Maine News Wednesday May 6

FREEPORT EVENTS
FREEPORT TALES

SAM SMITH BIO


The Electric Tool Lending Library features a variety of EGO brand electric yard care tools that residents can borrow for their personal residential use, including:

Self-propelled Lawn Mower (x2)
Leaf Blower (x4)
Hedge Trimmer (x3)
Weed Whacker (x2)

Tools can be reserved by Freeport residents free of charge as long as they are 18 or older and have an active library card for the Freeport Community Library.

Maine News Tuesday May 5

FREEPORT EVENTS
FREEPORT TALES

SAM SMITH BIO

NEWS

Patch -   A longtime Freeport firm, Fine Lines Construction, is moving its offices this June from Main Street to the former Stars and Stripes Brewing Co. site on Varney Road and adding a cabinet and millwork shop by September. The 35-employee company has heavily renovated the vacant brewery building and says the larger space will support more local projects within a reasonable radius of Freeport.

Freepot Town Manager reports 


Winslow Park camping
runs from

Friday May 22nd through Monday September 28th


Nightly Campsite Rates for 2026

  • Freeport Residents:
    - Site Type Inland: Tent $15, RV $17
    - Site Type Waterfront: Tent $16, RV $18
  • Non-Residents:
    - Site Type Inland: Tent $40, RV $52
    - Site Type Waterfront: Tent $52, RV $58
  • Group Campsite Rate: $86 (residents and non-residents)
    *Group Campsite reservations must be made over the phone at 207-865-4743 x126

*PLEASE NOTE: All reservations are non-refundable*

Maine Morning Star President Donald Trump said he supports a bill from Democratic U.S. Rep.Jared Golden to extend the pause on federal lobster rules.   Last month, Golden introduced a bill to continue shielding Maine lobstermen from new regulations to protect North Atlantic right whales until 2035.  “The need to protect Maine’s iconic lobster industry knows no party,” Golden said in a statement. “I’m grateful for the President’s support for Maine’s lobstermen and hopeful that my colleagues in the House will join me in quickly passing this bill into law.” On Friday, the Trump administration announced its strong support of the bill in a Statement of Administration Policy and said the president would sign the legislation if Congress sends it to his desk. 

Troy Jackson is first person ever to be endorsed in a gubernatorial primary by the Maine AFL-CIO

JOBS

  • C. & J. Clark International, Ltd posted a job opening for Assistant Store Manager New Store Opening in Freeport. Apply here.
  • MSAD 51 posted a job opening for K-12 Ed Tech III - Special Education in Cumberland Center. Apply here. You can search for other jobs near Freeport here.


Maine News Monday May 4


Press Herald  

Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-1st District, plans to visit Dilley Immigration Processing Center in South Texas to see Olivia Andre, a 19-year-old asylum seeker from Maine, who has been in federal detention since November.

Washington County farmers face mounting economic uncertainty, but they will not see a proposal for relief funds on the November ballot. Lawmakers made several attempts to revive LD 2094, a bill that would have directed a $45 million bond into existing grant and low‑interest loan programs for farmers and the forestry sector — even introducing an amendment to fold the farm and forestry funding into another bill. But the legislative session ended in mid‑April with the proposal stalled. Read more from The Maine Monitor.

Maine Morning Star -  From food assistance to healthcare, housing to energy costs, the Democratic-led Maine Legislature passed dozens of laws to counteract the adverse effects of federal cuts on affordability, while advancing several long-term Democratic priorities, notably a new tax on millionaires that aims to raise state revenue and permanently making community college free.

“The major accomplishments of the legislative session were efforts to counteract the cruelty of the Trump administration,” Maine House of Representatives Speaker Ryan Fecteau (D-Biddeford) told Maine Morning Star.

....But lawmakers stopped short of fully counteracting mounting federal pressures. Several ambitious proposals failed in the session’s final weeks, including a $250 million healthcare bill meant to help Mainers struggling with rising marketplace insurance costs and changing Medicaid eligibility. 

