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

  • Ewa Belc
    12 yearsElmhurst NY
  • James Schnare
    12 yearsJupiter FL
  • cindy cotton
    12 years dedham MA
  • Katherine Baril
    12 yearsOxford ME
  • Barbara Ashley
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • Beverly Murdough
    12 yearsAlton NH
  • Jane Schaefer
    12 yearsLancaster NH
  • Elizabeth Wisler
    12 yearsAtkinson NH
  • Alan MacEwan
    12 yearsFalmouth ME
  • William Weidman Jr
    12 yearsBridgewater NH
  • Virginia Cretella Mars
    12 yearsNewbury NH
  • Shawn Perchaluk
    12 yearsNaugatuck CT
  • Neil Day
    12 yearsWeston MA
  • Brian Henry
    12 yearsBarrington NH
  • dan fraizer
    12 yearsspringfield MA
  • James Geller
    12 yearsDevens MA
  • Moira North
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • Maureen Ellingsen
    12 yearsNorthfield NH
  • michael davis
    12 yearsshavertown PA
  • Jae Kim
    12 yearsSugar Hill NH
  • Julie Polhemus
    12 yearsEugene OR
  • Donald Lavoie
    12 yearsLittleton NH
  • Patricia Slavtcheff
    12 yearsLyman NH
  • Lani Lovas
    12 yearsEden Prairie MN
  • John McClanahan
    12 yearsWarner NH
  • Donald Crane
    12 yearsLancaster NH
  • William Mellekas
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • Sarah Matott
    12 yearsLittleton NH
  • Kathleen Foley
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • Robert Barthelmes
    12 yearsPeekwkill NY
  • Anita DePonte
    12 yearsLandaff NH
  • Dorothy Zug
    12 yearsFitzwilliam NH
  • Jeff Sawyer
    12 yearsFRANCONIA NH
  • Patricia M. Clark
    12 yearsStoddard NH
  • Judith Smith
    12 yearsBridgewater NH
  • Heather Wingate
    12 yearsNew Durham NH
  • Natalie Stephenson
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • Stephen Luce
    12 yearsMerrimack NH
  • Michael McCrory
    12 yearsPearl River NY
  • R. Stephen Loynd
    12 yearsLincoln NH
  • Stephanie Dubowyj
    12 yearsLondonderry NH
  • Virginia Virginia Davis
    12 yearsSalem NH
  • Julie Weisman
    12 yearsFranconia NH
  • John Gale
    12 yearsGloucester MA
  • Jane Crosby
    12 yearsBethlehem NH
  • Bruce Pike
    12 yearsHinsdale NH
  • Martine Stern
    12 yearsManhasset NY
  • Marjorie Salomon
    12 yearsBethlehem NH
  • Elizabeth Salesky
    12 yearsCambridge MA
  • Bee Thayer
    12 yearsDalton NH
  • Linda Upham-Bornstein
    12 yearsLancaster NH
  • Tom Ross
    12 yearsLittleton NH
  • Judith Haglund
    12 yearsSarasota FL
  • carol edwards
    12 yearsNiantic CT
  • Lilith Chunn
    12 yearsNewton MA
  • Raymond Labonte
    12 yearsEpsom NH
  • Steven Seron
    12 yearsCanterbury NH
  • Rodney Thompson
    12 yearsPelham NH
  • Mary Sue Seppa
    12 yearsPittsfield MA
  • Roger LaFontaine
    12 yearsBridgewater NH
  • Ashley Prince-Miles
    12 yearsBerlin NH
  • Christine Nagel
    12 yearsSanbornton NH

Pages

Sign here:

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

Why is this important?

