By Bobby Williams, 15 January 2023

There has been a lot of apprehension and misinformation going around about Keene's Downtown Infrastructure Improvement and Reconstruction Project. The City has put out a new video that I think does a good job explaining the project being proposed, the process that got us to this point, and the next steps forward. 

I like this project because it addresses several drawbacks with our current downtown, starting with the ridiculous and wasteful traffic pattern we have around central square. Right now, we have a situation that combines the difficulty of merging in a traffic circle with the delay of waiting at a stop light. Its the worst of both worlds.

What the new design shows us is that our traffic pattern could be far more efficient if, instead of having that intersection be both a circle and a stoplight, we picked one or the other. A redesigned intersection would be more efficient in terms of: 

  • Driver time saved
  • Reduced impact of automobile noise and exhaust on users of the downtown space
  • Less pavement needs to be dedicated to car traffic, freeing up that space for more people-centric uses

That last one is key. Right now, our main intersection downtown is so inefficient that entire lanes of asphalt north of the square can be turned into a pedestrian plaza and traffic would still get out of the city center faster. 

If you want to make your voice heard in support of this project (or against, even) come to the public informational meeting at Heberton Hall at 5:00 PM on Monday, January 30. 

By Terri O'Rorke, 14 January 2023

An electric vehicle (EV) uses one or more electric motors to drive the car. It can be powered independently by a battery system, using solar panels or by changing fuel to electricity. Another way is to use a collector system using electricity from extravehicular sources. EV’s are believed to be the technology that could decarbonize road and highway transportation, which accounts for 16% of global emissions. 

There are many modes of EV transportation now including rail and road vehicles, nautical and electric aircraft and spacecraft. There’s a “Moonbike” that is part bike, part snowmobile, in addition to trucks, cars and motorcycles. The auto industry has been looking into electrification plans in order to comply with policy regulations while keeping a competitive position in a changing market. In 2021 quite a few automakers proclaimed their goal of going all electric in the future. This could mean a larger range of models to choose from along with more competitive prices. 

This has all led to a huge growth in the electric vehicle industry and the need for nationwide EV charging stations. In 2021, the availability of these stations increased by nearly 40%. 

Here in New Hampshire, Senate Bill 52, a proposal to jump start investment in electric vehicle infrastructure, is scheduled for a hearing before the Transportation Committee next week. Thanks to Clean Energy – NH you can find the text of SB52 here.

Call or email your representatives to let them know you support this critical step to keep our state competitive as EV adoption accelerates here in New England and nationwide.

You can find your Senator and their contact information here and your House member(s) here.

EV info sourced from www.iea.org/reports/electric-vehicles

 

 

 

By Bobby Williams, 13 January 2023

My friend Raleigh Ormerod is a man of many talents. In addition to being a fellow Keene City Councilor, inventor of the Swiffer, and a rather impressive father, it turns out he is also quite an artist. Now, after going through several years of difficult medical challenges, Raleigh has drawn on that experience to come out with a compelling debut art installation at Dartmouth Medical Center. 

The pieces in his new installation, "Prime of Night" are computer-designed images that have been produced as limited edition prints on a glossy metal surface. They feature nocturnal animals on a black background, with each animal composed of exquisitely detailed geometric shapes. 

These prints evoke the best of Raleigh's personality - organized and analytical, detail oriented, colorful, innovative, with an underlying tone of benevolence, connection to nature, and peacefulness. As Raleigh says, the high-gloss metal evokes a feeling of "strength, resilience, and hope." 

The overall effect is positive and uplifting, which I think is a good place for contemporary visual art to be in this, the year 2023. It's been a rough stretch and we all could use some brightness and hope. 

Raleigh's installation on display through March 31, 2023 at Dartmouth Medical Center's 2K Lobby Gallery in Lebanon, New Hampshire. I hope there will be an installation in Keene someday.

Check out the video of his artwork below and visit his website for more details.

By Bobby Williams, 12 January 2023

There was a good showing in Concord today of people testifying in support of HB 61 that would get rid of the Divisive Concepts Law.

The Divisive Concepts Law is part of the broader racist Republican attempt to undermine public school systems as a means of privatizing education. New Hampshire's particular Divisive Concepts Law is a piece of copycat legislation brought over from Rick DeSantis' Florida. Its the legislative part of that whole nebulous "Critical Race Theory" brouhaha that was very popular with Republicans for quite a while before they got their butts handed to them on that issue in last November's election, and in the March election before that. 

