1. It’s a ‘Shell-ebration’ of Emerging Opportunities in Shellfish Aquaculture at Downeast Institute

    Downeast Institute (DEI), Maine Aquaculture Innovation Center, Maine Center for Entrepreneurs, and partners will host “Shell-ebration,” an event focused on emerging opportunities for shellfish aquaculture in Washington County, from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Sunday, June 8, at Downeast Institute, 39 Wildflower Lane, in Beals, Maine. The event is free and open to the public and will take place rain or shine.

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  2. Perfect Weather for Machias Parade Honoring Americans who ‘Gave All’ for Nation’s Freedom

    By Paul Sylvain

    After a gloomy week of rain and clouds, followed by more rain and clouds, the sun finally made an appearance just in time for the annual Memorial Day parade in Machias.

    And while cheers greeted parade participants from parade-goers lining the route – Machias Memorial High School down Court Street to Free Street, onto Colonial Way before proceeding down Main Street – veterans from American Legion Post 9 in Machias stopped to lay a wreath at the grave of Ephriam H. Johnson, which is who the Machias Legion post is named after.

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  3. County Commissioners, UT Supervisor Question Responsibility for Shaddagee Road Bridge Repair

    By Paul Sylvain

    Putting a discussion about the Shaddagee Road Bridge under “old business” on the Washington County Commissioners’ May 22 meeting agenda could be seen as an understatement. Just ask Washington County Unorganized Territories Supervisor Heron Weston, who had to claw through 40 years of meeting minutes to ferret out whether the county or property owners are responsible for repairing the bridge.

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  4. Opioid Response Director Gordon Smith Reports Slight Resurgence of Heroin, Cocaine Overdoses in Maine

    Nationwide Decline in Opioid Overdoses Tied to Less Lethal Supplies

    By Paul Sylvain

    Despite a more than 50-year “war on drugs,” the Governor’s Office of Policy Innovation and the Future’s Opioid Response Director, Gordon Smith, admitted the obvious last week: “We’re never going to stop everybody from using drugs.”

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  5. Kingfish Seeks Ordinance Change to Extend Permit

    By Nancy Beal

    It has been over five years since Kingfish Maine approached the town of Jonesport about building a $100 million land-based fish farm between Route 187 and Chandler Bay on nearly 100 acres north of the town’s largest cemetery. After over a dozen sessions with the town’s planning board and several informational meetings with citizens interested in learning about the various components of the fish-rearing process, in November 2022, the town finally granted the building permit Kingfish sought.

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  6. Maine DEA Supervisor Praises ‘Cornerstone Partnership’ with Sheriff’s Office

    By Paul Sylvain

    Maine Drug Enforcement Agency Supervisory Special Agent Chris Thornton opened the May 22 Washington County Commissioners meeting by recognizing the collaborative efforts between the county’s sheriff’s office and his department.

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  7. Machias Ambulance Service EMTs Honored in Augusta

    By Will Tuell

    On Wednesday, May 21, members of the Machias Ambulance Service attended a ceremony at the State House honoring one of their own. Joe Thompson, an EMT with MAS, was one of nine clinicians around the state to receive Maine EMS’s Excellence Award, MAS Chief Ryan Maker said in a social media post following the ceremony. 

    Thompson, noted Maker, “has been an integral part of Washington County's emergency services for over 20 years.” 

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  8. Machiasport Select Board Breezes Thru 20-Minute Meeting

    By Paul Sylvain

    As selectboard meetings go, if you blinked, you might have missed the May 19 meeting in Machiasport. In the span of about 20 minutes, board members Ryan Sprague, Sarah Craighead Dedmon, and Chairman Ryan Maker breezed through the public portion of their meeting faster than an Air Force fighter jet with its afterburners lit.

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  9. Washington County DA Bill Fails Passage in State House

    By Paul Sylvain

    The more things change, the more they stay the same.

    After attempts in the 129th and 130th Legislature to split a shared District Attorney between Hancock and Washington counties came up painfully short, local lawmakers revived their push to split the district in two again this year, only to see it falter in the Democratically controlled Legislature yet again last week. 

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  10. Freedom Studies

    by Jonathan Reisman

    Laws are like sausages. It’s better not to see them being made. –Attributed, likely apocryphally, to Otto von Bismarck 

    Regardless of the source, the verity of the observation was evident in Washington and Augusta last week. Close observance of the sausage-making process is not for those with a weak Constitution, and it does make me wonder occasionally about the wisdom of promoting transparency ... you are likely to see some things that you can't unsee but wish you could.

