Friday, October 30, 2015

Stop NH The Pipeline Newsletter



STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS

WE NEED YOU THERE. PLEASE JOIN US SATURDAY MORNING IN KEENE!
Your physical presence makes a statement.

About #KMface and the importance of protesting!  Listen to this man’s words about “showing up”!

Concerns to be voiced at Halloween-themed anti-pipeline rally in Keene This rally isn’t just about pipelines, it’s about climate change, divesting from fossil fuels and protecting our natural resources! Grab your neon T-shirt or costume, your sign, and join us!


PIPELINES ARE MORE SCARY THAN HALLOWEEN!
March & Rally in Keene, New Hampshire

Pipeline Opposition, Climate, Fossil Fuel Divestment Organizations, Farmers & Public Welcome!

9:30 AM Rise & Shine! Bring your coffee! Meet & greet! ✧
10:00 AM March leaves Ashuelot River Park *
10:30 AM Rally begins at Central Square

✧ Pipeline tees will be available for sale at Ashuelot River Park. ($10/$12)
* Those with mobility or health issues may meet us at Central Square.

ORGANIZATIONS ATTENDING
350 NH
NH Spirit
350 Action
Stop NED
ECHO Action
Post Oil Solutions
NextGen Climate NH
Safe and Green Campaign
Temple Pipeline Task Force
Monadnock Pipeline Resistance
Winchester Pipeline Awareness
Merrimack Pipeline Resistance
New Ipswich Pipeline Resistance
Stop the NH Pipeline: Monadnock Region
West Roxbury Quarry Neighbors for a Fossil Free Future

SCHOOLS REPRESENTED
Keene State College
Franklin Pierce University
University of New Hampshire
Antioch University New England





Thursday, October 29, 2015

WINchester Pipeline Awareness -- IMPORTANT MEETING !!

IMPORTANT MEETING --Select Board,Wed, Nov. 4th, 7 pm
 Liberty Utilities will be making a presentation to the Winchester Board of Selectmen in regards to their proposed spur line and about their option to provide natural gas service to a very small part of the town. All of this seems mute at this time as there is no gas pipeline for them to hook into to run a line to their facility in Keene. This is like putting the cart in front of the horse and an attempt to sway our select board into thinking this would be beneficial for the town .. IT IS NOT !

Its only been in the last few weeks that the BOS has taken a stand in response to our vote in March. You have made a difference with your calls, emails and attendance at meetings. It's important that we turn out again to reinforce opposition to NED.

 ~$5,000 to convert from oil to natural gas (if you live in the  proposed downtown area ),and why would you? - since the price of gas will rise (x 4 or 5) once NED gas gets exported to Europe!!!

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

How could they not oppose the pipeline?

What say ye?

 
N.H. Governor and A.G. OPPOSE pipeline ...
How do I know that? By simple deduction. In a recent court settlement the N.H. Supreme Court upheld a $236 million fine imposed on gas giant Exxon Mobil for contaminating thousands of ground water wells with the additive MTBE. Said Gov. Maggie Hassan: “New Hampshire’s natural resources and beauty are critical to our high quality of life and economy, a defining characteristic of what makes our state a special place to live, work and visit. Today’s decision is an example of the states vigilance in fighting against pollution that damages our environment and threaten the health of our people.”
Attorney General Joseph Foster noted separately, “This historic decision sends a clear message that New Hampshire will not permit polluters to endanger the health of its citizens and destroy it’s natural resources.”
So, based on those comments, how could our governor and attorney general NOT oppose the Kinder Morgan pipeline? They know that chemicals and massive amounts of precious water are used to extract the gas from the shale fields in Pennsylvania; that every home, family and natural resource in the pipeline corridor between Pennsylvania and Dracut, Mass., are in the incinerator zone and merely collateral damage; that a 41,000-horsepower compressor in New Ipswich will be emitting the toxins benzene, toluene, sulfuric acid and formaldehyde; that Round-Up (Agent Orange) will be used to keep the pipeline corridor free of vegetation; that the very reason tourists visit New Hampshire is to view the beautiful scenery, not wide swaths of cleared forests.
I could go on. Everything that the governor and the attorney general so beautifully expressed is why they should oppose the Kinder Morgan pipeline. How could they NOT? Add to those reasons the fact that the pipeline represents few jobs, and that the gas will be shipped to the highest bidder, not remain here for New Hampshire use.
How can the governor and the attorney general NOT oppose the pipeline? Or would they rather wait until the destruction and contamination put forth is like that of Exxon Mobil?


