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

  • Patrick Sleckman
    12 yearsSouthold NY
  • Mark Kern
    12 yearschadds ford PA
  • Roberta Rategan
    12 yearsWaterbury CT
  • Megan Carey
    12 yearsTrumansburg NY
  • Scott Hasu
    12 yearsMilford NH
  • Margaret Connors
    12 yearsSugar Hill NH
  • Annette Magowan
    12 yearsThornton NH
  • john DAWSON
    12 yearsplaistow NH
  • Amy Borne
    12 yearsRye NH
  • William Webb
    12 yearsHolderness NH
  • Susan Stott
    12 yearsAlexandria NH
  • Sue Wemyss
    12 yearsGorham NH
  • Jack McEnany
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • Lydia E. Robles
    12 yearsHyattsville MD
  • James Kilkenny
    12 yearsRedding CT
  • Francis Cox
    12 yearsCharlotte NC
  • Robert Hilo
    12 yearsLebanon NH
  • Deborah Stever
    12 yearsEaston NH
  • molly young
    12 yearscornish NH
  • Jennifer Tuthill
    12 yearsAlexandria NH
  • Anthony Fitzherbert
    12 yearsCampton NH
  • Omer C. Ahern, Jr.
    12 yearsPlymouth NH
  • Leslie Thompson
    12 yearsAlexandria NH
  • Glenn Keeling
    12 yearsNorth Conway NH
  • Ann Hartmann
    12 yearsPalos Verdes CA
  • Melissa Emery
    12 yearsWhitefield NH
  • John Kirby
    12 yearsRochester NH
  • Mark Hester
    12 yearsUncasville CT
  • john schaechter
    12 yearscanton MA
  • Ann Giles
    12 yearsBridgewater NH
  • Constance Howard
    12 yearsGrantham NH
  • Heide Fritz
    12 yearsHampton NH
  • Lukasz Rebisz
    12 yearsSalem MA
  • Wesley Preston
    12 yearsCampton NH
  • Ruth Jamke
    12 yearsBedford NH
  • Andy Larsen
    12 yearsBoonton NJ
  • Gayle French
    12 yearsFair Haven VT
  • Harry Lymn
    12 yearsMcLean VA
  • Frank Grima
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • Christina Shambaugh
    12 yearsMelrose MA
  • Kim De Lutis
    12 yearsLittleton NH
  • Janice & Fred Chipman
    12 yearsPlymouth NH
  • Richard Cusworth
    12 yearsHolderness NH
  • Karen Newton
    12 yearsGroveton NH
  • Philip Brandt
    12 yearsBronx NY
  • Nicholas Miller
    12 yearsConcord MA
  • Heather Bartle
    12 yearsDover NH
  • Bill Cobb
    12 yearsThornton NH
  • Mark Florence
    12 yearsWashington NH
  • Melanie Russell
    12 yearsfoxboro MA
  • Terry Wise
    12 yearsStockbridge MA
  • Carol Jewell
    12 yearsAlexandria NH
  • Cathy Sleckman
    12 yearsSouthold NY
  • Joan Joan McGrath
    12 yearsFRANKLIN NH
  • Asher Salomon
    12 yearsBethlehem NH
  • Daniel Paradise
    12 yearsCarver MA
  • William & Anne-Marie Nichols
    12 yearsLittleton NH
  • George Kocur
    12 yearsArlington MA
  • Bruce Hampson
    12 yearsWilton CT
  • Donna Coburn
    12 yearsBuckfield ME
  • John Jr
    12 yearsStark NH
  • Patricia Bash
    12 yearsMeriden NH

Pages

Sign here:

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

Why is this important?