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  11. Retired MMHS Principal, Career Educator Bill Prescott Sr. Touched the Lives of Many

    By Paul Sylvain

    The Greater Machias area lost a well-known and much-loved career educator and community member with the passing of Bill Prescott Sr. on May 15.

    “I lost the love of my life … when Bill passed away,” his wife of 63 years wrote in notifying this reporter of Bill’s death last week. “He was principal at Machias Memorial High School for 13 years,” she said, noting that her husband was the longest-serving principal at MMHS. 

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  12. Sheep Farmer Loses Valuable Nursing Ewe to Corn Tossed in the Field

    By Paul Sylvain

    David and Rhonda Craven’s sizable flock of sheep is a familiar sight to travelers driving along the Kennebec Road in Machiasport. And in recent weeks, the sight of tiny newborn lambs tagging along with the mothers near the Cravens’ fenced-in fields has been an extra special treat, prompting many drivers — sometimes with their youngsters in tow — to pull over to watch or perhaps take a few photos.

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  13. Machias Voters to Act on School Budget May 27

    By Paul Sylvain

    Beginning on May 27, Machias voters will be gathering twice in a two-week span to act on separate articles in a bifurcated school and town meeting warrant. 

    First up is an 18-article warrant addressing Machias public school funding for fiscal year 2025, which begins July 1. That meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Tuesday, May 27, and the Rose M. Gaffney School gymnasium. The Machias School Board, Budget Committee and Select Board support passage of all funding articles.

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  14. Rose M. Gaffney School Teacher Janis Whitney Honored as Washington County Teacher of the Year

    By Will Tuell

    Last Wednesday proved to be an extra special day for the students and staff of Rose M. Gaffney Elementary School in Machias. One of their own, second grade teacher Janis Whitney, attended a ceremony at the Hall of Flags at the State House in Augusta where she was announced as Washington County Teacher of the Year for 2025. Whitney will go on to compete with fifteen other teachers — one representing each county — to compete for Maine Teacher of the Year honors. 

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  15. Select Board Chair Reports Work Progressing on Machias Shellfish Conservation Ordinance

    By Paul Sylvain

    A project taken on last fall by Machias Selectboard Chairman Jake Patryn to draft the town’s first shellfish conservation ordinance is moving forward with consideration of input from clam diggers in neighboring Machiasport.

    Despite nothing being offered for action by the full selectboard, Patryn used the board’s May 13 meeting to bring his colleagues and Town Manager Sarah Craighead Dedmon up to date on his work on the ordinance.

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  16. Machias Finance Director Meghan Dennison Latest long-time Town Employee to Resign

    By Paul Sylvain

    The list of long-time Machias town employees to move on in recent months just grew longer with the resignation of Machias Finance Director Meghan Dennison, effective June 6. 

    In announcing the resignation at the selectboard’s May 14 meeting, Town Manager Sarah Craighead Dedmon noted that Dennison has served as the town’s finance director for more than 20 years. As selectboard member Carole Porcher observed, “It’s the end of an era.”

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  17. Machias Ambulance Service Expects a $200K Surplus, Invests in New Equipment

    By Paul Sylvain

    Business is booming at the Machias Ambulance Service, and like all successful businesses, MAS Chief Ryan Maker is laser-focused on investing in MAS’s future.

    In a meeting with the town’s selectboard on May 13, Maker sought the board’s approval for a novel plan for selling off an older ambulance to a smaller, less busy ambulance service. He also asked permission to forego the competitive bid process to purchase three pieces of new state-of-the-art EMS equipment. 

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  18. Energy in the Executive

    by Jonathan Reisman

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  19. Beals Selectmen Working on Grants

    By Nancy Beal

    Beals’ First Selectman Glenda Beal has taken it upon herself to become the town’s grant writer. Since her election a year ago (as someone totally without previous town government experience), she has spent much of her time seeking grant money for the town for a number of causes.

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  20. UMM’s 114th Commencement Highlights Native Culture

    By Will Tuell

    Not even a dreary, drizzly, mid-May morning could dampen the spirits of the 70 University of Maine Machias students receiving diplomas on Saturday. Friends, family, professors, and community members packed into the Reynolds Center gym for the 10 a.m. right of passage. Yet remarks by Class of 2025 Valedictorian Emma Soctomah and Passamaquoddy Tribal historian Dwayne Tomah, the ceremony’s keynote speaker, gave the proceedings a distinctly Passamaquoddy feel. 

