Saturday, October 28, 2017

Sumac Tea or Sumac-Ade

Sumac Tea or Sumac-Ade
Easy Pickings for a Seasonal Treat




Whether it is the dry summer or the more ominous signs of a changing climate the autumn colors have passed without fanfare.

Nevertheless there is one treat that I always look forward to in the fall that is almost assured irrespective of the weather, Sumac tea or served up ice cold as sumac-ade.


No doubt you've seen them before. Sumac is a plant that grows wild all over New Hampshire. It will grow in places where it seems inhospitable to almost any plant. And it makes a great tea or “lemon”ade from late fall right on through spring when the old clusters dry out and are replaced with new ones that will be tasteless until the end of summer. They are best in the late fall because it takes fewer of the flowerheads to make a robust drink.


There are several species of sumac but you want the Staghorn or Smooth Sumac variety for your tea. Its upright cluster of red seeds are easily spotted.  The Staghorn has a distinctive velvety feel on the newer growth, like a deer’s antlers in early spring, a sure sign that you are using the correct sumac.


If you are nervous about this because you may have heard of Poison Sumac, don't be. Poison Sumac is actually much more rare in New Hampshire and has white berries that droop. It is impossible to mistake for the more common Sumac varieties.


Making Sumac-ade is quite easy. Gather a grocery size bag of the clusters. Take a large pot and fill it with fresh water and put the clusters right into the water. Wash your hands and then rinse them well to be sure you’ve gotten all the soap off, crush the clusters until they break apart in the water and allow them to steep for an hour or two. Drain the liquid through cheesecloth or some other clean, disposable cloth, toss the clusters in your compost pile, add sweetener to taste (for lemonade) and voila!.


If you’d prefer it as tea, you can do all the above and then heat the liquid though you need not go through the process above but can steep a hand full of the seeds in hot water for just a few minutes and sweeten as you like it. You can also hang the pods to dry and store them for later.


It’s a very nice change from all of the commercially available drinks and a refreshing fall favorite in our home.


Wayne King's regular column, "The View from Rattlesnake Ridge" is a reflection of the meanderings and musings of the artist, author and activist.





Sumac Moon

Wayne King's regular column, "The View from Rattlesnake Ridge" is a reflection of the meanderings and musings of the artist, author and activist.

Friday, October 27, 2017

Sacred Trust Overview

“The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution!”

In the coming “Age of Electricity” the principal battleground will be over who controls the production and distribution of power. All across America today the battle lines are being drawn and the two sides are rushing to create advantages for themselves. Already more than 10 trans-national power transmission projects are proposed from Maine to Washington State and the Canadian Electricity Association projects a tripling of that demand in the next ten years. In most instances these transmission projects are being proposed by utility companies or consortiums that include a local utility company.

Utility companies represent one front in this battle over competing visions of our energy future. These utility companies, already in an existential battle for survival, seek to maintain control of the revenues generated by the flow of electricity. With a few rare exceptions, they are pitted against those advocates of a new distributed energy paradigm where small, renewable power production replaces the large electricity generators of today.  

Most Americans notice that things are changing with respect to energy production and transmission but they have yet to put together the full picture of what will be a sea change in life for every American this presages.

“Sacred Trust” is intended to tell that story in the context of a novel about a group of citizens that have joined together to stop the construction of one, especially egregious powerline, proposed in the small state of New Hampshire where tourism is the second most important industry and the people deeply cherish their beautiful mountains, clean air and pristine waterways.

The power company behind the transmission line, Polaris Electric, proposes to put most of the line above ground with massive 150 foot towers and intends to export 100% of the power right on through the state - like a giant extension cord - with no benefit to the people of the state. In short, like the oligarchs of a previous age, they intend to reap 100% of the benefits and to pass off a large portion of their costs through the generations-long visual pollution of the public commons, to say nothing of the decline in property values and the unknown scientific consequences of high voltage transmission lines on citizens living in their path.

The citizens of the state who stand to lose most from the destruction of real estate values and cherished viewscape are dead set against the project but the political winds are against them with a Governor in the pocket of the utility company and an approval process that seems to be rigged against them, eight unlikely compatriots from across the political spectrum come together to take on the consortium proposing the “Granite Skyway” Transmission line.