JEFFREY SCOTT

Spofford

Brattleboro police seek public's help in finding missing teenager

BRATTLEBORO — Police are asking for the public’s help in finding a teenager who has been missing since late last week. Opal Robinson, 15, of Brattleboro, was last heard from on Friday afternoon, according to a news release from the Brattleboro Police Department.
She remains missing as of this morning, Detective Lt. Mike Carrier said in an email.
Brattleboro police ask anyone with information on Robinson’s location to contact them at 802-257-7950 or the tip line at 802-251-8188.

Winchester police officer arrested, accused of pointing loaded gun at someone

 The old, don't ask me, pass the buck defense .. Where is Sgt. Schultz when you need him?

By Meghan Foley Sentinel Staff
 
WINCHESTER — A local police officer has been arrested and charged with criminal threatening with a deadly weapon in connection with an August incident when he allegedly pointed a loaded firearm at someone. Kevin W. Martel, 25, is expected to be arraigned in December on the felony charge, Cheshire County Attorney D. Chris McLaughlin said Monday.
He said he did not have further details about the incident.
McLaughlin said his office learned of the situation last week, and that the incident happened in Winchester. He didn’t know if Martel was on duty at the time.
As of this morning, nothing had been filed in 8th Circuit Court District Division in Keene or Cheshire County Superior Court.
N.H. State Police, who are investigating the incident, referred all questions about the case to McLaughlin’s office Monday. The Winchester Police Department also referred questions about the case to McLaughlin’s office.
McLaughlin referred questions about Martel’s employment status to the Winchester Police Department. Winchester Police referred those question to the Winchester Town Hall.
An official at Winchester Town Hall said her office didn’t have any information about Martel’s employment status or whether he’d been placed on administrative leave.
Martel has been a member of the Winchester Police Department for about a year, based on annual town reports. He could not be reached for comment.
McLaughlin said he expects the case to be prosecuted in Cheshire County, but it likely will not be handled by his office.

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Environmental rally sets record in Manchester

By MARK HAYWARD
New Hampshire Union Leader

MANCHESTER — Nearly 100 environmental activists from southern New Hampshire rallied against climate change in Manchester, setting a record for the largest climate-oriented rally in state history, organizers said.
The rally drew students from Southern New Hampshire University, Keene State College, St. Anselm College and University of New Hampshire-Manchester, as well as families from Gilsum, Weare and Manchester. Opponents to the Kinder Morgan pipeline also attended the rally, bringing a black, cylinder-shaped ballon with the words Stop the Pipeline.
The rally was organized by NextGen Climate New Hampshire.

NextGen spokesman Wyatt Ronan said the rally qualifies as the largest climate rally in New Hampshire. The approximately 95 participants topped the crowd of 60 who attended a League of Conservation Voters rally over the summer in Portsmouth, he said.
“It’s a super low bar, we understand that,” Ronan said.

NextGen also held a roundtable discussion at UNH in Durham and a candlelight vigil at Dartmouth College. NextGen said the Manchester ally is part of a national day of action to focus on a goal of achieving more than 50 percent clean energy by 2030.
The rally included brief remarks from several speakers.

Mayoral candidate Joyce Craig faulted incumbent Ted Gatsas for blocking a 1 megawatt solar project in Manchester. Craig said the project would have saved the city $1.5 million in energy bills and generated $5,000 in property tax revenues.
“The mayor put an end to that project — that’s unacceptable,” Craig said.

“Instead of Manchester being a leader in clean energy, we have our government officials actually lobbying against the project,” said Garth Corriveau, the Ward 6 alderman who is running for alderman at-large.

