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Two Coves Farm shuts down in dispute between farmers, landowner

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 31, 2025

A dispute about rent, productivity and other issues has led to an arbitration ruling ordering the longtime operators of Two Coves Farm on Harpswell Neck to vacate the property. Joe and Laura Grady, who have lived and farmed at the 110-acre coastal property for 16 years, were ordered to leave by the end of 2025 after an arbitrator found they had violated the terms of their lease. The Gradys said they strongly disagree with the ruling and plan to appeal it. Perhaps the largest working farm in a community where commercial-scale agriculture has largely disappeared, Two Coves recently suspended operations because of the legal dispute. The farm is the property of Neils Point LLC, owned by Helen Norton, a Harpswell Neck philanthropist. Norton pointed to the arbitrator’s findings and said she plans to work with Maine Farmland Trust to identify new tenants who will operate the farm in line with its conservation easement and long-term vision.

Loon rescued on Smithfield pond dies a week later

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 31, 2025

It was a sad ending to an otherwise uplifting tale about a loon rescued earlier this month on East Pond in Smithfield. The loon, taken to Avian Haven, a wildlife rehabilitation center in Freedom, died seven days later after the Dec. 7 rescue. It was emaciated, suffering from a lung infection and had the beginnings of frostbite, according to Avian Executive Director Barb Haney.

MOFGA cuts 6 positions

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 30, 2025

The organization that certifies and supports organic farmers in Maine is cutting six positions in the wake of federal funding losses and in the face of future budget constraints. The Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association, which also organizes the Common Ground Fair in Unity, announced this month that it would be restructuring, including the cutting of six positions. The association cited the loss of over $1 million in federal and other funding sources in 2025 and budget deficit projections through the rest of the decade. “These changes are necessary to put the organization on a path to financial stability by 2030, and allow for the remaining forty staff positions to have the resources necessary to maintain all core programs that achieve MOFGA’s mission,” the organization said.

Authorities investigating theft of $400K worth of lobster

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 30, 2025

Thieves used a fake commercial driver’s license, spoofed emails and forged papers to steal a truckload of lobster meat worth $400,000 from a Massachusetts warehouse just a few days before Christmas. The Dec. 12 heist from Lineage Logistics, a cold-storage facility in Taunton, is the latest in a string of high-value cargo thefts plaguing the transport industry. In recent years, Maine has accounted for about 90% of the nation’s lobster catch. Maine lobstermen wondered if any of their own catch ended up among the stolen lobster meat. They rarely know where what they catch will end up.

Starting the New Year in Maine on a high point — or peak

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 30, 2025

Many Mainers ring in the New Year by getting outside. Across the country, state parks, including those in Maine, offer free events to encourage people to start January with their best foot forward — maybe in a warm sock and an insulated hiking boot. Whether you bundle up for a stroll around the block or scale a remote peak, these Mainers offered up their tips for hiking on the first day of 2026.

Fake announcement misleads Maine anglers about northern pike regulations

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • December 30, 2025

A fake announcement about changes to northern pike regulations claiming to be from the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife circulated among Maine’s fishing community Tuesday, including on a popular ice fishing Facebook page. The document, dated Dec. 30, 2025, claimed that northern pike would be reclassified from an “unregulated invasive designation” to a “protected and actively managed fishery resource,” complete with new daily bag limits. However, Mark Latti of MDIFW confirmed that this information is false.

Maine’s PFAS ban expands to consumer items on Jan. 1

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 30, 2025

In a sweeping update to the law, Maine’s 5-year-old ban on products made using toxic forever chemicals is about to expand to thousands of everyday household products, including children’s toys, cookware and cosmetics. On Jan. 1, the state will also require all cleaning fluids, dental floss, menstrual products, ski wax, textiles and upholstered furniture sold in Maine to be free of forever chemicals, or PFAS, a group of manmade chemicals that don’t break down easily in the environment or the body. The 2026 update expands on a law that Maine adopted in 2021 that called for phasing PFAS out of almost all products by 2030. The rollout was delayed after businesses said they needed time to test their products and find reasonable PFAS-free alternatives.

