MAINE ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS

The most comprehensive online source of conservation news and events in Maine and beyond, edited by Jym St. Pierre

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Thank you for reading Maine Environmental News. Each year, we post thousands of news summaries, notices, and links related to important environmental issues from across the state (and beyond). If you find this service useful, you can help us continue to provide it by making a donation. Just click on the button below and contribute whatever you can afford. Thanks again for your generous support!

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Jym St. Pierre
Editor, Maine Environmental News

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What does a changing climate mean for central Maine? We asked an expert

CENTRAL MAINE • July 5, 2026

Gail Carlson, Colby College associate professor of environmental studies, said, “There is a ton of uncertainty in predicting exactly how hot it’s going to be in the world, in the U.S., and in Maine. We have made progress in terms of climate action at the policy level and investments in renewable energy, such that the worst-case scenarios for warming are probably off the table now. So that’s a good thing. But Maine has already warmed around 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit over the last 150 years or so, so it’s not like, ‘Oh, we’re good now.’ I think it’s reasonable that we can expect warming to continue. Exactly how much in Maine is hard to say.”

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Volunteers at Old Orchard Beach keep the shore sparkling on the fifth of July

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 5, 2026

Cigarette butts, lone flip-flops and un-lit sparklers filled blue Lowe’s buckets to the brim Sunday at Old Orchard Beach. Under the pier, blue tarps displayed the Surfrider Foundation’s beach cleanup loot, waiting to be sorted by volunteers. The Surfrider Foundation’s Maine chapter has been holding beach cleanups at Old Orchard Beach the day after the Fourth of July for several years. The nationwide environmental nonprofit hosts events that promote the fight against climate change and plastic pollution, Maine Chapter Chair Paula Slayton said. Festivities on Independence Day inspired the foundation to dub the fifth of July “The Dirtiest Beach Day of the Year,” and launch a cleanup.

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Skowhegan man drowns in Kennebec River

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 5, 2026

Jakub Prokop, 21, was a passenger on a 16-foot Lund boat that was traveling upriver of the Hinkley Boat Launch in Skowhegan at around 11:20 a.m. Saturday morning. He was not wearing a life jacket when he was ejected from the boat.

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Opinion: Fisheries managers must stop delaying and protect Maine’s river herring

MAINE SUNDAY TELEGRAM • July 5, 2026

For generations, alewives were harvested from Maine’s rivers, providing food, bait for fishermen and support for the broader ecosystem. When alewives disappear, the effects ripple outward. That is why in Maine we spent hundreds of millions of dollars removing dams, improving water quality and building fish passage to bring these fish back. Those efforts improved our alewife runs. But many of those restored fish are being killed at sea. Industrial midwater trawlers are the biggest threat to our restoration efforts. A single tow can wipe out an entire river’s spawning run. All the taxpayer dollars spent restoring rivers and fish passage can be wasted in one afternoon. Maine’s alewife runs have rebounded but Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York and New Jersey have seen their river herring and shad populations hit hard by industrial bycatch. The New England Fishery Management Council has failed to take action. ~ Rusty Taylor, Alewife Harvesters of Maine, Mount Desert

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Opinion: Maine must be prepared to accommodate ‘climigrants’

MAINE SUNDAY TELEGRAM • July 5, 2026

Since the COVID pandemic, Maine has gained nearly 80,000 new residents through in-migration. The state’s report “Why People Move to Maine” views this as a clear benefit: “Attracting population and workforce talent to Maine is a core goal of the state’s 10-year economic development strategy to mitigate the effects of an aging population and projected workforce deficit.” Half of recent arrivals say that climate influenced their relocation decisions and almost one-quarter list climate as an important push-pull influence. Maine’s current trickle of climigrants may become a stream, if not a flood. ~ David Vail, professor of economics emeritus and former director of environmental studies at Bowdoin College

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‘This is the long view’: Gabe Perkins’ ambitious vision for Bethel’s trail future

MAINE SUNDAY TELEGRAM • July 5, 2026

Gabe Perkins is pursuing an ambitious vision for Bethel as a recreation mecca: connecting Greenwood’s Mt. Abram Ski Area and Bike Park to Newry’s Sunday River Resort through a roughly 13-mile corridor of year-round recreation. The proposed route would create a recreational spine linking Greenwood, Newry and Bethel. Along the way, Perkins imagines additions — both practical and playful — perhaps a sledding hill, or even a snowmobile-powered shuttle to move visitors along the route in winter. For Perkins, the concept is bigger than a trail. “It’s a state of mind,” he said.