Buy this Image
Climate action activists display a parachute and pipeline balloon Wednesday afternoon during a rally at Pulaski Park in Manchester. (MARK HAYWARD/UNION LEADER)
In the past, Gatsas has said projected returns fell short of estimates given for previous solar projects at the city landfill. He has also said the land could be put to better use.

Other speakers included college students spoke about getting university recycling programs off the ground and problems related to environmental justice and environmental racism. The rally lasted for about a half hour.
Greg Moore, the state director of the Koch Brothers-affiliated Americans for Prosperity, said energy plans from the left will drive up the cost of energy. “It will cost us economic growth, cost us jobs, cost us wages,” he said.
But in an interview with the Union Leader, Moore would not answer questions of whether climate change is real and what is responsible for it. “We’re focused on dollars and cents,” he said. 


Stop NH The Pipeline Newsletter

STOP THE NH PIPELINE / ECHO ACTION NEWS

IN THIS EMAIL BLAST

- Hillary Clinton at Keene State College - Q&A about FERC and pipelines
* Transcribed
* Clip regarding FERC & NED pipeline
* Full Town Hall at KSC including question about fracking at 39 minutes in, followed by NED & FERC
- WMUR plugs Hillary’s response to pipeline question at Town Hall at KSC
- Pipeline opposition attends climate rally in Manchester (Union Leader story & photos)
- “Pipelines Are Scarier Than Halloween”, Oct 31st march, rally, flash mob dance in Keene! Plan to be there!
- Pipeline opposition at the Winchester Pickle Festival
- Pipeline opposition at the Milford Pumpkin Festival
- Pipeline opposition at the Nashua Harvest Parade
- Governor Hassan and the Executive Council in Mason on Monday
- Pipeline Information Pop-In at the Fitzwilliam Library Wednesday night


THE PIPELINE OPPOSITION HAS BEEN BUSY! 

We need you for support. Please come out, get involved!  Your next big opportunity is on Halloween! It’s difficult to to convince elected officials that people don’t approve of the pipeline when few people show up at rallies. Making your presence known is important. We know you’re busy. We are too. It’s a choice to make the time to be present. Speak now, or forever wish you had! Come on out and join us - I promise you’ll meet nice people and have fun!!!
  

 


Hillary Clinton Town Hall at Keene State College, 10/16/15
Question regarding FERC regulations and pipelines (transcribed).





 
March • Rally • Flash Mob Dance and some surprises too!

* Come do the FERC & Kinder Morgan Monster Smash! *

- Thoughtful signs (cannot go in the ground)
- You may bring wrapped treats and informational handouts
- All pipeline towns welcome and encouraged to attend
- Positive, peaceful protest/vigil
- Costumes encouraged!
- Want to do something about the pipeline? Please come out in numbers at 10:00 am to support this rally!!!

PLEASE RSVP if you have decorated vehicles, floats, or other fun visuals! Keep it safe and friendly!
Keene, Swanzey and Jaffrey have just been added to the proposed pipeline impact towns. Let's draw them in!
* PLEASE SHARE! *
 
 

