Monday, September 28, 2015

Stop NH The Pipeline Newsletter



STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS

FERC at FRANKLIN PIERCE COLLEGE - Tuesday, September 29th
Help us FLOOD THE CAMPUS. Yes, it’s that important!

* Everyone attending:  bring a flashlight with fresh batteries. *

WANT TO MAKE WEDNESDAY MORNING'S NEWS???
You cannot stop a pipeline by watching others take action. Get a babysitter or bring the kids. Bring sleeping bags for them to sleep in the car. Take turns with them. You can't afford to sit this one out.

Be present or be silent as their pipeline rips through our towns, raising our electric rates, making US pay for THEIR pipe for EXPORT. 

Are you a student? Please contact Stephanie Scherr to join ECHO Action's campaign for renewables in New Hampshire!

EVENT DETAILS
 
 

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Not much about planned pipeline makes good sense

Trying to stop a pipeline, one might say, is like trying to stop a tropical storm. You know it’s coming, and you can try and get ready for it. Of course the thing coming this way is trouble, right from the get-go. The fact that Kinder Morgan wants to send it through wetlands, and such fragile spaces, shows the desperation of the very notion.
Propane, a byproduct of natural gas processing, is in and of itself relatively clean; however, the method of capture of this gas is not. This gas comes right from the fracking fields, where the pollution and water waste are rampant.
But, of course, the oil barons know their days are numbered, and, are rushing their plans into production. It’s not because they have an endless supply of gas, that is for sure.
But what we have here, is just what they need out West.
A pipeline for water is what they want, right from our pristine aquifers to their thirsty deserts.
Seriously, though, the pipeline should not cross the Connecticut River, but remain somewhere along the Route 91 corridor, where there already is industry.
What about going along the rail corridor right up to Vernon, Vt., and re-animating the one-time nuclear power plant there to run on propane?
Hell, all the wires are still there. Of course there’s probably some reason why that wouldn’t work.
If Kinder Morgan somehow gets to play the eminent domain card, then we will probably be out of luck.
Best chance then, would be if the price of oil dropped so low as to make the whole pipeline project unfeasible economically.
Of course all the usual ways to save energy come into play. The bicycle-riding-skateboarder of tomorrow may find he can get a bit farther with wind and solar power than we have.
There’s more than one way to use the sun to give us power, especially now, with our thin ozone layer and hotter seasons.
As more and more people find ways to get further on less, as always, the need for fossil fuels will diminish.
As we learn more about the nature of electricity, superconductivity, we will get more out of a BTU.
Solar steam and solar batch systems, which provide 24-hour electricity from the sun, are the next generation.
It is likely there will be less call for the other fuels.
Also, as the cleaner burning engines of tomorrow are perfected, we will find that petroleum is best left in its original state, as a lubricant for the tectonic plates.
Whatever the reason, this pipeline business is a real non-starter, if you ask me.
Instead of providing local jobs, like a more sustainable energy picture, most of these pipeline jobs will not go to local company workers but more likely to some subsidiary of the bigger conglomerate.
Better to cover our mountaintops with small-footprint wind farms and solar panel every rooftop than to run a dangerous pipeline through pristine wetlands.
Of course every solution has its problems.
No matter what, in the spirit of progress, you can be sure that when the new technology comes in the old will be abandoned.
After that, we will be left with a brownfield, desecrated, and ruined, for some temporary gain, while greedy capitalists reap a fortune at the expense of someone else. Again.
Our leaders should look long and hard into a mirror and ask themselves a simple question: What kind of world will we leave for the next generations?


