Maine News Sunday

Press Herald - Nearly 25 years have passed since Maine lawmakers decided students should learn about Wabanaki history, culture and contemporary life. Still, not all children in Maine receive that education. A 2022 report that examined 10 school districts found most were struggling to implement the law with little support from the state. Three generations of Penobscot advocates are fighting to ensure students in Maine are taught about Indigenous tribes.

A proposed bill would require applicants for school positions in Maine to disclose all investigations they were subject to under previous employers, as well as by state licensing agencies, law enforcement and the Department of Health and Human Services. The information would stay between employers. A public hearing on the bill is scheduled for 1 p.m. Tuesday.

Snow is in the forecast for Monday, fresh off a storm that brought 4-6 inches to much of Maine. The latest forecast calls for 6-8 inches of snowfall in the Casco Bay area, with the storm starting Monday morning and winding down that night. Strong winds could lead to lower visibility, hazards and coastal flooding, according to Meteorologist Jerry Combs.



Eddie Bauer stores in Maine set to close

Press Herald - “I grew up thinking we didn’t have slavery in Maine,” Merita McKenzie said, leading a tour of close to 80 people through downtown Portland. “I thought it stopped in Massachusetts.” 

As she learned more about African American history in Maine, McKenzie found that she was wrong. Maine had seen slavery, and more than she expected. “It’s very sad, but it’s very true that slaves were here,” McKenzie said. 

A walking tour through Portland’s downtown on Saturday afternoon highlighted the city’s Black history, including the arrival of slaves on ships docked in southern Maine harbors and, later, slaves boarding ships in Portland, searching for freedom..... 

McKenzie, a Portland native, has ancestors with a long history in the city. Her great-great-great grandmother came to Portsmouth from Dutch Guyana by herself at only 11 years old, later settling in Portland and growing the family McKenzie was born into....

Slaves would enter by ship near the Ocean Gateway on the city’s waterfront, Maine historian Bob Greene said.

.... On Gould Street near the harbor, where slaves would be dropped off upon arrival in Portland, the ghosts of their footprints still mark the stones. 

One block away from famed restaurant Eventide, the Abyssinian Meeting House stands, the third-oldest African American meetinghouse in the country. 

....Portland is steeped in Black history, McKenzie said, but residents don’t often realize it. MORE


Events

    Monday February 23

    Due to the weather forecast, a parking ban will be in effect for the Town of Freeport from 7AM Monday (2/23) until NOON Tuesday (2/24).

    During a winter weather parking ban, no parking is allowed on public streets nor in turnarounds during winter storm events – please keep streets and turnarounds clear of vehicles (including trailers, campers, etc.) during a storm.

  • Finance Committee Meeting
    Freeport, ME Calendar, 30 Main Street, Freeport
    5:00 pm
  • Finance Committee Meeting 
  • 3o Main Street 5 pm
  • FSAB Lecture Series 10 Library Drive 630 PM  (Cancelled because of weather)
Tuesday February 24
  • Municipal Facilities Commitee 30 Main St, 7:45 pm 
  • Carpe Diem Outing Tuesday, 2/24 at 2pm  Walsh Preserve, 67 Old County Rd, Freeport

    Join us to seize the day at Walsh Preserve for a trek across the marsh to a waterfall on the other side of the Cousins River. With the cold winter, the ice is thick, and at the right tide we can pick our way across on foot. Come prepared for wet feet and some crawling over ice. Bring walking poles for certain and snowshoes if you’d like. 

Wednesday February 25
  • Ordiance Committee Meeting - 30 Main Street, 430 PM
  • Freeport Sustainability Advisory Board  - 30 Main Street, 630 pm

Chainsaw Safety Course

Saturday, March 14th & Sunday, March 15th | 8:30 am to 4:00 pm

Skyline Farm95 The Ln, North Yarmouth


RRCT is offering a FREE2-day, beginner-friendly Chainsaw Safety Course at Skyline Farm in North Yarmouth. Registration is limited to 10 spots.


The course will be taught by RRCT's Administrative Coordinator, tish carr, who also happens to be a licensed forester and arborist passionate about chainsaw safety. Mike Maines will also be teaching the course, another licensed arborist and forester.