It turns out that voters aren't as racist as a lot of people assumed! Maybe Republicans will take the hint and back off from this ill-advised relic of the culture war from several FOX News cycles gone by. 

The purpose of the Divisive Concepts Law is to make sure that a full and honest discussion of the experiences of racial, ethnic, and religious minority groups is excluded from the American classroom. It says, for example, that white parents can sue a teacher if they feel their kid is somehow made to feel uncomfortable about being white because of a discussion about slavery in school. Or they don't like a book about Star-Bellied Sneeches. 

It seems that parents who insist their kids play dodgeball will do anything to protect the poor dears from maybe feeling the least twinge of conscience over the recognition that they are the beneficiaries of a system built upon 500+ years of genocide, enslavement, and racial oppression.

Of course, many of the "parent" groups that have pushed this stuff are actually the local arms of Koch-sponsored, out of state conservative dark money organizations. Groups looking to experiment with education policy have been targeting New Hampshire because it is small, pliant, and a little money can go a long way. Last year, after this hateful and offensive bill was passed through scurrilous budget process shenanigans, some of these groups put up money to set up a hotline so that parents could inform teachers for being too woke.

I get that race is a difficult topic for a lot of my fellow white people - though far more so adults than children. In my experience, children can handle discussions of race - and Black children don't have any other choice. Sheltering white kids from these discussions means that they are being denied the tools and knowledge they will need to prosper in a multiracial society. Throwing a wet blanket over all discussion of racial issues and calling it "colorblindness" is not the way forward here.

I highly recommend watching - or listening, really - to this video testimony, which features Rep. Jodi Newell and Rep. Nicholas Germana, back-to-back. Jodi talks about the chilling effect the Divisive Concepts Law has on classroom discussion, and what divisiveness really is. Then Nick brings the history.

By Bobby Williams, 11 January 2023

The Report of Keene's Ad Hoc Committee on Housing Stability was presented before the City Council's Planning, Licenses, and Development Committee today. This has been a long time coming, and is the product of a lot of hard work by a lot of good people. 

Some may recall my role as a City Councilor in the establishment of this Ad Hoc Committee. After yet another expulsion of people camping outside behind a local shopping center, I got together with Councilors Bryan Lake and Catt Workman, and the three of us wrote a letter to the Mayor and City Council with a set of proposed actions that the City could take with respect to the ongoing crisis of housing and homelessness. Keene Sentinel with headline "Help for the Homeless"

This is the agenda we asked for:

  • Establish locations around the city to be designated as appropriate for camping. These locations should be provided with city-funded dumpster and latrine services to minimize the impact of campers on the on the local environment.
  • Establish a “safe parking” program, entailing the designation of parking lots where people living in their vehicles would be allowed to park and sleep overnight in relative security.
  • Work with our social services partners to provide occupants of camping and parking areas with outreach support and pathways to more stable housing opportunities. 
  • Review building code and zoning ordinances to make room for lower-cost housing solutions, such as tiny houses, cottage communities, and conversion of existing spaces into accessory dwelling units.
  • Work to expedite projects that bring expanded housing capacity into the city, with a balanced focus on both subsidized and market-rate housing.
  • Find a long-term solution for the lack of public bathrooms downtown.

There was a rather amazing hearing before a Council committee, with public support from a panoply of voices, including activists, advocates, agency representatives, health professionals, the clergy, public officials, and people experiencing homelessness. I told my own story of being homeless when I was 19. That meeting demonstrated to the Council that there was broad, community consensus on the need to put together a new strategy for Keene, and the matter was eventually referred to an Ad Hoc Committee appointed by the Mayor.

That Committee sat every month from April through December. I was not on the Committee, but I went to all the meetings, and so did a bunch of other people - the Monadnock Interfaith Project held ice cream socials at the UU church to strategize before every meeting. Boy howdy, that's how you organize.

The report that was presented earlier this evening was the culmination of the Committee process, and provides us with a strategy that we can follow that will help our community meet the needs of our most vulnerable. Now that it is being released, it is up to City Staff and the City Council to take up its recommendations individually to make sure that they actually come to fruition.

Do the recommendations that have come out of this Committee give the community everything that Councilors Lake, Workman and I asked for?  No, but, but we got a lot of what we wanted and there are some big wins. 

This is a long post already, so please find its continuation in Part 2.