While the compatriots, who call themselves The Trust, engage in creative civil disobedience intending to stop the project, or at the very least to literally drive it underground, a group of writers and activists, presenting themselves in the style of the writers of the Federalist Papers produce a series of essays in opposition to Granite Skyway, making the intellectual case, justifying the actions of The Trust.  One business writer, in search of a pulitzer, takes on the task of describing the tableau in which all of this takes place beginning with the 1972 election of Jimmy Carter and the drafting of the National Energy Policy Act and the Public Utilities Regulatory Policy Act into which one lone New Hampshire Senator, John Durkin, inserted two lines that changed history and ushered in the renewable energy revolution.Through the device of a series of articles scattered through the novel, business editor James Kitchen leads his readers through a virtual primer of the battle for a new post-carbon energy paradigm.

"Sacred Trust" is a vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private electric transmission powerline that leads the reader through not only the hijinks of The Trust, but also through the series of choices with which we all are currently confronting, or will be, in this new “Age of Electricity”.

Described by one reader as "The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution" the book follows these unlikely compatriots as they dodge both the law and a cabal of recruits doing the dirty work of the Consortium.

In part one of the book Sasha Brandt, an Iroquois woman from Canada who travels with her companion, a wolf named Cochise, meets Daniel Roy, a guide and outdoorsman while hiking the Mahoosuc Range on the Appalachian Trail. After a unique first encounter the two - three with Cochise - continue their hike together. A few days later, while paddling on Lake Umbagog, they find themselves unexpectedly camping together with an unusual assortment of people including a former Olympic paddler, a very conservative deer farmer, a real estate broker, a retired spook who was the first US victim of Lyme disease and an iconoclast named Thomas (just Thomas) who is also a former Army Ranger now living as a recluse in multiple backwoods abodes in the Great North Woods area of New Hampshire. Thomas is also unique in that his primary mode of transportation is a moose named Metallak, who pulls a cart when traveling with Thomas’ five dogs or wears a saddle when Thomas rides him solo.

The group quickly discovers that they have one very important thing in common - a deep concern about the Granite Skyway proposal to transport electricity from Canada to the toney suburbs of Boston, New York, Connecticut, Philadelphia and Washington D.C.. Their concerns range from the effect it will have on the habitat of newly re-established Raptor populations; to the clear cutting necessary to construct the line; and, the impact of 150 foot towers on the landscape of their beloved state.

The threat to the environment and the scenic beauty are only the tip of an iceberg that includes the value of homes, farms and businesses built by generations of men and women in this hardscrabble land. Rumors alone are already affecting life for many caught up in whisper campaign around this proposed transmission line. All agree, Granite Skyway poses an existential threat to an entire way of life.

Determined to do more than shuffle papers and employ lawyers, the compatriots form a band of brothers and sisters - along with Cochise and Metallak - calling themselves "The Trust". Armed with only their wits and a lot of heart they embark on a rolicking campaign of civil disobedience that would make Thoreau, Alinsky and Dr. King proud.

While the book is a work of fiction, teachers and professors may find it a book that would add a new dimension to classroom discussions and an interesting touch for classes on sustainability, renewable energy or the American tradition of protest.

Throughout their adventure the members of "The Trust" examine many of the most important questions of our time including how America can continue to make an honored space for free speech and civil disobedience in an era of terror; how social media can help create accountability in an increasingly corporatized mega-media landscape; and, how citizens can challenge the corporate oligarchies that often threaten our planet's future.

"Sacred Trust" is written by Wayne King a former State Senator, Democratic nominee for Governor of NH, and most recently CEO of environmental cleanup company MOP Environmental Solutions. Not coincidentally, King worked his way through college as a Mountain Guide in New Hampshire’s White Mountain which explains his detailed knowledge of the setting for the novel. The book is filled with political and environmental stories that will have you laughing and gasping and wondering what is true and what is fiction.