Most participants will have little to no experience with a chainsaw, though this course is also an effective refresher for more experienced individuals who have developed some bad habits.


Participants will have the opportunity to operate a chainsaw in a safe, comfortable, and supervised setting. We will practice starting a saw, making straight up-and-down cuts, and bore cuts, and all will witness a directional felling demonstration, and those who are interested will practice it.


If you have any questions, please email tish carr, tish@rrct.org


April 11 | 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

APR 11 - LADIES OF FLAME  7:00 PM A beloved all-women musical ensemble that performs a lively selection of heartfelt songs and popular hits. Reserve tickets

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.

How much snow will actually fall near you?

 NY Times - There’s a reason the snowfall prediction on your weather map often misses: It represents just a fraction of the possible outcomes contained within official forecasts.

Most weather maps show you only the center of the distribution of snowfall estimates. Search below to see the full range of possibilities for your community over the next few days.



Maine News Saturday

Press Herald - A new gun safety law that was pushed by advocates in the aftermath of the 2023 Lewiston mass shooting takes effect Saturday. The so-called red flag law was approved by voters 63% to 37% in November following a referendum campaign. The law makes Maine one of 22 states that allow authorities to temporarily remove weapons from people who pose a risk to themselves or others.

The Portland City Council will decide Monday whether to extend a moratorium on large concert venues for another six months as officials consider ordinance changes that could block a proposed 3,300-seat music hall downtown. The Portland Music Hall – proposed by Mile Marker Investments and Live Nation – would be built next to Merrill Auditorium, but it has drawn strong opposition from Portland’s music community.

Some Kennebunkport business owners and residents are raising concerns about town discussions that could lead to new restrictions on tour buses. Visitors to Maine’s Beaches region — which includes Kennebunkport — spent $2.5 billion in 2024. While some locals say traffic and safety issues have gotten out of hand, businesses that rely on tourism fear additional restrictions will drive customers away.

Maine News Friday

Press Herald -   In a consequential decision for Maine, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that President Donald Trump cannot use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose sweeping tariffs....

Trump’s tariffs, a signature part of his economic and international relations platforms, have strained relationships with longtime trading partners, including Canada. A Politico poll released Thursday found that only 22% of Canadians agree that “the United States is a reliable ally.” More than half — 58% — disagreed.

Canada is by far Maine’s largest trading partner. In August, Trump raised the tax on goods imported from the state’s northern neighbor to 35%. Maine brought in more than $4.7 billion in Canadian goods in 2024, before the tariffs hit.

At the time, experts said many of the products Maine imports from Canada would be exempted from Trump’s tariffs because they are covered in the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, a major pact designed to alleviate trade barriers between the three countries.

The agreement covers roughly 86% of Canadian imports into the United States, according to an analysis by the Royal Bank of Canada. Broadly speaking, the agreement exempts products made entirely in Mexico and Canada. Some items made with components from other countries — but that are substantially changed by the manufacturing process — are also exempt.

Patrick Woodcock, president of the Maine State Chamber of Commerce, said the Trump administration’s use of emergency tariffs created a challenging regulatory landscape for local businesses.

“It has been a rollercoaster for a lot of Maine businesses,” he said Friday morning.

The chamber is generally supportive of tariffs that can level the playing field for Maine businesses in certain industries, such as those targeting softwood lumber, Woodcock said. But the sweeping and fluid nature of these emergency tariffs was difficult to plan around.

....James Myall, an analyst with the left-leaning Maine Center for Economic Policy, said the decision was “generally good news” for Mainers. He called it unsurprising, given the skeptical tone of justices’ responses to oral arguments in the case last year.

He said the USMCA exemptions have softened some of the effects of Canadian tariffs.

“The Canadian tariffs have actually not had as much impact as people worried they would,” Myall said. But “many Maine companies and businesses use goods that are imported from all kinds of other places as well.”

The full impact of tariffs on Mainers’ overall cost of living is still unclear, Myall said. It’s not clear whether Friday’s ruling could mean savings for consumers.

