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

  • Peng-Khuan Chong
    11 yearsPlymouth NH
  • Ed Chernosky
    11 yearsTownsend MA
  • Christine Kuhn
    11 yearsMiddleton MA
  • Matt Daughdrill
    11 yearsCampton NH
  • Jane Heinstrom
    11 yearsMeredith NH
  • Christopher Williams
    11 yearsMeredith NH
  • James Meryman
    11 yearsHolderness NH
  • Kristen Adams
    11 yearsBoston MA
  • Laura Mammarelli
    11 yearsHolderness NH
  • Sara Norris
    11 yearsEllsworth NH
  • Mae Williams
    11 yearsCenter Harbor NH
  • Joshua Taillon
    11 yearsWashington MD
  • Matthew Banik
    11 yearsPlainville MA
  • Sandra Lehner
    11 yearsHolderness NH
  • Raina Chong
    11 yearsWashington DC
  • Stacey G. Yap
    11 yearsHolderness NH
  • Carl Lehner
    11 yearsHolderness NH
  • todd dunphy
    11 yearshokderness NH
  • Andrea Sweet
    11 yearsExeter NH
  • Keith Bance
    11 yearsNorth Wales PA
  • Angelika Evans
    11 yearsWestwood MA
  • Douglas Frazier
    11 yearsYork ME
  • Robert Blaisdell
    11 yearsDerry NH
  • wesley white
    11 yearswoburn MA
  • Joseph Joseph Polansky
    11 yearsScranton PA
  • Brenda Boda
    11 yearsSalisbury NH
  • Margaret Cain
    11 yearsBrookline MA
  • Joanne Schiding
    11 yearsBerlin MA
  • Michele Charles
    11 yearsbraintree MA
  • Margaret Mould-Cooney
    11 yearsForty Fort PA
  • Laura Foley
    11 yearsGranville MA
  • peter Hanuschak
    11 yearsDana Point CA
  • douglas fink
    11 yearscentral islip NY
  • Timothy Burrows
    11 yearsNew York NY
  • cathe denz-polonsky
    11 years03110 NH
  • Lee Snyder
    11 yearsMedford NJ
  • Susan Orzeck
    11 yearsWestport MA
  • Theodore Petro
    11 yearsManchester NH
  • Kathi Smith
    11 yearsCenter Harbor NH
  • Alan Roux
    11 yearsPrinceton MA
  • Carina Park
    11 yearsCampton NH
  • Sally Baldwin
    11 yearsShelburne NH
  • Anne Elton
    11 yearsHaverstraw NY
  • Jon Walsh
    11 yearsBrookline MA
  • Brian MacIlvain
    11 yearsWeston MA
  • Daniel Ryan
    11 yearsEaston NH
  • Ellen Setser
    11 yearsArlington MA
  • Kevin Forrin
    11 yearsMiddleton NH
  • kate emery
    11 yearswhitfield NH
  • Kristen Nau
    11 yearsWaterville Valley NH
  • Tadd Bailey
    11 yearsTwin Mountain NH
  • Al Millstein
    11 yearsRoyal Oak MI
  • Matthew Witham
    11 yearsDover NH
  • Jerralyn Welch
    11 yearsHolderness NH
  • Yvonne Lavallee
    11 yearsBell FL
  • MaryAnna Foskett
    11 yearsArlington MA
  • Alisha Adams
    11 yearsHenniker NH
  • Preston Lawrance
    11 yearsLoudon NH
  • Ella Everett
    11 yearsAuburn ME
  • Lorraine Porter
    11 yearsCrawfordville FL
  • Mike Russo
    11 yearsNottingham NH
  • Jo Beth Dudley
    11 yearsDalton NH

Pages

Sign here:

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

Why is this important?