"Sacred Trust' is a vicarious, high voltage campaign to stop the Granite Skyway power transmission project and its short-sighted and in some cases greedy corporate sponsors, intent on using political muscle and money to lock up the region's energy production and distribution, short circuiting efforts to bring about an energy future based on sustainable, and renewable energy deployed through micro-grids, smart-grids and a competitive environment that makes energy more - not less - affordable.

http://bit.ly/STrust

The Folly of Chasing Amazon

The Folly of Chasing Amazon
Politicians Waste Precious Time and Resources Chasing Out of State Businesses
Wayne D. King


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The folly of youth may be the kindest explanation for the amount of time and precious resources that have been squandered in the Governor’s recent Quixotic attempt to tilt at the windmill known as Amazon.

It does, however, generate a whole lot of ink and pixels. A quick search on Google shows nearly 70,000 hits from a search on combinations of the words Sununu and Amazon. A cynic might judge this as the primary motivation for the Governor. In fairness to the Governor, New Hampshire Democrats did their fair share of egging on the Governor and got their fair share of pixels and ink as well. I suspect the reason for the Democrats was more likely to be that they wanted to embarrass Sununu into a hopeless battle, which he would undoubtedly lose allowing them to beat him up for that.  All of this demonstrating that it’s good politics to chase the white whale even if it’s not good policy.

Yet, despite it all, it is also a very instructive case in point worth exploring as New Hampshire continues to chart its economic future. Perhaps the Governor will accept some sage advice from someone not interested in replacing him.

Let’s start with the obvious. If attracting new businesses turns into a bidding war for tax breaks, economic incentives and other such largess, New Hampshire will always lose that battle. We have little to give when it comes to those kinds of deal sweeteners. Nor should we wish that we could. Most states that have ponied up such large incentive packages have come to regret it and those who have not are usually the ones who have passed the cost off onto working class people through laws like the “Right-to-Work” law that our legislature has had the good sense to reject for nearly 40 years.

Twenty years ago when first Republican Senate President Ed Dupont and then Senate President Ralph Hough (R-Lebanon) had their attention laser focused on New Hampshire’s economy - and Democrats and Republicans were known for working together - we faced that reality head on and asked ourselves some difficult and revealing questions about the kind of leadership we should be providing and where the hard-earned tax dollars of New Hampshire citizens and businesses should be directed to get the most economic bang for our buck.

Senator Dupont created the first Senate Economic Development Committee, focused solely on economic development issues. After Senator Dupont retired and Senator Hough was elected Senate President I was honored to be appointed Chair the committee. Our committee, not content to simply respond to bills offered up by other legislators brought in noted experts and asked them to lead us through an analysis of what New Hampshire needed to do to strengthen our economy in both the short and the long term.

We also held a statewide Economic Summit at the Center of New Hampshire organized by a brilliant graduate of the London School of Economics, Michael Kitch and Jeff Barr of Bristol who brought a fine mind and an ability to organize to the tasks. The Summit was simulcast on both NH Public Radio and NH Public Television for an entire day and featured Robert Reich, Secretary of Labor, Michael Porter noted Economist from Harvard University, Dennis Meadows Director of the Policy and Social Science Research Center at UNH, Dean Kamen, Gary Hirshberg, Cathy Schoen, Russ Thibeault, Ron Rioux and Everett Barnes among others. A veritable collection of New Hampshire finest economic thinkers gathered for a full day of panel discussions and breakout sessions.

The result of that summit was a series of comprehensive bills with broad bi-partisan support.  They represented New Hampshire solutions to New Hampshire challenges: bills focusing on workforce development, infrastructure, education and access to capital.

What we learned during four years of intense study and action is applicable even today. New Hampshire’s best hope for economic prosperity and well-paid jobs lies right here at home. If we focus our efforts and resources on building a robust economy here then others will want to come here to share in our success and we won’t need tax breaks, deal sweeteners or any other special enhancements. Chasing out-of-state businesses is a waste of money, and most especially time - time that should be invested right here to benefit all New Hampshire businesses.

Here’s why:

Homegrown Businesses are Here for the Long Haul
Businesses that start here are most likely to remain here as they grow.

When Pat Gallup and David Hall founded PC Connection in 1982 the two had only recently met on an AMC Trail support work group. They started the company on $8,000 and a dream. Today, now called “Connection” the company has more than 2,500 employees and still calls New Hampshire home, though they have moved operations from Marlborough to Merrimack.

In 1973 Nathan Schwartz, who had moved his boot making operations to Newmarket NH in the early 1960s, officially launched the Timberland Company. Today, with more than 5,000 employees worldwide, Timberland is a world renowned brand and consistently voted among the best companies in America to work for, and still based in New Hampshire.

