Maine News Monday

Press Herald -  Protesters clashed with supporters of the Trump administration outside Bath Iron Works on Monday afternoon ahead of a visit by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

By 12:30 p.m., dozens of people had gathered at the intersection near the Bath post office and the base of the Sagadahoc Bridge carrying signs that read, “Fire Hegseth” and “Maine doesn’t welcome war criminals.” Dozens of others waved American flags in support.

The Guardian -  Maine, the US’s whitest state, has been shaken by the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, a crackdown that could threaten Republican control of the Senate in November’s crucial midterm elections.

Immigration Customs and Enforcement (ICE) agents launched “Operation Catch of the Day” in the state on 21 January, targeting “the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens who have terrorized communities”, according to the administration.

As critics said the operation had caused “pain and suffering”, Senator Susan Collins, a Republican facing a re-election battle this year in a state that voted for Kamala Harris in 2024, claimed she spoke with Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, who told her the operation had ended at her request.

But residents doubt Collins has defanged ICE and say the agency is still making its presence known and causing chaos in the bucolic state nicknamed Vacationland.

....Workers and labor unions in Maine claimed ICE is racially profiling people and has created an environment where people of color are under “an occupation” impeding their freedom of movement.

...Maine has grown more diverse in recent years but remains the whitest state in the US. The state has a small immigrant population of about 56,000 people, comprising about 4% of the state population.

A recent report by the Maine Immigrants’ Rights Coalition said ICE detentions in the state substantially increased in 2025 from 2024, and said many detainees had no criminal history, even before ICE launched their latest operation in the state, which the agency claimed was targeted at criminals.

WalletHub - Maine has the lowest racial gap in educational attainment, with the share of black people aged 25 and older holding a bachelor’s degree at 30.3 percent compared to 22.5 percent for their white counterparts, a difference of 7.8 percent favoring black people. The full report 

Press Herald -    From The Maine Monitor: While Maine’s timber harvests have steadily declined in recent decades, sawlog production increased between 2010 and 2020. Demand has since slowed, but the owners of Pleasant River Lumber said the tariffs on Canadian lumber imports that the Trump administration increased last year have given them the confidence to expand business in Maine. Is it enough to overcome high costs and a slumping housing market?  

Philip Spiller Jr., a one-time mayoral candidate in Westbrook, was jailed again Feb. 6 a week after he made bail following his arrest on domestic violence charges. Spiller was being held without bail in the Cumberland County Jail over the weekend for allegedly violating the terms of a protection order and of his release. The victim said she called authorities after she discovered firearms that Spiller was supposed to have surrendered.


How to play it safe on snow days in Maine




Maine News Sunday

Press Herald 

President Donald Trump issued a proclamation on Friday reopening a huge swath of protected sea in the Atlantic Ocean to commercial fishing. Trump said the move would reestablish fishing in a marine national monument off the New England coast, a nearly 5,000-square-mile preserve east of Cape Cod that was created by former President Barack Obama. Trump rolled back protections in the area in 2020 and President Joe Biden later restored them.

Many of the Maine residents arrested during an immigration enforcement operation last month were processed at a facility in Massachusetts that attorneys warn has deplorable conditions and is not set up for extended detention. When Immigration and Customs Enforcement pulled all of its detainees out of the Cumberland County Jail, many of them were moved to a field office in Burlington, Massachusetts, about 100 miles from Portland.

Peggy Grodinsky, Press Herald -  Marital strife in the garden, I’ve read, is a thing, with couples arguing over division of labor, budget, likes and dislikes, and in our case, time management. 

Riley Brannigan, who works in the gift shop at Allen, Sterling & Lothrup nursery in Falmouth, has seen it firsthand: One half of a couple piles up an ambitious heap of seed packets and pricy garden tools. The other applies the brakes. Friction, if not outright disagreement.

That said, the four couples I interviewed ahead of Valentine’s Day to ask how they get along in the garden are models of harmony.  MORE


George Mitchell & the Epstein scandal

WMTW  - Former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell, of Maine, has resigned from the scholarship institute that bears his name.  Mitchell, 92, has said one of his proudest accomplishments in life was the creation of the Mitchell Institute on Washington Avenue in Portland.

For several decades, the Mitchell Institute has given at least one student from every public high school in Maine a $10,000 scholarship.

The Mitchell Institute Executive Committee said Thursday that Mitchell tendered his resignation from his role as honorary chair of the organization.

"We also agree that this is an appropriate time to initiate a thoughtful, responsible process to consider a potential name change," the committee said in a statement.

