Column: Monhegan maintains its magical allure — mostly

TIMES RECORD • August 11, 2025

We recently took our annual trip to Monhegan Island, a treasured tradition for over 40 years. A blue-sky Maine day enhanced the experience. The calm waters made for a smooth ride to the island with Hardy Boat Tours out of New Harbor. We chatted with three Bowdoin College students during the ride. They were planning to spend the day working on their summer research project on the island, which involves determining the ages of various trees. ~ David Treadwell

2nd bald eagle dies after fight with young eagle in Bar Harbor

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • August 11, 2025

A second bald eagle has died after a Wednesday fight with a younger eagle in Bar Harbor. The eagle was fighting with another bald eagle when their talons became tangled and came down on Bar Harbor Road, according to Acadia Wildlife Center. The fight happened after the younger eagle, who was about 4 years old, tested his limits when he encroached on a mated pair at Leland Point, possibly in a territorial or mating dispute.

Get off the Main(e)land and explore 22 of Maine’s islands

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 11, 2025

It’s not just the Maine coastline that draws locals and visitors alike. People can find welcome relief from rising temperatures by exploring the natural beauty of the state’s many coastal and lake islands. The state boasts thousands of them, each one offering a slightly different vibe — from rocky shorelines to sandy beaches, and quiet forests to bustling harbors. Although we can’t cover all of them, we have a list of 22 islands worth visiting in southern and Midcoast Maine.

Opinion: Maine must take more action on tick-borne disease

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 11, 2025

In Maine we face a creeping, quiet natural disaster: the ongoing epidemic of Lyme disease and associated tick-borne illnesses. In 2024, Maine reported its highest number of Lyme cases to date, and the trend shows no sign of slowing in 2025. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 476,000 Americans are diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease annually. Yet, calls for comprehensive prevention and education too often go unanswered or receive only half-hearted attention. We must invest in prevention, infrastructure, robust scientific research and public awareness. We must ensure that every Mainer knows how to protect themselves and their family from Lyme and associated diseases — and that our public health system is ready to respond with urgency and compassion. ~ Barb and Bob Maurais

Letter: The sad story of Jamie’s Pond

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 11, 2025

On July 26, 2016, I sent a letter objecting to the tree harvest at Jamie’s Pond Wildlife Management Area. After, I met with the commissioner for Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. He told me the logging operation would proceed. There was not the political will or public interest to stop it. It wasn’t an important issue. I was assured I did not understand forestry principles. After the logging, large swaths of the forest were left bare. These filled in with small, dense beech trees that are now dying. The logging operation left the forest in perfect condition for beech leaf disease. Given our current political climate, especially federally—without regard to the future, denial of climate change, decrease in funding for research and environmental protections—what will be next? ~ Scott Schiff-Slater, Hallowell

Camp Ellis celebrates summer, working waterfront at Harborfest

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 10, 2025

Where the Saco River drifts into the Saco Bay sits Camp Ellis, a shoreside neighborhood with a rich history as a working waterfront. As both the memory of its robust fishing culture grows more distant and the shoreline itself is threatened by erosion, a festival on the pier Sunday showed the lively persistence of the community and its commitment to preserving Camp Ellis.

Game wardens recover two bodies in Grand Falls Flowage

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 10, 2025

Game wardens pulled the bodies of two anglers out of Grand Falls Flowage in Baileyville. On Friday, a volunteer found the body of Charlotte Evans, 67, of Cibolo, Texas, approximately 100 yards from shore. On Saturday, warden divers found the body of Douglass Bass, 67, of Agawam, Massachusetts. Neither of the victims were wearing life jackets. The deaths are not considered suspicious.

Kennebec Land Trust to dedicate three new conservation areas

CENTRAL MAINE • August 10, 2025

June Roullard and Joe Baltar donated a 56-acre lot, now named the Eaton Mountain Conservation Area, to the Kennebec Land Trust in March. An official dedication of Roullard’s 74 Kimball Pond Road property and optional guided hike will kick off the Land Trust’s annual celebration Monday. Members of the public are welcome; the Kennebec Land Trust’s 8,191 acres are preserved not just for wildlife habitat but for public access. Two other properties will also be a part of the two-day celebration: a 56-acre lot along Parker Pond in Mount Vernon and a 56-acre conservation easement in South Gardiner. Another soon-to-be donated property, an 86-acre farm on Sturtevant Hill Road in Readfield, will host an event at 4 p.m. Tuesday.

Letter: Don’t forget volunteers who maintain Maine trails

MAINE SUNDAY TELEGRAM • August 10, 2025

I was delighted to read the Aug. 3 article on the work that is being done on the Pine Ridge Trail system after the damage caused by the installation of the solar farm. I was disappointed, though, that the Kennebec Messalonskee Trails group was barely mentioned. John Gardner, maintenance director for our group, contributed greatly to the Recreational Trails Program grant that helped fund this effort, and that same group are often the people removing trees after storms, fixing washouts and redirecting existing trails. ~ Barbara Bowling, Kennebec Messalonskee Trails Organization, Oakland

Maine environmental researchers grapple with federal funding changes

MAINE MONITOR • August 9, 2025

A University of Maine initiative exploring ways to bring renewable energy to Indigenous and rural communities was gaining momentum this spring when the Trump administration abruptly cancelled its $1 million federal grant. The Environmental Protection Agency award is one of dozens of federal grants to Maine research institutions that have been cancelled or paused as the Trump administration cracks down on what it sees as wasteful spending. This includes cuts targeting environmental justice initiatives and climate change research. The UMaine project, which was in its second year of a Science to Achieve Results award, had pulled together more than 100 people from the Wabanaki Nations and rural communities throughout Maine to discuss local renewable energy goals and pathways to reach them. 