Marcus McCarroll

Keene

Cheshire County government on cusp of joining pipeline debate

By Meghan Foley Sentinel Staff
 
Five area towns have been fighting the battle against the proposed Northeast Energy Direct pipeline project for months. Now the Cheshire County government is on the cusp of joining them.
That is, if county officials want to.
Officials from Fitzwilliam, Richmond, Rindge, Troy and Winchester plan to submit a letter asking commissioners and delegation members to vote to take a position against the project, and write a letter conveying that stance to the governor and New Hampshire’s Congressional representatives.
The decision to write a letter came during a meeting involving town officials from Fitzwilliam, Swanzey, Troy and Winchester and county commissioners Friday afternoon in Keene. Representatives from the Southwest Region Planning Commission were also present. County commissioners called the meeting, saying they wanted to discuss the project and ways they may be able help, even though what they can do is limited.
Fitzwilliam Selectman Susan S. Silverman volunteered her board to take the lead in drafting the document when it meets Monday. She said the letter could then be sent to other towns — including those with no officials present at the meeting — to sign.
“At this point, I think what we’d ask the county commissioners to do, and I also hope the county delegation, is to write the preferably strongly-worked letter to the governor and our congressional representatives saying they’ve examined all the issues and don’t think this is right for New Hampshire,” Troy Selectman William T. “Tom” Matson said.
The delegation comprises the county’s 23 state representatives.
Officials and residents in Matson’s town and others along the pipeline’s projected route have been submitting comments to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, he said, but with more than 6,000 already submitted, he is concerned about how much weight is being given to them.
“Our fear is this is going to be a railroaded process,” he said.
FERC’s five-member board will decided whether the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline wins federal approval.
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. LLC, a Kinder Morgan company, is proposing to build a pipeline carrying natural gas from shale gas fields in Pennsylvania through upstate New York, part of northern Massachusetts and into southern New Hampshire before going to a distribution hub in eastern Massachusetts.
The Northeast Energy Direct pipeline would cross 71 miles of southern New Hampshire, including Fitzwilliam, Richmond, Rindge, Troy and Winchester.
Liberty Utilities, which is interested in buying natural gas from the pipeline for its customers, is considering building a line to branch off the pipeline to supply fuel to customers in the Keene area. It’s likely that branch would have to come through Swanzey to get to Keene.
“There has been a lot of activity relative to the pipeline,” Stillman Rogers, chairman of the county commission, said. “The thing that has struck me is we’re going to need to plan for what happens in our towns, if this thing happens.”
That includes having ordinances that would pertain to pipeline development in place sooner rather than later, participating in public meetings and hearings, and submitting written comments when there is an opportunity to do so, he said.
It’s also important that residents and officials push state and federal legislators to come up with laws about the process of decommissioning a natural gas pipeline when it is no longer in use, and who would be responsible for paying for it, he said.
“What happens when pipelines are no longer useful, they get abandoned in place,” he said. “We don’t want towns in the state of New Hampshire to have to pay to rip out 30 miles of pipeline in this county, and pay to do all the soil work and testing because it’s going to be required.”
Silverman said several New Hampshire towns along the proposed pipeline route are members of a municipal pipeline coalition that meets every two weeks.
One of the topics that has been discussed is how Portland Natural Gas Transmission System in Maine is proposing a project that would expand a pipeline built in 1999, she said.
Her husband, Terry, who is chairman of the Fitzwilliam Planning Board, said the pipeline travels 300 miles through the states of Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts, and connects to TransCanada’s system at the border. That project, as well as another pipeline expansion project being proposed along an existing line, could be alternatives to the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline, he said.
“It’s a bigger picture,” Susan Silverman said. “There is a better alternative out there than NED.”
Matson said among the many frustrations associated with the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline project has been that people living in the towns where the pipeline is proposed to pass through are being treated like “ignorant hillbillies.”
“This whole process has disregarded this end of the state,” he said.
He believes that is because elected officials don’t believe this area has the same amount of voters that they’d get from communities such as Manchester, Concord, Merrimack and Nashua, he said.
In addition, many government officials seem to be suspicious of information being presented by people with the pipeline awareness coalitions, and officials are treating them as if they don’t know what they’re talking about, he said.
“I have a conservation commission with two Ph.D.s on it. Is their information valid? I bet it is,” he said. “We’re looking for validation for the work we’re doing as committees and citizens. Government bodies need to recognize that we’re doing a good job and our information is correct.”
Silverman agreed, adding that when she and representatives from other towns along the proposed pipeline route met with Gov. Maggie Hassan, they were disappointed because they felt Hassan wasn’t listening to them, and was more concerned about the state possibly losing businesses if the pipeline wasn’t built.
“The take-away I had was that she was willing to throw away 15 towns so the roughly 20 businesses she mentioned could stay in the state,” Silverman said.

Friday, September 25, 2015

STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS

                                                                              



PLEASE CALL NOW & SHARE!

Our Elected officials called for us to be heard. After the FERC presentation and elected officials speak, there will not be enough time for the public to speak and hear others speak. Remind them that we told them to go to the Cheshire Fairgrounds and their permit was approved. They sheltered in at FPU. FPU's Rick Kohlmorgen said they are shutting down at 10 PM. Jim Earle, VP of Student of Student Affairs said FPU only booked the space until 10 PM. This is unacceptable. Call now and demand your time to be heard!

