Maine News Sunday May 10

Jobs 

  • Albertsons Company Inc. posted a job opening for Night Crew Stocker in Freeport. Apply here.
  • Sam's Club posted a job opening for Stocking Team Associate in Brunswick. Apply here. 
  • You can search for other jobs near Freeport here.

Press Herald-  Just 12% of Maine's school buildings were assessed for radon in the past five years, and nearly a quarter of those had elevated levels of the cancer-causing gas. It’s common for districts, especially small rural ones with other financial and safety challenges, to overlook a health issue that can seem invisible.

 


 

Where are Portland residents moving? U-Haul gives us a sense.



Maine News Saturday May 9

Press Herald -  A plot of woods situated across from Brunswick High School along Maquoit Bay is now officially open to outdoor recreation with the completion of a deal permanently protecting the land, the Brunswick-Topsham Land Trust announced last week. The announcement comes following an August 2025 vote by the Brunswick Town Council to accept $2 million from the local land trust organization to create a conservation easement on 240 acres of Maquoit Woods. The funds for the purchase came from an anonymous supporter of the land trust.

Press Herald - Brunswick’s town councilors Monday voted to extend a temporary measure preventing mobile home park owners from raising lot rents for another 180 days. The vote comes as the town crafts an ordinance to address rent practices that park residents say are pricing them out of their homes.

Maine Senate candidates outline priorities on energy, national issues
Hannah Pingree grew up in Maine politics. Is she the next governor?

Press Herald 
-  Fewer visitors came to Maine last year, but those who did spent more. The Maine Office of Tourism reported there were 14.15 million visitors in 2025, down 4.4% from the year before. Even so, visitors last year spent $9.37 billion, up 1.4% from 2024. Less than 5% of visitors came from other countries in 2025, with most — 3.6% — coming from Canada. That number is down from 2024, with 5.4% of visitors coming from Canada.

FREEPORT

WGME -  Freeport’s sewer system is getting a more than $20 million overhaul that will modernize treatment plants, add a new admin and lab building, and shift to UV disinfection. Funded largely by federal grants but adding a 10% surcharge to local sewer bills, the multi-phase project tackles decades-old corrosion and capacity issues and will roll out over the coming years.





Maine News Friday May 8

FREEPORT EVENTS
FREEPORT TALES

Who is the real Graham Platner?

Maine Biz -    Unity Environmental University, a private liberal arts institution based in New Gloucester, has signed transfer agreements with 11 community colleges in Maine and New Hampshire that will allow incoming students to apply associate’s degrees toward bachelor’s programs in environment and sustainability-related fields.

The agreements include partnerships with Central Maine Community College, Kennebec Valley Community College, Washington County Community College and York Community College.

 Freeport gardeners can look forward to Farthest Field Farm’s Memorial Day weekend seedling sale on May 23–24, featuring organically grown vegetable and herb starts. The article also highlights several other Midcoast farms and nonprofits in Brunswick, Bowdoinham, Freedom, and beyond offering seedling sales, preorder options, and community-focused programs to help residents kick off their gardens this month.

Press Herald - The health plan that covers 26,000 state employees and retirees under 65 is changing its coverage rules for the highly popular weight loss medications known as GLP-1s, marketed under brand names such as Wegovy and Zepbound. With open enrollment beginning this week, state employees will be required to enroll in a guided nutrition and lifestyle program for their insurance to continue covering the costs of GLP-1s for weight loss.

Here’s the state of tick-borne diseases in Maine

Where are Portland residents moving? U-Haul gives us a sense.

Rick Bennett My top priority as Maine governor will be to implement practical, immediate solutions to make Maine more affordable. We’ve already released plans on two of my biggest priorities: housing and healthcare.  

...As energy costs continue to rise, it drives up the prices of everything else. High electricity costs keep us dependent on expensive fossil fuels and our money flows out of state. The costs weigh on Maine families and businesses.

We must move faster and do more to bring down energy costs in Maine.  My plan focuses on four actions:

  • Right-sizing utility profits to lower delivery costs
  • Lowering energy costs for manufacturers and Maine’s heritage industries
  • Increasing efficiency and saving energy
  • Creating a new Maine Generation Authority to power Maine’s future

The details matter. Read my full plan here. 

Yahoo -   Maine Democrat Graham Platner is targeting the oil industry and the federal gasoline tax in his campaign for the Senate seat currently held by Republican Susan Collins.

Platner — who last month became his party's presumptive nominee for the marquee race when Gov. Janet Mills (D) dropped out — released an energy platform Friday, with a focus on policy changes he argues would reduce people's bills.

