- 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
MAINE NEWS & NOTES
News of Maine near Freeport
Maine News Monday April 27
Maine News Sunday April 26
FREEPORT EVENTS
Tidal chart for May in South Freeport
Forever Wild Yoga & Wellness - 98 Main Street Ste 10 Brunswick 6 pm
O’Donoghue’s Pub, 103 Pleasant St., Brunswick: Open mic hosted by Billy The Kid, 3-7
Celebration Tree Farm & Wellness Center,125 Bowie Hill Rd, Durham 6 pm
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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 27
Finance Committee Meeting, 30 Main St, 5 pm
Little Roots In Person - Freeport Community Library, 10 Library Drive - 10:15 AM
Defend Democracy Messaging Project - Peaks Island Community Center, 129 Island Ave, Peaks Island 10 am
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April27th 6:00 PM Public Hearings
27th 6:30 PM Select Board meeting28th 6:30 PM Conservation Commission Meeting29th 6:30 PM Capital Asset Plan Funding Committee Meeting
May16th 10:00 am - 2:00 pm Pownal Community Day
APRIL 29
The operator of the Amtrak Downeaster is hosting a pair of open houses next week, soliciting community feedback on the future of the rail line’s service. “It’s a chance for the community to help design a passenger rail system that works better for everyone,” Patricia Quinn, the authority’s executive director, Open house will be held in in Freeport, April 29 from 5-6:30 p.m. at the Freeport Community Center.
APRIL 30
The inaugural Wolfe’s Neck Center “Twilight Meeting” for Freeport community and local partners. Updates on Wolfe’s Neck Center campus stewardship, farm operations, education programs, historical buildings and research. Expect a 45-minute presentation, 15 minutes of small group Q&A, and light refreshments. RSVP here
MAY 1
Maine Democrats Biennial Convention. 1 Thompson Point, Portland. 9 am
Wolfe's Neck Center - Our beloved Farm Cafe opens on May 1 and you’re going to want to see this menu! Chef Macolm Kelly has outdone himself, offering a variety of rotating freshly made pastries, breakfast sandwiches (beginning May 22) and salads, all made with Wolfe’s Neck meats and produce. Hours: 8am-1pm
Sample items:Squash MuffinsEgg & Bacon Breakfast SandwichGarden SaladRoast Beef Sandwich
Climate Solutions Dance Party: Dance your way into climate action! in collaboration with Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and SPACE Gallery. The event is a celebration of the paperback release of Dr. Johnson’s New York Times bestselling book 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. Grab your tickets before they sell out. TICKETS

MAY 11
Join Maine Historical Society’s Donor Engagement and Events Specialist, Sophie Bray, for an entirely informal opportunity to socialize and converse. In Novare Res Bier Cafe, 4 Canal Plaza, Suite 1 Portland, ME, to mingle, hang out, and chat a little history. Our History Happy Hour offerings are held on the second Monday of every month at a different establishment in greater Portland from 5:30–7:30 p.m.
As we do every spring, the Wolf's Neck Club will be selling perennials from our gardens as a fundraiser. This year we will also have a Bake Sale on Saturday morning. The sale will be Saturday and Sunday, May 16 and 17, 9-5, at the intersection of Birch Point and Wolf's Neck Roads. For a successful Plant and Bake Sale, we need plants and baked goods and people to buy them.
With participation from the club’s members, we can pull it off. It’s not hard or complicated, and it can be fun. We hope you can pitch in with outreach for the sale and in coming up with plants and baked goods to sell.
Maine News Saturday April 25
Newsweek - On prediction markets, Democrats’ implied chances of defeating Collins have now reached record highs. Kalshi, a regulated U.S.-based prediction platform, currently prices a Democratic victory in the Maine Senate race at 73 percent, leaving Republicans—including Collins—at 27 percent.
.Benjamin Freeman, Politics Growth at Kalshi and an election prediction specialist since 2019, flagged the shift on social media: “New all-time high. Democrats have a 73 percent chance of defeating Susan Collins in the Maine Senate race.” Polymarket, a separate crypto-based platform popular among political traders, paints an even bleaker picture for the incumbent. There, Democrats are priced at roughly 76 percent to win the seat, compared with 22 percent for Republicans, based on tens of thousands of dollars in matched wagers.
Troy Jackson - I have a plan to tax the ultra-wealthy and make real changes to support working people — because that’s what Mainers deserve. My Democratic opponents want to play it safe. They say they support the millionaire tax, but I'm the only one who wants to double it from 2% to 4% — so we can actually pay for what working families need, things like quality childcare and nursing homes, trade schools, property tax relief, affordable housing, and healthcare.