  • James Cunninghamabout 11 years ago Newton NJ
    I have seen how the power lines have effected the Delaware National Park in NJ. What used to be beautiful views of the surrounding hills is ruined by the new power lines that are carved into the hills. Please don't let this happen in NH.
  • Alicia Jacobsabout 11 years ago Hooksett NH
    The NH outdoors has influenced my philosophy on life, as it has for people for hundreds of years. So much history- our mountains and our forests have been a place of peace, hard work, leisure, and everything in between.
  • Fred Bruneyabout 11 years ago Bayfield WI
    I am moving to New Hampshire because the citizens of this state do care about the health and beauty of their forests. The towers are an assault on all that nature has left for us to protect.
  • Stephen Kirkpatrickabout 11 years ago Lancaster NH
    Do not degrade the economy of northern New Hampshire for the benefit of southern New England.
  • Deborah Dineenabout 11 years ago Jefferson NH
    To preserve and protect the White Mountain National Forest's unbelievable beauty.
  • Joanne Melleabout 11 years ago Gilmanton Iron Works NH
    New Hampshire is beautiful, the Northern Pass lines would mar the natural beauty of our state. Bury the lines.
  • Pam Teixeiraabout 11 years ago Center Conway NH
    I moved to NH for it's natural and preserved beauty and do not want to see a foreign, private company use our land as a pathway to deliver energy to sources outside of NH. Preserve the White Mountain National Forest!
  • Erik Hanrahanabout 12 years ago Center Conway NH
    Maggie, please don't let a multi-billion dollar foreign company influence your decision. You were elected by the people of NH and NOT by board members from Hydro-Quebec. Don't make it about money, do the right thing and protect our natural resources.
  • matt charbonneau about 12 years ago nashua NH
    My wife's family owns property here. This is very important for the living and future of this environment to keep these huge posts and ugly wires buried.
  • lianne russo about 12 years ago nashua NH
    My family owns a condo at mountain river east. To keep up with the NH look and health as well as the beautiful views we now have this is something we all hope to keep.
  • Kurt Morgensternabout 12 years ago Derry NH
    The white mountains are one of NH last natural jewels. Bury the lines and minimize cutting. Greed and profits are not the answer.
  • Lynette Emersonabout 12 years ago N. Stratford NH
    Keeping NH free and not allowing Northern Pass to continue to lie to all landowners and residents and promising the world for their own benefit. No need for NH, but greed for NP fuels the entire project.
  • Philip Campanileabout 12 years ago Thornton NH
    This installation of these large overhead towers would dimminish the natural beauty of the white mountain national forest, along with the adverse affect it would have on tourism, which this area largely depends on.
  • Giovanna Leporeabout 12 years ago Canaan NH
    We vacation in the northern part of nh because of the natural unspoiled beauty. Having spent time touring Quebec province I am shocked at the amount of transmission lines marring wilderness areas and flooding Native American territory.
  • William Meffertabout 12 years ago Allenstown NH
    Ruin the beauty of our state and property values of those near lines for the profit of a private foreign company.
  • Lisa Meffertabout 12 years ago Allenstown NH
    Towers will ruin the wonderful beauty of our state, damage the value of private landowners who are near them, possibly pose health dangers, and are allowing a private foreign company to profit of our state.
  • Donald Russoabout 12 years ago Waltham MA
    I have a condo at Mountain River East in Thornton, NH
  • Ann M Dodgeabout 12 years ago Landaff NH
    This project is not benefiting NH. The power is not being used in NH. Our state is being USED as a pathway to feed the energy consumptive homes and businesses outside of NH.
  • jennifer hatfieldabout 12 years ago Lancaster NH
    because the darn thing is supposed to go right thru my pasture on Route 2, the scenic route 2 that will no longer be a scenic route if this goes
  • Nicole Currierabout 12 years ago Hudson NH
    There are a ton of people I know who will be negatively impacted by the Northern Pass. I'd hate to see the natural beauty of New Hampshire destroyed by giant ugly power lines.
  • Jessie Currierabout 12 years ago Whitefield NH
    These towers will directly affect my family, running right through their backyards. We live in a beautiful place, one that many visit for that sole purpose. I want future generations to enjoy NH as I have, with beautiful views clear of ugly towers.
  • Thad Whithedabout 12 years ago Dalton NH
    Businesses should respect the will of the people.
  • Tara Gilesabout 12 years ago Dalton NH
    regional impact
  • Norman Dupreabout 12 years ago Thornton NH
    Underground the transmission wires. Perhaps HydroQuebec and State of NH could put up some grant money to see if the young people at our universities can come up with some solutions to lower the cost of undergrounding if that is the real sticking point.
  • Francis Cashmanabout 12 years ago Nashua NH
    Once you lose the land, you lose it forever...

Pages