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Visitors to Acadia National Park get this injury more than any other

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 5, 2026

Pamela Gunter began her well-prepared summer vacation by slipping down a steep granite incline in Acadia National Park and breaking her ankle — resulting in a rescue off Dorr Mountain, emergency surgery and an overnight hospital stay. While many hikers depart the park with memories of the iconic sunset from Cadillac Mountain summit or the daring scramble up Beehive trail, a handful also leave with an island injury known as “Acadia ankle.” MDI Search and Rescue, a volunteer group that assists Acadia park rangers with missing or injured visitors, completed 93 missions between March 2017 and September 2023. Over those roughly six years, more than half of the rescues — 48 missions — involved rescuing a hiker with an ankle injury. “Everyone be careful out there — there were 3 broken ankles while I was at the ER and apparently it is so common it is called the Acadia ankle,” Gunter wrote in a Facebook post about the incident.

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Column: Wildlife finds creative ways of staying cool in summer

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 4, 2026

It is fun to watch how various animals cope with heat extremes. One of the funniest ways that animals cool down: splooting. This is most often seen with gray squirrels. They spread their body out across the cool ground, splaying their legs and tail out to help dissipate their body heat. Another common heat-dissipating behavior you’ll see from pets is panting, but watch for this with wildlife too. One other cooling technique, but I wouldn’t recommend that any readers attempt, is called urohidrosis. It is a cooling mechanism in which birds defecate on their own legs to cool themselves off. Through evaporative cooling, the fluid waste pulls heat from the birds’ legs which dissipates as it evaporates. ~ Doug Hitchcox

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Aroostook’s biggest celebration of the potato industry starts next week

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 4, 2026

Amid the summer heat in a rural Aroostook town a stone’s throw from Canada, where blossoms are poised to explode from fields, thousands of people will soon descend on Fort Fairfield to bask in northern Maine’s chief agricultural export: the potato. They will race potatoes. Decorate potatoes. Cook potatoes. Eat potatoes. Tour potato fields. High-five a potato mascot while walking by a stack of potato barrels to watch a potato-themed parade in a region once dubbed “The Potato Empire.” Anywhere else, it would be odd. In Fort Fairfield, that’s just July. The 79th annual Maine Potato Blossom Festival kicks off on July 11, bringing with it patrons from across the state — and the country — to celebrate the region’s rich agricultural history.

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Trump pardons 9 people convicted of violating vehicle emissions controls

ASSOCIATED PRESS • July 3, 2026

President Donald Trump on Friday pardoned 11 people, including nine identified by the White House as having helped people bypass emissions control systems on vehicles. The acts of clemency come as Trump has issued a slew of pardons in his second term, particularly for allies, public figures and those seen as politically aligned. In a list provided Friday evening by the White House, Trump pardoned 11 people, including nine who faced charges related to violations of the Clean Air Act by disabling emissions monitoring systems on vehicles or selling devices that enabled emissions systems to be bypassed.

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Letter: Maine should have participated in Great American Fair

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 3, 2026

Think of Maine’s abundant natural resources, from blueberries, apples, potatoes, lobsters and wood products to the great shipbuilding legacy. Every Mainer, regardless of party affiliation, can agree on the things that set our state apart from others. That’s why I was so dismayed that Maine was one of a few states opting out of the Great American Fair, the event celebrating our nation’s 250th anniversary on the National Mall. There are times in life when we have to rise above the fray. What a missed opportunity for Maine. ~ Jane Atkinson Leifester,Turner

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Robbins Lumber co-owner dies of injuries from mill fire and explosion

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 3, 2026

Alden Robbins, a co-owner of Robbins Lumber who was severely injured in a May 15 fire and explosion at the company’s Searsmont mill, has died, according to his family. Robbins was one of 3 members of the Robbins family who were injured when a silo exploded at the mill as firefighters and mill workers were working to contain a blaze that started in the mill’s woodchip bagging building.

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Another firefighter released from hospital nearly two months after Searsmont explosion

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 3, 2026

It was a quick and quiet affair Friday morning when firefighter Katie Paige left Maine Medical Center. Amid record heat and on the observed Independence Day holiday, Paige, in a wide-brimmed white hat with her hands bandaged, walked out of the hospital’s back door just after 12 p.m. She traveled past a line of first responders and got into a black truck, before being escorted by an eight-vehicle convoy down the Western Promenade. It’s been almost two months since a fire and subsequent explosion in a silo at Robbins Lumber in Searsmont killed three and injured at least 10. Paige, a Belmont firefighter who sustained severe burns when she responded to the incident, was promoted to lieutenant while hospitalized.