In 1984 When I visited Sam Kaymen and Gary Hirshberg at a little farm in Wilton, New Hampshire where they were making yogurt organically, I had no idea that they would go on to develop Stonyfield Farm one of the most widely popular yogurt and health food brands anywhere, donating 10% of their profits annually to charitable causes.

Both New Hampshire and Vermont can lay claim to C&S Wholesale Grocers which has been a valued employer in the Monadnock and Brattleboro regions for almost 50 years. With 14,000 employees nationwide they are proof positive that homegrown business sets roots deeper than any other.

A Focus on the Fundamentals Creates a Tide that Lifts all Boats
Sure businesses care about tax rates; but, all things being equal, they are closer to the bottom of the list of fundamentals than the top. Businesses want to know that they can count on a well educated workforce, an infrastructure that provides them with reliable and safe ways to move products to market and employees and raw materials to the workplace; A quality of life that keeps young people here and is alluring to others; and a culture of entrepreneurship beginning with enlightened policy makers who actively work to create opportunities for new companies to start here, grow here and remain here.

Playing to your Strengths Makes Them (and us) Stronger  
Of the top 100 companies in New Hampshire more than 11% of them are Universities and Colleges; 13% are hospital and medical centers and a significant number of them are technology companies. Focusing on how these core businesses can be leveraged to produce spinoffs and businesses that together create synergies enhancing growth is a far more constructive way to direct our energies and resources.

Making Strategic Investments in Infrastructure Yields the Most Bang for the Buck
New Hampshire doesn’t have a lot of tax revenue to throw around. Strategic investments in Infrastructure like the Manchester Airport; the Pease Tradeport and the Port of NH are important components of our critical infrastructure. In addition to these, carefully chosen investments can power economic opportunity and growth.  The NH Innovations Research Center at UNH which has, since 1992, awarded more than $5 million, in 176 grants benefitting 125 companies is one such example. The NHIRC funds partnership projects between New Hampshire companies and academic institutions via the Granite State Technology Innovation Grant. Grants are awarded through an RFP process and are matched by company contributions. Past projects have been in the areas of materials science, environmental technology, nanotechnology, plant biology, medical technologies, and more. A small amount of funding from state government served as the seed capital for the NHIRC initially and modest funding has gone a long way for New Hampshire.

In 1993 we took the first steps to establishing the UNH Institute for Earth Oceans and Space. In just a little more than two decades EOS has become UNH’s largest research enterprise and receives more than 41 million dollars in external research support from NASA, NOAA, The National Science Foundation and other Federal agencies. Some of the most important and ground-breaking research on climate change began as EOS projects under the guidance of giants like Berrien Moore and Paul Mayefsky.

Sometimes these investments may require a leap of faith. I suspect that Governor Sununu was wishing that we had a plan in the works for high speed rail between Boston and Nashua as he walked out of his meeting with Amazon, but a “deathbed” conversion has no authority when the moment is at hand.

Making Education the Centerpiece
Education has always been our most important “currency” for economic growth. According to the NH Forum on the Future, an alliance of Educational, Business and Policy leaders, 7 out of 10 of New Hampshire’s fastest growing jobs over the next 10 years will require a post-secondary degree. Furthermore, producing students who are lifelong learners is no longer just a good idea, it is an economic imperative. We live in the most dynamic and rapidly shifting economy the world has ever known, and it’s only going to get more complex and more dynamic in the future.  If we short change our kids, we short circuit our future.

If we fail we risk becoming an economic backwater. It’s time for Republicans and Democrats to work together, to forget the sacred cows and to make New Hampshire’s education system second to none from Pre-K through college and beyond with job and classroom based training for both displaced workers and those needing new skills to meet the challenges of a dynamic marketplace.

There’s no magic bullet when it comes to creating such an education system. All of the simplistic “solutions” whether it’s vouchers or merit pay or any of a hundred other ideas (or fads) may have a place within the firmament of options and experiments but if we create an education system that leaves the children of the poor and working class families behind to benefit those who could already afford to supplement their child’s education themselves then we will suffer the consequences. Truly, we need a system in which no child is left behind and no adult is without options for enhancing their knowledge base.

