Letter: EVs aren’t right for Maine

SUN JOURNAL • July 19, 2024

Electric vehicles are not right for Maine. True, they are smooth and powerful, but good luck in the charging arena. There is not a single public charger of any kind in all of New Auburn. I have to wonder why the state is investing in anything other than supercharges at this time. Ten percent to 80% in as little as 30 minutes. ~ Michael Lemay, Auburn

Column: Dying baby birds are becoming an epidemic

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 19, 2024

May marked the 12th consecutive month of record-breaking temperatures globally. June will be the 13th. July is on pace to smash that record again. Readers are asking if hot weather kills nestlings. It does. In fact, it’s an epidemic. It’s been abnormally hot in Maine, and the rest of the country has been even hotter. Three billion birds have disappeared from the planet since 1970. The biggest factors contributing to the decline have been habitat loss, outdoor cats and collisions with man-made structures. At least the birds die one at a time and avoid a mass loss. Excessive heat can kill off an entire brood at once. Losses mount exponentially. As heat bakes the Pine Tree State, mountain birds can move upslope. Eventually, they run out of mountain. As sea level rises, Maine’s salt marshes flood more often, jeopardizing birds that nest there. Soon, they run out of marsh. When their habitat changes too quickly, few animals can adapt fast enough. ~ Bob Duchesne

Summer residents try blocking workforce housing project on MDI

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 18, 2024

A group of property owners in Northeast Harbor, all of whom are seasonal residents who own property near the planned development site, has filed a court appeal to try to overturn local approval of a workforce housing development. The project, proposed by the local nonprofit organization Mount Desert 365, would create six housing units reserved for income-qualified year-round residents at the corner of Neighborhood and Manchester roads in the Mount Desert village of Northeast Harbor. The group of seven property owners challenged the town’s approval in the state’s Business and Consumer Court, but Justice Thomas McKeon ruled last month in favor of the town and upheld the town’s approval of the proposed development.

Letter: Reagan Paul right about offshore wind

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 18, 2024

I state Rep. Reagan Paul and particularly with regard to her stand on offshore wind power. Paul is supporting fishermen in opposition to offshore wind power where it could hurt the fishing industry, and at the same time she is considering environmental impacts. I have been up close to wind turbines. They are much more noisy than I expected and I wonder how they will impact various kinds of sea wildlife. ~ Terry D. Atwood, Prospect

A New York company will be paid $310K to clean and patrol downtown Bangor

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 18, 2024

Downtown Bangor Partnership is finalizing an agreement with Streetplus, a Brooklyn-based urban safety, cleaning and hospitality service. The company will hire five local personnel who will be tasked with a series of responsibilities, including to clean up litter and report vandalism to the appropriate city department, patrol downtown and can walk people to their vehicles if they feel unsafe, and approach people who are homeless downtown and direct them to local services that can meet their needs.

Smoke plumes may reach U.S. as wildfires in Canada erupt

WASHINGTON POST • July 18, 2024

the fire season in Canada has suddenly come alive with a recent flare-up of blazes reminiscent of last summer, the country’s worst fire season on record. One of the biggest eruptions of thick smoke from Canada’s wildfires is beginning to drift south, with the Midwest, Great Lakes and eventually Northeast potentially in its path.

Council Corner: A path to continued land conservation in Scarborough

SCARBOROUGH LEADER • July 18, 2024

The November ballot includes a request to replenish the Scarborough land bond fund, a town fund that was created in 2000 for the purpose of purchasing land for conservation. Scarborough voters have overwhelmingly supported every land bond referendum since the creation of the land bond fund in 2000. The town has contributed $7.5 million towards the acquisition of land for conservation in this 24-year span. No other town in Maine has spent as many local dollars on conserving their natural resources. There is approximately $14,000 remaining in the town’s land bond fund. The request before the Town Council is for $6 million. With a town goal to conserve 30% of Scarborough by 2030, more funds are needed. There are many public and economic benefits to land conservation that make this goal so important for Scarborough.

2nd fox tests positive for rabies in Bath

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 18, 2024

A second fox has tested positive for rabies in Bath. That follows a case on June 28 involving an older fox in the same area, according to Police Chief Andrew Booth. The young fox was spotted about 6 a.m. Monday wandering around the Big Apple and walking into traffic on Route 1, Booth said, adding that callers reported that the animal was acting sick. Officers later found the fox near Cottage Street, where they determined it wasn’t “acting normally and was potentially rabid.” They captured the fox and euthanized it, Booth said Thursday morning. Subsequent testing confirmed the fox had rabies.

Organizations work to keep conservation lands connected to save species

TIMES RECORD • July 18, 2024

Established in 2002, River~Link is a recreational trail and wildlife corridor connecting the Sheepscot and Damariscotta rivers. It extends from the northern forests to the southern marshes, encompassing woodlands where bobcats roam and lawns where groundhogs hibernate. Land for Maine’s Future secured the initial funding that launched the River~Link project, sparking a partnership among several neighboring land trusts, municipalities, nonprofit organizations and state agencies that has grown ever since. In the future, Coastal Rivers Conservation Trust hopes to merge the River~Link corridor with a more extensive project called 12 Rivers to expand the continuous tract from the Kennebec River to Penobscot Bay.

YMCA suspends summer day camps in Portland and Standish

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 18, 2024

YMCA of Southern Maine has suspended day camp programming this summer at the Portland Branch and at Otter Pond in Standish as the organization strives to get its membership and finances back to pre-pandemic levels following deep staffing and program cuts.