ERIC TOMASI AT FERC

GOVERNOR HASSAN

Concord, NH

CONGRESSWOMAN ANNIE KUSTER

Washington, DC 20515

Concord, NH

Nashua, NH

SENATOR JEANNE SHAHEEN

Washington, DC

Manchester, NH

Nashua, NH

SENATOR KELLY AYOTTE

Washington, DC

Manchester, NH

Nashua, NH

SENATOR ANDY SANBORN

Bedford, NH

Also call your regional state representatives!


Thursday, September 24, 2015

Winchester Pickle Festival hasn't soured after nearly two decades

By Melissa Proulx Sentinel Staff
 
WINCHESTER — In upcoming years, a dollar might be all organizers of the Winchester Pickle Festival need from the town. That’s the amount selectmen had allocated to the annual event last year, before town meeting voters approved a $3,999 boost. And now the Pickle Festival’s new organizer aims to make the event self-sustaining in the years to come.
The annual briny bash was at a crossroads earlier this year after Roberta A. Fraser, chairwoman of the board of selectmen, stepped down from her position as one of the main organizers during a Feb. 3 meeting. She had been in charge of the festival’s committee for 13 years.
“I’m a single mother of three going to school full-time and working. The festival is a lot of work, and I just can’t do it anymore,” she said during the meeting.
After Fraser made her announcement, the selectmen provided $1 of funding for the annual event. Local officials agreed to commit only to that amount until someone else stepped up to take Fraser’s place.
But Richard Horton, head of the local group Winchester Proud, said he decided to help continue the bread and butter of the event — bringing people in to see what the town and its residents have to offer.
“It’s important for our kids to have something that the community comes together for,” Horton said.
The group got the OK for the festival in March, when voters approved a warrant article to provide $4,000 in funding for the event, which is in its 17th year.
He said his goal is to make the festival self-funded — needing no financial support from the town — within the next three years.
This year is a good indication that it’s possible to do that, he said.
Organizers will raise money to fund the event through a variety of sources, according to Horton: vendor fees, sponsorship, donations and memorabilia sales.
The festival will be held in downtown Saturday starting at 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Already, Horton said he’s expecting the festival to be full of flavorful offerings. More than 50 vendors have signed up to participate in the festival, Horton said.
“Vendor-wise, we’re maxed out,” he said. “That’s one tell-tale sign of the success of the festival.”
Horton said he’s unsure how many vendors have been at other festivals, but estimates this year’s number is a little bit higher than previous ones. He said there’s also been an increase in new vendors coming to partake in the event.
Attendees will be able to enjoy live entertainment, kids’ activities, crafts and — of course — pickles.
Festival goers will also get a free pickle spear. Horton said organizers ordered 7,000 of them — nearly double the number they had last year — just to make sure they don’t run out.
“I would expect a minimum of 5,000 people this year,” he said.
Attendees come not just from the Monadnock area, but from surrounding states as well, according to Horton. This has made the festival a vital part of the town because it brings visitors who might otherwise pass through Winchester on their way to Massachusetts or Vermont, he said.
Winchester resident Gary O’Neal started the festival nearly two decades ago. When Horton asked him why he started the festival all those years ago, his answer was simple.
“He said to me, ‘Nobody else is doing it,’ “ Horton said. “He wanted something that could really showcase our talents and it seemed like the right thing to do.”
Mr. Pickle himself will be there as well, despite a minor setback.
“There was a little bit of a worry that he couldn’t find his pickle suit,” Horton said.
New Hampshire Rep. Henry A. L. Parkhurst, D-Winchester, as he’s more commonly known, has played the pickle mascot for more than 15 years. Each year, Parkhurst dusts off his green suit and puts on his matching top-hat to march through the streets.
Parkhurst, too, has said the festival’s a great way to showcase Winchester and all that is done by its residents.
“This is community support of the highest order,” he told The Sentinel at last year’s festival.
As the event continues to grow, Horton said he looks forward to seeing it spread throughout Winchester. He hopes to expand the festival beyond its footprint downtown.
“We’re bursting at the seams and I think, in the future years, you’ll see us expand and create more venues in town,” Horton said.
“It would make it kind of like an old home day.”


Tuesday, September 22, 2015

STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS

TROY • FITZWILLIAM • RICHMOND • WINCHESTER PIPELINE TEES!