Senate Democratic Campaign Committee - Susan Collins just said she will support the Trump backed SAVE Act. If passed, this dangerous piece of legislation would force millions of Americans to jump through hoops to exercise their right to vote

Press Herald - Wabankai tribal leaders, lawmakers and Gov. Janet Mills might not be entirely on the same page. But they’re reading the same book. The Legislature’s Judiciary Committee heard from tribal leaders and their allies Thursday during a hearing on two bills. One would make federal Indian law broadly applicable to the Wabanaki Nations. The other would lift restrictions on tribal land acquisition and expand tribal authority over hunting and fishing on their lands.

Some civilian workers at the government-owned Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery recently got bonuses of up to $25,000 from the Department of Defense. Others did not, and they’re not happy about it. The selective bonuses have prompted complaints of favoritism and discrimination. The program, rolled out in December by the Trump administration, was a way to recognize “our very best civilians with meaningful monetary awards.”

It will be another weekend of good sledding and snowblowing in southern Maine. The National Weather Service forecasts a large swath of the region to receive at least 3 inches of snow Friday night into Saturday, while some areas may receive up to 8 inches. The highest totals are expected in southern Oxford County, northwestern York County, and a slice of western Cumberland County. 

Maine Forest Service urges loggers to adapt to extreme weather

Press Herald - Maine Gov. Janet Mills won’t attend an annual governors meeting Friday at the White House, declaring that she refuses to attend an event she says “that has turned into an unproductive vanity project for the President.”

The governor’s announcement followed weeks of back and forth over whether she and other Democrats would attend. The National Governors Association previously backed out of the meeting, which Mills and several other Democratic governors are boycotting after Trump declined to invite two Democrats.

Press Herald A sculpture planned near the new bridge linking Brunswick and Topsham will honor its historic predecessor, using steel recycled from the soon-to-be-dismantled Frank J. Wood Bridge.

Brunswick Public Art announced its choice for the bridge memorial at Tuesday night’s Town Council meeting after months of planning and collaboration with artists.

The organization chose a design by the Seattle-based artist team of Laura Haddad and Tom Drugan, BPA President Sarah Brayman announced Tuesday.

The artists have several public art works in their portfolio. A Bowdoin College graduate, Haddad also has ties to the Midcoast.

“The community has a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reuse actual Frank J. Wood bridge parts to create a distinctive structure commemorating this iconic structure that has been a dominant aspect of the Brunswick-Topsham landscape and an essential economic asset for the previous 100 years,” Brayman said.

Maine News Thursday

Press Herald -  One statewide crisis – a growing number of deteriorating schools nearing the end of their lifespan – could play an important role in ending another: the critical lack of affordable housing. Lawmakers are weighing a bill that would establish a program to help towns turn vacant schools into apartments. Even if it does pass, though, lawmakers would have to find a way to fund it, which could be a hurdle.

A personal financial disclosure Gov. Janet Mills filed last week details more than $170,000 in stock investments. The disclosure comes as Democrats push to ban stock trading by members of Congress. Mills said in a written statement that she supports efforts to ban congressional stock trading and would place her current investments into a blind trust if she’s elected to the Senate.

Maine is the only state in the country where legal medical cannabis is not required to be tested for chemicals, mold, heavy metals and other contaminants — but that could soon change. Lawmakers are considering a proposal to hold the state’s medical and recreational cannabis to the same safety standards, which reflects a reckoning for the market but the bill still faces significant opposition from the industry.

Maria Girouard member of Penobscot Indian Nation - There is more in the news today about the state possibly “returning more sovereignty to the Wabanaki Nations.” They act as though sovereignty is theirs to give and return.  If the tribes have inherent sovereignty, which we claim that we do, then all this legislative dog and pony show is completely unnecessary and only gives the state more power, and chips away at tribal sovereignty. What the state gives, the state can take away. The kicker in all this is that these bills have never been vetted in our tribal community. We have never had the opportunity to have discussions around these matters, to share our collective knowledge, to strategize. 

Casco History Lab

As the Public Historian for Wolfe’s Neck Center, Tilly Laskey manages the new Casco History Lab, Located on Abenaki and Penobscot homelands, the center’s 626-acre campus remains largely unchanged since English settler colonialists established farms in the 1660s on what is now called Wolfe’s Neck. Historic resources include Ulster Scots archaeological digs and houses from the 1718s, a 1750s saltbox house on the National Register of Historic Places and other historic buildings such as the 1890 Mallet Barn, a grand post-and-beam structure. (865 4469, 184 Burnett Road.