Gov. Janet Mills got a lot of what she wanted during her final legislative session. The Legislature again failed to override her vetoes, including what would have been a first-in-the-nation temporary ban on data centers. She also blocked continued attempts to return full sovereignty to the Wabanaki Nations. And, her “affordability checks” for some Mainers squeaked through, despite pushback from even some within her own party. 

Maine Monring Star -   The latest legislative session in Maine saw few changes to the state’s criminal justice system.  Lawmakers pursued three overarching types of reform: adding oversight of prisons, reestablishing parole and expanding criminal record sealing. The first two proposals were significantly walked back, while the latter was outright rejected through the failure of multiple bills. But, the lawmakers and advocates behind these proposals said they plan to bring them back, either again in future legislatures or potentially as citizen initiatives sent to voters. 

FREEPORT

On April 30th, Freeport’s Meetinghouse Arts hosted the statewide National Poetry Month Maine grand finale, A Celebration of the Maine Poets Laureate...The poems carried us through marriage and grief, rhubarb and beauty salons. A letter to a Maine still one hundred years away. Cow faces pressed to farmhouse screens, the moon compared to a deadbeat roommate and a violinist who played through her own brain surgery. The recording is now on YouTube

Maine Biz - The Freeport Sewer District has scheduled a groundbreaking ceremony for May 7 to mark the start of its wastewater infrastructure upgrade and rehabilitation project at 43 South Freeport Road.  The projectreceived $20.1 million from U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development.

“We are pleased to mark the groundbreaking of a project that has been years in the making and represents a once-in-a-generation investment,” said Mike Ashby, the district’s chair.  The project is a “significant step forward in strengthening Freeport’s wastewater infrastructure for the future,” he added.

“As commercial clammers, we depend on clean water,” Ashby and Tom Hudak, the district’s treasurer, said in a joint statement. “This project allows the district to continue to protect the Harraseeket River and Casco Bay for everyone.  The project is a critical investment in upgrading the district’s 50-year-old facilities and ensuring effective wastewater treatment for our community and visitors for decades to come.”

Maine News Sunday May 3

Fun walking in Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park

Maine Biz -  The Wood Build Maine conference on June 5 in Freeport will showcase how wood is shaping the future of construction, from mass timber and engineered wood systems to sustainable building practices and advances in manufacturing and research. Sponsored by the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry, in partnership with the Maine Department of Economic and Community Development and the Maine International Trade Center, the one-day event will bring together architects, builders, designers, manufacturers, policymakers and investors.

The event builds on the DACF’s partnership with Finland’s Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. It will highlight the broader movement that sees wood not just as a building material, but as a climate solution, an economic engine, a design element and an opportunity to connect with nature.

JOBS

Maine News Saturday May 2

FREEPORT NEWS

Town of Freeport - Beginning Monday, July 6, the Town of Freeport will implement new Town Hall public hours to better align open hours with staff capacity and community usage patterns. Under the new schedule, Town Hall will be open:

  • Monday: 7:30am - 5:00pm
  • Tuesday: 7:30am - 6:00pm
  • Wednesday: 7:30am - 5:00pm
  • Thursday: 7:30am - 5:00pm

Analyses of Town Hall activity showed very low transaction volumes during the 5:00 - 6:00pm hours, during which time multiple departments remain staffed. Adjusting hours allows the Town to focus staff coverage during times residents most frequently seek in‑person assistance. Online services such as some payments, permit information, forms, and requests are available 24/7 on our website at https://www.freeportmaine.com/184/Online-Services-Transactions

The total number of hours Town employees work will be unchanged, and there is no reduction in staffing or services. The change aligns public hours with the staffing capacity approved through the Town’s budget, helping ensure that offices are routinely staffed whenever Town Hall is open.

MAINE UPDATE

Recent poll: Palmer leads Collns by 2%

Thom Hartmann -   Maine just handed Democrats a wake-up call that they’d damn well better actually listen to this time.

Governor Janet Mills suspended her Senate campaign yesterday, leaving Marine veteran and oyster farmer Graham Platner as the presumptive Democratic nominee to take on Republican Senator Susan Collins in November.

