MAINE ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS
The most comprehensive online source of conservation news and events in Maine and beyond, edited by Jym St. Pierre
Group Calls On Trump To Nominate A Competent Park Service Director
NATIONAL PARKS TRAVELER • May 12, 2026
The Association of National Park Rangers (ANPR) is calling on President Trump to nominate a competent director of the National Park Service. Trump’s previous pick, Scott Socha, a long-time officer for national park concessionaire Delaware North, was withdrawn by the White House in April after widespread backlash against the choice. The Park Service has been without a Senate-confirmed director since Chuck Sams left the position at the end of the Biden administration. “Accomplishing the National Park Service mission is possible only if we care for the dedicated public servants who protect parks and ensure that the agency that employs them is adequately staffed and supported,” said Mike Pflaum, president of ANPR.
Maine Warden Service plane crashes in Franklin County
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 12, 2026
Authorities from multiple local agencies responded Tuesday morning to a plane crash in the Franklin County town of Avon. The crash happened around 11 a.m. Local officials said it was a Maine Warden Service plane. According to scanner traffic, at least one person was reported alive inside the plane but that could not be confirmed early in the afternoon.
It will be raining rabies vaccines in Aroostook starting tomorrow 3
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • May 12, 2026
It will be raining rabies vaccines over Aroostook County starting this week. About 450,000 oral vaccines will be dropped from the air between Wednesday and May 22, according to Lindsay Hammes, a spokesperson for the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. That will be in addition to the annual fall rabies vaccine drop.The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services, which is partnering with the Maine CDC, is dropping the extra vaccine doses because of a spate of reports of rabid raccoons over the past year.
Meeting the Moment: An Environmental Policy Guide for Maine, 2026-2031
MAINE CONSERVATION ALLIANCE • May 12, 2026
Maine people are experiencing difficult change. our public policies and government systems can and must reflect our shared values, our changing world, and the challenges and opportunities before us. Together, we can forge new paths that utilize our environmental resources wisely, connect the dots across our communities, and integrate the wisdom and problem-solving skills of the people in Maine. This policy guide outlines five areas of focus and the specific actions needed to rebalance Maine’s environmental policies in favor of fairness, responsibility, sustainability, and collaboration.
Maine environmental advocates call on state to turn climate goals into mandates
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 12, 2026
Tribal land return, a total ban on synthetic pesticides and the creation of a new state office of conservation anchor a new environmental report that calls on Maine to convert its voluntary climate goals into state law over the next five years. The Meeting the Moment report, released Tuesday by a coalition of 17 advocacy and public health organizations, challenges Augusta to adopt a values-driven blueprint for protecting the state’s natural assets as Mainers face record energy costs and increasingly destructive storms.
Column: Hummingbirds’ arrival has Mainers buzzing
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 12, 2026
While red hummingbird feeders long have been fixtures of Maine yards and decks (especially at camp), technology has taken a once-passive hobby and put it into hyperdrive, enabling birders to keep better track of avian visitors and share their excitement with fellow enthusiasts online. Although many species of migratory birds show up in Maine this time of year, there seems to be heightened anticipation around ruby-throated hummingbirds, which travel from as far away as Central America to destinations throughout the eastern U.S. and up into Canada.
Small MDI town votes to reverse nearly 100-year ban on deer hunting
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • May 12, 2026
Following months of public hearings, Tremont residents on Monday voted to allow a deer hunting season within town limits, reversing a nearly 100-year ban. Deer hunting has not been allowed on the island since 1931, though special permits have been issued for nuisance deer. 314 residents voted in favor of the plan and 227 voted against the proposal in a secret ballot. The hunt is intended to manage the town’s — and island’s — deer overpopulation, which has contributed to more vehicle collisions with the animals, concern over Lyme disease and complaints of residential property damage.
This couple moved to Bangor to flee climate change in Texas
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • May 12, 2026
Shawn and Sara had lived in Austin since 2006 and 2011, respectively. After more than a decade in Texas, the couple decided it was time to leave and move somewhere entirely new. “We had a lot of reasons to move…but the one that hit us the hardest was the weather,” Shawn said. “We were facing our fourth catastrophic event in five years and nobody was doing anything to address it. The couple are one example in a growing trend of climate migrants, people who forcibly or voluntarily leave their home due to extreme weather events or climate change, such as wildfires, sea level rise or hurricanes. From 2008 to 2024, more than 22 million people in the U.S. were displaced by environmental disasters.