 IN THIS NEWS BLAST

- Southwestern NH Pipeline Tees are coming!
- Pipeline Opposition at the NH Democratic Convention!
- TODAY: "Pipeline Procession” performance art, Pulpit Falls, Winchester, 5:00 pm
- TOMORROW: Prime Wetland Study Presentation, Fitzwilliam Town Hall, 7:00 pm
- NEXT SATURDAY: Winchester Pickle Festival, 
- COMING UP - FERC HEARING AT FPU, September 29th, 6:00 pm (more)


SOUTHWESTERN NH PIPELINE TEES ARE COMING!
Troy - Fitzwilliam - Richmond - Winchester - we have one just for us! 
Get one before the September 29th FERC hearing!

Take pride in our towns as we fight the Kinder Morgan pipeline!

* Our design is ready to roll, but we are in need of assistance in starting our order. If you are able to offer financial help, we will pay you back as our shirts sell. Remember, we do all of our work unfunded - travel, copies, banners, flyers, logos, meetings, etc. 

We are taking pre-orders and expect them to be rolled out next Saturday at the Winchester Pickle Festival (details below)! Want one? Order now! Children’s shirts and special sizes must be special ordered unless ordered in advance. Know you want one? Contact us TODAY before the order is in!

$10.00
FRONT & BACK on NEON GREEN shirts! (approximate color)

 Available on Saturday at the Winchester Pickle Festival!

Show your concern for Southwestern NH natural resources!
Get yours to wear to the FPU FERC hearing September 29th!
Pre-Orders now being taken! $10 each !
$12 for 2X
Left: Front - Right: Back

* Sponsors still needed to assist in purchasing shirts. We want to say NO PIPELINE, but with a positive message that there ARE ALTERNATIVES, and that we want to protect OUR TOWNS! Join us in saying SUNSHINE, NO PIPELINES!
                                                 FRONT
                                                 BACK

Thursday, September 17, 2015

STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS

GET UP, GET OUT, AND HELP STOP THE PIPELINE this Saturday!

HUGE VISIBILITY AND NATIONAL MEDIA PRESENCE!
PEACEFUL, POSITIVE, HIGH-ENERGY CLIMATE RALLY!

MESSAGING SUGGESTIONS
- Stop Kinder Morgan "Northeast Export Direct"(NED) Pipeline
- Stop Spectra Pipeline
- Stop Constitution Pipeline
- No New Pipeline Infrastructure Anywhere
- KM Pipeline = Increased Utility Rates to Pay for Export Pipe
- NH Renewables NOW
- Divest NH, Divest the Nation
- President Obama or Bernie Sanders carbon reduction quotes
- Green Energy + Green Economy = Green Jobs
- Nearly 6,000 FERC Comments --> #1 is NH Renewable Energy Now!
- No Eminent Domain For Corporate Gain
- WALK the Environmental TALK
- Shut Down FERC
- Stop Corporate Corruption
- Direct messages to NH elected officials
* Keep messaging appropriate.

PEACEFUL, RESPECTFUL, ORDERLY
- High energy, but peaceful.
- Sidewalks, public areas.
- Share the message that THE FOSSIL FUEL AGE IS OVER.

PIPELINE & ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS
- Organized groups encouraged.
- Plan, carpool, review expectations in advance.
- Reminders that this is a peaceful event. You are responsible for your behavior and that of your group.

TRASH - WALK THE TALK!
- Carry In / Carry Out
- Pick up after yourself and recycle! Reusables preferred.
- Take Back The Tap! No throw away containers please.
- Skip the plastic baggies and single use bottles! No glass.

INFORMATION
Group organizers please contact ECHO Action.

Thank you.
 
 

Thursday, September 10, 2015

THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND…the Milford Labor Day Parade.


It was a busy holiday weekend with a BIG EVENT for the pipeline resistance
 





 

STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS




THIS JUST "LEAKED". OH, NO, IT WASN'T A PIPE THIS TIME.

JUST IN CASE YOU FELT LIKE CARRYING A SIGN TOMORROW...

KINDER MORGAN TO SIGN AGREEMENT WITH THE NEW HAMPSHIRE BUILDING TRADES TO WORK ON NORTHEAST DIRECT PROJECT

1. This is created news, not actual news.
2. Keep pushing pipeline peeps, KM is feeling the need to justify their existence and now trying to gain support for temp jobs in NH.
3. Who has a press conference to announce they'll give work to residents?
4. How many southerners will now be taking residence in NH?
 