 

 

 

By Bobby Williams, 10 January 2023

There was a hearing for HB 34 before the House's Children and Family Law Committee. It would raise the legal age for getting married from 16 to 18 in New Hampshire.

The bill was introduced by its sponsor, Rep. Cassandra Levesque (D-Barrington), who is the activist and legislator largely responsible for getting the age raised to 16 (from 13 for girls and 14 for boys), back in 2019. Since then, Republicans have been stonewalling on getting the age raised all the way up to 18, 

Rep. Levesque described the generational impact that child marriages have on peoples lives, as has occurred within her own family history. She spoke of the how child marriage commonly coincides with trafficking and abuse. She described a case of a 16 year old being married to a 49-year old, in exchange for financial compensation to a parent, as an example of something that happens and should not be sanctioned by law.

"You have to be 18 to sign a legal contract. Why do we allow 16 year olds to sign a legal contract of marriage?" Rep. Levesque asked,. She noted that girls who get married at 16 face a barrier to getting legal representation if they want to get out by getting a divorce, because they are not legally old enough to sign a contract with a lawyer. 

Republicans were predictably harping on the idea that marriages under 18 in New Hampshire are quite rare. Which is true - these marriages have become pretty rare. This article says 10 in the past three years. To me, that's a signal to close the book on the practice. But to Republicans, ensuring that someone can marry two years before they can vote is more of a "freedom" thing.

However, as one might expect, what it really boils down to is abortion. The theory goes that if a 16 year old gets pregnant, they would be less likely to get an abortion if they could get married instead. It seems that some people look back fondly on the days of shotgun weddings and see a lot of value in coercive models of family behavior.

 

The hearing closed with the moving testimony of Rep. Maria Perez (D-Milford). She shared her story of being sold into an arranged marriage when she was a minor, and of the abuse she endured at the hands of a much-older husband.. 

Her statement is queued up in the YouTube link below - it is recommended watching. Milford can be proud of its State Rep.

By Bobby Williams, 9 January 2023

Remember Christmas Eve? There had been some crazy weather coming through, as temperatures dropped from balmy to bitter cold and falling rain turned to ice. The storm affected grid infrastructure all across the country and power distribution lines were failing all over New England. Heroic utility linemen were sacrificing their holidays to make sure the rest of us had light.

That day also saw some wildness in New England's energy market. I know I wasn't the only nerd reloading ISO New England's real time maps and charts that day just watching in morbid fascination as electricity prices went through the roof. Check out this graph from ISO New England.

Electricity prices on Christmas Eve were already extremely high - averaging over $484 per megawatt hour (MWh) over the course of the day. But in the late afternoon they hit escape velocity, with regional prices peaking at $2,816/MWh around 5 PM. By contrast, I just checked the cost of a megawatt hour right now and it is $45.72.

ISO New England did not call for controlled power outages on Christmas Eve, but did declare a capacity deficiency, meaning the region’s supply of electricity was insufficient to meet required operating reserves in addition to satisfying consumer demand, at 4:30 p.m. This action was taken after approximately 2,150 megawatts (MW) of resources scheduled to contribute power during the evening peak became unavailable.

The way energy markets work, energy companies commit to being able to sell electricity to the grid when it is called for, and they are compensated for this commitment. Many fossil fuel-powered plants are kept around for the purpose of collecting these capacity payments, which are supposed to ensure when a demand spike in energy occurs, there will be generation capacity to fill it.

While blackouts on one of the chilliest days of the year were narrowly avoided, one can't ignore that, on Christmas Eve, several of our region's power generation companies failed to deliver the power they had been paid to commit to provide. Our regions dirtier, expensive, oil-powered plants were fired up to cover the shortfall that day, to fill in for natural gas plants knocked offline during the cold.

I don't have any grand lessons to draw here, except to say that its important to examine how the systems that support our lives perform when they are under stress.

I do have a couple other thoughts. First, keep this story in mind the next time Republicans try to undermine energy efficiency programs like NH Saves, claiming they just want the best deal for ratepayers. There are real capacity constraints in our electricity system, and the one of the best ways to live with them is to ensure that we aren't wasting the power we do have.

Second, I think there is a case for moving our peak capacity generation systems away from fossil fuels, and toward solutions like biomass, biofuels, hydrogen, and battery storage. The capacity payment system is a subsidy for power generation systems that are too expensive for every day use but can be counted on to help out in a pinch. If we are going to have this subsidy around anyway, why not use it to finance something a little greener?

