Maine News Sunday

Press Herald 

After decades of use, many of the state's underground water mains are nearing the end of their viability. Replacing them - or not replacing them - comes at a huge cost to ratepayers.

Often working part time, people age 65 and older have become a critical resource in Maine's economy and tight labor market. The trend benefits employees and employers alike. 

At least twice a month throughout the city, Portland Parks and Recreation is hosting hikes led by a park ranger or special guests who are experts in their field. The goal is to connect people with local trails and parks in the community.

Maine's plain license plate has gained a following

These dog restaurants and cat cafes cater to Mainers' pets (and their hoomans)

Portland tops Food & Wine's list of best small cities for food and drink




Maine News Saturday

Troy Jackson -  We’re proud to share that Bernie Sanders endorsed Troy’s campaign for Governor of Maine! And now we have a new video so you can hear from Bernie yourself. You can watch it by clicking here

Press Herald 

Some Mainers in a focus group this week said they are only reluctantly supporting Graham Platner over Gov. Janet Mills in the U.S. Senate Democratic primary. A participant said the candidates’ ages are a factor in supporting Platner, 41, over Mills, 78, who would be the oldest freshman senator in history. But several participants said Platner’s past social media posts and a tattoo linked to Nazis have made them reluctant to back him.

Staff at the Portland Public Library’s downtown branch called police for assistance 501 times last year — more than double the number in 2024 — a stark increase that has city and library officials looking for answers. While serving vulnerable populations is nothing new for public libraries, the extent to which the library is relied upon by homeless people and those with substance use or mental health challenges has put immense pressure on staff. 

What big-money groups are spending the most on the Maine governor’s race this year?

Republicans hold huge spending advantage in Maine Senate race, and it’s getting bigger

What big-money groups are spending the most on the Maine governor’s race this year?

Democratic candidates for Maine governor discuss reforming health care

Broadway Bowl in South Portland to close after less than 3 years

 I’m a Maine reporter who went to high school with Graham Platner. Here’s what explains his success

Events


Thru April 30th in various venues around Freeport



Stroll through downtown Freeport and encounter original poems by local writers displayed in storefronts and public spaces throughout April. Selected from the Freeport Community Poetry Competition, these works celebrate connection, place and shared belonging. Presented in partnership with the Freeport Community Library.


Darn It! Mending Drop-In

Every Last Saturday of the Month  •  10:30 AM – 12:00 PM
@ Freeport Community Library, Sun Porch


Come be a part of the change sweeping the nation. Darn It! is the place to chat with neighbors and get mending advice to save money and keep junk out of the landfill – and look cool while doing it. Free and open to the public; some materials will be available for you to mend with but we recommend bringing some notions (patch, thread) if you have them.


Winslow Park - Campground reservations are now open.  The camping season runs from Friday May 22nd through Monday September 28th. 
April
13th 6:00 PM Public Hearings
13th 6:30 PM Select Board meeting
15th 6:00 PM Planning Board meeting
11th 6:30 PM Open Mic Night
27th 6:00 PM Public Hearings
27th 6:30 PM Select Board meeting
28th 6:30 PM Conservation Commission Meeting
29th 6:30 PM Capital Asset Plan Funding Committee Meeting
May
16th 10:00 am - 2:00 pm Pownal Community Day

Art Van

Friday, April 10 & 24 • 10:30 AM
@ Bradley Room at Freeport Community Center


Age-Friendly Freeport & Pownal is hosting the Art Van every second and fourth Friday. Join us in the Bradley Room to make art and see what the Art Van has in store. Free and open to all!


APRIL 12
Vesta, 424 Walnut Hill Rd., North Yarmouth: Bess Jacques Trio (Jacques, piano/vocals; Evan Haines, guitar; Sheldon Perkins, drums), 4-6 PM

APRIL 14

Complete Streets Committee- 30 Main Street, 7:30 AM
Town Council Workshop - 30 Main Street, 6 pm
FHS Advanced Theatre - Freeport High School, Durham 6 pm
Conservation Commission - 5 Deport Street, 630 pm
APRIL 15

The Freeport Project Review Board will hold public hearings on Wednesday, April 15, 2026 at 6:00pm in the Freeport Town Hall Council Chambers at 30 Main Street, Freeport, Maine, to discuss the following: items:

1) An application for Subdivision Review, submitted by Lumbo Ledge LLC (Mark Dorsey), for a 12-unit Village Open Space Subdivision off of Elm Street. The subdivision proposes 6 duplexes with an associated access drive, stormwater management, landscaping, and utilities on a 62,617 square foot parcel. The site, previously occupied by a residence, is now vacant. Zoning District: Village 1 (V-1) District, Freeport Village Overlay District (FVOD). The subject premises is located at Tax Assessor Map 11, Lot 88 (39 Elm Street).

2) An application for a Subdivision Amendment Review, submitted by Alex and Nubia Calabi, for an amendment to the previously approved Todd Brook Farm Subdivision to revise the language of Note 5 on the recorded subdivision plan to allow Lot 10 of the subdivision to have a driveway entrance from Old County Road. Zoning District: Rural Residential 1 (RR-1) District. The subject premises is located at Tax Assessor Map 26, Lot 12-10.