This is a task that requires every shoulder to the wheel: teachers, parents, taxpayers, policy makers, businesses . . . all of us; leaving behind our preconceptions and seeking common ground. Exercising our intellects and our imaginations. Being willing to experiment and accepting the reality that failure, now and then, is a valuable teacher; but failure of the mission is not an option.


About Wayne D. King: Wayne King is an author, artist, activist and recovering politician. He was a three term State Senator,  who Chaired the Senate Economic Development Committee and the NH Senate Economic Summit. In 1994 King was the Democratic nominee for Governor and most recently the CEO of MOP Environmental Solutions Inc., a public company in the environmental cleanup space.  His art is exhibited nationally in galleries and he has published three books of his images. His most recent novel "Sacred Trust"  a vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline has been published on Amazon.com as an ebook (http://bit.ly/STrust ) with the paper edition due soon. He lives in Rumney at the base of Rattlesnake Ridge. His website is: http://bit.ly/WayneDKing

Friday, October 20, 2017

One day left! Free Download October 19-21! "Sacred Trust"



One day left! Free Download October 19-21! "Sacred Trust" A vicarious eco-thriller where citizens take on a "Northern Pass-like" powerline project using creative civil disobedience to stop the travesty. To download the ebook go to Amazon.com and type in any of the following keywords: Eco-thriller, Creative Civil Disobedience, Environmental Action, Sacred Trust. The eBook is free for 3 days only (10/19-10/21). If you like it I'd appreciate a review from you but its not required.

Short cut link:
http://bit.ly/STrust


Thursday, October 19, 2017

Re-Post: Waiting for Color, Waiting for Hope



In Case You Missed my Column Posted on Monday both here and on my Rattlesnake Ridge Blog I am re-posting it again, mostly as a celebration of the fact that two former Presidents have already stepped up.

“Whether they cooperate to step forward together or simply speak out individually we need our living past Presidents to speak out; leaders who still believe in the transformative possibilities of America. Leaders who still believe in the American dream and the possibilities and power of extending that dream to every American without regard to race, color or creed.”

Yesterday both President Obama and George W. Bush spoke out loud and proud about REAL American values and while they did not call out the President by name we all knew of whom they spoke.

https://viewfromrattlesnake.blogspot.com/2017/10/waiting-for-color-waiting-for-hope.html

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Download "Sacred Trust" Free for 3 Days only Oct 19-21

Download "Sacred Trust" Free for 3 Days only Oct 19-21

Free Download October 19-21! "Sacred Trust" A vicarious eco-thriller where citizens take on a "Northern Pass-like" powerline project using creative civil disobedience to stop the travesty. To download the ebook go to Amazon.com and type in any of the following keywords: Eco-thriller, Creative Civil Disobedience, Environmental Action, Sacred Trust. The eBook is free for 3 days only (10/19-10/21). If you like it I'd appreciate a review from you but its not required.


Monday, October 16, 2017

A Song Softly Sung




















A Song Softly Sung

Tamarack are the final dancers among autumn’s stars.
Golden needles ignoring all the coniferous rules.
Changing, clinging, willfully waiting, poised for peak performance.


Let the maples have their moment
The oaks, the ash, the sumac too
They will be gone with the gawkers, following the foliage.


Until, until that sweet surrender, gold gilding black bark
As wintery winds, spraying snow, bear other leaves away
Borne, blown, buried in drifts of leafy litter

A golden moment, a shining sundance
A song, softly sung, after the symphony has ended
And the audience has gone home.

Wayne D. King

Waiting for Color, Waiting for Hope

Past Presidents Should Call a Temporary Break from the Tradition of Silence

The view from Rattlesnake Ridge this week has been sobering. Either autumn’s show is very late to arrive or it’s not coming; at least not in the style to which we are accustomed.

Every morning I arise hoping that somehow the hand of the Great Spirit will have swept through during the night turning the greens to to orange and yellow and red but so far I have been disappointed.

There is enough green remaining on the mountains that hope still abides but if the maples outside our post office, usually a bright orange at this time, are any indication hope will not abide for long, today they are a dry brown and likely to devoid of foliage within the week.