Letter: Plugging into solar can help reduce our electric bills

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 30, 2025

Electricity rates in Maine are among the highest in the nation, with prices forecast to continue to rise. The average Maine household pays nearly $140 per month to power their home. LD 1730 is a bill before the Maine Legislature that will allow for homeowners and renters to reduce their monthly bill by about $43 by purchasing up to 1,200 watts of solar capacity at a present cost of $3,000. The hearing for this bill is on Jan. 6, 2026. Call our legislators now. ~ Tom Mikulka, Cape Elizabeth

Opinion: Utility reform will be key to confronting Maine’s high energy bills

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 29, 2025

It’s clear that as we power more of our lives with electricity, we’ll need to make investments in the state’s power grid to keep things affordable, reliable and clean. But we don’t have to stick to the old ways of doing things, including how we pay for the transmission and delivery of that electricity. There are proven tools and policies that can stabilize and even lower electricity bills, and now that CMP has been sent back to the drawing board, the utility has an opportunity to get it right. It must draft a new proposal that accounts for the reality of unaffordable, price-volatile electricity rates and the necessity of modernizing how we think about the electricity grid. This moment is also a crucial opportunity for the state’s other investor-owned utility, Versant, before filing its next request to the commission. ~ Phelps Turner, Conservation Law Foundation

Maine regulators issue warning letter for Belfast wetlands lapse

MAINE MONITOR • December 28, 2025

The Maine Department of Environmental Protection recently issued a letter of warning designed to recoup wetlands protections lost in a regulatory oversight more than 20 years ago. The lapse by state and federal regulators allowed a wetlands mitigation site in Belfast to be marketed for commercial development earlier this year. The mitigation deal emerged from the development of credit card giant MBNA’s sprawling campus in Belfast. In exchange for impacts to about seven acres of wetlands, the Maine DEP and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers agreed to let MBNA restore wetlands on a nearby 24-acre site, and protect it in perpetuity for conservation and public access. Bank of America acquired the wetlands parcel when it bought MBNA in 2006. It sold the 24 acres at auction this January, but the deed was unencumbered by a conservation easement, because it had never been filed. The new owner is now offering it for sale for commercial development.

Upper Machias Bay Master Plan moves forward nearly two years after destructive downtown flood

MAINE MONITOR • December 27, 2025

Downtown Machias has experienced nine floods at the 100-year level in the past seven years. Ben Edwards, a member of the Upper Machias Bay Master Plan Leadership Committee and vice chair of the Machias Select Board, shared the information during a community meeting earlier this month. Conditions are expected to become more challenging as climate change accelerates, polar ice caps melt, sea levels rise and storms grow more frequent and intense, according to Judy Colby-George, a member of the leadership committee. The meeting, part of a community series, drew about 80 people and was scheduled to focus on downtown flooding in Machias. The next meeting on the Upper Machias Bay Master Plan is scheduled for Jan. 12, and formal recommendations for how to proceed are to be presented to the leadership committee at a public meeting set for Feb. 23.

Opinion: Maine’s energy policy looks to be going up in smoke

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 26, 2025

This fall I attended two energy conferences. I came away pessimistic about Maine’s energy future. Maine has a state energy plan that builds on efforts to reduce our dependence on imported petroleum and shift to an economy powered largely by renewable electricity resources. It complements the state’s climate action plan. The problem is, both strategies depend on cleaner electricity being affordable. But electricity is becoming more expensive, with prices nearly doubling in Maine over the past decade. The greatest source of pessimism comes from the sabotage of offshore wind. In his quest to kill green energy, President Trump has hobbled a multi-billion dollar industry. It was New England’s next big source of energy. One man has upended an industry. Trump also is killing incentives that helped people weatherize their homes, and buy more efficient appliances and vehicles. That leaves New England on its own. ~ Tux Turkel

Nature Connects: Atlantic salmon hold the line in the Sheepscot

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • December 27, 2025

Maine is the only state in the U.S. that still has wild populations of Atlantic salmon. The Sheepscot — a modest, 58-mile-long coastal river — is one of a handful of rivers in Maine that still support naturally spawning Atlantic salmon. Despite its smaller size, the Sheepscot plays a vital role in the path to Atlantic salmon recovery in Maine. The Sheepscot is one of only seven U.S. rivers with a genetically distinct population of Atlantic salmon. These fish are uniquely adapted to the local conditions in the river. The survival of this population is critical to preserving the genetic diversity of the species, and therefore, its recovery. Midcoast Conservancy and its partners are working on land conservation and river restoration projects throughout the Sheepscot watershed to help recover this iconic and ecologically important species. This work not only benefits salmon, but other native species and the rich biodiversity of the ecosystem. ~ Melissa Cote, Sheepscot River watershed manager at Midcoast Conservancy

