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09-17-2009, 12:11 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Moultonborough
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Laconia Daily Sun Letter
I picked up the Laconia Daily Sun today and found this letter.
Almost none of us want to see return to chaos on the Big Lake To the editor, Once we got past the bad weather of June, it was a wonderful summer for boating and other activities on Lake Winnipesaukee. Surely the safest and most enjoyable in many years. Nobody can sincerely argue otherwise. While one could usually count as many boats on the lake, if not more, it felt much less crowded and safer because civility fi nally reigned. It’s amazing how big a lake can seem when fi lled with boats operating at reasonable speeds. Sailing vessels once again became a common sight. Families in smaller craft going for evening ice creams in their runabouts were back. Kids were being taken water skiing again. Campers were canoeing again in numbers we have not seen for years. Lake Winnipesaukee was once again a place that all could share and enjoy. 45 miles per hour in the daytime and 25 miles per hour in the nighttime proved plenty fast enough for all safe and reasonable boating. AND WE FINALLY HAD A SUMMER WITHOUT A HIGH-SPEED TRAGEDY. No boaters were run over this year, no boats crashed up onto islands, no speeding boats lost control and fl ipped over. But then, isn’t that what most of us expected? The Marine Patrol deserves a heartfelt thank you for their efforts to make the lake a more enjoyable place for all once again. They heard the concerns of the boating masses and responded professionally and effectively. And their efforts really paid off. Our biggest thanks should go to those who formed WinnFABS and made this happen. Using their own funds, this group of local citizens fought on our behalf for several years to fi nally get this law in place against an organized political machine funded by those who profi ted from crowding our lake with over-sized over-fast boats, and who wrongly predicted that our economy would be destroyed by a law that was not needed because “nobody goes that fast anyway” and would just be ignored (Note the contradiction in this statement is not mine). Unfortunately, this most-effective law is only temporary and will soon expire, and we face the possibility of returning to the “get out of my way” boating environment that brought us here unless we can convince our Legislature to make it permanent during the upcoming session. WinnFABS must and will again lead our efforts to make this happen. After writing this letter, I will make a donation to them to do my small part. But this time around promises to be the most expensive, and it is critical that they get as much support as possible. Aside from visiting www.gencourt.state. nh.us/house/members/wml.aspx to fi nd your legislators’ e-mail addresses and writing to them to let them know of your support for a permanent 45 MPH daytime and 25 MPH nighttime speed limit on Lake Winnipesaukee, I urge all to go to www.winnfabs. com and make a small contribution to WinnFABS’ upcoming campaign. Almost none of us want to see a return to the chaos that things had been. Lake Winnipesaukee is our lake. It is the gem of NH and the engine of our economy. Let’s keep it the way it was this summer. XXXXXXXXX -end- (I redacted the name and town of origin of the writer, with that exception I have copied and pasted in its entirety) Have we had a high speed tragedy every year?? |
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