There is a Sugar Maple at the home of my neighbor, Peter, that is always the most stunning orange this week. I have watched children playing in her leaves beneath a cerulean sky, laughing and throwing leaves into the air; reaching for them as they flutter back to earth. Today it is as if that beautiful tree is fighting to give us even a hint of her former glory. Most of her leaves are gone but among the few that remain some still hint at what use to be.

Autumn Color Dance
Whether the colors of the fall, or lack thereof, reflect the changes wrought by a dry summer and autumn or presage the more ominous changes of a shifting climate, we will not know until time has unveiled truth.

In years past you could not have kept me from reveling in the glory of this moment. Even a rainy, or foggy day would find me wandering the woods and the mountain trails, camera in hand. I would often find myself explaining to others how the overcast day brought out the colors and created ever shifting moods in the landscape.

Today, the drabness of the landscape reflects a sorrow clouding my own inner spirit. As much as I fear for my mountains, I am distracted from that because I fear more for my country.

In the span of less than a year we have gone from the leader of the free world and the standard bearer for a world where tolerance, civility, resilience and compassion provide hope and a reason for optimism to even those suffering under the yoke of tyranny; to a country that coddles those tyrants who oppress their people and walks away from its leadership role on the great issues of our time, again and again.

Only four years ago the United States military and an “army” of healthcare workers and volunteers from around the world prevented the Ebola outbreak in Guinea from becoming a worldwide pandemic. Who today believes we would step up to prevent that?

Two years ago it appeared that the Paris Climate talks were going to end without agreement when the President of the United States stepped in and brokered a final agreement. The entire world celebrated. Would the world celebrate with us today?

In 2008 the world economy was on the verge of collapse the outgoing President George W. Bush and the incoming President Barack Obama put aside partisan differences to agree on a set of emergency measures to save the international economic system. Between those measures and the further action taken by the Obama Administration the United States averted a world wide depression and ushered in the longest period of sustained economic growth of the modern era. Could we expect such statesmanship today?

Republican members of Congress are paralyzed by fear; Democrats are incapacitated by ambition, but we need them now. We cannot wait three years for leaders to emerge.

I know that the tradition of restraint by former Presidents is almost sacrosanct but perilous times call for unprecedented measures. Whether they cooperate to step forward together or simply speak out individually we need our living past Presidents to speak out; leaders who still believe in the transformative possibilities of America. Leaders who still believe in the American dream and the possibilities and power of extending that dream to every American without regard to race, color or creed.

We need leaders who will say that America was already great before, when we didn’t need to brag about it, when actions spoke louder than words. Leaders who know that systematically dismantling all that has made us great will only make us weak and irrelevant.

Jimmy, stop being the greatest Ex-President long enough to weigh in.

Stop shaking your head in disgust Papa Bush. Do something about it. The entire nation is proud of the sacrifices you made for our country, don’t let one man make them meaningless.

Laura, tell “W” it’s time to stop clearing brush. It’s time to dust off his kickers and remind us that he’s still relevant and he’s not going to let the people who elected him for two terms down.

Bill, Hillary had her moment in the sun, you don’t have to stand in the background now. Step up.

Barack, stop yelling at the TV and get out here. We know you deserve some rest after the last eight years but there will be plenty of time to rest after this fight is over.

All of you . . . we don’t expect you to agree on every little thing. Just the big stuff. The moral leadership of the planet, stuff like that. . .

As Nobel laureate Bob Dylan said, “There’s a battle outside and it’s raging.”




Bird Houses on a Fence

Friday, October 6, 2017

New Hampshire’s Outsized Role in The Renewable Energy Revolution

Want to Know who to thank for The Revolution? Start with John Durkin. . . and Jimmy Carter


Sunlight on a Woodstock Beaver Pond
Summer’s fleeting pleasures are quickly yielding to the bittersweet days of autumn here on Rattlesnake Ridge. Autumn always seems to summon forth the highs and lows of our inner spirits; one moment we want to run and jump and throw our hands in the air, rejoicing at the beauty of the world around us and the next we are close to tears, often for reasons that seem completely unfathomable . . . bouncing between joy and sadness, though I sense that the passage of time, more acutely felt, is the primary motivating force.