Column: 2026 birding resolutions: Bird naked or use every tool

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • December 27, 2025

I offer only two New Year’s Resolutions for birders in 2026, and they are completely opposite. For less experienced birders: resolve to use every tech tool available. Of course, the fastest and easiest way to get experience is to steal it from someone else. Going out with experts is the time-honored way to learn more quickly. For more experienced birders: resolve to use no tools at all. Bird naked once in a while. ~ Bob Duchesne

Here are the changes coming to UMaine’s campus next year

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • December 27, 2025

The University of Maine is working on 10 major capital projects on its campus that will be completed in 2026. The Sustainable Aquaculture Workforce Innovation Center will be a new space for one of the top marine science programs in the country. The space, which will be completed in time for the fall semester, will be used to research sustainable economic development, food security, and climate and community resilience. The building will have several 8-foot tanks and an area for lobster research. Other projects that will finish next year include renovating a PFAS laboratory, funding blueberry research in Jonesboro and building a sawmill training facility.

Watch a Maine man show how to escape after falling through ice

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • December 27, 2025

Every winter, there are harrowing examples of people in Maine and elsewhere who have broken through the ice, sometimes with deadly results. That’s why Josh Gerritsen, a Rockport-based documentary filmmaker and an avid ice skater on Maine ponds, recently took it upon himself to coach a small group of onlookers how to safely escape the water when it’s mostly frozen over, should they ever fall through. Assess the ice strength, depth and density; know how to identify weak points; and avoid going solo. Help a victim, including by shouting encouragement, extending an object such as a rope or ladder for them to grab or wrap around themself, using a boat to assist and going for professional help: preach, reach, throw, row, go. if you’re the one who goes in, stay calm, spread your arms out on the unbroken ice and kick hard to lift your body onto it, so you can then roll to safety.

Where to find Maine ice thickness reports this winter

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • December 27, 2025

The Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife provides winter fishing reports with notes on ice conditions and safety guidelines, as well as an ice safety web page with recommendations on checking ice thickness. The Lake Stewards of Maine maintain an ice-in and ice-out map that tracks when lakes freeze over and thaw, based on volunteer observations. Community‑reported ice measurements are available in the Ice Thickness in Maine Facebook group. For the most current location-specific conditions, people traveling from farther away can contact an IFW regional office during the week to speak with a biologist or warden familiar with local waters and how ice usually forms there.

Federal funding cuts are straining the nonprofits that keep this Maine island afloat

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • December 26, 2025

In Stonington, nonprofits build workforce housing, conduct research that helps its lobster industry, conserve its land and provide arts programming. It’s an example of how much of the responsibility for providing such services is shifting to outside organizations. Gaps are being stretched by abrupt changes in federal priorities. Since January, nonprofits have seen funding abruptly cut, grants canceled and research projects terminated by the Trump administration. That’s taken a toll. Housing is needed for Stonington’s lobster industry, the busiest in Maine. Lobster dealers often house their own employees in order to keep a workforce. Other aspects of the industry are researched and supported by the Maine Center for Coastal Fisheries, another local nonprofit that aims to keep fisheries sustainable and economically viable. Grants it received during the Biden administration were canceled earlier this year by Trump.

8 evergreen Maine trails that are lovely year round

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • December 26, 2025

Here I’ve listed eight Maine trails that travel through lovely forests that remain rich green year round, being that they’re mostly composed of various evergreen trees. These forests are also filled with mosses and lichens, which retain their color regardless of the time of year. And what’s more, these dense forests will shelter you from the cold winter wind, offering a getaway during an otherwise typically hectic time of year.
1. Prentiss Woods in Bangor
2. Johnson Brook Trail in Milford
3. Ingersoll Point Preserve in Addison
4. Simon Trail in Lamoine
5. Backwoods Mountain in Brooksville
6. Little Moose Mountain near Greenville
7. Thorne Head Preserve in Bath
8. Horserace Brook Trail near Millinocket