Democrats nationwide are relying on pocketbook issues to retake Congress during the midterm elections. But unlike other contenders in Maine and elsewhere, Platner has been less vocal about whether he would pursue a data center moratorium because of their potential effect on energy prices. His new plan doesn't touch on the debate.

"Nine hundred dollars more. That is what the average Maine household paid this winter compared to the year before — just to heat the house, keep the lights on, and get to work," Platner, a Marine veteran and oyster farmer, says ...

His ideas, including a fund for clean energy projects and a national freeze on electricity rate increases, "simply require the political will: to end Big Oil’s stranglehold on our energy policy, to slash prices for consumers, and to build the energy of the future."

Collins has touted her seniority in the Senate and her leadership of the Appropriations Committee. She has prioritized the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, and suggested President Donald Trump’s administration has withheld funding. The Department of Health and Human Services recently released millions of dollars after Collins and other senators pushed for it.

Jobs  - Under Armour posted a job opening for Seasonal Stock Associate in Freeport. Apply here. Walgreens posted a job opening for Inventory Specialist in Yarmouth. Apply here. You can search for other jobs near Freeport here.

Maine Democrats - Susan Collins:

  • Votes with Trump 96% of the time
  • Voted for the Big Ugly Bill, which has caused rural hospitals to close and more than 61,000 Mainers to lose their healthcare coverage
  • Voted to let ACA tax credits expire
  • Voted for dozens of anti-choice Trump judicial nominees

The best restaurants in Brunswick

Maine Morning Star -  After years of educators, districts and school leaders advocating for higher teacher salaries, Maine passed a law late last month to incrementally raise the minimum educator salary to $50,000 by 2029. While that still might not be enough to keep up with the rising cost of living, Deering High School teacher Lily Withington said, “it feels like the bare minimum, at least.”

Maine Morning Star -   Olivia Andre, a 19-year-old asylum seeker and Portland resident, will be released this week from an immigration detention center in Texas where federal authorities held her for six months, U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree’s office announced Wednesday evening. 

Maine News Thursday May 7

FREEPORT NEWS

WGME - Freeport breaks ground on new downtown housing project — Downtown Freeport is getting a major boost with construction underway on The Dash, a 51‑unit apartment building one block off Main Street. Town leaders and longtime residents say the project, and another expected soon, aim to revive year‑round downtown living, support local businesses, and bring back the neighborhood feel many remember from earlier decades.

 Press Herald - What are those boxes in Casco Bay's mudflats?— If you've spotted mysterious wooden boxes on Freeport's mudflats, they're part of a coastwide research project tracking how well softshell clams survive against predators like invasive green crabs. Downeast Institute scientists are using these "recruitment boxes" in Freeport and other Casco Bay towns, and they're looking for local volunteers this fall to help haul and process the heavy, mud-filled boxes when tides allow. 

Taking the Kids - Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park in Freeport offers locals easy-access trails, Casco Bay views, and daily hours from 9 AM to 7 PM right on Wolfe's Neck Road. The article walks you through its accessible paths, birdwatching, forest bathing, picnic spots, and seasonal scenery, with tips on when to visit for quieter walks and how families, seniors, and dog owners can enjoy the park comfortably. 

Jobs:  Skechers USA, Inc. posted a job opening for Retail Key Holder in Freeport. Apply here....Under Armour posted a job opening for Seasonal Stock Associate in Freeport. Apply here. You can search for other jobs near Freeport here.

Shaw Bros. plans to start sewer work on Friday morning, May 8th at Depot Street and the access road to First Parish Church. There will be flaggers on site and at times Depot Street and the church access road will be down to one lane of traffic. This work should roughly take all day Friday. After Friday, the sewer work will continue on the access road for the next 1.5 weeks.

 Maine Morning Star -  Maine’s Judicial Branch is warning residents of a new scam demanding payments for unpaid traffic violations. The texts include an image of a “final enforcement notice” and demand payment for unpaid traffic violations, including failure to pay tolls, speeding tickets and parking violations.

The state wants accessory dwelling units. Cities and towns are seeing mixed results.

National Democrats pour $9M into Maine governor’s race


Press Herald -   The City Council on Monday approved an ordinance update that extends limitations on cooperating with federal immigration authorities to all public employees, but not without some last-minute wrangling over the final language. The updated language, proposed in response to this winter’s immigration enforcement surge, further limits how public employees can interact with federal immigration authorities and includes restrictions on allowing agents into municipal buildings, using public funds to assist with operations and more.

