Monthly Archives: April 2014

SB 392 to Create Rural Commission

Rural Affairs Commission and Farm to Plate Programs – more public-private partnerships means more pay-to-play and more shadow government.

If it weren’t bad enough that NH has a Water Sustainability Commission (created by Gov. Lynch Executive Order 2011), and a Coastal Risk and Hazards Commission (Hassan signed the bill in 2013 – Cliff Sinnott, director of the Rockingham Planning Commission, ends up as chairman) which basically monitors the sea level, now SB 392 has been filed to create a “Rural Commission”.

The bill was heard in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and passed the full Senate on February 19th. It is slated to come out of the House Environment and Agriculture Committee by May 8th.

Recommended appointees would include:

a) One member of the senate, appointed by the president of the senate.

(b) One member of the house of representatives, appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives.

(c) Three public members, appointed by the governor.

(d) Two members appointed by the chancellor of the university system of New Hampshire.

With the commission stacked with three appointees of the governor and two from UNH, the seat of the Carsey Institute, well, what could go wrong?

Full text of bill: http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2014/SB0392.html

Americans Have Just Been Robbed by the UN

Check your wallet and your purse- You have been robbed!

Without U.S. funding, the United Nations climate scam program, known as the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), would likely have never gotten off the ground. The chairman of IPCC, Rajendra Pachauri, reportedly receives no annual salary from his work at the IPCC, but you know how money trickles down.

Read more… US Gives $44M to UN Climate Change Trust Fund, Next Closest, Germany $10M

Rindge planning board deals final blow to Plan NH charrette

RINDGE — The Rindge Planning Board dealt the final blow to a controversial Plan NH charrette Tuesday night, erasing it from the town’s master plan.

With more than 70 town voters watching, the planning board voted 6-1 to remove the results of the charrette from the master plan after voters overwhelming passed a request for it to do so at town meeting March 11.

If Rindge voters did this, SO CAN YOU! All it takes is a bit of effort to plan, organize and then fan out to inform the public. They will be shocked to find out they had no idea what was going on in the first place.

Read more: Home Rindge planning board deals final blow to Plan NH charrette

Save Our Town Mentioned in Article

Save Our Town Rindge was mentioned in an article regarding federal influence on local zoning and planning issues by way of grants.

It remains to be seen how Rindge’s vocal group of residents concerned with keeping the federal government removed from town politics will react to these proposed grant applications. The recently-formed Save Our Town Committee, which campaigned throughout the 2014 town election season to oppose any article on the town warrant that requested or involved federal grants or influence – most notably Article 2, which failed at the polls, but if passed would have meant amending current town zoning ordinance to allow for commercial development on the intersection of Routes 202 and 119.

Town may explore energy grants
Funds would help improve lighting efficiency

Read more…