Citizens can't rely on state laws for protection

Citizens in New Hampshire have been mobilizing to oppose certain large, corporate industrial projects such as Northern Pass or the Kinder Morgan pipeline that threaten the New Hampshire way of life. They are attending meetings and hearings because they believe that the environment will be harmed or that the health, safety and welfare of their families and neighbors are endangered. Many residents believe that once their voices have been heard, the regulators will order major changes to the proposed project or prevent it from being built. Unfortunately, their reliance on the current regulatory scheme is misplaced, because federal, state and local laws cannot be relied upon to accomplish either of these goals. The proposed industrial project will go forward unless the corporation decides, for its own reasons, to postpone or abandon it. Why? Because the regulatory process regulates only how the project proceeds, not if it will proceed.
Throughout the United States, large commercial energy, transportation and building projects are regulated by a host of government agencies, such as the EPA, DOE and BLM. Once the public hearings have been held and the federal rules and regulations (usually fashioned by the industry involved) have been satisfied, the project must be allowed to proceed under federal law. Citizens can’t rely on state laws for protection, because, under the doctrine of preemption, federal law takes precedence over state law.
Similarly, at the state level, where projects are overseen by a myriad of state agencies such as the DES or DRED, the project must be allowed once the corporation meets the required laws and regulations. Local laws are also thwarted. Under “Dillon’s Rule,” because the state allows the municipalities to exist, the state should determine what laws municipalities may enforce. If the municipal law isn’t subject to Dillon’s Rule, it will likely be preempted if the state has already acted. A notable exception was when Durham was able to stop the planned Onassis oil terminal some years ago. However, in order to stop this project, those opposing the oil terminal had to mobilize the whole state to permit the community to do so.
The state allows municipalities to enforce zoning ordinances under the theory that each town can best determine how to manage the land within its bounds, although these laws may not be exclusionary in nature. However, zoning laws are but a temporary impediment to any proposed industrial project with all the necessary state and federal permits. Once all of the requirements of the ordinances are complied with, the project can (and probably will) proceed.
A former presidential candidate once uttered, “Corporations are people, my friends.” He was right. While corporations are a bundle of property rights created to shield the owners from liability, these legal entities have been given the status of “persons” under the law. Over time these artificial persons have been afforded rights under the federal and state constitutions. Corporations have successfully filed suits for damages claiming violation of their constitutional rights. The Fourteenth Amendment has been used to protect corporations claiming harm more than often than it has been used to protect the rights of natural persons. Citing their constitutional rights, large corporations have not been shy about bringing suits against those opposing them.
What can you do? Fight back. Support the New Hampshire Community Rights Network proposed amendment to the New Hampshire Constitution designed to elevate the rights of real persons over the rights of artificial persons. Visit the network at nhcommunityrights.org.
Lorraine L. Hansen
Council for Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund
LL Hansen Legal PA
P.O 1115
Portsmouth