The council conducted a first reading of the ordinance April 13 after negotiating amendments with the city’s legal team and the American Civil Liberties Union of Maine, which has brought the language to multiple cities.

The 7-1 vote followed some back and forth over the final language, which led Mayor Mark Dion to cast the lone vote in opposition.

Dion argued that language barring city employees from allowing federal agencies to access nonpublic portions of municipal buildings sends an “unfair” message to city staff. He offered an amendment that would’ve protected staff from discipline for violating the section, if they were found to have granted such access because of intimidation by federal agents, but it failed.

Press Herald - A Portland teenager whose immigration case has garnered national attention is set to be released by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement after nearly six months in custody.  A judge ordered on Wednesday that Olivia Mabiala Andre, 19, be released by Friday, according to one of her attorneys, Todd Pomerleau.

“She’s just overjoyed and ecstatic and going through a lot of emotions,” Pomerleau said in a phone call Wednesday evening, “but she’s getting out.”  Olivia Andre and her mother, Carine Balenda Mbizi, and two siblings, Joel and Estefania Andre, were taken into custody by U.S. Border & Customs Protection after the family sought asylum in Canada on Nov. 12. 

According to Border Patrol, the family entered the United States illegally in 2022 and a judge ordered their removal in February 2025. They appealed that order, but were denied in October.   The mother and two siblings were released in March. Ahead of their release, attorneys had argued that the mother and two high schoolers must be released from custody under the Flores Settlement Agreement, which details protections for people under 18 who have been detained by immigration authorities.

Jacobin - Troy Jackson, a fifth-generation logger and labor leader, is the first to say he’s not from the Left or the Right — he’s from the bottom. Troy worked eighty-hour weeks in the woods for big timber corporations as an “independent contractor” forced to accept the prices they set and leave his family for six days a week. In 1998, Troy led the fight to shut down the US-Canadian border to protest the illegal hiring of Canadian loggers, whose national health care system and exchange rate allowed them to work for less.

Jackson initially made his bid for the Maine State Legislature in 2000 as a Republican (and later became an independent), reflecting the political sentiments of many of the people he grew up with and worked alongside. His voting history details votes against marriage equality and legalized abortion. However, Troy is an elected official that actually talks to his constituents. Following his 2009 vote against marriage equality, which he calls “the worst vote he ever took,” he met with a group of pissed-off gay people from Aroostook County. In 2004, Jackson made the switch to the Democratic Party and now is a firm supporter of trans rights, women’s bodily autonomy, and progressive tax reform to make millionaires pay their fair share. 

Maine News Wednesday May 6

Portland Press Herald -  The Maine Department of Health and Human Services is gearing up for the rollout of the new Medicaid work requirements set to launch in 2027. The new policy will require some Medicaid recipients to work at least 80 hours per month, attend school, or volunteer. In Maine, the requirements would apply to about 90,000 adults, and the state estimates over 31,000 people could lose coverage as a result.

Based on per capita deaths, Portland is more dangerous for pedestrians than Boston and New York City. In 2025, the number of pedestrians seriously injured or killed in Portland reached a five-year high.

The average price for a gallon of regular gas in Maine rose to nearly $4.50 on Tuesday, charting a new high since the conflict in Iran began more than two months ago. Statewide, regular averaged $4.48 per gallon, premium was up to $5.48 and diesel hit $5.82. Experts warn that rising diesel prices could have spillover effects on the cost of groceries, dry goods and other industries that require the fuel to produce or ship goods.

Chellie Pingree calls on ICE to free Portland teen detained in Texas

Could the Maine budget be overturned in a people’s veto?



What are those boxes in Casco Bay’s mudflats?

Maine Morning Star -    Arresting law enforcement officers who are violating people’s constitutional rights. Establishing a public health insurance option. Continuing to challenge the federal government in court.  Those were some ways that the five Democratic gubernatorial candidates said they would stand up to President Donald Trump’s administration, during the candidates’ second televised debate, hosted by the Bangor Daily News and WGME Tuesday evening. 

The $85 test that could change Maine's PFAS fight (pressherald.com)

Troy Jackson -   CMP just went back to our state public utilities commission to ask for another rate hike — even though their profits are already skyrocketing. If you've seen some of the headlines, you might think they're going to “lower” your bill this summer.  ut don't believe it — it’s corporate trickery to make CMP seem like the good guys. In reality, they’re asking the state to let them jack up the electricity rates even higher to line the pockets of their multimillionaire investors, all while squeezing working-class Mainers who are already struggling. 


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.