MAINE ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS
The most comprehensive online source of conservation news and events in Maine and beyond, edited by Jym St. Pierre
Business owner clear-cut land in Scarborough without approval
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • June 2, 2026
A business owner clear-cut land near Route 1 without a permit, according to a notice of violation from the town of Scarborough. Cary Seamans is the owner of Seamans Construction and CVS Foundations LLC, according to Seamans’ LinkedIn account. Seamans recently purchased around 10 wooded acres with a single home. A large part of the property is also subject to the shoreland zoning ordinance — which protects the environment and wildlife on land near a pond, river, stream or wetland — as it is within 250 feet of the Stuart Brook east of the Maine Turnpike. Seamans needed approval to clear or remove vegetation for the portion of the property in the Stream Protection 2 Overlay District. “I didn’t have any real reason for the trees to be removed,” Seamans said. “We were thinking about hopefully developing the property.”
For World Fish Migration Day, eyes turn to restoring the Mousam River
MAINE PUBLIC • June 2, 2026
On World Fish Migration Day at the end of May, dozens of people gathered in downtown Kennebunk on the banks of the Mousam River. There were informational booths, a fly tying demonstration and live fish on hand to demonstrate the kinds of species that make the river their home. Chris Schorn, southern Maine land protection project manager for Maine Coast Heritage Trust said the 27-mile river snaking through York County is a biodiversity hotspot with a “diversity of rare, different rare, threatened and endangered species." It's also one of the most heavily dammed rivers in Maine. There are 11 dams on the Mousam's main stem, almost one every two miles. Fish trying to make it upstream halt at a series of three aging hydropower dams in Kennebunk, just a few miles from where the Mousam meets the Gulf of Maine. MCHT, along with local and state advocacy groups, wants the dams taken out and the lower Mousam restored to a free-flowing river. It's a scenario that's playing out all over Maine, on rivers big and small.
Acadia advisory panel created by Congress fails to meet for 3rd time in 18 months
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • June 2, 2026
Acadia National Park’s citizen advisory commission has missed its second meeting in a row, and its third meeting in less than a year and a half, amid funding cuts and staff departures across the National Park Service. In 1986, Congress established the 16-member commission to advise the secretary of the U.S Department of the Interior on Acadia National Park management and development. Since President Donald Trump was sworn into office in January 2025, there has been a mass firing of federal workers that included eight full-time employees at Acadia, where chronic seasonal staff shortages have left the park struggling to keep up with services.
Action Alert: Oppose Increased Funding for Trump’s Dept. of Justice's Environment and Natural Resources Division
Under the Trump administration, rather than focusing on enforcing the nation's bedrock environmental laws against billionaire corporate polluters, Trump has directed the Department of Justice's Environment and Natural Resources Division (ENRD) to defend meritless and lawless rollbacks to clean air and water protections, challenge state and local efforts to protect themselves from pollution, and reduce accountability for industries that continue to destroy our natural heritage. ENRD is now more focused on finding and bringing meritless lawsuits to undo state-level efforts to address even the most basic efforts to address the climate crisis and to wreak havoc with every effort to expand renewable energy in this nation. Send a message to Maine's federal delegation calling on them to oppose this funding!
Fifty Years of Common Ground: The Posters of the Common Ground Country Fair
MAINE ORGANIC FARMERS AND GARDENERS ASSOCIATION• June 2, 2026
This fully illustrated publication features all fifty Common Ground Fair posters, as well as essays by Maine Arts Commission Executive Director Amy Hausmann, MOFGA’s Executive Director Sarah Alexander, and more, offering a deep dive into the cultural history of the Fair and the community movement it has built.
The best hikes in Lewiston and Auburn are gems ‘right in the middle of the city’
SUN JOURNAL • June 2, 2026
There are plenty of green spaces accessible in Lewiston-Auburn. But it can be difficult to know where to find good nature walks or hikes and what to expect when you get there. Below is a list of trails and information to help you plan your trip.