New pumpkin festival at Cheshire Fairgrounds ready to roll out

By Susan Reing Sentinel Staff
 
NORTH SWANZEY — Jennifer Matthews is about to be bombarded with pumpkins, but she’s sitting in her newly rented office just a stone’s throw from the Cheshire Fairgrounds looking as cool as a cucumber. Matthews’ company, Memorable Events LLC, is tackling the job of putting on the first Monadnock Pumpkin Festival at the Swanzey fairgrounds Saturday, Oct. 24, and she’s determined to make it a success — and an annual event for years to come.
A professional event planner based in Westmoreland, Matthews said the idea for hosting the festival came to her as she was driving past the fairgrounds in April. The week before, the Keene City Council had denied a permit for the 2015 downtown festival following rioting in the city last October outside the annual event’s footprint.
She wondered why it couldn’t simply be moved to a better-suited location.
“Without the downtown component, it becomes a whole lot less insane,” she said.
Matthews had helped put on the 2005 Keene festival as a member of Center Stage Cheshire County, and knew the logistics it would involve. She just had to get enough people excited about the idea to get it off the ground.
They weren’t hard to find.
Past participants and businesses stepped up. Former members of Let It Shine Inc., which organized the past four Keene festivals, lent their expertise. And the region loves its pumpkins, she noted.
She’s counting on that love to bring out lots of people, all carrying carved pumpkins (and candles) to add to the festival display. Matthews isn’t out to break any records (Keene holds the Guinness record for most lit jack-o’-lanterns), but she wants and needs those pumpkins to turn the fairgrounds into acres of glowing gourds.
To that end, Memorable Events will host a free community pumpkin-carving event Thursday, Oct. 22, from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Cheshire Fairgrounds. Pumpkins will be provided; participants are asked to bring their own carving tools. The Stoddard PTO will host a bake sale for those who need a sugar boost to complete their jack-o’-lanterns.
People can drop off their pumpkins Friday, Oct. 23, from noon to 6 p.m., or just bring them on Saturday when they come for the festival.
“It’s been a great community effort, and a lot of it has been grassroots,” she said.
She’s also working with downtown Keene businesses to ensure they get to see a share of the day’s profits.
Some will offer discounts to those who display their entry bracelets from the fairgrounds. A few will have a presence on-site, directing festival-goers to offerings downtown. There will also be booths for local artists and craftspeople to promote their work.
And she’s gone out of her way to ensure that local nonprofit groups — many of which have depended on the annual pumpkin festival in Keene as their major fundraiser — get in on the action. Matthews has 25 booths set aside just for nonprofit groups, and they’ll be paying about $300 for the spaces, half the price they paid for a space downtown, she said.
Matthews has planned live music, a large tent filled with activities for kids, pumpkin carving and catapulting contests, a children’s costume parade and a fireworks display to close out the day’s events.
The costume contest has taken on a life of its own, she said, with people clamoring for “cosplay,” or costume play, where participants wear costumes and accessories to represent a specific character from manga, anime, comic books, cartoons, video games, or live-action films and television series.
There will also be “larpers,” live-action role players, who act in character, interacting with one another as part of a larger performance.
The Great Pumpkin Mile road race will benefit a new Elm City Rotary Club project, which gives away pairs of new sneakers to 2nd-graders in Cheshire County. The club also puts on the annual Clarence DeMar Marathon. Sponsors have lined up to host the “The Pumpkin Mile” and donate prizes to the winners.
In addition to the road race, there’s Fright Fest, put on by the Keene Lions Club, with proceeds from that attraction going to support the club’s community outreach programs.
Then there’s the baking contest — pumpkin pies for adults to enter for competition, pumpkin breads for kids. She’s asking each participant to make two: one to judge, the other to sell, with proceeds benefiting The Community Kitchen in Keene.
And she’s promising the pumpkins will be a very visible part of the new event. She’s not giving away too many details at this point — she wants it to be something of a surprise — but there will be zigzag scaffolding to display the entries, as well as pumpkin-laden towers and structures designed by the Keene State College architecture department.
The one thing that won’t be available at the fair is alcohol. Matthews says it’s going to be a dry event, and backpacks and coolers will be subject to search by fair security guards. Those found with alcohol in their possession will be asked to leave.
The fairgrounds, being an open space, has no occupancy limit, so the crowds are limited only by the amount of parking Matthews is able to line up.
Right now, between the fairgrounds, the nearby Dillant-Hopkins Airport and the donation of parking from Moore Nanotechnology Systems, down the road from the fairgrounds, she’s got space for about 8,000 vehicles at any given time. Cost is $10 per car, with some of the proceeds going to the Monadnock Center for Violence Prevention; the Cheshire Fair Association, which owns the fairgrounds property; and Rouleau’s Taekwondo school.
She expects some turnover — the folks who arrive at 10 a.m. aren’t likely to still be there 10 hours later when it wraps up — and she’s keeping her fingers crossed for good weather.
“But if social media is any indication, it’s going to be well-attended,” she said.

The Monadnock Pumpkin Festival will be held Saturday, Oct. 24, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. at the Cheshire Fairgrounds in Swanzey. Admission is $5, with children ages 5 and under free. Information: monadnockpumpkinfestival.org or on Facebook.

Friday, October 16, 2015

So what's this BS that natural gas heat is cheaper?

Earlier this month, the National Association of State Energy Officials hosted its 2015 Winter Energy Outlook Conference, where an official from the U.S. Energy Information Administration unveiled its projected fuel costs for the winter.
The association is a Virginia-based nonprofit organization for energy officials and serves as a resource for state energy offices.

People who heat their homes with oil are projected to save 25 percent from last winter and those who use propane are expected to save 18 percent, Howard Gruenspecht, the deputy administrator at the U.S. Energy Information Administration, said at the conference.
Homeowners using natural gas are expected to save 10 percent and those with electric heat are expected to save three percent, Gruenspecht said.

Two factors that play a role in the savings are the drop in price for fuel and a winter that’s predicted to be warmer east of the Rocky Mountains than last based on a winter forecast by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, according to Gruenspecht.
The drop in oil prices is explained by supply and demand, according to a New York Times article from last week.

Over the past six years, domestic oil production has nearly doubled, which forced out some foreign oil, the article says. Plus, Europe and developing countries’ economies are weakening, and vehicles are becoming more efficient, which drops demand, according to the article.