Column: How Maine’s birds use molting to survive and thrive

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • August 9, 2025

All snakes, most lizards and some politicians shed their skins. Actually, all humans shed their skin, including the political subspecies. In fact, we shed about 30,000-40,000 skin cells per minute, totaling over eight pounds per year. Our skin completely renews itself every 28 days. Replacing our outer covering is straightforward and routine for humans. However, this isn’t the case for birds. Replacing feathers is complicated, varying widely by species and sex. Some bird species molt in summer before migrating, so they’ll have brand-new feathers for the long journey. Others molt after migration, so they can spend the winter foraging with fresh plumage. ~ Bob Duchesne

Letter: We need to do our part to block Trump’s anti-environment agenda

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 9, 2025

Each day brings another outrageous executive order, false accusation or blatant lie from Donald Trump. A newly minted outrage involves Trump’s EPA chief, Lee Zeldin, who is attempting to rewrite science by discrediting the fact that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. As though Trump’s efforts to halt offshore wind farms, open up federal lands to fracking and expand natural gas exports were not contributing enough to the climate crisis. We, in Maine, can do our part by urging our representatives in Congress to block Trump’s anti-environment agenda; switching to renewable technologies, particularly electric vehicles and heat pumps; altering our lifestyles to reduce energy consumption; and never giving up hope. ~ Joe Hardy, Wells

Are AI data centers influencing electricity costs in Maine?

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 8, 2025

Massive data centers needed for generative artificial intelligence systems like ChatGPT require enormous amounts of electricity, putting new strain on power grids. While that’s driving up the cost of electricity in some parts of the country, regulators say Maine has yet to feel that pressure.

How Maine towns are regulating development in flood zones

MAINE MONITOR • August 8, 2025

Early last spring, while still cleaning up the wreckage of devastating winter storms, southern Maine towns began drafting new rules governing how they’d rebuild or develop on stretches of land that were widely inundated months before. The process coincided with the adoption of new federal flood maps and is required by the Federal Emergency Management Agency for participation in the National Flood Insurance Program. After years of back-and-forth between FEMA and local officials, the agency finalized its first flood map updates for Cumberland and York counties in decades. That meant local officials had to update their floodplain ordinances to FEMA standards or risk their residents losing out on federal flood insurance — often a requirement for homeowners with government-backed mortgages who live in FEMA flood zones.

EPA strips Maine of $62 million solar grant

MAINE PUBLIC • August 8, 2025

The Trump administration has stripped Maine of a $62 million grant to help low income households access solar power. In a Thursday letter to the state, the Environmental Protection Agency said the recent Republican tax law, called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, revoked the $7 billion "Solar for All" national grant program. "Thus, any attempt to continue the program’s administration, in the absence of any authorizing legislation or appropriated funds for that purpose, is no longer legally permissible," the agency said. But supporters of the national program claim it is being shut down illegally and will hurt Americans struggling with high electric bills.

Trump administration moves forward with clawing back $62 million in low-income solar grants for Maine

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 8, 2025

The Trump administration is moving forward with plans to take back more than $60 million in already-promised funding for low-income solar grants in Maine, part of a program commonly referred to as “Solar for All.” The Maine Governor’s Energy Office said Friday that it had received a termination letter from the Environmental Protection Agency, which in 2024 had awarded Maine $62 million to expand solar access for low-income communities. Those funds were fully obligated to Maine in December, the office said. The state office had been in the process of developing its plan for the money, which it had intended to begin distributing to residents and community groups across Maine.

Far more environmental data is being deleted in Trump's second term than before

NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO • August 8, 2025

The current Trump administration has made 70% more changes to government environmental websites during its first 100 days than the first Trump administration did, and those changes are bolder. A report published by the Environmental Data and Governance Initiative found climate change information has also been altered or removed from federal websites, though less consistently than environmental justice and DEI sites. The federal climate change research website globalchange.gov was shut down. A widely used National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) site, climate.gov, stopped publishing new content this summer, after the staff of 10 people who contributed to it was terminated.

Feds may let Maine lobstermen fish in restricted area — if they use ropeless gear

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 8, 2025

Federal regulators are considering a rule that would allow Maine lobstermen to fish in an area that closes seasonally to protect endangered North Atlantic right whales. The catch? Fishermen would need use experimental ropeless fishing gear to do so. The restricted area is a 967-square-mile stretch of the Gulf of Maine that runs from the New Hampshire border to Midcoast Maine. It’s closed to fishing each year from Oct. 1 to Jan. 31 because officials say it is a hot spot for the whales.

Letter: Hope Ave parcel should become a conservation property

PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • August 8, 2025

Portland Planning can finally close the Hope Avenue permit application, initiated over two years ago by Miami-based developer GenX Capital Partners, since the parcel is going into foreclosure. Throughout this years-long saga, GenX botched a development in Saco and had an unfinished condo complex foreclosed in Cumberland. And, in the two-plus years that the Hope Ave permit has been active, GenX neglected to pay its property tax, damaged the Presumpscot River Preserve, refused to pay the ensuing fine and failed to appear at any of its court hearings, forcing Portland to issue a motion for contempt of court. Portland should designate this parcel for conservation to protect the delicate and beautiful Presumpscot River and adjacent preserve. ~ Emily-Anne Garland, Scarborough

Bald eagle dies after becoming entangled with another eagle during a fight in Bar Harbor

BANGOR DAILY NEWS • August 7, 2025

A bald eagle found injured along the roadside in Bar Harbor on Wednesday has died. The eagle was fighting with another bald eagle when they became interlocked and came down on the road. One of the bald eagles died from a severe spinal injury. The other eagle suffered a severe fracture and was brought to a veterinarian in Greater Bangor to determine whether the bird can be treated.