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My name is Keith Michaud and this is “Letters From Away,” a blog written by a Mainer living outside the comfortable and sane confines of New England. The blog is intended for Mainers, whether they live in the Pine Tree State or beyond, and for anyone who has loved ’em, been baffled by ’em or both. Ayuh, I am “from away.” Worse still, I live on the Left Coast – in California. Enjoy! Or not. Your choice.
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- How Maine Became a Laboratory for the Future of Public Higher Ed | The Chronicle of Higher Education
- Angus King Urges Interior Department To Reconsider Offshore Drilling Proposal | Mainepublic.org
- Maine Voices: Higher education, employers must work together for bright future | Portland Press Herald
- Stunning reversal: McDaniels turns down Colts’ job to stay with Patriots | The Associated Press via the Portland Press Herald
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Category Archives: Economy
Political change has familiar feel, George Mitchell says | Maine Sunday Telegram
It was November 1988. Maine’s own George Mitchell had just been elected Democratic majority leader of the U.S. Senate. And high atop his to-do list was a sit-down with then-Republican minority leader Sen. Robert Dole.
“I said to him, ‘This job is hard enough under the best of circumstances. It’s impossible under bad circumstances,’ ” Mitchell recalled last week.
And so Mitchell and Dole agreed on a few ground rules:
Never surprise each other.
Never try to embarrass each other.
And finally, be as fair as possible to each other under whatever circumstances might arise.
“We kept our word for six years,” Mitchell said. “Bob Dole and I never had a harsh word pass between us – in public or in private.”
Ah, the good old days.
Click for the rest of the column by Bill Nemitz in the Maine Sunday Telegram.
Fish passage is the next step for Presumpscot | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Posted in Economy, Education and Schools, Energy, Entertainment, Environment, Food and Drink, Outdoors
Tagged alewives, blueback herring, Casco Bay, Cumberland Mills, Cumberland Mills passageway, fishway, Maine Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Commission, Presumpscot River, Sappi Fine Paper North America, Sea Trail, Sebago Lake, shad, Westbrook
Sunday River opens first ski trail in the U.S. | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Economy, Entertainment, Environment, Maine, Outdoors, Sports
Tagged black-diamond T2 trail, Newry, ski, ski season, skiing, snow, snowmaking system, Sunday River
Some clarity around new Maine political poll | DownEast.com
[I haven’t had a time to read or analyze this poll, so I won’t comment about the candidates and issues, but I thought I’d offer it up for those of you in Maine who might be voting in the coming election. The link below is to Mike Tipping’s blog on DownEast.com and there is a copy of the poll results attached to the blog entry. I recommend reading Tipping’s comments – and reservations – on the poll before diving into the poll itself. – KM]
Some clarity around new Maine political poll | DownEast.com
Posted in Economy, Law and Order, Politics and government
Tagged DownEast.com, election, political race, poll, Portland Press Herald, survey
In Greenwood, a turn for the better: Mills offer new opportunities | Lewiston Sun Journal
GREENWOOD (AP) — Many people gave the Saunders Brothers manufacturing plant up for dead when it closed its doors and went to auction last spring, a victim of the sour economy and cheap imports flooding in from overseas.
Less than five months later, machines are humming and the smell of sawdust is in the air again as a skeleton crew puts out rolling pins, brush handles, dowels and other wood products.
Maine’s wood products industry has been on the slide for years. Numerous plants that made hundreds of everyday things — toothpicks, tongue depressors, Popsicle sticks, pepper mills, checkers pieces, clothespins, you name it — have gone out of business.
Now, a Portland woman and her partners have bought not only the shuttered Saunders Brothers factory, but three other plants as well in hardscrabble areas of interior Maine. Louise Jonaitis says she intends to bring the plants back to life in regions where times are tough and jobs are scarce.
“I grew up knowing a mill of any size was the life of a community in Maine,” said Jonaitis, 49, whose father worked in a paper mill when she was growing up in Rumford. “What I’ve been seeing as plants close is the decline of the social fabric in Maine. And I thought, ‘What else do we have?’”
Click for the rest of the story by Associated Press Writer Clarke Cainfield found in the Lewiston Sun Journal.
Yacht maker offers to buy Eastport’s Boat School | Bangor Daily News
EASTPORT, Maine — One of the world’s premier yacht makers, who has previously focused his manufacturing efforts in Taiwan, China and Tampa Bay, Fla., has made an offer that could turn around the financially struggling city of Eastport. David Marlow of Marlow Yachts approached the City Council during a workshop this week and floated a proposal to buy The Boat School, which is owned by the city and leased to Husson University.
His plans include expanding The Boat School program from a two-year to a four-year marine trades program while keeping Husson University involved. He also plans to revamp the campus, expand the existing boatyard and build an on-site yacht manufacturing facility that could create 100 new jobs.
“This could be a godsend for Eastport,” City Manager Jon Southern said Thursday. “This business is compatible with every city goal for our working waterfront. It is ecologically friendly. It would create high-quality jobs. It protects The Boat School and retains the partnership we have with Husson.”
Click for the rest of the story by Sharon Kiley Mack in the Bangor Daily News.
Castine center to test tidal energy turbines | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Economy, Education and Schools, Energy, Environment, Maine, Politics and government
Tagged Bagaduce River, Castine Harbor, environmental assessment, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Maine Maritime Academy, Maine Tidal Power Initiative, tidal energy, Tidal Energy Demonstration and Evaluation Center, tidal turbines, University of Maine
Potato crop ‘looking great’ thanks to rain in September | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Economy, Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Aroostook County, farmers, growers, Hurricane Earl, Maine Potato Board, potatoes
5 things to do this Oct. 15 weekend | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Economy, Entertainment, Maine
Tagged "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf", AudioBody, Beer and Mussel Fest, Comedy Riot, Dover-Foxcroft, Emily Burnham, juggling, Maine comedy, Oktoberfest, Riot Enterprises, Ten Bucks Theatre, The Blue Hill Fall Foliage Food and Wine Festival, The Center Theatre, The Toughcats
Web Comic: 10 Reasons You Should Hire a Journalist
Posted in Economy, Entertainment, Journalism
Tagged cartoon, comics, Journalism, journalists, Newspapers, Patrick Garvin
Concert series puts Bangor on the map, but will it stay? | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Economy, Entertainment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Alan Jackson, Bangor, Bangor Waterfront, Celtic women, Greater Bangor Convention and Visitors Bureau, Hollywood Slots Waterfront Concert Series, Jason Mraz, Live Nation, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Charlie Daniels, Miranda Lambert, New England Concerts LLC, SmackFest, Tim McGraw