Freeport - Obituary: Florris L. Bly (pressherald.com) — Florris L. Bly, 91, who once made her home here, worked as a legal secretary in town, and co-owned Arthur’s Market.
It’s official: passenger fares on Portland’s Casco Bay Lines are increasing again starting in June. Round-trip, peak-season adult tickets will rise from $14 to $16, 30-day passes from $48 to $51, and annual passes from $432 to $435. It’s the ferry service’s second passenger-ticket increase in the past three years. In 2024, Casco Bay Lines approved its first rate hike in 15 years, raising round-trip ticket fares by 82%.
U.S. forces aboard a Bath-built Arleigh Burke–class destroyer fired on and took control of an Iranian-flagged cargo ship crossing the Arabian Sea heading toward an Iranian port on Sunday. After six hours of repeated warnings and orders to evacuate the engine room, the Spruance disabled the Touska by firing several rounds into the engine room, according to videos of the exchange. U.S. Marines then boarded and took control of the Touska.
Judge gives Maine 30 days to review validity of trans referendum signatures
Cumberland fire chief was placed on leave over meeting misconduct
Times Record - A fuel island set to be constructed next to Brunswick’s Public Works facility is prompting alarm among nearby residents, who say they are worried about fumes, traffic, disruption and the future of Brunswick’s Senior Gardens — which will be demolished in the construction. Several neighbors who live in the area of Water Street — which leads to Industry Road, where the Public Works building is located — told the Brunswick Town Council at its meeting Tuesday night that they’re concerned about the possible environmental impacts and the nuisance that a fuel station could create.
Press Herald - The operator of the Amtrak Downeaster is hosting a pair of open houses next week, soliciting community feedback on the future of the rail line’s service. The events will include an update on the new station proposed for Portland, a presentation highlighting recently completed projects and conversations about potential new investments and service changes, the Northern New England Passenger Rail Authority said in a Wednesday announcement.
“It’s a chance for the community to help design a passenger rail system that works better for everyone,” Patricia Quinn, the authority’s executive director, said in a written statement. Quinn will give presentations at both events. Open houses will be held in in Freeport, April 29 from 5-6:30 p.m. at the Freeport Community Center
NY Times - Maine’s governor vetoed a bill that would have banned the construction of new data centers in the state, which would have been the first law of its kind in the U.S.
Maine News April 24
Janet Mills vetoes temporary data center ban
Portland Press Herald - Earlier this week, the Maine Attorney General’s Office conceded that up to 3,014 signatures backing a referendum on trans participation in school sports might be invalid.
A judge gave the Secretary of State’s Office a month to gather new evidence and further investigate questions regarding the validity of signatures backing a referendum on transgender athletes in school sports.
The office must issue a new determination of validity within 30 days, Superior Court Justice Deborah Cashman ruled Friday.
The ruling comes after a group of Maine residents argued that the controversial referendum did not gather enough valid signatures to qualify for the ballot. In a lawsuit last month, they argued that there were problems with at least 7,900 signatures that Secretary of State Shenna Bellows had verified.
The Office of the Maine Attorney General, which is representing Bellows, said many of the arguments put forward by the residents should be rejected, but conceded that up to 3,014 signatures that Bellows’ office initially found to be valid should be invalidated.
Maine Morning Star - Maine’s Bureau of Motor Vehicles launched a mobile branch on Thursday that aims to expand access to rural parts of the state that lack services. The portable unit, branded BMV4ME, offers the BMV’s most common services, such as issuing driver’s licenses and learner’s permits, as well as handling name and address changes.
“This modernization improves our customer service,” Secretary of State Shenna Bellows said in a statement, “We can’t wait to take it on the road to service not only Maine’s most rural communities but also senior living facilities, veterans’ homes and other sites where Mainers would most benefit from the convenience of in-person BMV service.”
Portland Press Heald - Three Democrats running for Maine governor stood side by side Wednesday to accept an unusual joint endorsement along the Kennebec River — a scene made possible in large part by ranked-choice voting in the upcoming June 9 primaries. Experts say the system will be crucial in deciding this year’s Maine governor's primaries, as crowded fields in both parties make it unlikely any candidate will secure more than 50% of the vote in the first round.
Maine is delaying some Medicaid payments until July 1 to address its budget shortfall, according to state officials, though hospital leaders say patient services won't be disrupted. When lawmakers approved the $519 million supplemental budget this month, it included funds to make up the $62 million Medicaid shortfall. It’s the second year in a row that Maine has delayed some Medicaid payments to make up for budget shortfalls.