The price for heating oil from Cheshire Oil Company in Keene is about $2.20 per gallon. At this point last year, the price was between $3.35 and $3.49, according to owner James Robertson.
Swanzey Oil is charging $1.99 per gallon for heating oil, which is down from when it was between $2.99 and $3.10 last year, said owner Lisa Patnode.

“I think it’s definitely helped the customers,” she said. “We’re seeing a lot more people getting oil sooner. Filling up their tanks rather than sticking with the 100-gallon minimum. They’re tending to put more oil in their tanks because it is less of an expense for them.”
Patnode said she’s also heard from customers that they’re choosing to burn more oil this year because it’s cheaper than other heating sources. She also said her customer base has grown with the falling prices.
“We’ve definitely had a very good influx of customers, which is very nice to see,” she said.

Talk on health effects of natural gas compressor stations Oct. 25

(Published in print: Tuesday, October 13, 2015)
 
NORTHFIELD — Northfield Pipeline Awareness will present a talk on the health effects of gas pipeline compressor stations on Oct. 25 with Dr. Curtis Nordgaard.
The event will take place at the Northfield Trinitarian Congregational Church at 147 Main Street at 3 p.m.
Dr. Curtis Nordgaard is a resident pediatrician at Boston Children’s Hospital and Boston Medical Center. He has an interest in environmental health, and in particular, climate change and asthma, two environmental health problems facing many of today’s children.
The proposal of natural gas projects in New England challenged him to explore their potential health impacts. He’s been particularly focused on the Spectra Pipeline expansion and the health impacts from compressor station emissions in affected communities in the eastern part of the state.
Northfield and Windsor, N.H., have been targeted for large compressor stations by Kinder Morgan subsidiary Tennessee Gas Pipeline’s Northeast Energy Direct Project. Natural gas compressor stations burn methane and emit a mixture of volatile organic compounds. In general, these pollutants have been linked to heart disease, respiratory diseases, low birth weight and pre-term births.
There have been very few studies looking at local pollution and health complaints around compressor stations. The few that have been done suggest pollution levels are high enough to increase local health risks. Communities with compressor stations face multiple challenges of learning about the risks these compressor stations pose to local residents, deciding whether the risks are acceptable and determining what can be done to address them.
The talk will address what data are known about how air pollutants are distributed from compressor stations, what kinds of pollutants are released, what the health consequences are for local residents where these facilities are located, and what communities facing natural gas infrastructure development can do to prepare themselves.
There will also be discussion on how residents can get involved at the local level, and information will be available from the Northfield Pipeline Awareness group.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Company proposes expanding natural gas service to 4 local towns

A utility company is seeking to expand its natural gas distribution system to four Cheshire County towns on, or abutting, the proposed Northeast Energy Direct pipeline route. And while some view the move as an opportunity to boost the region’s economic development, it’s not sitting well with those opposed to the pipeline.
“I really think this just gives the pipeline another strong reason to come through unfortunately,” Winchester Selectmen Chairman Roberta A. Fraser said. “We are opposed to the pipeline. It’s not good news for us, but we’ll work with what we have to do.”
Liberty Utilities, which is also known in New Hampshire as EnergyNorth Natural Gas Inc., has submitted a petition to the state Public Utilities Commission asking its members to approve a gas franchise covering Jaffrey, Rindge, Swanzey and Winchester.
The approval is needed for Liberty Utilities to build, own and operate natural gas distribution systems in those towns, which now don’t have access to such systems.

Move keeps options open
 
Liberty Utilities plans to tap into the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline to provide natural gas to the four towns. But company officials say in the petition that they’re requesting the natural gas franchise rights for the communities regardless if the pipeline is built.
Liberty Utilities filed the Oct. 9 petition about a week after the Public Utilities Commission approved an agreement between Liberty Utilities and the Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. allowing Liberty to buy natural gas off the proposed Northeast Energy Direct pipeline.
William J. Clark, a business development professional for Liberty Utilities, referenced the decision in testimony to the state commission, saying that the plan is to supply the four towns with natural gas from the pipeline.
However, Liberty Utilities would look at the options of serving communities with liquefied natural gas (LNG) and compressed natural gas (CNG), if the pipeline is delayed or not built, he said.
Liberty Utilities has 1,250 customers in Keene connected to a propane-air mixture distribution system, according to its petition.
If the pipeline isn’t approved, company officials would analyze converting that Keene system to liquefied or compressed natural gas and extending it south to Swanzey and Winchester, Clark said.
Liberty Utilities “would also evaluate the possibility of serving Rindge and Jaffrey with LNG and CNG,” he said.