In a week or two the hills will be ablaze with color. At least we all hope so. The effects of climate change seem to be having an effect on autumn foliage, but we really don’t know what the effect is. Some climate scientists say it will enhance colors, at least in the short term. Others insist the leaves will turn from green to brown and simply fall off the tree, but we don’t know how much of that is because of climate change and how much is because of an extremely dry summer and fall.  Scientists differ wildly in their predictions of the effect but there is not the slightest difference on the causality side of the equation . . .  the changing climate of our earth mother.


Recently I finished my first novel, “Sacred Trust” and published it as an eBook on Amazon Kindle  (http://bit.ly/STrust) while I finish the process of readying it for publication in paper - and if I’m really lucky finding a publisher and/or a production company that agrees with me that it would make a great movie.


In Sacred Trust An existential environmental time bomb, in the form of a massive powerline, is about to explode an entire way of life for the people of the North Country. Nine unlikely oddballs: rock climbers, paddlers, a deer farmer and a former spook, are all that stands between the people and the powerline.


Most readers find themselves praying for the Oddballs. . . If the storyline sounds familiar it is at least in part because I was seeking a vicarious way to express my own frustration with the current situation here in New Hampshire, but also in states across the nation where the same scenario is taking shape.


The novel is somewhat unique, I think, in that the story divides itself between our heroes - citizens engaged in creative civil disobedience as the last defense against the powerline; a group of writers, calling themselves the Gazetteers, writing against the powerline project in the style of the authors of the Federalist Papers; and, finally, a serious-minded journalist who is writing a well researched analysis about both the project and the national and international challenges of the advancing “Age of Electricity”.   


It was, and is, my hope to create a work of fiction that was enjoyable to read but that also helped readers to understand some of the challenges and nuance of the world in which we are all living and the world we are beginning to see emerge . . . the post-carbon world. Whether this education occurs on an individual basis or as a creative tool for the classroom, or both, it was my hope that art could be harnessed to facilitate change and dialog.


In doing research for Sacred Trust I learned a great deal and found to my delight and surprise that New Hampshire played an outsized role in today’s Renewable Energy Revolution. Furthermore, there were some civics lessons that also could be gleaned from the process that has brought us to this place.


Most of the remainder of this column is taken, almost verbatim, from Chapter 57 of Sacred Trust, in which journalist James Kitchen discusses the renewable energy revolution and New Hampshire’s role in its genesis.


Kitchen begins by describing a shifting paradigm that replaces carbon-based energy sources with sustainable green energy and some of the choices, challenges and dilemmas associated with the changeover.
 
Understanding the choices that our nation faces as we struggle to build a new energy paradigm requires that we have at least a basic understanding about how we got to where we are today and that journey - strangely enough - winds right through New Hampshire. In more ways than one . . .


Most politicians and even most citizens in New Hampshire consider the place of our state in the national election process as sacrosanct. The First-in-the-Nation presidential primary provides a jolt of cash to the state’s economy every four years but most people, particularly the staunchest defenders of the Primary, will tell you that there are more important reasons for protecting our place as first in the nation.


They will explain that only in a small state like New Hampshire does a candidate with limited money - but a great message - have a chance. In larger states, where the election is dominated by big business, big labor, and exorbitant media costs a great candidate without deep pockets will never have such a chance.


New Hampshire folks take their role in the process of winnowing down the field of candidates in their primary very seriously.  They study the issues, they vigorously question the candidates, and then, once they have made up their minds, they roll up their sleeves and get involved in one campaign or another.


To understand where we are today we need to go back to the mid 1970s. Richard Nixon had resigned, to avoid being impeached, and Gerald Ford, appointed by Nixon after the untimely (and from many accounts unseemly) death of Nelson Rockefeller, was our first unelected President.  


The Presidential primary of 1976 saw a very crowded primary among Democrats. Depending on who you count there were almost twenty people testing the waters or outright campaigning for the nomination. From that process, an unknown Governor named Jimmy Carter emerged and swept to the nomination as the “un-politician”. Carter won in Iowa and during the last three weeks of the New Hampshire Primary, capitalized on his Iowa win and zoomed from a 2% standing to over 30%, capturing New Hampshire. These two wins would serve to create a groundswell and Carter would go on to win the Democratic nomination. By the time the General Election rolled around James Earl Carter had sold himself as the first “outsider” candidate of the modern era and he won handily over Gerald Ford.