Southern Maine pastor detained by ICE, leaving a hole in his church community
How to avoid scams, according to Maine fraud experts
Former dean of pharmacy, who researched maple syrup, sues UNE for firing him
Mi’kmaq Nation and federal wildlife refuge agree to share land in Aroostook County
Tariff refunds won’t benefit many Maine businesses, consumers
Maine News April 23
Platner's interview with NBC News
Portland Press Herald - Amid growing political pressures on American higher education and the rising cost of college, some southern Maine students are heading across the border. The number of American study permit holders in Canada reached its highest point in a decade in 2025. Last year, after President Donald Trump took office and began slashing grant funding and threatening schools with investigations, Canadian universities began seeing rising interest from American students
At first glance, 2025 appears to have been a banner year for housing production in Portland. The planning board approved 1,420 units — a city record and an almost 200% increase from the 477 approved the year before. However, last year was one of the worst years for completions in the last decade, with just 187 units added, down 68% from 2024.
Holy Donut workers at Portland’s Park Avenue store vote to unionizeMaine Morning Star - The Maine chapter of the Sierra Club has endorsed three candidates in the Democratic gubernatorial primary: Shenna Bellows, Troy Jackson and HanAt a press conference Wednesday, Emma Conrad, chair of the chapter’s political committee, said the organization often endorses in primary elections, but this is the first time endorsing three candidates, which they said was a benefit of the state using ranked choice voting in the primary. More
Yarmouth: Lawmakers reject speed camera bill, but MDOT and Turnpike plan to try again (newscentermaine.com)
The Lincolnville-based Cellardoor Winery has closed its Portland tasting room on Middle Street.
Jetport update: A new approach for airplanes landing at the Portland International Jetport will minimize ongoing noise complaints, officials say.
Student walkout: Students at Lyman Moore Middle School in Portland walked out of class last week in support of social studies teacher Josephine Tibbetts, who believes she was retaliated against when administrators declined to renew her teaching contract.
187: The number of housing units built in Portland in 2025, after 582 were built in 2024, and 780 built in 2023.
Press Herald - The Cumberland County Board of Commissioners voted Tuesday to drop U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from its contract with the U.S. Marshals Service to hold federal detainees at Cumberland County Jail. The board voted 3-1 to drop ICE from the agreement roughly eight months after dozens of constituents began showing up to commission meetings to advocate for such a move.
The decision also comes about three months after the Department of Homeland Security pulled its prisoners out of the jail. That was in the wake of Cumberland County Sheriff Kevin Joyce referring to ICE’s arrest of a corrections officer during the January surge in Maine as “bush-league policing.” DHS officials also cited the county’s decision to hire an “illegal alien” in the first place, though Joyce had said the correction officer’s record was “squeaky clean.”
JOBS
L.L.Bean, Inc. posted a job opening for Security Officer - 3rd Shift in Freeport. Apply here.
NextEra Energy Resources, LLC posted a job opening for Senior Production Technician (Shift) in Yarmouth. Apply here. You can search for other jobs near Freeport here.
Maine News April 22
Maine House Democrats - We just finished up the second session of the 132nd Legislature in Augusta....Some highlights include:
+Ensuring tax fairness with a millionaire's tax!
+Supporting education and child care by overhauling the state school funding formula to ensure every town receives its fair share, raising starting salaries for teachers, clearing the child care waitlists, and guaranteeing free meals for public pre-K students.
+Making a $68 million investment to build affordable homes and providing annual property tax relief by increasing the Property Tax Fairness Credit from $1,000 to $1,500.
+Protecting women’s rights from the Trump Administration by ensuring funding for reproductive health care centers and starting a program to track sexual assault forensic examination kits.
+Protecting immigrants by prohibiting ICE from accessing dorms, schools, libraries, and hospitals without a warrant from a judge.
+Introducing first-in-nation legislation that will put a temporary ban on data center development, giving the state time to put guardrails in place that will protect Maine’s natural resources and ensure electric costs for consumers aren’t driven up by big corporations.
Press Herald
The small mountain town doesn’t immediately seem like one of Maine’s most vibrant cannabis markets. Bethel, a community of about 2,500 in the White Mountains, has about one dispensary, grow, or manufacturing facility for every 200 residents — the highest concentration of cannabis businesses of any Maine municipality with more than 1,500 residents. To locals, the surprise isn’t the number of shops, but how they all manage to stay in business.
A Maine island airline says the United States Postal Service owes nearly $400,000 for mail deliveries dating back to 2023, prompting it “to make a small stand” Tuesday. Penobscot Island Air says it has ferried mail on 75 days so far in 2026 without payment. A USPS spokesperson said Tuesday that the agency will be reaching out to the airline “to resolve the matter.” But the airline says it has already been in regular contact with USPS, to no avail.