 

By Bobby Williams, 8 January 2023

An angry mob of far-right protesters has stormed the seat of government in order to reverse a democratic election and restore a disgraced and defeated president to power.  This time, the country is Brazil and the would-be strong man is Jair Bolsonaro. Bolsonaro was a one-term, right-wing president who was defeated fair and square in October 2022 by now-President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Bolsonaro is currently exiled in Florida. Back in November, it was reported that his son was playing a role as a go-between with Trump, visiting Mar-a-lago and coordinating by phone with Steve Bannon. Bannon at the time was out in Arizona trying to undermine confidence in the electoral process there on behalf of failed Gubernatorial candidate, Kari Lake.

In all three elections - Trump, Bolsonaro, and Lake - reactionary candidates who had been defeated at the polls sought to instill among their more gullible followers the idea that such a loss could only have come as a result of a stolen election. They attack public confidence in voting as a means of attacking the institutional strength of democracy itself.

By now, the establishment of stolen election mythology has become a well-established strategy in the playbook for aspiring fascists. We can also now recognize it as a potential precursor to mob violence against governing institutions.

Meanwhile, not long ago, the GOP nominated General Don Bolduc as a candidate for US Senate. This is a guy who for months and months was undermining public confidence in our democratic process by saying things like “I think there was a tremendous amount of fraud across this country and in every state... I do know in the state of New Hampshire we have big problems with election integrity.” Of course, he never provided any evidence of this.

Don Bolduc was spewing the same kind of voter-confidence-undermining election denialism that got far-right extremists rioting in Brasilia and in Washington. What does it say about the rest of New Hampshire's Republicans that they were willing to go along with it?

By Terri O'Rorke, 7 January 2023

Chris Sununu was recently inaugurated for his fourth term as Governor of New Hampshire. Will this term, perhaps, be the one in which he seriously takes into consideration the concerns of citizens and gun violence prevention groups? 

At the beginning of his first full term beginning in 2017, one of the first bills he signed into law allowed people to bring guns into schools, made concealed carry licenses voluntary, and removed ‘suitable person’ criteria for licensing. The NH Chiefs of Police Association strongly opposed that by testifying to the necessity of keeping concealed weapons away from persons with a record of violence. To no avail.

He has repeatedly opposed allowing schools to establish and enforce “gun free zones,” stating his support of state law, which prohibits  schools and towns from doing so.

He campaigned on closing the background check loopholes then changed his mind after getting elected. He has also refused to help pass a ban on bump stocks.

The first weekend in August, 2019, saw back to back mass shootings in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio, leaving the nation to mourn the senseless loss of life again. A few days later, the Governor vetoed three bills having to do with gun safety; background check requirement for commercial weapons sales and requiring a waiting period from the time of purchase to delivery of a weapon. The third bill was to restrict possession of weapons on school property with the exception being police officers.

He stated that New Hampshire gun laws are “well-crafted and fit our culture of responsible gun ownership and individual freedom." He went on to say we are one of the safest states, having a long, proud tradition of "responsible firearm stewardship."

Until we don’t. 

New Hampshire shouldn’t wait for that day to happen.

By Bobby Williams, 6 January 2023

Rep Nicholas Germana has shared the following information on two upcoming bills he is working on.

HB 65 is sponsored by Rep. Eric Gallager (D-Concord) and cosponsored by Nick as well as other Keene local favorite Reps. Amanda Toll and Jodi Newell.  It honors the first labor strike by women in the United States and will have a hearing on Wednesday morning, January 11, in the Executive Departments and Administration Committee at 10:45.  Here is the text of the bill:

The Dover Mill Girls Recognition Day.  The governor shall annually issue a proclamation calling for a proper observance of December 30 in recognition of the first all-women labor strike in the state of New Hampshire, which took place over 3 days in Dover, starting December 26, 1828.  This was a seminal event in United States history for both labor and women's rights movements.  Schools and libraries are encouraged to commemorate the day with appropriate ceremonies and activities as close to the date as possible.  

Another, very important bill that Nick is cosponsoring, HB 61, would repeal the "divisive concepts" law. It will receive a hearing before the Education Committee next Thursday, January 12, at 9:30. 

If you have strong feelings about the importance of repealing the divisive concepts law, and you should, the best way to make your voice head is by emailing your written comments to all committee members through the email address HouseEducationCommittee@leg.state.nh.us.