Signs of a Keene lateral
 
Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. LLC, a Kinder Morgan company, is proposing the 30-inch diameter transmission pipeline, which would carry natural gas from shale gas fields in Pennsylvania through upstate New York, parts of northern Massachusetts and into southern New Hampshire before going to a distribution hub in eastern Massachusetts.
The pipeline’s proposed route has it crossing about 70 miles of southern New Hampshire, including Fitzwilliam, Richmond, Rindge, Troy and Winchester, and carrying up to 2.2 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas. The amount is equivalent to providing electricity for 1.5 million households.
The pipeline is still in the pre-filing stages with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which has the power to approve or deny the project. Tennessee Gas Pipeline officials plan to file the full application for the project with FERC this fall. Company officials anticipate it will take a year for the pipeline to receive federal approval, if it does.
In its Oct. 9 petition, Liberty Utilities’ officials wrote that Jaffrey, Rindge, Swanzey and Winchester have a total of about 8,530 single- and multi-family homes. There are also commercial centers along the state highways in those towns, the petition said.
“By approving this Petition, the Commission will be creating opportunities for economic development and cost savings for both existing and new commercial and residential customers in these towns,” company officials wrote in the petition.
Liberty Utilities is a subsidiary of Algonquin Power and Utilities Corp, a company that has its headquarters in Canada and is participating in the development of the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline with Kinder Morgan.
In his testimony, Clark said the route of the distribution system for Swanzey and Winchester would start in Winchester, where Liberty Utilities’ line would connect to the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline. The system would then extend north into Swanzey and connect to Liberty Utilities’ distribution system in Keene.
That would be done by extending gas mains along Routes 10 and 12 from the Keene system, which would be converted from its current propane-air mixture to natural gas at the same time as the expansion is being done, Clark said.
What Clark described matches what Liberty Utilities’ officials have proposed as the Keene Lateral, a line that would branch off the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline to provide natural gas to Liberty Utilities’ customers in Keene.
Liberty Utilities’ officials were unavailable for comment by press time this morning.

Out of loop
 
Included with Clark’s testimony were maps of the proposed route Liberty Utilities’ natural gas distribution systems would follow in each town (see related sidebar), as well as estimated expansion costs.
The Winchester project’s estimated cost is $1.3 million.
Richard Horton, chairman of the Winchester School Board, said Liberty Utilities filing the petition for a gas franchise is “purely a way to show there is some sort of need for it.
“I can tell you from the school’s aspect, we don’t have a need for natural gas. We have a need for conserving energy, but not a need or desire for natural gas,” he said.
The school board has publicly taken a stance against the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline.
Horton added that the filing so soon after the N.H. Public Utilities Commission approved the agreement between Liberty Utilities and Tennessee Gas Pipeline — and with no notice to residents in the affected communities — is pretty consistent with how things have been happening recently with the pipeline.
Swanzey selectmen learned at Tuesday’s board meeting of Liberty Utilities’ proposal, and that company officials want to schedule public presentations in each of the four towns included in the requested gas franchise.
Selectmen Chairman Deborah J. Davis said Wednesday she hadn’t given the proposal much thought since the meeting. But board members plan to schedule Liberty Utilities for a presentation to residents, business owners and town officials.
“It has potential, maybe, but I think it’s too early to tell,” she said. “We’d have to find out more specifics.”
Liberty Utilities’ officials estimate the Swanzey expansion could cost $990,146 along Route 10, and about $1.1 million along Route 12.
Rindge Selectmen Chairman Robert Hamilton described Liberty Utilities’ proposal to expand natural gas service into Jaffrey, Rindge, Swanzey and Winchester as a “deflection of the NED pipeline.”
“I’ve read over the petition, and I have a multitude of questions,” he said.
Two, he said, are whether the town has any say in the franchise agreement, and whether Liberty Utilities is willing to dedicate its funds to providing natural gas for the entire town.
“It’s a very minuscule area of town they would be providing gas to,” he said.


