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

  • Elise Lawson
    12 yearsBethlehem NH
  • Darleen Placey
    12 yearsCOLEBROOK NH
  • Karen Goddard
    12 yearsNashua NH
  • Keith Watling Southborough
    12 yearsSouthborough MA
  • Stephen Vinciguerra
    12 yearsWashington NH
  • Michael McLellan
    12 yearsNewton MA
  • Eric Alarie
    12 yearsHinsdale NH
  • Rachel Cleveland
    12 yearsHolderness NH
  • rebecca williams
    12 years19507 PA
  • dave coulter
    12 yearssanbornton NH
  • Vearle Sayer
    12 yearsBelchertown MA
  • ellen lamb
    12 years03431 NH
  • Joseph Coppola 18 Alden Terrace
    12 yearsLittle Silver NJ
  • Michael Charpentier
    12 yearsSaunderstown RI
  • Mary Sturtevant
    12 yearsSugar Hill NH
  • Joseph Egan
    12 yearsNew Brunswick NH
  • Nancy Walsh
    12 yearsbridgton ME
  • Sean Gouvin
    12 yearsMonson MA
  • Scott Livingston
    12 yearsBolton CT
  • Suzanne Fournier
    12 yearsMilford NH
  • William Horne
    12 yearsSalisbury MD
  • Renae Broderick
    12 yearsBartlett NH
  • Michael Neivert
    12 yearscambridge MA
  • Nikki Patton
    12 yearsWest Falmouth MA
  • Daniel Buffone
    12 yearsOssining NY
  • Prentice Weathers
    12 yearsNewport RI
  • John Kerrick
    12 yearsPeterborough NH
  • Lawrence Phillips
    12 yearsCanterbury NH
  • Tim Tim Sposato
    12 yearsGorham NH
  • JoAnne Waters
    12 yearsNewbury MA
  • David Scheuring
    12 yearsDublin NH
  • Lori MacDonald
    12 yearsLisbon NH
  • John Hewitt
    12 yearsNew London NH
  • Anne Sharp
    12 yearsWinchester MA
  • Marketa Rosecka
    12 yearsWestborough MA
  • ken mosedale
    12 yearsfranconia NH
  • Mark Lennon
    12 yearsNew London NH
  • Jeff Foster
    12 yearsMystic CT
  • Laurelae Oehler
    12 yearsWhite River Junction VT
  • ann loeb
    12 yearsNew york,NY NH
  • Sandra Lucore
    12 yearsNew Harbor ME
  • camilla camilla lockwood
    12 yearstemple NH
  • Deirdre Henderson
    12 yearsChatham Center NY
  • Frank Diekmann
    12 yearsBedford NH
  • Tom Tom Leeds
    12 yearsMedfield MA
  • Grace Bartlett
    12 yearsBangor ME
  • L K Lyn O'Callaghan
    12 yearsNew Hampton NH
  • michael boisvert
    12 yearsmerrimack NH
  • PAUL SHIEBLER
    12 yearsWinchendon MA
  • Joseph Gallagher
    12 yearsE. northport NY
  • Jane Phelps
    12 yearsMaynard MA
  • Mary Fish
    12 yearsWalpole NH
  • Gail O'Keefe
    12 yearsLexington MA
  • Michael Horvath
    12 yearsPhoenixville PA
  • marc hedges
    12 yearsCambridge MA
  • Elizabeth Monaco
    12 yearsGrantham NH
  • Maryanne Mullen
    12 yearsQuincy MA
  • Steve Bachand
    12 yearsMerrimack NH
  • Donald Buchholtz
    12 yearsWaterville valley NH
  • Irmgard Schrempp Arruda
    12 yearsLanesboro MA
  • Lawrence Eliot
    12 yearsIpswich MA
  • Stuart Sherman
    12 yearsNashua NH

Pages

Sign here:

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

Why is this important?

