[Deliberations have started, apparently. — KM]
Jury begins deliberations in lobsterman shooting case – Bangor Daily News.
[Deliberations have started, apparently. — KM]
Jury begins deliberations in lobsterman shooting case – Bangor Daily News.
Posted in Law and Order, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged deliberations, jury, lobster, lobstermen, Matinicus Island, Rockland, shooting, trial
[I posted a link to a wire story about this trial earlier, but this has far, far more details. — KM]
Trial illustrates case of bad blood on Matinicus | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME.
Posted in Law and Order, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged "lobster wars", Knox County Superior Court, lobster, lobstermen, Matinicus Island, Rockland, shooting, Steamboat Wharf, trial
Posted in Law and Order, Maine, Outdoors, Politics and government
Tagged closing arguments, fued, lobster, lobster fishing, lobstermen, Matinicus Island, Rockland, shooting, trial
Posted in Economy, Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Clearlake, Lower Lake, marijuana, Northern California, pot
In delicate talks, the many factions
of landowners are forging a plan
that tries to satisfy all of their interests
The long-simmering debate over the future of Maine’s northern woodlands is about to move back to the front burner.
A group called the Keeping Maine’s Forests steering committee is working on a proposal to protect millions of acres of the working forest from further development. The committee is close to having a final plan and will deliver it to federal officials as early as this month.
People already are lining up to oppose it with competing plans for the more than 10 million acres known as Maine’s North Woods. It’s the largest unfragmented forest east of the Mississippi River, with most of it in private hands.
The steering committee grew out of an effort, organized by state officials, to get the traditionally warring factions of landowners such as Katahdin Timberlands, environmental groups such as Maine Audubon, outdoor recreational organizations such as the Appalachian Mountain Club, and members of the forest products sector such as the Forest Products Council, to forge a plan that would satisfy all of their interests.
“The fact that we got them sitting down at one table is unprecedented,” said Alec Giffen, director of the Maine Forest Service.
Click on the link for the rest of today’s story by Beth Quimby in the Portland Press Herald.
Here’s more:
The Maine Woods
• Maine is the most heavily forested state in the nation, with trees growing on 90 percent of its land base, or 17.8 million acres.
• The Maine woods are home to more than 20,000 species of wildlife.
• As an economic resource, Maine’s forests directly employ nearly 23,000 people.
• About 95 percent of Maine timberland is privately owned, with small, non-industrial landowners holding more than 6.2 million acres.
• The Maine woods generate $1.15 billion in revenues from forest-related recreation and tourism activities.
• Maine’s forest industry harvests 6 million to 7 million cords of wood each year to build homes and make furniture, paper and other products.
Source: Maine Forest Service
Steering committee members
• Eliza Townsend, Maine Department of Conservation
• Wolfe Tone, The Trust for Public Land
• Rosaire Pelletier, adviser to Gov. John Baldacci
• Sherry Huber, Maine Tree Foundation
• Karin Tilberg, Office of the Governor
• Mike Tetreault, The Nature Conservancy
• Alec Giffen, Maine Forest Service
• Patrick Strauch, Forest Products Council
• Ted Koffman, Maine Audubon
• Roger Milliken, Baskahegan Co.
• Marcia McKeague, Acadian Timberlands
• John Williams, Maine Pulp and Paper Association
• Eleanor Kinney, Environmental Funders Network Council
• Karen Woodsum, Sierra Club
• Brownie Carson, Natural Resources Council
• Alan Hutchinson, Forest Society of Maine
• Peter Triandafillou, Huber Resources
• Walter Graff, Appalachian Mountain Club
• Don White, Prentiss and Carlisle
• Mathew Dunlap, Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine
• Rich Merk, Small Woodlot Owners of Maine
• Ken Elowe, Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife
Posted in Economy, Environment, Maine, Outdoors, Politics and government
Tagged "The National Parks: America's Best Idea", Appalachian Mountain Club, conservation easements, Forest Products Council, Katahdin Timberlands, Keeping Maine’s Forests, logging, Maine Audubon, Maine Forest Service, Maine Land Use Regulation Commission, Maine Sportsman, Maine’s North Woods, national forest, national park, public access, Restore: The North Woods, working forest
Lobstering is dangerous work!
Posted in Environment, Food and Drink, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged “The Lobster Gangs of Maine”, criminal threatening, elevated aggravated assault, Knox County Superior Court, lobster fishing, lobstermen, Matinicus Island, reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon, shooting, Tenants Harbor, territory dispute
Posted in Disaster, Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged aid, earthquake, Haiti, Haitian, Port-au-Prince, recycling, relief, sailors, sails, shelter, tents
“Thank heavens Lisa was there.” – Charanay Pok of North Waterboro
Charanay Pok was desperately trying to unbuckle her two screaming children from their seats as icy water filled her car when an “angel” appeared to help.
Moments earlier, Pok’s 2009 Toyota Camry, with her two young children in the back seat, had crashed through a guardrail, flipped several times and plunged into the Little Ossipee River in Limerick.
Pok, 24, reached into knee-high water to retrieve her cell phone near her feet and call for help, but the phone was dead. She turned to try to unbuckle her son from his car seat, but it was stuck.
Suddenly, a woman appeared next to her car, knocking on the window to help.
“We found out later it was Lisa,” Pok said Friday.
Investigators for the York County Sheriff’s Department say that without the help of Lisa Boisvert of North Waterboro, Pok, her daughter Kisani, 3, and her son Tayven, 6 months, may not have escaped from the crash Thursday on New Dam Road in Limerick.
Click on the link for the rest of this story by Beth Quimby of the Portland Press Herald.
Fishing, economic issues
highlighted as 12 hopefuls
speak at the industry forum
ROCKPORT – A dozen candidates for governor stressed the importance of Maine’s fishing heritage at a forum on Friday, but differed on how best to help one of the state’s oldest and most important industries.
The three-day Maine Fishermen’s Forum at the Samoset Resort is designed to draw attention to the issues facing the state’s commercial fishermen.
This year, the group invited some of the candidates for governor to a forum. Four Democrats, six Republicans, a Green Independent and an independent candidate got a chance to address about 100 people and to answer questions.
Candidates were asked what they would have done to prevent next month’s closing of the sardine cannery in Prospect Harbor, how strongly they would advocate for Maine fishermen and what can be done to attract seafood processing plants to Maine.
Click on the link for the rest of the story by Susan Cover of the Portland Press Herald.
Posted in Disaster, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Goodall Hospital, hero, Ledgemere Dam, Limerick, Lisa Boisvert, New Dam Road, WCSH-TV, York County
Posted in Economy, Energy, Environment, Maine, Newspapers, Outdoors
Tagged Mountain Valley High School, National Honor Society, recycling, recycling bins, resources, Rumford, waste, waste management