SEPTEMBER 10TH - CONCORD
The New Hampshire Building and Construction Trades Council (NHBCTC) will sign a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with Kinder Morgan for work on the company’s proposed Northeast Energy Direct (NED) underground natural gas pipeline. The signing will include members of the NHBCTC as well as representatives from Kinder Morgan.  The MOA states that Kinder Morgan and all of its construction contractors will use union labor at all pipeline construction sites in New Hampshire, and negotiate a project labor agreement (PLA) for work on the project. This project means the creation of hundreds of local construction jobs and is expected to also reduce the cost of living and doing business in New Hampshire. 
 
The media and members of the public are invited to attend this event. 
- "Invited"? As in "BRING YOUR SIGNS"???
 
LOCATION - In view of Governor Hassan's office?
Signing event will take place at IBEW Local 490, 48 Airport Rd, Concord.
 
TIMING - Middle of the work day...
Thursday, September 10th, 2015 at 11:00 AM
 
 
 

WHAT HAVE YOU DONE TO FIGHT THE PIPELINE TODAY?

TOMORROW
Kinder Morgan Open House, 6:00-8:00
Fitzwilliam VFW Hall, Route 12 at the Eversource substation entrance.

- Bring your notebook. Ask questions, write down the answers you receive.
- Have a friend video answers if possible.
- Gather materials. 
- Contact STOP THE NH PIPELINE: Fitz/Troy/Rich/Win afterwards for TRUTH TALK as a follow up to what you receive at the event.


* DIRECTIONS FROM TROY, RINDGE, RICHMOND/WINCHESTER *
DIRECTIONS FROM TROY:
- Follow Route 12 and pass the sign entering Fitzwilliam on the right side (pipeline sign below it).
- You will see a large wetland on the left and the electrical substation.
- The VFW is up on the hill at the same entrance as the substation.
DIRECTIONS FROM RICHMOND & WINCHESTER:
- Follow 119 into Fitzwilliam.
- Continue through town passing the Town Hall and the large fountain on the common on your right.
- Stay on 119 as it goes through town and makes a right after the common.
- Blinking light at the corner of 119 & 12. The Flip Side Grille on right & Mr. Mike's diagonally to your left.
- Make a left onto Route 12 heading north towards Keene.
- The VFW is up on the hill on the right side about 1/2 mile down.
- When you see the UTILITY SUBSTATION ON YOUR RIGHT, that's the entrance to the VFW.
DIRECTIONS FROM RINDGE:
- Follow 119 into Fitzwilliam.
- Blinking light at the corner of 119 & 12. The Flip Side Grille diagonally on left & Mr. Mike's on your right.
- Make a right onto Route 12 heading north towards Keene.
- The VFW is up on the hill on the right side about 1/2 mile down.
- When you see the UTILITY SUBSTATION ON YOUR RIGHT, that's the entrance to the VFW.

EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Winchester Pipeline Vigil
4:30 PM at the Winchester Town Hall
Corner of Route 119 and Route 10

EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT
Northfield Pipeline Vigil
4:30 PM at Gulf Road
Northfield, MA

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26TH
Winchester Pickle Festival
Pipeline Booth and Information - Volunteers needed
Please wear your pipeline opposition shirts and help us have a strong presence for Richmond & Winchester!

WANTED! PIPELINE PEEPS TO ADOPT A NH FALL FAIR OR FESTIVAL!
Want to fight the pipeline? We need people to spread the word throughout the state! The only way to fight this is with INFORMATION. You don’t need to have all the answers. We will supply you and your group with information, flyers, banners, etc. Please help!
 
 

Sunday, September 6, 2015

STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS

HAVE YOU SIGNED THE STOP NED PETITION YET?

You meant to get around to it, but life being what it is, maybe you still havent. If you haven’t signed online or at a pipeline event, rally or fair, please, sign the petition for Governor Hassan! Every signature counts! The combined number between online and paper petitions is creeping near 10,000 signatures. Let’s help get it there! Thanks and have a great weekend!