The message Maine voters are frankly shouting is the same one I’ve been hearing from listeners on my radio/TV show for years and the same one that pollsters across the spectrum keep picking up across the country: people are sick and tired of mealy-mouthed corporate Democrats who run on focus-grouped slogans and govern like they’re scared of their own shadow. They want fighters.

Mills was Chuck Schumer’s hand-picked candidate, recruited by Democratic Party insiders because they thought the 78-year-old two-term governor would be the safest, most “electable” option against Susan Collins. What Schumer and the “insider Democrats” got instead — and deserved — was a 30-point shellacking.

Platner, who launched his campaign last August by naming “the oligarchy” and “the billionaires who pay for it” as the enemy, outraised Mills every single quarter, packed wildly enthusiastic town halls all over the state, and even earned Bernie Sanders’s endorsement along the way. He turned Mills’s establishment alignment into a major liability and thus pushed her out of the race a full five weeks before the primary.

Press Herald Special education rates are at an all-time high nationally. Depending on the study, Maine ranks second, sometimes third, in the nation, with just under 21% of the state’s 171,174 students qualifying for additional services in the 2023-24 school year. The national average is 15%. There is no clear reason for Maine’s high rates, though experts mention factors like the aftereffects of the COVID pandemic, an aging teacher population and state regulations.

Press Herald -  When Susan Tarpinian opened the original Morning Glory Natural Foods on Maine Street in Brunswick in 1981, her son, Toby, was just 2 years old. Now, he’s running the business, and has a brand new store for his own 2-year-old to toddle around in.

Tarpinian and his team decided to expand the business about a year ago, feeling cramped in the downtown store. The new location [in the former REAL school building in Brunswick Landing] offers the same natural food products as the Maine Street store, with the addition of a seafood counter and a butcher.  

Interview with the team behind Morning Glory here. 

How five Democrats running for governor agree and disagree with Janet Mills

Maine News Friday May 1

Clean Link -  The Green Restaurant Association (GRA), a national non-profit organization that demarcates official Certified Green Restaurants, announces the winners of the 2026 Green Restaurant Award. These facilities support sustainability initiatives that aim for both conservation and cleanliness. To measure the efficacy of environmental efforts, organizations are measured alongside eight categories: energy, water, waste, chemicals and pollution, food, and building and furnishing. For each element implemented within a category, Green Points can be obtained. The cumulation of these points demonstrates foundational steps toward eco-friendly operations. Greenest Independent Restaurant: Maine Beer Company Tasting Room, Freeport, Maine


Troy Jackson - I proudly endorsed Graham Platner back in February because I saw in him the same thing Bernie Sanders did, and the same thing countless people all across Maine and the entire country did: a progressive champion with the guts to take power back from the corporate oligarchs who’ve dominated our political system for FAR too long.

Maine Bix -  Out of 149 U.S. metropolitan areas, Portland ranked second for livability in a barometer by RentCafe.com, an apartment search website. Washington, D.C., topped the list.

The rankings evaluated metro areas with populations of at least 300,000 across 17 metrics, including cost of living, health care access and community feel, grouped into three categories: location and community, quality of life and socioeconomic status.

While the city of Portland has a population of around 68,000, the Portland–South Portland Metropolitan Statistical Area totals more than 563,000. Researchers highlighted the region’s access to a large number of membership associations, local farmers’ markets, top universities and a robust network of health care providers.

“Although the cost of living here exceeds the national average, Portland’s steady job market, income gains and low unemployment rate make it appealing to renters looking for stability,” according to the report.

“But, it’s not just a spot where you can work hard,” the authors noted. “The metro area also stands out for its rich food scene, with 230 restaurants per 10,000 residents, an

Press Herald -   With Gov. Janet Mills' withdrawal Thursday morning, the Senate race in Maine now appears to be a competition between incumbent Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican, and Democratic newcomer Graham Platner.

The Democratic primary takes place in June, and Platner will have to beat David Costello for his party's nomination, but he's almost certain to do so. That means Mills' announcement turns our attention to November's midterm election.