  • David Eddyabout 12 years ago Rochester NH
    Our scenery is one of the defining characteristics of our state. Bury it or forget it.
  • Paul Chamberlandabout 12 years ago Québec
    Il y a 35 ans, je marchais dans les montagnes blanches (White Mountains). C'est là que mon gôut de la nature et du plein-air a pris naissance. C'est primordial de conserver et préserver les "Whitte Mountains" dans leur état d'origine.
  • steve paoneabout 12 years ago wilmington MA
    This is too beautiful to lose.
  • Marcia Trippabout 12 years ago Francestown NH
    Beauty, tourism, never getting it back once it is gone..please!
  • robert adkissonabout 12 years ago norfolk VA
    I love to camp and canoe in N. Hampshire, and do so about once a year, usually for about a week at a time. I'd hate to see such an unnecessary and obtrusive thing as these power lines cutting a huge and ugly swath across your beautiful state.
  • John Petrofskyabout 12 years ago Stewartstown VA
    The long-term future of the north country depends on tourism. Northern Pass undermines the most promising element of the region's economy.
  • Marie Nardinoabout 12 years ago Andover NH
    It's obvious. The initial additional cost to the power company to bury the lines is fleeting and recoverable. The destructive cost to New Hampshire's outdoor beauty will be permanent and irreversible.
  • Dik Dagavarianabout 12 years ago Bow NH
    Because the impact from a Northern Pass project with hundreds of towers would cause irreparable harm to the beauty of NH and its tourist industry in NH. If the energy need is so great, then bury it.
  • Kevin Carsonabout 12 years ago Johnston RI
    I spend many days near Franconia every year. It is one of my favorite places on earth. I would be sickened by the impact of Northern Pass.
  • Katherine Reddochabout 12 years ago Medford MA
    The White Mountains are a very special place to me, my husband and our friends & families. We don't want to see them spoiled with transmission lines. Thank you for your help!
  • Patricia Mackabout 12 years ago Meredith NH
    NH is known for its beauty and we should do our very best to maintain it.
  • Maryann Szabadicsabout 12 years ago Bridgewater NH
    Because there are alternatives to destroying our beautiful state.
  • Ellen Goldsberryabout 12 years ago Weare NH
    We need to preserve the beauty of our state and protect its natural resources. We need to protect outdoor tourism.
  • Lawrene Cohenabout 12 years ago South Easton MA
    Having hiked Us Natl Parks Canda, Nepal I still find the White Mtns to be a unique treasure. We owe it to our children to pass along this gem in its unaltered natural state.
  • Leo Leo R. Sandyabout 12 years ago Chesterfield NH
    NH has many pristine areas that need to be preserved for future generations. We need less electric power and more conservation of the power we have, as well as alternative energy sources
  • Joe Wilkasabout 12 years ago Bridgewater NH
    Since NH already generates 2X the power it uses, and acceptable alternatives are available, there is absolutely no need to sacrifice NH's irreplaceable scenery and significant tourist industry for giant powerlines benefiting others.
  • Randy Mooreabout 12 years ago Beaver PA
    This is important to me because I would like to visit NH and explore it's amazing landscape.
  • fanny whitmanabout 12 years ago plymouth NH
    people and our land over corporations and money
  • Lance Emrickabout 12 years ago Wentworth NH
    To stop or acceptably change the Northern Pass project to protect NH nature, beauty, and important outdoor tourist industry.
  • Michel Duprasabout 12 years ago Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada NH
    With all the development in evey direction and in every theme, we need to keep intact land and spaces where man does not interfer, mostly rare and big surface of nature representing biology and forestery in the 2000 years
  • Elizabeth Brownabout 12 years ago Marblehead MA
    I am a conservationist and hiker, and this is a NATIONAL FOREST that should be protected.
  • Fran and Rick Towerabout 12 years ago Middleton MA
    We snowmobile up thru there and it take away from the sites
  • Joyce Dvorakabout 12 years ago Lexington MA
    Our family spends a great deal of time in the beautiful White Mountains. This project, constructed above ground, will ruin much of the landscape and likely the tourism that provides income to the north. Find a way to protect both of those interests.
  • Michael Carterabout 12 years ago Paris, France
    If Northern Pass does not agree to bury power lines, it should be stopped. I am a member of the AMC and a frequent visitor to the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
  • melbern &virginia Trueabout 12 years ago E. Derry NH
    We own land in Wentworth, NH and will be affected if Northern Pass is built above ground. We prefer to look at tress other than 200 ft towers.

Pages