The Grassroots Level: We are the Origin of GovernmentCELDF organizer Michelle Sanborn, along with Alexis Eynon, Dick Hage, former State Rep Steve Rand, and Pete Martin, discuss corporate personhood, how to break away from the status quo, and speak out about how their small town of Plymouth, New Hampshire stepped into action when the Northern Pass barged its way in. Background: For the better part of a decade, Plymouth residents have been working with the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF) to stop Northern Pass, a 192-mile, high-tower electrical transmission line carrying industrial hydro-power from Canada. Community members recognized the Granite State was being used as an extension cord to deliver power to other states. The cost to New Hampshire communities: risks to their health, water quality, local economies, and surrounding ecosystems. In January 2018, Plymouth Residents adopted a rights-based ordinance and blocked Northern Pass in their town. “We are the origin of government, the people. We are the origin of the power of government. That’s legitimate” - Michelle Sanborn “We are asking our judicial system to make a choice in our community between the right of a person and the right of a corporation” - Alexis Eynon Follow the Links Below to Stay up to Date on Plymouth, NH and other Towns like them. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NHCRN Twitter: @NewHampshireCRN Website: http://www.nhcommunityrights.org/ |
What can we do differently?CELDF organizer Michelle Sanborn, along with Diane St. Germain, Olivia Zink, Kathy Preston, and Doug Darrell, talk about USA Springs and how, in one of the most conservative towns in New Hampshire, residents began thinking outside the box. Background: In 2001, a company known as USA Springs wanted to put in three wells to withdraw over 430,000 gallons of water per day from the local aquifer. The water would feed a massive water bottling operation. These wells were to be situated at the headwaters of Nottingham and nearby Barrington, where most inhabitants rely on wells for their own water supplies. People like small government in New Hampshire and they credit themselves with having a strong streak of independence that is reflected in the state motto “live free or die.” In 2006, the town voted 135:1 in favor of the rights-based Ordinance that prevented USA Springs siphoning of the water. “We had folks down the road who had spent millions on fighting a multinational corporation, we knew if it failed there, we would be next” - Diane St. Germain “There’s a Hebrew saying, tikkun olam, which means mending the world. Mending is to build on what is already good, and so I always tell the children to go out and mend the world” - Kathy Preston Follow the Links Below to Stay up to Date on Barnstead, NH and other Towns like them. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NHCRN Twitter: @NewHampshireCRN Website: http://www.nhcommunityrights.org/ |