…Platner's campaign has spent more on advertising than Collins', but those figures may not show the full picture.  Platner for Maine had spent about $7.3 million on ads as of Thursday afternoon, according to the ad tracking site AdImpact. Collins for ME Senate had spent about $2.4 million.

Press Herald - For the first time, thousands of Mainers can take paid time off from work for life events and return to work. Over 2,000 Maine residents have already pre-applied for benefits. Starting May 1, the Maine Paid Family and Medical Leave program will allow any employee in Maine to take up to 12 weeks off work for family or medical events such as childbirth, infant care, injury, illness or family caregiving duties — while still receiving a portion of their wages.


Wabanaki Alliance -  The Wabanaki Studies bill being funded and signed into law, advancements made to improve the conservation easement statute to include tribes and tribal ties to land, more positive movement on taxation benefits, and waived admission fees for tribal citizens to state parks...

7 Oddball Maine Museums to Visit


JOBS
  • Regional School Unit 05 posted a job opening for Athletic Coaching Positions 2025-2026 in Freeport. Apply here.
  • L.L.Bean, Inc. posted a job opening for Assistant Manager, Retail (Stores) Communications in Freeport. Apply here. You can search for other jobs near Freeport here.

Maine News Thursday April 30

Graham Platner interviewed by Jon Stewart

The Hill -  Centrist Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) on Thursday broke ranks with Republican leaders and most GOP colleagues by voting for a war powers resolution sponsored by Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) to halt military actions against Iran, the first Republican senator to change her position on curtailing President Trump’s military authority.

Collins joined Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) in voting to advance a resolution to withdraw U.S. military forces from the conflict with Iran unless Congress votes to authorize the use of force. She and Paul voted with most Democrats for a motion to discharge the resolution from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but it still failed by a vote of 47 to 50.

Maine News Wednesday April 29

                                                                                          FREEPORT EVENTS 

Press Herald - When Maine seemed poised to pass the nation’s first temporary ban on new data center development, the country started to pay attention. Then came the veto. Gov. Janet Mills shot down the measure late last week, saying she would have signed it if it included an exemption for a development proposed at the former Androscoggin Mill in Jay. Critics were quick to condemn the move, while supporters praised Mills for defending local interests amid national scrutiny.

A jury has awarded $102.2 million in a lawsuit over artwork attributed to the late Robert Indiana, a longtime Maine resident who created the famous LOVE sculptures. In a case filed in New York just before Indiana's death in 2018, the group that owns the rights to his work sued his former associate, Michael McKenzie, who was found to have produced fraudulent pieces and violated copyright and trademark laws. 

What Maine put in a time capsule that’s meant to be unearthed in 250 years

How to stay safe amid elevated fire risk in Maine

FREEPORT -  Kati Sylvester is offering yoga classes in the Barn at Windpointe at the end of Litchfield Road. I enjoyed a good class last night.   To learn more, see the class schedule, go to: yoga.seekingwonderment.com - Katrina Van Dusen

Maine News Tuesday April 28

Press Herald - Maine marijuana growers are increasingly using radiation and other methods to remove contaminants like mold and yeast from their products, a process consumers are likely in the dark about. Despite state policy requiring remediated products to be labeled, that rule hasn't been enforced since at least November 2024. Supporters say the process is safe, while opponents argue there isn’t enough research on remediated cannabis. 

Supporters of a bill that would give certain lawmakers access to confidential child protective records will make another push this week, arguing the change is needed to hold the state accountable. They plan to rally on Wednesday, when the Maine Legislature returns to Augusta to act on bills vetoed by the governor. The measure could get a second vote on “veto day,” or it could go without another vote and die upon adjournment.

How to watch the upcoming primary debates in Maine’s races for governor, Senate, House

Graham Platner and his wife announce miscarriage

Pro-Collins super PAC launches $2M attack ad against Graham Platner

Portland City Council approves jetport parking plan

Maine Morning Star -   Energy affordability was top of mind for state lawmakers this session, as they passed an assortment of bills to try and bring down Maine’s high energy prices. But with a varied approach, it’s hard to tell exactly how much impact the legislation will have on residents’ bills. “I think it is a shift in emphasis and in direction going forward that I think will help us start to turn the tide or push down on the upward price pressure that we’re finding coming from lots of different angles within electricity rates,” said Heather Sanborn, the state’s public advocate. But, she added, there’s nothing among the list of new laws “that is immediately going to make bills lower.”