Pipeline meeting scheduled in Rindge, comment period extended to October

Sentinel Staff


RINDGE — A federal agency has scheduled a meeting in Cheshire County for people to comment about a proposed natural gas pipeline.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission will hold a “scoping” meeting about the Northeast Energy Direct project on Tuesday, Sept. 29, at 6 p.m. at the Franklin Pierce University Fieldhouse in Rindge, agency officials announced Thursday afternoon. The meeting is intended for the federal agency to gather public comments, including any concerns people have about potential adverse effects on the environment.
In addition, the time period for people to submit written comments about the proposal has been extended to Oct. 16. The original deadline had been Aug. 31.
Written comments about the project can be submitted through the “documents and filings” section of the FERC website at www.ferc.gov.
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. LLC, a Kinder Morgan company, is proposing to build a pipeline carrying natural gas from shale gas fields in Pennsylvania through upstate New York, part of northern Massachusetts and into southern New Hampshire before going to a distribution hub in eastern Massachusetts.
The Northeast Energy Direct pipeline would cross 71 miles of southern New Hampshire, including the Monadnock Region towns of Fitzwilliam, Richmond, Rindge, Troy and Winchester.
Liberty Utilities, which is interested in buying natural gas from the pipeline for its customers, is considering building a line branching off the pipeline to supply fuel to the Keene area.
FERC officials have been holding meetings throughout the summer in all the states along the pipeline’s proposed route.
Originally, agency officials had scheduled two meetings in New Hampshire, in Milford and Nashua. The Cheshire County session comes following pressure from Gov. Maggie Hassan and the public to add meetings on the project.
It also comes the day after U.S. Rep. Ann M. Kuster, D-N.H, submitted letters to FERC and Kinder Morgan outlining concerns she shares with her constituents about the project.
“Many of my constituents have raised questions about the (Northeast Energy Direct) project’s impact on environmentally sensitive areas, public health and emergency preparedness plans,” Kuster wrote in the letter to Kinder Morgan officials. “I request that Kinder Morgan fully analyzes the specific concerns outlined in this letter during the decision making process.”
Kuster represents the state’s 2nd Congressional District, which includes a number of towns along the proposed pipeline route in Cheshire and Hillsborough counties.
The commission has the power to decide whether to grant federal approval for the project.
Separate from the FERC meetings, Kinder Morgan has scheduled five open houses this month to provide information to people about the project.
One of those meetings will be held in Fitzwilliam on Sept. 10 at 6 p.m. at the VFW on Route 12.
The other open houses will be held on Sept. 9 at Mascenic High School in New Ipswich, Sept. 15 at the Hampshire Hills Sports & Fitness Club in Milford, Sept. 16 at Rockingham Park in Salem, and Sept. 17 at the Merrimack American Legion.
The meeting announcement for Cheshire County comes after FERC officials originally submitted an event permit application to the town of Swanzey seeking approval to hold the meeting at the former Cheshire Ice Arena at the Cheshire Fairgrounds in early September. Selectmen approved the permit.
However, FERC officials decided to reschedule the meeting because of a concern that the date would not provide the public enough advance notice to prepare for the meeting, spokeswoman Tamara Young-Allen said last month.
She said Thursday that staff with the federal agency try to find meeting venues that are available, easily accessible and large enough to accommodate in excess of 700 to 800 people.
“The Franklin Pierce University Fieldhouse fits that bill,” she said.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

* STOP THE NH PIPELINE NEWS *

STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS


KINDER MORGAN OPEN HOUSE: Fitzwilliam, NH
September 10, 2015
VFW / American Legion Hall, Route 12
6:00-8:00 PM

ALL REGIONAL OPEN HOUSES

Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company, L.L.C. (“Tennessee”) is scheduled to hold additional public open houses for the proposed Northeast Energy Direct Project in New Hampshire. Please find the details of these five upcoming open houses below.

September 9, 2015: New Ipswich, NH
Mascenic High School; 175 Turnpike Rd, New Ipswich , NH

September 10, 2015: Fitzwilliam, NH
Fitzwilliam VFW; NH-12, Fitzwilliam, NH

September 15, 2015: Milford, NH
Hampshire Hills; 50 Emerson Rd, Milford,NH

September 16, 2015: Salem, NH
Rockingham Park; 79 Rockingham Park Blv, Salem, NH

September 17, 2015 : Merrimack, NH
Merrimack American Legion; 43 Baboosic Lake Rd, Merrimack, NH

All open houses are from 6pm-8pm. Light buffet will be served. Landowners will receive notification of the open houses via mail and ads will be placed in local newspapers to inform the general public.


CHESHIRE COUNTY FERC SCOPING HEARING
Tuesday, September 29, 2015, 6:00 PM
FRANKLIN PIERCE UNIVERSITY FIELD HOUSE



 About 15 people showed up for the Winchester vigil at the corner of Routes 119 and 10 last night and that the weekly vigils at 4:30 on Wednesday nights will continue. All are invited to participate or to come by and ask questions!