  • Angela Ryanabout 12 years ago Littleton NH
    I was not born and raised here. However, when I moved here four years ago I fell in LOVE with the pure land New Hampshire offers. You just can't find untouched land like this anymore. Why ruin it?
  • Allison Hagerabout 12 years ago Londonderry NH
    Because I've lived in NH my whole life. I want to protect what little land we have left to nature, trees, birds, clean air and water.
  • Dale Geslienabout 12 years ago East Hartford CT
    I frequently visit NH to recreate in the White Mountain National Forest and other nearby locations. I do so because of the wilderness areas and breathtaking vistas. Please protect them for future generations to experience.
  • Michael Frittsabout 12 years ago Little Falls NY
    Governor Maggie Hassan, please don't be a dick.
  • rosemary perryabout 12 years ago meredith NH
    All of the above reasons!!!
  • Ed Johnsonabout 12 years ago Dunbarton NH
    Please don't ruin the natural beauty of NH!!!!
  • Edward P. Allardabout 12 years ago West Ossipee NH
    We agree the lines should be buried or the project stopped.
  • Peter Smithabout 12 years ago Littleton NH
    We must preserve our most valuable resources, visual and natural
  • Carol Bartlettabout 12 years ago Round Lake IL
    The best part of New Hampshire is it's people and it's views. Do not let Northern Pass spoil New Hampshire.
  • Chuck Phillipsabout 12 years ago Franconia NH
    This is NOT a clean energy source. The devastation that starts with the land of the First Natio people would continue down through our "sacred" lands. The only reason for this unnecessary project is to rescue PSNH.
  • Roberta Rateganabout 12 years ago Waterbury CT
    I hike those mountains and do want to see them destroyed.
  • Margaret Connorsabout 12 years ago Sugar Hill NH
    to protect our environment, our rural culture, our tourist economy, our natural and historic resources, our children AND because the only things that makes sense is a designated state corridor for burial of all elective trnasmission projects.
  • William Webbabout 12 years ago Holderness NH
    No project, private or public, is worth destroying the very essence of New Hampshire. We own a hospitality business, the future of which depends on New Hampshire remaining the beautiful destination it has always been.
  • Susan Stottabout 12 years ago Alexandria NH
    I love the White Mountains and so do thousands of tourists who spend money in NH and help to build its economy. Thank heavens for the Weeks Act. Please protect our mountains and their views.
  • Sue Wemyssabout 12 years ago Gorham NH
    NH's greatest assets are her natural areas and the wildlife they support. A chain of high towers transporting power across our state will greatly disrupt and interfere with these natural habitats and the scenic quality of NH.
  • Jack McEnanyabout 12 years ago Franconia NH
    NH already exports twice the electricity it consumes. If CT has allowed development to out pace its energy capacity, then that's a problem CT should be grappling with--not NH.
  • James Kilkennyabout 12 years ago Redding CT
    Because they should be buried because the developing world is doing it
  • Francis Coxabout 12 years ago Charlotte NC
    I Love The White Mountains..
  • Jennifer Tuthillabout 12 years ago Alexandria NH
    I treasure our state, and the natural beauty that makes it stand out from other places. We do not need to send power elsewhere at the cost of our landscape, tourism, and habitats. PROTECT NH!!
  • Anthony Fitzherbertabout 12 years ago Campton NH
    NP will destroy our property values, our beautiful land, our economy, and the electromagnetic fields emitted by such transmission lines can destroy the health of those who are exposed to these fields for a prolonged time.
  • Ann Hartmannabout 12 years ago Palos Verdes CA
    Own property in NH. Why destroy beauty and livelihood of proposed area? Bury lines!
  • Melissa Emeryabout 12 years ago Whitefield NH
    Maintain NH's natural beauty for future generations
  • John Kirbyabout 12 years ago Rochester NH
    There is NO need to destroy our forests over energy transmission! We have enough technology to produce our own sufficient sources of energy if the D**m EPA was out of the picture! Not to forget to mention the greedy energy sector's influences!
  • Constance Howardabout 12 years ago Grantham NH
    The power lines need to be buried to preserve New Hampshire's greatest attraction.
  • Wesley Prestonabout 12 years ago Campton NH
    NH is beautiful. I love NH. Tourism earns many people their living, and many people live here because of NH pristine beauty.

Pages