Carter’s one-term presidency was roiled by controversy and crisis, from an Arab Oil Embargo to the taking of American hostages at the American Embassy in Iran and a disastrous attempt to rescue those hostages.


Hidden in the layers of these controversies and crises is a legislative record that created the framework for a renewable energy revolution that has, of late, taken the country by storm. Carter’s team shepherded through Congress the landmark Nation Energy Policy Act,  including a section called PURPA - the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act. These massive pieces of Federal legislation included the first national policies on renewable energy and energy conservation, among other things.


Two years before Carter ascended to the Presidency, New Hampshire held an election for a United States Senator to replace the retiring Norris Cotton. A close contest between the Democrat John Durkin and the Republican Louis Wyman led to two recounts; the first won by Durkin, by ten votes; and, the second, won by Wyman, by 2 votes. Any citizen who wonders if their vote counts, need only look at the outcome of this election.  Finally, at an impasse, the election was decided in the US Senate and Durkin was seated. Two years later, as the Carter Energy policy was moving through the Congress, John Durkin quietly and without fanfare, added an amendment into the PURPA act. The amendment required that utility companies purchase power - at market rates - from any producer of electricity generating fewer than 80 megawatts from a renewable energy source.


Durkin originally believed that he was helping to establish a foothold for wood to energy biomass and trash to energy co-generation, and he was, but the door that he opened with his amendment turned out to be big enough for every dreamer and entrepreneur, with a viable idea for generating electricity renewably, to walk through.


Soon proposals for small hydro (also called low head hydro), solar power, wind power and other renewable resources were on the drawing board and underway.


The Energy Policy Act passed the Senate by 1 vote. Again, a civics lesson in the importance of every vote in a democracy.


Over the years since then a few changes have been made to the Energy Act, but all continuing to move the country toward the day when renewable energy would account for a larger and larger portion of the power produced.


The changes of the 70s represented the first step in a changing relationship between America’s public utilities and the people and businesses who consumed the energy. Utilities no longer held complete monopoly power over both the sale and the purchase of electricity as well as its transmission.


To be fair to utility companies, it is important to note that these changes have created serious disruption in the model that they had been employing to govern their business plans and for many would come to represent an existential threat to their economic viability.


Different utility companies have approached the challenges posed by this deregulation in different ways. Almost immediately Vermont utilities formed a working group among utilities to come up with approaches that would allow them to create sustainable business models and one of the first things they did was to add ratepayers and citizens to the process to create forward momentum and a consensus building approach that made everyone a participant in a process that strengthened utility companies and encouraged the development of renewable energy.


Those who simply tried to squeeze more from a diminishing set of profit centers hastened toward crisis. The changes that have taken place over the past twenty years represent an existential challenge to many utility companies. They are casting around for ways to generate more profits in an era of shrinking opportunities.


The more progressive utilities are doing this by working to build an infrastructure that enhances the opportunities for renewable energy and the organic job growth that comes with it. Others are simply clinging to the past and trying to enhance their bottom line through transmission proposals that link together large generators of power with lucrative markets.
 
There are many lessons to be learned from the approaches employed to enhance their sustainability by utility companies all across America. But there is no doubt about one thing.


One short paragraph, authored by John Durkin and his team, had successfully wrested monopoly control over the electric grid from the utility companies and opened the gates for a flood of small alternative power producers and eventually individual homeowners and businesses.


For the first time the American people, just beginning to experience a growing environmental consciousness back in the 70s, had a say in the kinds of energy that we were using and could participate in the creation of that energy. For that we can thank Jimmy Carter, John Durkin and the 95th Congress of the United States.


About Wayne D. King: Wayne King is an author, artist, activist and recovering politician. A three term State Senator, he was the 1994 Democratic nominee for Governor and most recently the CEO of MOP Environmental Solutions Inc., a public company in the environmental cleanup space.  His art is exhibited nationally in galleries and he has published three books of his images. His most recent novel "Sacred Trust"  a vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline has been published on Amazon.com as an ebook (http://bit.ly/STrust ) with the paper edition due in Mid-October. He lives in Rumney at the base of Rattlesnake Ridge. His website is: http://bit.ly/WayneDKing

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