Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Guest Column by Deb Reynolds: A Call for Action

Deb Reynolds served as the state Senator for Senate District 2 from 2006-2010.

Editorial Opinion Column           
Date: 1/11/2011
Contact: Deb Reynolds
            Phone: (603) 536-5553


NORTHERN PASS: WRONG FOR THE WHITE MOUNTAINS

Like many other legislators desperate for job creation in New Hampshire, I initially welcomed the announcement last fall by Public Service Company of New Hampshire that the Hydro Quebec/Northern Pass project would create 1,200 jobs for New Hampshire.

Sadly, I was wrong to assume that this project, if approved, would help our state’s economy. This project is wrong for the White Mountains.  It is a bad decision for the state of New Hampshire as a whole.

Coos County has the highest unemployment rate in the state. And although Grafton County unemployment data reflects a more sanguine picture, the reality is that Northern Grafton County is struggling with high unemployment and foreclosure rates.   So why have I come to conclude that this project will continue to destroy the economy of the White Mountains, with no ultimate net benefit in job creation in New Hampshire?

Simply put, the Hydro Quebec/Northern Pass project will ultimately serve to drive the nail in the coffin of what is left of the economy of the North Country.

Thousands of visitors every year come to the White Mountains.   They hike in the White Mountain National Forest and state parks, swim in our northern lakes, snowmobile, ski, fish, and recreate.   According to the New Hampshire Department of Resources and Economic Development (DRED), tourists pour approximately $250 million into our economy.  Our restaurants, hotels, and retail businesses thrive on tourism dollars.

For decades, visitors from all over the world have been drawn to the beauty of the White Mountains.    As a result, a robust second home economy has developed, drawing investors and creating jobs.    The beautiful vistas, pristine scenery and fresh mountain air make our part of the state one of the most attractive in the country.  

All of this has the potential for being destroyed if the Northern Pass project is
approved. This profit-generating project proposes to create a new 40-45 mile power-line right-of-way directly through public and private forestland in the North Country, including the White Mountain National Forest.  This is not in the best interests of New Hampshire's forests nor the tourism-based economy those forested landscapes help to support.

Do the proponents of the project seriously believe that 135 foot high electrical towers and expanded rights-of-way that will destroy the vistas of the White Mountains are a net benefit to New Hampshire?   Do we really need to permanently scar our pristine landscape with power supplied by another country?  How is that going to help tourism?   Rather than creating jobs, this project will potentially destroy what is left of our North Country economy by reducing property values, driving away tourism and discouraging investment?    It will also be a economic disincentives to in-state small hydroelectric projects, biomass, wind and true renewable energy projects?

As the state Senator for most of Grafton County over the past four years, I pushed hard for high quality broadband for our part of the state.     This was largely due to the knowledge that people want to live in the White Mountains, for the very reason that it is so beautiful.      We just need the telecommunications highway in order to survive here.    Broadband expansion and connectivity for the North Country is the true answer for long term economic development.

We need to stop giving lip service to ways to stimulate the North Country economy.   Unless we intend to permanently economically balkanize the White Mountains, this project should be stopped dead in its tracks.   As John Harrigan so poignantly put it, “We only have the landscape left.  Let’s not destroy it.”   I call on all of our Federal, state and local officials to speak out against the Northern Pass.
 



Bury the Northern Pass, a group of concerned citizens in Grafton County, belongs to the No Northern Pass Coalition; to join our email list, write to burynorthernpass@gmail.com