  • Michael and Marsha Bironabout 12 years ago Colebrook NH
    Our mountains and wilderness areas are so very important to the Great North Woods. Please do not let a foreign business destroy our legacy for our children and grandchildren.
  • Naomi Butterfieldabout 12 years ago Concord NH
    If a private company is permitted to use our state as a way to transport electricity for their profit the least they should be required to do is minimize the harm to NH. A large ugly foot print down the spine of our state should not be permitted.
  • Julia Cotterabout 12 years ago Bow NH
    Save our forests and bury the lines!
  • Rebecca Hattabout 12 years ago Las Vegas NV
    To preserve New Hampshire's pristine beauty why not bury the lines if this technology is readily available? We need to prevent the destruction of the critical habitats still left here and protect it for future generations!
  • Alden Van Sickleabout 12 years ago Holderness NH
    Because it's the right thing to do.
  • Kittie Wilsonabout 12 years ago New London NH
    Please save our precious White Mts from an ugly scar across their backs that will never be healed. They will change the Whites forever. NO NORTHERN PASS!!!!!
  • James Iannoneabout 12 years ago 17315 PA
    Dear Governor Hassan, I look forward to the day when I return to my home in NH. It truly is a special place that values and treasures its natural beauty; upon which it has built a significant part of its economy. Please bury the Lines.
  • David & Kathryn Mannethoabout 12 years ago Sugar Hill NH
    Income for the state and more jobs than building towers would create. Just bury it.
  • Ruth Ward 386 Route 123 Southabout 12 years ago ruthward@myfairpoint.net NH
    Dear Governor Hassan, I can't imagine these huge steel towers going across our beautiful mountain ridges, and valleys.Bury the towers, or NO towers.
  • Gerd Lutterabout 12 years ago Rumney NH
    it contradicts everything that New Hampshire represents. An eyesore that would affect tourism, property values, Ultimately it would affect the spirit of all those that make NH their home......
  • Shell Noyesabout 12 years ago Campton NH
    There's no need to be rapacious about energy production, transmission and consumption. This project promotes all 3 of the above. The better solutions that exist, should be explored and encouraged.
  • Carol Hendeeabout 12 years ago chichester NH
    The White Mts are beautiful-keep them as they are-burying the lines is doable
  • Roxanne Buschabout 12 years ago Sugar Hill NH
    To preserve the N.H. that I worked so hard to get to. Bury the lines or kill our economy for a private enterprise that only sees us as in the way of their corporate profit.
  • Marti Faulknerabout 12 years ago Dalton NH
    The preservation of the beauty of NH is our responsibility for generations to come.
  • Jeff Carterabout 12 years ago Sugar Hill NH
    I love the beauty of New Hampshire, which is why I purchased a vacation home here. Trashing the forests for this project is unnecessary
  • David Robyabout 12 years ago Lyme NH
    Power is important, of course, but there's no need to sacrifice our natural heritage to accommodate it. Let's bury the power lines and then we can have both.
  • Barbara Helmstetterabout 12 years ago Epping NH
    Our forests are treasures of NH. I don’t want them defaced by electrical towers.
  • cecilia aufieroabout 12 years ago enfield NH
    Why spoil something that is so rare and NH's truly Natural Resource. There are no benefits to NH from this over taking of the land.
  • Winifred Taylorabout 12 years ago Golden CO
    Because my heart is there, our old family home is in Franconia, We still cry about the Old Man.My ancestor Phillip Wheelock Ayres helped form tthe Society through its' infancy.
  • Leif Martinsonabout 12 years ago Northfield NH
    Thomas Edison saw the benefits of buried lines in the 1890's. It's the 21st century !!! Bury them, please.
  • Karen Wundermanabout 12 years ago Cranbury NJ
    I own houses in Franconia and Holderness and plan to retire to NH. Northern Pass will destroy NH's beauty, ecosystems, and tourism--forever. Please bury the lines or just say NO.
  • Julie Moranabout 12 years ago Colebrook NH
    We MUST preserve what we have so that those who have lost their wild areas to "development" can experience the wild areas still left.
  • peta brennanabout 12 years ago goshen NH
    Why destroy the scenery when it is that scenery that brings tourism to this state every year. If they are allowed to proceed w/o burying their lines it will be very a short sighted decision.
  • Stacie Winsorabout 12 years ago Rumney NH
    I want to preserve the beauty of NH
  • Greg McLeodabout 12 years ago Contoocook NH
    Sacrificing NH's beauty and natural resources for corporate profit is unacceptable.

Pages