• Garcelon Bog Conservation Area
• David Rancourt River Preserve
• Thorncrag Bird Sanctuary
• Mount Apatite Park
• Lake Auburn Watershed Commission trails
Maine’s busiest lobster port plans for new public pier
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • June 2, 2026
Stonington plans to add access to its working waterfront from the site of a historic downtown building, a project years in the making. The town is looking for grant funding to stabilize the shoreline behind the Independent Order of Odd Fellows hall it purchased two summers ago and create a new pier and ramp for more float space. The project would provide room for additional dinghies next to its existing public fish pier and add resiliency to sea level rise.
Robbins Lumber has resumed operations in wake of deadly explosion
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • June 1, 2026
Robbins Lumber in Searsmont resumed full operations last Tuesday, just 11 days after the fire and explosion that killed a firefighter and injured 12 other people. Robbins Lumber has multiple locations across the state that are aiding operations in Searsmont, the co-owner stated. That includes using a Sanford location for warehousing, while a mill in East Baldwin “has stepped up production efforts to support customer order needs.” The company has also constructed a temporary warehouse on site in Searsmont.
River driver remembers Maine’s last log drive 50 years later
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • June 1, 2026
North America’s last log drive ended on the Kennebec River in 1976, halted by environmental regulations and a legislative ban. It also marked the end of the historic Kennebec Log Driving Company (KLD). Founded in 1853 by 63 sawmill owners, the company was formed to coordinate wood transport, manage log-driving dams and minimize conflicts among river drivers. Dave Calder, 76, of Canaan, was one of the last KLD workers. “I started working on the log drives in June 1967 when I was 17 years old,” said Calder. “Because my dad was a river driver, I wanted to work on the river, too. Earning one dollar an hour for a 55-hour work week, I was bringing in pretty good money back then.”
Non-Target Catches
THE MAINE SPORTSMAN • June 2026
Non-target catches are one of the problems a trapper has to deal with. The capture of a Canda lynx must be reported to a game warden or biologist prior to removing the animal from the trap, unless a Department official cannot be reached in time to prevent injury to the lynx.
Opinion: Federal policy change means farmworkers in Maine will likely see a pay cut this year
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • June 1, 2026
the federal H-2A visa program, which allows foreign workers to work in seasonal agricultural jobs in the United States. A key part of the H-2A program is the Adverse Effect Wage Rate, or AEWR. For most of 2025, the AEWR for H-2A workers in Maine was $18.83, well above the current state minimum wage of $15.10. For 2026, the baseline AEWR for most H-2A workers in Maine will be $14.81. By law, these workers cannot be paid less than the state minimum wage, but this still works out to a potential pay cut of up to $3.73 per hour. We are lucky to live in a state with such rich and diverse agriculture. But we must also remember the lives and livelihoods of the workers who bring this produce to us and reflect on what fairness demands that we provide these workers in return. ~ Michael Haedicke
Opinion: Maine’s energy future can’t be built on 1980s rules
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • June 1, 2026
Our rapid adoption of heat pumps proves that Mainers are ready for change. But as we electrify our heating, we are trading a dependence on foreign oil for a reliance on a regional electric grid that faces massive demand during our coldest months. To survive a deep winter freeze without fossil fuels, our regional grid requires what engineers call firm power, meaning steady, reliable electricity that operates independent of the weather. Wind, solar and efficiency are vital, but they cannot carry the baseline load alone during an extended sub-zero snap. If we want true energy independence for New England, Maine needs to start looking further ahead. That means taking a serious look at Small Modular Nuclear Reactors. ~ Nathaniel Eames, Portland
Maine was warned about toxins in sludge decades before PFAS crisis began
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • June 1, 2026
In 1983, two farmers attending a growers’ meeting in southwestern Maine heard about a new product that would change their lives, and farming in the state, for decades. That product was sludge, a muddy byproduct of industrial processes and municipal wastewater treatment that also contained nutrients for enriching soil. For Fred Stone, a dairy farmer from Arundel, the decision to spread the fertilizer meant a free way to enrich his clay soil to grow cow feed. But Tim Leary decided against it. Friends at the wastewater department and local dairy cautioned about the chemicals and heavy metals likely to be in the fertilizer, which was made of refuse from the S.D. Warren Paper Mill in Westbrook. That growers’ meeting proved to be a trigger for the spreading of sludge throughout Maine, including through a state-sponsored program. The decisions made by Stone and Leary sent them down separate paths, the effects of which both farmers still feel.