 Proposed natural gas distribution routes


Liberty Utilities submitted the following proposed routes in its petition to the N.H. Public Utilities Commission to expand natural gas service to Jaffrey, Rindge, Swanzey and Winchester.
In Winchester, the system could provide natural gas to Applewood Rehabilitation Center on Snow Road, as well as homes and businesses along Warwick Road (Route 78) from where it intersects with Manning Hill Road (Route 10) and General James Reed Highway (Route 119) southeast to just past Snow Road. The system could also extend to properties along Route 10 between the intersections of Routes 78 and 119, and Main Street (Route 10) and Richmond Road (Route 119).
The distribution system could then continue along Richmond Road, ending in the area of Plumb Pak Corp. There would also be a branch line off Main Street at Parker Street that would follow the road to the Winchester School, which enrolls students in preschool through 8th grade.
Two lines could be run through the neighborhood near the school, connecting the Parker Street and Richmond Road pipelines, according to the map.

Swanzey would stand to get natural gas service along West Swanzey Road (Route 10) in the town’s west village, and Monadnock Highway (Route 12) in the community’s north section.
The maps submitted to the Public Utilities Commission show the line along Route 12 traveling southeast from Keene past the Lake Street and Swanzey Factory Road intersection, stopping just before the Cheshire Fairgrounds and Safford Drive.
The map from West Swanzey shows only the natural gas line traveling along South Winchester Street to just over the town line, stopping at Market Basket.
In Rindge and Jaffrey, company officials propose distributing natural gas along Routes 119 and 202. The expansion project for those communities would be done in two phases, with the first estimated to cost $2.1 million and the second projected at $2 million.

According to the maps, the distribution system could run from where it connects with the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline north to the intersection of Routes 119 and 202 before continuing up Route 202 to Jaffrey.
At the intersection, the system could also travel west along Route 119 ending at Franklin Pierce University.

Monday, October 12, 2015

WINchester Pipeline Awareness

IMPORTANT WARNING FOR ALL

DO NOT APPROACH SURVEYORS.
VIDEOTAPE ANY AND ALL INTERACTIONS.
CONSIDER THE Right of Way TO BE UNSAFE TERRITORY.

- Some town police departments are acting on Kinder Morgan's cries of eco-terrorism and threats, regardless of peaceful action.
- Police are being advised by Kinder Morgan and may receive training from the FBI on handling what they consider to be unruly protesters.
- NH Spirit's Board is discussing fund raisers to prepare for legal counsel assistance for those who are arrested under peaceful, unarmed resistance circumstances. We encourage others to do fund raisers for NH Spirit. We need to protect ourselves and each other.
- Please discourage "shadowing" surveyors. This has caused an increased armed guard/police presence along the ROW and interactions are increasing. If you do arrange shadowing, be prepared to assist those you have sent into battle zones when and if they run into trouble.
- Many of the ROW entries are now gated. Consider this fair warning that you should proceed with caution, at your own risk, and follow any and all posted information.
- Police seem to be siding with surveyors and may not be clear on where boundaries are and rely on information from Kinder Morgan and contractors.
- We have already had one comrade fall victim to arrest on serious, trumped up charges of trespassing in an attempt to keep property from being trespassed upon. Try to avoid becoming the next KinderVictim. 

DO contact police when you witness trespassers.
DO continue large scale public protests.
DO act verbally and physically in a peaceful manner.
DO use social media to address our elected officials directly.
DO remember that climate change must be addressed by our elected officials. Call them on their inaction and support the comments of others.

BE ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE LAW. Kinder Morgan claims to be victimized. Protect yourself and others.


IN PUBLIC:
Do not pursue or call after those are not interested in information or disagree.
Please be kind and use a soft approach. It will also serve us well when Kinder Morgan claims that we are the bullies, not them.  :)
Do wish them a nice day!

THANK YOU so much for the many things you all do!