Wildlife Warden Pilot Joshua Tibbetts mourned
MAINE GOVERNMENT NEWS • May 12, 2026
Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife is heartbroken to share that Game Warden Pilot Joshua Tibbetts died this morning in a plane crash in Avon, ME. Game Warden Pilot Tibbetts served the people of Maine as a Maine Game Warden for 18 years, including the last three years as a pilot for Maine Warden Service. In that role, his specialized aviation work supported search and rescue, law enforcement, fisheries and wildlife conservation, and public safety across the state.
Bar Harbor area resident receives Espy Award
MOUNT DESERT ISLANDER • May 11, 2026
Conservation leader and Bar Harbor area resident Karin Tilberg was awarded on Wednesday with the 2026 Espy Land Heritage Award, the state’s highest honor for lifetime achievement in land conservation. The award is given once a year at the Maine Land Conservation Conference to individuals and organizations whose innovative, forward-thinking leadership has strengthened land conservation across Maine. Part of the award includes a $5,000 honorarium that will be donated to nonprofits of Tilberg’s choice. Half of the money will go to the Allagash Wilderness Waterway Foundation to help fund its Youth on the Allagash and Wabanaki collaborative projects. The other half will go to the Brunswick‑Topsham Land Trust's Cathance River Education Alliance, which hosts a summer camp for children and collaborates with local schools to incorporate place-based learning.
Roadless Rule Repeal Would Harm New England’s Last Wild Places
NATURAL RESOURCES COUNCIL OF MAINE • May 11, 2026
6,000 acres in the White Mountain National Forest are Inventoried Roadless Areas, meaning they have been protected from road-building and harvesting activities since 2001 by the Roadless Area Conservation Rule. Unfortunately, those precious acres could soon be subject to road construction and subsequent extractive activity because of the Trump Administration’s latest attempt to hand over our public lands to corporations and billionaires for profit. Once a draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) is released this spring, the following comment period will be the last chance for the public to voice their dissent against the termination of the Roadless Rule. The threat is not only to the stunning cloak of forest across the mountains of western Maine, taken in from the peaks of Maine’s parcel of the White Mountain National Forest. The health of tens of millions of acres of forest—and their surrounding ecosystems and watersheds—is at stake.
Maine has dozens of fishing waters where adults can’t fish
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • May 11, 2026
Maine also makes it easy to get the next generation of anglers started. Youngsters do not require a fishing license until age 16 and this year Saturday, May 30 and Sunday, May 31 are Free Fishing Weekend days, meaning resident and nonresident adults and teens age 16 and older can fish statewide without a fishing license. There is also a list of Special Opportunity Waters. There are 50 scattered throughout the state in each of the seven fishery regions, including 10 in the Sebago region, 11 in the Rangeley region and a dozen in the Penobscot region. These waters are specifically restricted to young anglers under age 16. Most are stocked with trout. ~ Al Raychard
Column: Let’s talk about those myths about turkeys
I’m still surprised to find people, even (or perhaps especially) within the hunting community who don’t like wild turkeys. Perhaps is because they tried hunting them and failed. Or maybe it’s because they hold onto long dispelled and out-dated myths. maybe you tried to take on Old Tom and failed to fell a fowl. That’s no reason to dislike them. Think of it not as a disincentive but a motivation. They beat you once and they may do it again, but it the hunting game, they only get to lose once. ~ Bob Humphrey
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 11, 2026
I’m still surprised to find people, even (or perhaps especially) within the hunting community who don’t like wild turkeys. Perhaps is because they tried hunting them and failed. Or maybe it’s because they hold onto long dispelled and out-dated myths. Maybe you tried to take on Old Tom and failed to fell a fowl. That’s no reason to dislike them. Think of it not as a disincentive but a motivation. They beat you once and they may do it again, but it the hunting game, they only get to lose once. ~ Bob Humphrey
Greenwood voters to weigh conservation proposal, zoning
SUN JOURNAL • May 11, 2026
Voters in Greenwood will head to the polls May 16 to vote on an amendment to the town of Greenwood Shoreland Zoning Ordinance. Article 23 asks voters to designate an 18-acre lot on West Paris Road — the “Finnish Picnic Grounds” parcel — as conservation land. If passed, the town will partner with Western Foothills Land Trust to maintain the property.
Voters in Greenwood will head to the polls May 16 to vote of an amendment to the town of Greenwood Shoreland Zoning Ordinance. Article 23 asks voters to designate an 18-acre lot on West Paris Road — the “Finnish Picnic Grounds” parcel — as conservation land. If passed, the town will partner with Western Foothills Land Trust to maintain the property.