Mitchell served as a United States senator from 1980 to 1995 and is well known for his diplomacy. He is credited with successfully brokering a peace deal in Northern Ireland in 1998, effectively ending decades of conflict.

This past weekend, the U.S.-Ireland Alliance voted to remove Mitchell's name from its scholarship. In addition, Queen's University in Belfast, Northern Ireland, decided to remove a bust of Mitchell from its campus.

These actions were taken after Mitchell's name appeared more than 300 times in the latest release of documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

One document in particular details an encounter Mitchell allegedly had with a girl. According to the documents, the girl expressed being scared and reported having to leave for school.

An FBI document dated December 2020 focused on that girl, whose name is redacted. The female described having sex multiple times with Mitchell after Epstein arranged for her to travel to Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., according to the documents.

The girl claimed, Mitchell asked for oral sex and sex, so she complied. According to the documents, the girl, "did what she was told."

Mitchell's spokesperson responded to the allegations with a written statement that read: "Senator Mitchell reiterates unequivocally that he never met, spoke with, or had any contact ... with any underage women."


"Senator Mitchell profoundly regrets ever having known Jeffrey Epstein and condemns, without reservation, the horrific harm Epstein inflicted on so many women," Mitchell's spokesperson went on to say in the statement.


Events

    Tuesday February 10
  • The Sharing Table: Food For All In-Person
    Curtis Memorial Library Atrium
    12:00 pm
  • Art Supply and Hardware Swap In-Person
    Curtis Memorial Library Atrium
    2:00 pm
  • Wednesday February 11
  • Valentine's Day Party
    Val Halla Golf & Recreation, 60 Val Halla Rd, Cumberland Center
    12:00 pm
  • FREE FLY-CASTING INSTRUCTION
    Brunswick Recreation Center, 220 Neptune Dr, Brunswick
    2:30 pm

Join us for a morning conversation exploring Indigenous ways of relating to water—and what those perspectives can teach us about care, responsibility, and reciprocity in Casco Bay. Casco Baykeeper Ivy Frignoca will be joined by Keyana Pardilla of Wabanaki Public Health & Wellness for a thoughtful, accessible discussion, with time for your questions. 

Coffee with the Casco Baykeeper: Indigenous Relationships with Water

Date: Thursday, February 12, 2026
Time: 8:00-8:45 a.m.
Where: Zoom

Coffee with Casco Baykeeper Indigenous Relationships with Water graphic with coffee cup

Town Council

Tuesday, February 17 Regular Council Meeting

Saturday, March 7, 10:00 a.m.
In-person at MHS
Seating is limited, reserve your tickets early.

Deborah Sampson, the first woman to successfully enlist, fight, and be honorably discharged from the American Military, captivates audiences in this hour-long program chronicling her life. This performance is the flagship production of History At Play, LLC. Having been performed nearly 2,500 times, the award-winning living history experience is internationally renowned.
Learn More | Buy Tickets

March 25: Coffee with the Casco Baykeeper: The PFAS Results are In!

What do recent PFAS test results tell us about Casco Bay—and what comes next? Join Casco Baykeeper Ivy Frignoca and a panel of experts for a practical, accessible conversation about new PFAS data from across the Bay and lower watershed, including results tied to the Brunswick spill. We’ll explore how the findings compare to EPA criteria, what Maine is detecting in fish and shellfish, and what these “forever chemicals” could mean for Maine moving forward. Grab your favorite hot beverage and bring your questions as we dig into the evolving science together.

webinar graphic with coffee cup

Coffee with the Casco Baykeeper: The PFAS Results are In!


Date: 
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Time: 
8 - 9 a.m.
Where: 
Zoom


April 2026 | Open Mic Poetry with Betsy Sholl

Free tickets can be reserved here now for our next Freeport Folio Open Mic Poetry featuring Betsy Sholl, Poet Laureate of Maine 2006-2011. We have also invited the to be crowned 2025-2026 Maine State Poetry Out Loud Champion. The event is on April 11th, 1pm at the Freeport Community Center. Tickets are free but seats are limited. 

Short Term Change in Town Clerk Desk Hours

Due to staffing needs, these hours will likely be in effect until April. We apologize for any inconvenience and appreciate your understanding.

Town Clerk's Office Hours of Operation:

  • Monday, Wednesday, Thursday: 7:30am - 5:00pm
  • Tuesday 7:30am - 6:00pm
  • The office will be CLOSED from 2:00pm - 2:30pm each day for lunch.