Letter: Golden is not a true Democrat

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 18, 2024

How much more of U.S. Rep. Jared Golden’s voting with Republicans are we as Maine Democrats going to stand for? It seems clear that Golden is simply setting himself up for a run at Susan Collins’ seat in the Senate or the Maine governorship in 2026. His failure to support/introduce bills while currently a U.S. congressional representative — which protect our environment from the ravages of vehicle emissions, protect our fish and wildlife, encourage solar and wind power generation over coal and oil — are the reasons he is an unreliable Democrat. ~ David McKechnie, Saco

Maine’s growing permaculture movement hosts 1st conference

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 18, 2024

Permaculture, an alternative farming method focused on creating self-sustaining systems, is moving from the fringes of agriculture to wider adoption. So is agroforestry, which uses forest land in tandem with growing food and raising animals. Interest in both is large enough to sustain Maine’s first conference dedicated to the two practices, happening this weekend in Unity. The Maine Permaculture and Agroforestry Convergence also invites people with interests in mycology, herbalism, food sovereignty, traditional skills, activism and homesteading. The event is organized by the Maine Ecological Design School.

Ed Swain’s island farm may be the last one in western Maine

SUN JOURNAL • July 17, 2024

Gone now are the many other island farms that once dotted the Androscoggin River in Western Maine; Swain stands as the last island farmer in this part of  the state. He says access was most likely why others no longer island farm. His own access, sometimes very difficult, is mostly doable. While Swain’s land flooded in 2023,  he dismisses it as, “an odd year … a 100-year flood.” Over the years, Swain’s father acquired many of the smaller adjoining plots that now constitute his son’s expansive 100-acre farm. While he actively farms 60 of those acres, he also tends to additional parcels owned by others who rely on him for haying services.

Discarded Christmas trees helping shore up Popham Beach

MAINE PUBLIC • July 17, 2024

A test to see if old Christmas trees can help shore up eroded sand dunes has shown some success at Popham Beach State Park. In some places, rows of trees have been completely covered in sand, creating ridges that are now colonized by dune grass. That's a promising development after the dunes were wiped out in back-to-back storms this winter. Beach erosion is a natural process and typically sand depleted in the winter gets restored in warmer months. But when storm damage puts human infrastructure at risk, dunes are a critical shield, said Peter Slovinsky of the Maine Geological Survey in a tour of the restoration area. "Humans love coastlines, and we've put a lot of infrastructure in harm's way, so sand dunes are nature's way of protecting the uplands," Slovinsky said.

New Sharon man missing four days at Mt. Blue State Park improving at rehab center

SUN JOURNAL • July 17, 2024

A New Sharon man who was missing four days last week is recovering at a rehabilitation center in Franklin County. Michael Altmaier, 75, fell off a cliff and hit his head while walking a trail at Mt. Blue State Park in Weld, his brother Robert Altmaier said. Michael slipped on some moss and did what he could to stay alive with no food, including drinking water from sources, Robert said. He walked around each day hoping he would see something, find someone.

L. Herbert ‘Bussie’ York of Farmington is remembered as ‘icon’ and community leader

LIVERMORE FALLS ADVERTISER • July 17, 2024

Family, friends, officials and the agricultural community gathered Tuesday to share memories of longtime farmer L. Herbert “Bussie” York. The lifelong Farmington resident died July 9 at the age of 86. Oldest daughter Terry Zacker said her father never thought he was anyone special. “He was just a small-town farmer who worked hard every day to provide for his family and to be one of the many who grew food to sustain others. His life is a testament to hard work and resiliency, to supporting his community and those in it, and to listening to and learning from others he met along the journey.”

Belfast to offer a drop-off site for residents to compost food scraps

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • July 17, 2024

Belfast city councilors unanimously voted on Tuesday night to launch a pilot drop-off site at the city’s transfer station for residents who want to convert their food waste into compost. When the one-year pilot program starts, residents will be able to drop off their food scraps at the transfer station in one of two ways. They can either leave their scraps without paying any direct fees, and not receive anything in return. Or they’ll be able to pay an $18 monthly fee to drop off scraps they’ve collected in a bucket provided to them through the program, and in return, they’ll receive composted material for their home gardens. A start date for the program was not mentioned on Tuesday.

Letter: There are better alternatives to the Gorham Connector

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 17, 2024

The proposed four-lane highway from Portland to Gorham sounds like the next road ready to be paved with good intentions. Why not address southern Maine’s traffic issues with less intrusive, more cost-effective and reversible solutions? Expand bus service with modern equipment that runs efficiently and frequently. Widen existing roads to include bicycle lanes. Let’s embrace sustainable, reversible transportation solutions that will benefit everyone in the long run. It can be done. ~ Tilman Reitzle, Scarborough

Southern and Midcoast Maine farmers markets

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • July 13, 2024

In Maine, we’re spoiled by the many farmers markets that offer an array of goods, from fresh, seasonal fruits and vegetables to naturally raised meats, milk, eggs, cheeses, baked goods, coffee, maple syrup, honey, soaps and salves. And don’t forget the seedlings, cut flowers, crafts and other items often for sale. Here’s a list of markets in southern part of the state where you can support local vendors.

New conservation agreement protects 3 rivers' headwaters in Hancock County

MAINE PUBLIC • July 17, 2024

Five thousand acres of Maine forestland has been preserved under a new easement to protect important freshwater resources. The parcel on Eagle Lake in northern Hancock County is rare in that it contains the headwaters of three rivers, said Forest Society of Maine president Karin Tilberg. The Passadumkeag, Union, and Narraguagus rivers all originate on the land, and protecting their source has positive impacts all along their course to the sea, Tilberg said. It's an example of how conservation groups are increasingly looking at how to protect whole ecosystems, she added. "Keeping these ecosystems intact is very important for Maine, very important for fish and wildlife, for water quality and for climate control," Tilberg said. The land, owned by the Dysart family, will remain open for fishing, hunting, recreation and logging.