Brunswick nonprofit produce provider brings on first paid director
TIMES RECORD • May 11, 2026
In March, Cooper became the first paid executive director at Growing to Give, a nonprofit farm in Brunswick that provides produce to organizations that help people facing food insecurity. As Maine enters its growing season, Cooper said she’s excited to get into the workflow of the farm and help expand its reach even further.
TIMES RECORD • May 11, 2026
In March, Cooper became the first paid executive director at Growing to Give, a nonprofit farm in Brunswick that provides produce to organizations that help people facing food insecurity. As Maine enters its growing season, Cooper said she’s excited to get into the workflow of the farm and help expand its reach even further.
Opinion: America’s dam busting is a sign of economic strength, not decline
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 11, 2026
The last 30 years in the United States has been a story not of dam building but removal, with New England leading the way. The 1999 removal of the Edwards Dam on Maine’s Kennebec River, ordered by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, established a landmark precedent that free-flowing rivers should be prioritized. But we’re not rebuilding our decrepit dams after we tear them down, either. And that is because the law began to change in the 1970s owing not just to environmental concerns, but also to the recognition that an undammed river has substantial economic value whether through increased recreation or development. On rivers where big dams have come down, fish have returned at a scale beyond the most optimistic predictions. American strength lies in our ability to change our minds. Our crumbling dams do not signal decline. Instead, our strength as a nation is a dynamism rooted in the law, and in the rivers that sustain us. ~ Scot McFarlane
This 80-mile relay in northern Maine traces the alewife migration up the St. Croix
As thousands of river herring begin their upstream migration this month, runners will do the same. Joggers on May 23 will pace the alewife run from the Passamaquoddy Reservation at Sipayik (Pleasant Point), 80 miles up the St. Croix River to Forest City in Washington County. The St. Croix River, known as the Skutik River to the Indigenous people of northern Maine and southeastern Canada, was once a vital migratory highway for tens of millions of alewives, said Brian Altvater Sr.
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 11, 2026
As thousands of river herring begin their upstream migration this month, runners will do the same. Joggers on May 23 will pace the alewife run from the Passamaquoddy Reservation at Sipayik (Pleasant Point), 80 miles up the St. Croix River to Forest City in Washington County. The St. Croix River, known as the Skutik River to the Indigenous people of northern Maine and southeastern Canada, was once a vital migratory highway for tens of millions of alewives, said Brian Altvater Sr.
Hike Barren Mountain for one of the best views in Maine
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • May 10, 2026
Barren Mountain is the first major peak of Maine’s famous 100-Mile Wilderness, if you’re trekking from the south. The 100-Mile Wilderness is considered the most remote section of the Appalachian Trail. It doesn’t cross any major roads for approximately 100 miles, but parts of it are accessible by side trails and gravel woods roads, if you’ve got good directions and a DeLorme atlas.
Bountiful kelp harvest gives UNE students a taste of the blue economy
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 10, 2026
The sun broke through the clouds on Thursday as a small crew of students from the University of New England hauled up about a thousand pounds of brown kelp. Over the next week, they will turn that bounty into about 5,000 salty-sweet nutrition bars. “This is what I came here to do,” said Julianne Manlove, a 19-year-old freshman marine science and biochemistry major from Rhode Island. “Learning about sea farming is one thing. Learning to do it, that’s just so much better. This was easily the highlight of my year.” The first kelp harvest of the season proved so bountiful that it was almost unmanageable.
Who visited Maine in 2025, and how much did they spend?
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 8, 2026
The Maine Office of Tourism reported there were 14.15 million visitors in 2025, down 4.4% from the year before. Visitors last year spent $9.37 billion, up 1.4% from 2024, not adjusted for inflation. Most people drove from the East Coast, although more flew in 2025 than in 2024. Nearly 20% of visitors came by plane. Nearly 20% of people, or 2.9 million, counted as visitors last year were residents exploring the state. 15% came from Massachusetts. New York and New Hampshire. Nearly 40% of visitors had been to Maine more than 10 times. Less than 5% of visitors came from other countries in 2025, according to the report. Most — 3.6% — came from Canada. That number is down from 2024, a drop attributable to political tensions and economic pressures. Popular regions to visit last year included Greater Portland, the Midcoast, the beaches and islands. More than a quarter visited Down East Maine, including Acadia National Park.