Column: Watch for these classic Maine signs on your next road trip
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • June 1, 2026
Signs are everywhere. How could we cope without them? Signs in Greenville’s Thoreau Park tell the story of Henry David Thoreau’s visits to the Moosehead Lake region. One of my favorite signs is the weather-worn, barely legible wooden marker that stood at the summit of Katahdin the last time we made the climb. But my favorite Baxter signs are the ones that mark the trailheads to the park’s trout ponds. Bible Point is somewhat famous because a young Teddy Roosevelt camped, hunted and fished there in the late 1870s at the confluence of First Brook and the West Branch of the Mattawamkeag River. A plaque commemorates the spot. Signs are everywhere. Fortunately, many of them point us toward Maine’s history, outdoor traditions and wild places. ~ Al Raychard
Mainers flock to Wolfe’s Neck Woods for 16th annual birding festival
PORTLAND PRESS HERALD • May 31, 2026
As spring turns to summer in Maine, park rangers are welcoming some familiar faces. Along with the tourists, the state will once again become home to thousands of birds of different species. The 16th annual Feathers Over Freeport birding festival at Bradbury Mountain and Wolfe’s Neck Woods state parks on Saturday and Sunday celebrated their return with a community event for all ages.
Opinion: Maine graduates, take a note from our feathered friends
MAINE SUNDAY TELEGRAM • May 31, 2026
The central message of a poem from my own graduation ceremony stays with me: Just like the birds, use your voice and be yourself. A bird sings a song, it isn’t very long, sings it, never gets it wrong. ~ Susan Graham, Kennebunkport
Get lost with us on a Sunday drive through western Maine
MAINE SUNDAY TELEGRAM • May 31, 2026
Feel like a leisurely drive on a beautiful day? Want to enjoy all the scenery that western Maine has to offer? We’ve got the guide for you.
• Grafton Notch Scenic Byway
• Evan’s Notch Road
• Newry’s Sunday River Covered Bridge
• Andover’s Lovejoy Covered Bridge
• Route 17 — Rumford to Oquossoc
• Rangeley Lakes National Scenic Byway
• Coos Canyon (Byron)
• Rumford Community Forest trails
• Route 4 — Rangeley to New Vineyard
• Route 27 — Carrabassett Valley to Stratton
• Route 156 — Jay to Wilton
Population trends in Maine show a shift to the suburbs
MAINE SUNDAY TELEGRAM • May 31, 2026
That “exurban” shift has become increasingly popular across the state and country, U.S. Census Bureau data shows, as people eschew major urban areas. The trend is reshaping Maine towns and cities, particularly in Cumberland County, as officials and residents in Portland’s bedroom communities grapple with seemingly exponential population growth. Scarborough, Windham, Gorham and Westbrook are growing rapidly — Portland isn’t. Between 2020 and 2023, Maine was the fastest-growing state in New England. More than ever, community planning is going to be crucial, said Joe Oliva, outreach and communications director for GrowSmart Maine.
Sabattus residents balk at large housing development: ‘That’s too much’
SUN JOURNAL • May 31, 2026
There is mounting public pushback among Sabattus residents to a proposed 96-unit housing development on No Name Pond Road across from the former Sabattus Primary School. The area is currently undeveloped and is wooded with pockets of wetlands, along with a stream in the southwest corner of the lot that drains into the Sabattus River. Some residents feel the area, and town services, cannot sustain that much new housing and the subsequent increased traffic in such a short period of time.
I went sea kayaking near the site of a recent drowning. Here’s what I learned.
BANGOR DAILY NEWS • May 31, 2026
My first sea kayaking adventure this year was off Deer Isle, near the location of a recent tragedy. Just a couple of weeks prior, a man had drowned after his kayak capsized off Little Deer Isle. He’d been paddling solo, and he hadn’t been wearing a life jacket. What’s so great about a life jacket? It keeps you afloat when you lose the ability to swim, which can happen shockingly fast in Maine’s frigid water. It gives you more time, and in that time, help might arrive. Another lesson: Sea kayaking on a wind-free morning is 100% worth the yucky, groggy feeling that usually tempts me to stay in bed for “just five more minutes.” ~ Aislinn Sarnacki