The public is welcome to attend and may choose to attend in person, or on Zoom. The meeting agenda (including information on how to join on Zoom) can be viewed at the Freeport Town Office or on the Town’s website at www.freeportmaine.com. Supporting materials are on file for viewing at the Freeport Town Hall.
event graphic

Join Seth Goldstein of the South Portland Historical Society for an illustrated presentation on the Wabanaki people of Casco Bay. Explore their history, culture, and habitation in the region, from life before European contact to the arrival of settlers. 

Wednesday, April 15
6:30 p.m.
Main Library, South Portland

Free and open to all. More info

APRIL 17



APR 18

APR 22 


APR 24

ERICA BROWN & THE BLUEGRASS CONNECTIONFriday, energetic five-piece band featuring some of the finest musicians in New England.April 24 at 7:30 PM 

APRIL 25
Visit Freeport & Meetinghouse Arts present

OPEN STUDIO SATURDAY

Saturday, April 25 •  10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
@ Various Venues in Freeport!


Visit Freeport & Meetinghouse Arts invite you to join us on a journey through Freeport, Pownal, Durham & New Gloucester to explore the artist & maker studios often hidden on side streets and
country roads. You’ll be invited into their working studios to view their newest projects up close. Learn about their inspirations and process in intimate conversations that are sometimes not possible at art show openings.


Earth Day Festival -Saturday, April 25, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Harriet Beecher Stowe Elementary, Brunswick

Freeport Folio presents

Pressure Makes Diamonds | Poetry Workshop with Joseph Coleman

Saturday, April 25 •  10:00 AM – 2:00 PM
@ Freeport Community Library


In this workshop, “Pressure Makes Diamonds,” students will use the pressure of workshopping an original poem and then reading that poem at an open mike that same evening. The instructor will provide prompts and each student will get a typewriter if they would like to experience what it was like pre computers. As a Barnum and Bailey Ring Master would yell out when a rogue elephant dashed for the exits: “The Show Must Go On!” or in this case: “Poems Must Be Read!”


APR 26


Shuck Yeah! Oyster Shucking and Cooking Class

Sunday, April 26 •  3:00 PM
@ Wolfe’s Neck Center


Join Chef Malcolm Kelly to learn about how to safely shuck an oyster along with some tasty recipes. Using oysters from Quahog Bay Conservancy, you will learn raw, grilled and baked oyster preparation and enjoy these yummy bivalves.


APRIL 30
Freeport Folio presents:

A Celebration of The Maine Poets Laureate

Thursday, April 30  •  6:30 PM
@ Meetinghouse Arts

Join us for this State of Maine National Poetry Grand Finale Event: a special reading by ALL of the Maine Poets Laureate to be held in Freeport. A partnership of  Maine Arts Commission, the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance and Freeport Folio.


MAY 1
Maine Democrats Biennial Convention. 1 Thompson Point, Portland. 9 am 

MAY 8-9 

First Parish Hall, 40 Main St, Freeport (lower side door) 

5:30 pm doors, 6 pm show.

TICKETS : https://our.show/crabcakes/fp 

MAY 9
Wolfe’s Neck Center is proud to present the Climate Solutions Dance Party on Saturday, May 9 in collaboration with Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and SPACE Gallery. This special series is making stops at iconic institutions across the country, including the American Museum of Natural History and the Monterey Bay Aquarium. We are proud to be a part of this vision, bringing people together to celebrate climate solutions through community and creativity. 

The evening celebrates the paperback release of Dr. Johnson’s New York Times bestseller What If We Get It Right?: Visions of Climate Futures, an inspiring collection of possibilities for building a better climate future.  The first 200 people to arrive will receive a copy of the new book. Tickets


MAY 13

Freeport Conservation Trust

FCT Annual Meeting & Membership Celebration

Wednesday, May 13th from 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
📍Bradley Room, 53 Depot St, Freeport


MAY 16

The Greater Freeport Chamber of Commerce invites you to be part of the Boots & Brews 5K on May 16, 2026—bringing hundreds of participants and visitors into downtown Freeport. Consider offering an exclusive day-of discount or special to runners and attendees, identified by their race bibs. This initiative is designed to drive people into your business, encouraging participants to explore, shop, and dine throughout town.

To be included in our promotions, please send your discount details to info@freeportmainechamber.com by May 1st.

MAY 20 

Are You Cyber-Savvy? Understanding thet Geopolitics and Personal Threats of Cyber Attacks, which will be held on Wednesday, May 20, at 7:00 pm at the Freeport Performing Arts Center.  You will hear from Nathaniel Fick, a Maine resident, former American diplomat, technology executive and author of the memoir One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine Officer.  Ambassador Fick was selected to lead the U.S. State Department's Bureau for Cyberspace and Digital Policy in 2022. Ambassador Fick will be joined by Rachel Wilson, Head of Cybersecurity for Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. Ms. Wilson transitioned from a career leading counter-terrorism and cyber-exploitation missions at the National Security Agency to protecting the financial sector.  Tickets go on sale a month before the event.


