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Saturday, December 16, 2017
Northern Pass Business Directory Stirs Some Controversy
Northern Pass Business Directory Stirs Some Controversy
Robert Blechl
Caledonian Record
December 16, 2017
Wrong names, closed businesses, and ones who say they never signed up and oppose the project - all can be found on the recently released Northern Pass business directory, which Eversource Energy had wanted to keep confidential at this point.
Of the 208 businesses on it, many did sign up, with some saying they don’t necessary support Northern Pass, but if the line is ever approved it would benefit their enterprise and other small, local businesses that would see traffic from work crews building the line.
Others, however, were surprised and perplexed, and some angry, to find themselves on it and are now trying to get off a directory they say they never registered for and that conveys the impression they support the project when they don’t.
On Friday, Eversource/Northern Pass spokesman Martin Murray said, “Support of the project was never asked for nor required of any business to be listed, and all the businesses in the directory did previously indicate their respective agreement to be listed.”
Some business owners in the North Country said there was no such agreement.
One is Kate Foley, who runs Cold Mountain Cafe in Bethlehem.
“We do not support the Northern Pass and are outraged that we were added to the list,” she said in a Dec. 3 letter to Tom Getz, attorney for Eversource Energy, which is proposing the transmission line. “In fact, we are horrified to be connected to this endeavor in any way.”
She asked that Cold Mountain Cafe be removed and requested a written apology from Eversource “to show all our customers and people of our community that we are not supporting the Northern Pass.”
Getz issued a response letter, saying a “community outreach team member” spoke with a “Kate” in 2015 about participating in the business directory.
Foley, however, said no such contact occurred. Her mother, Coleen Foley, said the same.
In his response, Getz, who said Cold Mountain Cafe will be removed, said the list was created to ensure local businesses would benefit from the project.
For some, though, that doesn’t explain how their businesses - more than a half dozen the Caledonian-Record spoke with, from Littleton to Pittsburg - became listed on a directory they never sought to be on.
“We did not give them any kind of permission for that,” said Tom Caron, co-owner of Rainbow Grille and Tavern in Pittsburg. “No one stopped by to my knowledge. We came out against Northern Pass, in a letter written under Tall Timber Lodge, so I’m not sure how it came to be.”
Another is Le Rendez Vous French Bakery, Colebrook, owned by Verlaine Daeron and Marc Ounis.
“We never signed up, but we have our name on the list,” Daeron said Friday.
They did receive a friendly email from Eversource on Thursday stating their name would be removed, she said.
“We prefer not to be associated with Northern Pass,” said Verlaine. “We are against that.”
In Littleton, there is The French Sisters Bakery.
Owner Patricia Ann Tilton said her husband, Rick, learned of their business’s listing after the N.H. Site Evaluation publicly released the directory on Nov. 20. The implication, she said, was that French Sisters supports the project.
“That’s not the case at all,” said Tilton. “I don’t know how they got our names and how this came about.”
Rodney Stone, who runs Twisted Wrench Auto Repair in Bethlehem, said he also never signed up and it’s a mystery to how he got on there.
On the directory, too, is the Spare Time Pizza Pub, in Colebrook, whose name was changed three years ago to Strike Zone Pizza, and Colebrook House Motel and Restaurant, which closed several years ago.
Another entry is the Dancing Bear Pub in Colebrook, which closed in 2015 and is now the location of Black Bear Tavern.
“Dancing Bear Pub hasn’t existed for 2 1/2 years,” said Black Bear Tavern owner Rick Nadig, who said he is not in favor of the project. “Personally, I don’t care whether I’m in the directory or not. But if you’re going to put out a directory, make sure the information is correct.”
Heidi Milbrand, who runs Pleasant View B&B in Bristol, found out from a Bristol town representative.
“I never signed up for anything,” she said. “I’ve called [Northern Pass] twice and spoken with somebody who assured me my name would be removed, but it hasn’t been removed as of yet.”
Doug Kenney, who runs Crazy Horse Family Campground in Littleton, said the previous campground owner, when a few years ago it was called Crazy Horse Campground, could have had something to do with the inclusion of the latter name.
“We didn’t put our names on it,” said Kenney.
Others, however, did sign up, including the seasonal Barron Brook Inn, in Whitefield.
Owner Beth Cape, a member of Northern Gateway Regional Chamber of Commerce, said the inn could provide lodging to construction workers.
“If you own a business, you can’t discriminate,” she said. “That doesn’t mean we support it, but we are a hospitality business, and if you look up the word hospitality, you have to open your doors to all … My job is to help businesses and promote our business. There is some trickle-down effect to local businesses.”
Cape called Northern Pass a “tough situation” and said if the line was going near her property she would not be happy.
Shawn Cote, of LL Cote sports center in Errol, also said he chose to be on the directory.
“Being a businessman, if it’s coming through I’d just as soon be on the good side of things than the bad,” he said. “There will be plenty of people around and we definitely need some business in this area.”
The city of Franklin, which would have a DC-to-AC converter station and is the only municipality out of the 31 communities the line would run through that is on record supporting Northern Pass, has 46, or nearly a quarter, of the 208 directory listings.
Franconia, Sugar Hill, and Plymouth, all hotbeds of opposition, have no listings.
For Cold Mountain Cafe, Coleen Foley said when she asked representatives of Northern Pass how businesses get on the directory, she was told they have to register.
“That is not certainly anything we did,” she said.
Murray declined to recount the process of how businesses were contacted, who from Northern Pass visited area businesses, and what was said to them about the directory.
He also declined to say how many businesses to date have contacted Eversource requesting removal of their names and if the N.H. Site Evaluation Committee was also a target audience for the directory to show business support for the project.
The Northern Pass business directory web page has a prompt for owners of lodging establishments, restaurants, gas stations, convenience and hardware stores and other businesses to actively sign up if they want to be included.
In testimony before the SEC, lead Northern Pass project manager Sam Johnson, when asked about economic impacts, said between 200 and 300 businesses registered with Northern Pass through a jobs hot line.
He said businesses have to register to be on the list and, when notified, are directed to a web site to put their name in.
“That, in effect, is the way we do it,” said Johnson.
It is completely sensible to produce a listing of businesses that are available to provide services for what would be some 2,000 Northern Pass construction workers, said Murray.
Eversource sought confidential treatment of listed businesses because of concern for their privacy, he said.
“We will honor the request of any business who does not wish to be listed on the directory when it is actually published and disseminated at the time construction begins,” said Murray.