The Northern Pass Project

A proposal to build construct a major powerline through New Hampshire’s north country has led to a vigorous discussion about the region’s electric supply and distribution. The 180-mile utility line would carry electricity from Hydro Quebec to southern NH, MA and CT. The project is proposed by Northern Pass, an LLC owned by Northeast Utilities which believes it can offer the electricity on the grid at a competitive price. New Hampshire is presently uses less electricity than it generates. However, consumption is increasing and there are times in the summer when electric demand in the whole northeast grid approaches peak capacity.

The power line would require towers 90-135 feet tall. The proposed preferred route would run on existing right of way, including 10 miles through the White Mountain National Forest. An alternate route has been identified that would avoid the National Forest. This route would require the acquisition of about 50 miles of new right of way and include portions of Haverhill, Piermont and Orford. Emily Bryant, who serves on the Orford Conservation commission and makes maps professionally (Stonehouse Mtn Mapping), donated a map that shows the proposed alternate route and nearby conservation lands.

A critical step in the potential development will be an impact analysis conducted for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), which must approve the proposal. DOE has been conducting public hearings to solicit guidance regarding the “scope” of the impact analysis – the issues that will be examined. Written testimony on scoping will be accepted until April 12. At the same time, the NH legislature is considering a bill which would make it less likely that right-of-ways along the route could be acquired by eminent domain.
We believe the proposed route through Haverhill, Piermont and Orford poses risk to conservation resources and community health. We have submitted written testimony to DOE detailing our concerns about potential impacts on the conservation and stewardship of wildlife habitat, water resources, and visual and recreational resources as well as the economic consequences of those impacts. Please read this letter written by UVLT’s President, Jeanie McIntyre to the U.S. Department of Energy for a full description of our concerns and scoping requests.

What you can do:

  • Learn more about the steps in the review process and the opportunities for public comment by reading this document put together by the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests.
  • Speak up. You can submit your own comments before April 12 by visiting the Department of Energy’s website.
  • Reduce the peak. As consumers of electricity, we all shape projections of demand and peak load. “The Home Energy Diet: How to Save Money by Making Your House Energy-Smart” is a good conservation guide. Join your town’s energy committee or help form one.
  • Participate in the ongoing dialogue about the region’s energy future. Visit SERG’s website to learn more.

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Maple Open House Weekend – March 19 & 20

It’s that sweet time of year again! The days are getting longer, the snow is melting and the birds are singing, but best of all if you have a sweet tooth – the sap is running.

Sugar makers from across the region are busy boiling away. It’s hard work – did you know it takes 40 gallons of sap to make just one gallon of syrup? That makes it almost like liquid gold; well pretty darn precious at the very least…

Howard Hatch in his 1896 sugarhouse in Bradford.

This weekend, some sugar makers are inviting the public to visit their sugarhouses to watch this good stuff in the making. In Vermont, visit: http://www.vermontmaple.org/open-house-weekend.php and in New Hampshire visit: http://www.nhmapleproducers.com/weekend2011.html to find an open house near you!

Some maple syrup operations on UVLT-conserved land include:

Where in the Upper Valley do you get your maple syrup?

UVLT’s Photo Display Moves to the Lebanon Co-op Food Store

Upper Valley Land Trust Trustee, Anne Peyton and I just finished hanging the photo display in the Lebanon Co-op Cafe Gallery this morning. We hope you’ll stop by sometime during the next month to view it.

Please join us at 5:30pm on Friday, March 11th for a reception at the Co-op’s Cafe Gallery! We’ll celebrate the photo display and the land conservation work it depicts with refreshments and friends. Hope to see you there!

One of the descriptions from the photo display seemed particularly fitting for today’s weather:

Sleepers Meadow, Newbury, VT

“Those who can’t stand the sight of March simply go away and return when the grass is green. But there are those strange Vermonters who, as the years go by, develop an affection for this cussed month.

“Louise Dickinson once wrote that her grandmother said she must wash the dishes till she enjoyed doing them. And that is so with March. We endure the month till we learn to love it. We stand outside and sniff the air like hounds, ignoring the ugly nakedness of the old earth-body sticking out of its ragged snow blanket and the torn plastic windows flapping in a biting wind, and we say, ‘Isn’t it lovely – it smells like Spring.’”

~ Isabel Whitney