... Dr. Barbara Kates-Garnick, a professor of practice in energy policy at the Fletcher School at Tufts University, said the progress will have an impact long term. But in the immediate future, it’s unclear what ratepayers will see. “All of these measures make a difference, but whether or not, in the short term, we’re going to see the price decreases and impacts that people desire, I think the jury is really out,” Kates-Garnick said.

Bowdoin exhibit documents the Wabanaki experience through oral histories, photos (pressherald.com)

Jobs 

Patch - Gap posted a job opening for Retail Sales Associate - Freeport Vlg Station in Freeport. Apply here.

Skechers posted a job opening for Retail Sales Associate in Freeport. Apply here. You can search for other jobs near Freeport here.

Maine News Monday April 27

Maine Biz -  The Mount Desert Island YMCA found a housing solution for its employees when it bought a single-family home with six bedrooms and common spaces to use as shared housing.  The MDI YMCA bought 2 Rockwood Ave. in Bar Harbor from Tim and Susan Buell for $650,000. Erica Brooks of Swan Agency Portside Real Estate Group brokered the deal. Bar Harbor Bank & Trust financed the acquisition.

Hannah Pingree - In my community, when your house is on fire or you’re having a health emergency, we rely on our neighbors - even if we don’t agree politically. Because it’s up to all of us to show up for each other. That’s exactly how I think about politics.

Women's Tennis Sweeps Middlebury and Williams For First Time In Program History (bowdoin.edu)

Brunswick residents try to stop town from building new fueling station (wgme.com)

Press Herald -  The biggest change at Acadia National Park this year is for foreign tourists. An America The Beautiful Pass, which covers entrance fees at many national parks and federal lands, jumped to $250 for non-U.S. residents in 2026. The pass will still cost $80 for U.S. citizens and residents. Baxter State Park introduced a change to its reservation system for 2026 so campers will be able to book four consecutive nights at the same site online.
Life as a Working Mom in Maine 
  • Overall Rank: 6th
  • 10th – Day-Care Quality
  • 25th – Pediatricians per Capita
  • 5th – Gender Pay Gap (Women’s Earnings as % of Men’s)
  • 8th – Ratio of Female Executives to Male Executives
  • 13th – Female Unemployment Rate
  • 12th – Parental-Leave Policy Score
  • 9th – Avg. Length of Woman’s Work Week (in Hours)
  • 26th – % of Single-Mom Families in Poverty
 For the full report:

Maine Morning Star - Maine enacted several new laws during the latest legislative session that aim to counter President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda, codifying the pushback from local, community efforts.There’s a ban on immigration agents entering public schools, state libraries and hospitals without a judicial warrant, and a measure to protect tenants against the disclosure of their personal information. 

Gov. Janet Mills signed both into law last week. And earlier this month, she approved a measure clarifying that jails can refuse to hold people detained solely for a civil immigration violation, paving the way for the Cumberland County Jail to stop holding Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainees. 

Maine Morning Star -   Gov. Janet Mills on Friday vetoed a bill that would have banned data centers larger than 20 megawatts until November, 2027 — which would have been the first such moratorium in the nation. “A moratorium is appropriate given the impacts of massive data centers in other states on the environment and on electricity rates,” Mills wrote in her veto letter to the Legislature. “But the final version of this bill fails to allow for a specific project in the Town of Jay that enjoys strong local support from its host community and region.”

Press Herald -  Intermed will no longer accept Martin’s Point Medicare Advantage insurance, starting in 2027. About 4,500 InterMed patients will be affected, according to the healthcare provider.

WBLM -  Education holds an important place for many Mainers. According to the U.S. Census, more than 35% of residents have earned a bachelor’s degree or higher, ranking the state 18th nationwide and above the national average. Top ranked colleges