren
    11 yearsCambridge MA
  • Jennifer Routhier
    11 yearsGroveton NH
  • Bernadette Cassidy
    11 yearsAmherst NH
  • Tom Poirier
    11 yearsConcord NH

Pages

Sign here:

with 8810 supporters
Exceeded by 2810
By signing, you accept CMG's privacy policy.

Why is this important?

  • Robert Albrightabout 11 years ago Fort Lauderdale FL
    We own property very close to the proposed route and feel it would be criminal to defile the national forest and the white mountains with such an eyesore.
  • vincent carlucciabout 11 years ago pittsburg NH
    big business is not my friend.
  • Cheryl Westonabout 11 years ago Tewksbury MA
    If the power companies are able to bury the lines in VT and ME, why not in NH? Why damage pristine forests and land rather than following easily accessible paths already cleared?
  • Margaret Hofmannabout 11 years ago West Lebanon NH
    I'd like to leave my grandchildren an unspoiled New Hampshire.
  • Barbara Russellabout 11 years ago New Boston NH
    It's the RIGHT thing to do.
  • Chris Smithabout 11 years ago Memphis TN
    I drove up/down the border of ME last summer (Rte 1/1A & Trans-Can 2). The windmills stick out - even in that vast expanse. Can't imagine how badly they'd mar the vistas at home in NH. Do not give in to NP on this - it would be an unrecoverable loss.
  • Lynn EDWARDSabout 11 years ago AUBURN NH
    Once the land is defaced - we will never get it back. This is what makes NH the way it is!
  • MARK SILVAabout 11 years ago SANDOWN NH
    THE BEAUTY OF NATURE SHOULD BE PRESERVED. Solar is the way of the future, Homes independently powered. invest in that! protect the forest, we need it.
  • Peter Silbermannabout 11 years ago Bridgewater NH
    It preserves what I most cherish about living in NH - natural and scenic views.
  • Robert Wofchuckabout 11 years ago Brentwood NH
    Please keep the beauty of the land and use the sensible existing rtravel corridors to bury the lines out of sight and with more proctection from the weather.
  • Donna Muirabout 11 years ago Belmont NH
    Because it would be an eyesore and hurt the beauty and tourism of the state.
  • John Turcotteabout 11 years ago Bedford NH
    Preserving the aesthetics of the NH countryside.
  • Terry Melleabout 11 years ago Gilmanton IW NH
    NH is a beautiful state and above ground power lines are U-G-L-Y and unnecessary.
  • Paul Guyreabout 11 years ago Lyme NH
    Tourism is NH's best shot at continued fiscal solvency. Northern Pass will lead to the New Jersification of NH--not help tourism.
  • Richard Beaulieuabout 11 years ago Colebrook NH
    Reducing property values and taking away the beauty of the New Hampshire landscape
  • Cynthia Brussabout 11 years ago Springfield NH
    This project is not to benefit NH. And the land that is flooded to provide the power is criminal.
  • mark niemanabout 11 years ago Weare NH
    The visual blight would be lessened, and another company that thought NH was a bunch of pushovers, look at the money NP was throwing around, has to follow the rules. Our rules with respect to the environment.
  • barbara Finlayabout 11 years ago Sudbury MA
    It is terribly important to us as we now have a cottage with a beautiful unimpeded view of the mountains .PLEASE help to keep those ugly towers away from our sight.Thank you. BF
  • Sally Harrisabout 11 years ago Newbury NH
    Please preserve the beauty of our state!! We live here because of it, and we rely on tourism.
  • Norman LaBrecqueabout 11 years ago Franklin NH
    Want to keep the natural beauty of NH as pristine as we are able.
  • Robert S. Athertonabout 11 years ago Belmont NH
    To protect our great wilderness country.
  • Daane Crookabout 11 years ago Rye NH
    The beauty and biological integrity of our natural world should be protected to the best of our ability. Burying the line is thus the way to go if the line is to be constructed at all. Otherwise, NO NORTHERN PASS!
  • Susan Brownabout 11 years ago North Haverhill NH
    scenery!!!!
  • LIsa Plourdeabout 11 years ago Goffstown NH
    The northern part of our state is beautiful, and needs to stay that way.
  • Jane Hemmingsenabout 11 years ago Hollis NH
    We breathe clean air!

Pages