Thanks to Patch for some of the above

Thanks also to Bob Green for his music contributions to this list, He notes, "It is strongly recommended that you call ahead to confirm any performances and the conditions for entry. "

Learning laughter in Maine

Sam Smith  - Long before Bert & I, I started collecting Maine humor during my summer visits. One of my sources as a boy was Walter Stowe for whom I worked on various projects.

Mr. Stowe appreciated having someone to instruct and demonstrate his immunity to poison ivy by chewing on some its leaves. He had a stock of sayings of which he never tired. He could recite a blasphemous version of the Lord's Prayer at breakneck speed and when you asked him how much something cost, he always replied, "25 cents, two bits, two dimes and a nickel, one quartah of a dollah." When you picked up your end of a plank, the instructions also never varied: "Head her southeast!" When you said goodbye he said, "Keep her under 60 on the curves." And he offered this assessment of a suddenly departed brother-in-law: "That fella never was any good. Now he's upped and died right in the middle of hay season."

On the other hand, his assessment of Clyde Johnson was more favorable:  He’s the only man who can shingle a barn, tell a dirty story and smoke a pipe all at the same time."

When he needed to stall while thinking of a reply, the quite short Mr. Stowe would go into a brief shuffle, observe his feet intently, pick up his dirty baseball hat and scratch his bald head, finally declaring, "Well now!" with the occasional addendum "Ain't that somethin?"

When I introduced my future wife to Mr. Stowe and told him we were engaged, he did his shuffle and his head scratching, glanced at Kathy and then looked up at me over his little round glasses and said, "Pretty good for a girl."

" Er, Mr. Stowe, Kathy's from Wisconsin."

Shuffle. Hat back on.

"Glad to meet you anyway."

John T. Mann recalls that Mr. Stowe  had told his father: "If I die afore the end of mud season, just stick me in the gravel pit 'til the road dries out and the ground thaws."

By the time Kathy met Mr. Stowe he was very old. He made do to the end. When Mrs. Stowe forbade him to repair the roof on the grounds that a ninety something man shouldn't do such things, Mr. Stowe reluctantly called a roofer, then donned his carpenter's apron and climbed to the ridgeline where, like an aged great blue heron, he sat and supervised the operation.

Carolyn White, who spent nearly all her young summers on Wolfe’s Neck, recalls the season-end ritual in which her parents would instruct her to "go over and say goodbye to Mr. Stowe, because he may not be here when we come back next year." Mr. Stowe lived long enough for Carolyn to repeat the ritual with her own children.

Maine's less than pompous culture could be found everywhere, even reflected in the work of the local police department, as witnessed by a few entries in the Freeport police log from the summer of 1979:

JUNE 14 1000 PM: A barking dog was reported on Bow Street. Officer Gillespie asked the owner to quiet the dog and she said she would do her best.

JUNE 15 1008 PM: Officer Sloat received a report of a woman screaming on Pine Street. He found it was a lovers' spat.

JUNE 17 230PM: Officer Walker attempted to locate an 8O-year-old woman on 1-95. She had had a quarrel with her husband and decided to walk . . . 300 PM: Officer Walker located the woman and assisted with the reunion.

810 AM. Officer Carter responded to a call at the Brogan residence for a dog unable to get out a pool. In the process of getting the dog out of the pool, the dog bit Officer Carter. . . . 855 AM Officer Carter went back on duty after changing his trousers at home.

Even the road signs could be fun

Big new tube
Just like Louise
You get a lot
In every squeeze
Burma Shave

Not to mention the road directions

How much further is it to Freeport? . . . About 25,000 miles the way you're       headed.

How do I get to Skowhegan? . . . Don't you move a goddamned inch.

Where does this road go?. . . . Don't go nowhere. Stays right here.

How do I get to Boothbay Harbor? . . . Can't get there from here.

When you get to big Jimmy's place down the road a piece, you're gonna wanna take a right..... But don't!

How do we get to Topsham? . . . Don't rightly know . . . Well, how about Gorham then? . . . Nope, don't know that eithah . . . You don't seem to know much . . . Ayah, but I ain't lost.

Do you know how to get to Waldodoro? . . .Ayah

How do you get to Bangor? . . . Well, I usually get my brother to take me

You never knew when a laugh would crop up. Once, as a teenager, I drove into a gas station, stepped out of my car into a puddle and heard someone say "How's the watah?"

And John at R&D Automotive told me many  years back that my brother had been in with his car. "He said he kept smelling  gas . . . so I told him to stop it."

Then there was the exchange at Ed Leighton's department store:

"How ya doin?"

"You want the long story or the short one?"

"Oh hell, give me the long one."

"Pretty good, I guess."

At my father’s funeral I asked Billy Maybury, the undertaker how he wanted the pallbearers arranged.

"How many you got?" he asked pleasantly.

"Six," I replied

"Three on a side."

And then there was the time Bob Guillamette, the plumber, came to fix something. I asked him to also look at the tub he had recently installed because the water was slow to drain. He returned a couple of minutes later saying, "Christ, Sam, you're one of the lucky ones. Most of them won't hold water."

Then he fixed it.