Posted on 06/27/2014 5:19:08 AM PDT by thackney
Plans to build a natural gas pipeline through central and western Massachusetts are running into opposition from residents in the communities affected.
The pipeline begins in Troy, Pennsylvania and runs through Wright, New York before entering Massachusetts in Richmond. It would run through dozens of communities before ending in Dracut.
But few residents expect to see any benefits from the pipeline plan.
It would go in front of our house. It would go through this hay field, said Pat Worth, one of those residents. Worth is afraid her 25-acre farm in rural Royalston will be ruined if a natural gas pipeline is ever allowed to be built.
It will destroy property values, she said. It will destroy any inheritance to our children. This is not a good thing.
Called the Northeast Expansion Project, Kinder Morgan, a Houston-based energy company is proposing a multi-billion dollar pipeline. It would cross into western Massachusetts and travel through more than three dozen New England communities.
Here is the issue energy experts in New England say demand for natural gas is skyrocketing. Half of the homes in Massachusetts now use it and an even larger number get their electricity from plants powered by natural gas.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.cbslocal.com ...
Our entire nation is going to whinge itself to a mewling halt.
I understand no one want's to have their property torn up, but I grew up where one of the defining features of the neighborhood was a set of NG pipelines that ran along the bayou I grew up by.... and there was never an issue.
Yet one has to wonder if these people wailing over it being built are the same ones who will be gnashing their teeth when the price skyrockets due to lack of supply.
Whether it’s wind power generation in Nantucket Sound or the natural gas pipeline in the western part of the state, MA residents can be counted on for a NIMBY response.
Nice NIMBY-on-NIMBY fight shaping up between the cities of Boston/Everett/Chelsea (mostly LIV's) and the elites in Richmond!
Put the popcorn on.
I've seen literally hundreds of properties torn up for pipeline, and put back to pasture (or whatever) with no visible way of knowing what they did last year.
Hell .. I wish they'd use MY land ... they pay very well per foot.
It is about time someone built another ng pipeline up here. I just received my prebuy heating oil contract from my local company for this coming heating season. Their offering is $3.549/gallon. This translates into me spending between $3700-4000 if I just heat my 2700 square foot house with oil. To get this price, I must go on automatic delivery and purchase 500 or more gallons. I will use at least 1000 gallons. I am typical of a New England consumer.
Therefore, I will be installing a Harman Pellet insert this fall. With the price of pellets vs. oil it should pay off in about 4-5 years. The installation of the stove will be just under $5000. Pellets run about $220/ton. A typical house will use between 4-6 tons of pellets throughout the season.
These people out in western Mass need to get over themselves. Buried pipelines do not effect their property values like an electric transmission line. As you can see from your map there is a great need for transmission lines into New England. Most of the current supply goes to generate electricity. I am on a rural road. I do not foresee a natural gas line ever being installed in front of my house in southern NH. If you look at your map, I live about where the “g” in Hillsborough County is in NH. The current gas lines go north along the Merrimack river through the cities of Nashua, Manchester and Concord. Of the 50 people in my office, only 3 of us have ng at our house. Almost all of us heat with oil or propane. Many of us have wood or pellet stoves as a secondary heat source.
I would bet these same idiots live in houses with buried utilities. They have a nat gas line leading into their house. Electric lines that carry electricity are buried in the wet ground. Oh the horrors.
Exactly, it is no different than having a sewer or water line pipe in front of your house.
Dracut, Sommerville with trees.
"Butane is a bastard fuel."
Dracut is one of those towns that probably 95% of the MA population has never even heard of.
.
Electric transmission lines, railroads and pipelines, among other utilities, provide little if any direct benefit to the people whose land they cross.
But they are absolutely essential if products are to be moved around efficiently. Which is precisely why the Constitution allows for eminent domain. Even if it’s abused wildly today.
Dracut, land of the women with BIG HAIR.
Their best portrayal was of Micky Ward’s sisters in “The Fighter”. They got the accent, hair style and mannerisms down in that movie. I swear I knew some of those women from going to clubs in Lowell in the 80’s.
If you don’t work at the jail, you can look for work on the pipeline.
I wonder if Tesla got this much grief when he was involved with those hydro electric projects at Niagara Falls.
There was probably a big WHALE OIL lobby that was totally against it.
I could see environmental issues here, and not from people being hypocritical. Rural MA is a well-regulated environment.
(I lived in one of those towns for a few years while transitioning to OH)
Not really. The market for whale oil had been destroyed decades before by the eevvill men who found a much cheaper and better source of light in kerosene for rural areas, and gas lighting in towns.
The guys selling kerosene might have had some theoretical incentive to oppose electrical lighting, but the market for petroleum products was exploding in all directions. So the people with real incentive to oppose electricity would have been those with capital invested in the gas lighting systems.
> But few residents expect to see any benefits from the pipeline plan.
i.e. they want to shake down the business and impose a toll.
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