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Maine game wardens recover body of missing paddleboarder

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 3, 2026

The body of a Standish man who drowned Thursday while paddleboarding on a lake in Poland has been recovered by the Maine Warden Service. Maine Warden Service divers recovered the body of Todd Bradeen, age 51 of Standish, in Lower Ranger Pond at around 8 a.m. Friday in water approximately 30 feet deep and 200 feet from shore. He did not have his leg attached with the tether rope to the paddleboard, and was not wearing a life jacket. The wind pushed the paddleboard away from him, and after attempting to swim and catch up to it, he eventually went underwater and did not resurface.

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Maine commemorating United States’ 250th anniversary through a diversity of perspectives

MAINE MORNING STAR • July 3, 2026

“Longer than the United States has been a country, Penobscot people have been dislocated from their homelands,” historian Tilly Laskey said. That is the understanding that a research project funded by the Maine Semiquincentennial Commission intends to unearth more fully by comparing Wabanaki and colonial perspectives in the region and restoring Wabanaki access to their ancestral territories. Among the 14 grants awarded by the Maine Semiquincentennial Commission are projects to examine how natural resources have shaped life in Maine.

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What’s causing unsafe bacteria levels at Maine beaches?

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 3, 2026

Maine’s clean coastal waters support a $9 billion tourism industry. However, heavy summer rains frequently turn popular beaches into collection points for agricultural runoff, pet waste, and sewage overflows, according to data from Maine Healthy Beaches program. More than 10 beaches in Maine were deemed unsafe for swimming last week due to high bacteria levels. As of Thursday, all of Maine’s monitored saltwater beaches were considered safe for swimming. When it rains, water rushes over the landscape, picking up waste from wildlife and pets, and carrying it through storm drains and rivers into the surf. Aging septic tanks and leaking sewer pipes can also contribute to the contamination. Annual water safety trends are inextricably tied to the weather. Over the last decade, the frequency of Maine swim advisories mirrored rainfall patterns, with more advisories issued during wetter years and fewer during drought years.

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Watershed Festival set for July 11 in Waterford

ADVERTISER DEMOCRAT • July 3, 2026

The Keoka Lake Association of Waterford is hosting its first Watershed Festival on July 11, a celebration of area lakes, ponds, rivers and streams with a focus on education and awareness of the importance of watersheds throughout Maine. The event will be held at Townhouse Beach at 641 Waterford Road from 1-4 p.m. From 1-4 p.m. there will be local music and jam sessions. There will also be presentations on Maine watersheds and lake stewardship.

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Column: 5 upcoming Gulf of Maine wildlife cruises you won’t want to miss

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 3, 2026

The Gulf of Maine is a summer destination that attracts sea mammals and birds from across the Atlantic Ocean, from as far east as Europe and as far south as Antarctica. It’s why Mainers should get out on the salt water and see for themselves all the blessings nature has given us. These five upcoming Bar Harbor Whale Watch cruises deserve special mention, especially for birders.
• Downeast Offshore Seabird and Lighthouse Tour - July 18
• Brier Island/Lurcher Shoals Pelagic Trip - Aug. 16
• Midcoast & Monhegan Lighthouse Tour - Sept. 5
• Maine Audubon Pelagic Trip - Sept. 13
• Cashes Ledge Wildlife Cruise - Sept. 26
~ Bob Duchesne

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Opinion: In praise of Maine’s dead zones

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 3, 2026

It’s three o’clock in the afternoon, and my friend Parker and I are camping on a remote island trying to dodge wet summer weather and catch a few of the pond’s famed landlocked salmon. The shoreline around us is undeveloped and the other islands empty. This is one of the longest days of the year, and it’s amazing how slowly it unfolds as we wait for evening. There are few distractions, few unnatural sounds. There’s no cell service here, no Wi-Fi network to join. The pond — like many of Maine’s remote waterways — exists in a dead zone where cellphones are useful only as cameras and clocks. A fish rises and takes a mayfly. Parker makes a few casts, misses. He casts again at a fading ring. When he sets the hook this time, a fat, mini football of a salmon leaps into the dusk. I net the fish. In the morning we break down camp. There’s a spot just on Route 16, heading south, where cell service returns. I ignore my phone. ~ Ryan Brod

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