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  21. Efforts to Boost Rural Patrol Advance in Maine Legislature

    By Paul Sylvain 

    A pair of bills designed to reduce response times and fight crime in rural areas has made their way through the Legislature in recent weeks. On May 1, LD 477, sponsored by Madison Rep. Jack Ducharme, a Republican, cleared an early procedural vote on the House floor by a 117-26 margin. That same day, a similar proposal exclusive to Washington County, LD 461, sponsored by Calais Republican Sen. Marianne Moore and the local legislative delegation, cleared the Senate on a voice vote.

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  22. Moosabec School Boards Grapple with Title IX Issues

    By Nancy Beal

    The national discussion of transgender rights under Title IX that began in the Maine state house, when a Republican legislator posted pictures of a transgender student competing on a girls track team, and exploded in the White House when Governor Mills told President Trump “see you in court” after he chastised Maine’s transgender student policy, has come full circle back to Maine.

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  23. Machias Off to a No Start on Solar Farm Ordinance

    By Paul Sylvain

    On March 26, a handful of Machias voters enacted separate 180-day moratoriums on solar and wind farm applications to give town officials time to draft regulatory ordinances addressing both. Seven weeks later, and with both moratoriums set to expire on Sept. 22, work has yet to begin on either.

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  24. Moosabec Schools to Have Narcan; Elementary Schools Loaded with End-of-Year Events

    by Nancy Beal

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  25. Perry, Congelosi Honored for Emergency Response Efforts

    On May 8, Sheriff Barry Curtis and Deputy Director Joshua Rolfe, along with Washington County Regional Communications Operational Supervisor Lieutenant Dennis Perry and Sergeant Michael Congelosi, attended the 27th Annual Maine NENA (National Emergency Number Association) awards ceremony in Portland. Perry was nominated and chosen for the 2024 Director/Operations Manager of the Year. 

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  26. UMaine Studying Atlantic Sea Scallop Growth Methods

    A new study from the University of Maine’s Aquaculture Research Institute (ARI) and Darling Marine Center is helping to refine best practices for growing Atlantic sea scallops (Placopecten magellanicus), a species of increasing interest to Maine’s aquaculture sector.

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  27. Campus Follies

    by Jonathan Reisman

    Higher Education in America is in for some change. The change process is not pretty or pleasant, but it is necessary because American higher education is the source of quite a bit of the toxic ideology and idiocy that has poisoned America in recent years, including identity/oppression politics, critical race theory, equity, and climate alarmism. DEI divas and defenders were created and trained on America’s campuses. 

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  28. Drive-Thru Lunch to Benefit Teen Leadership Camp

    Healthy Acadia, in collaboration with Coastal Washington County Institute of Technology Culinary Arts (CWCIT) students located at Machias Memorial High School, will host a drive-thru luncheon on Friday, May 16, with proceeds to benefit Down East Teen Leadership Camp (DETLC).

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  29. Wellington “Billy” Noyes

    Wellington “Billy” Noyes, born on April 2, 1936, passed away on April 25, 2025, at the age of 89. Billy was a devoted husband, father, brother, grandfather, uncle, and friend. He is survived by his loving wife of 65 years, Wanda Dodge Noyes. His children, Nancy Emery, Lisa Noyes, Nathan Noyes, and Leigh Noyes, along with his son-in-law, Douglas Emery, and daughter-in-law, Danielle Noyes.

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  30. An Eel of a Story About Netting Elvers, Krill on the Banks of the Mighty Machias River

    By Paul Sylvain

    Over the past three centuries, the waters of the Machias River between the falls and the dike have served as a backdrop for numerous events. English sailor-turned-pirate Samuel “Black Sam” Bellamy is said to have used Machias as a safe haven to repair his ship. Legend has it that Black Sam buried a never-found treasure somewhere in the woods of Machiasport.

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  31. Quoddy League Legend Passes at 84

    By Phil Stuart

    One of the best-known players in the Quoddy Baseball League has passed away at the age of 84. Richard “Dickie” Norton of Addison played in four different decades and was one of the most productive hitters that the league produced during the 30 years of its existence. 

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  32. GSA Puts USCG Housing in Jonesport up for Bids

    By Paul Sylvain

    The General Services Administration (GSA) announced that bids are being accepted on the nearly 10-acre former U.S. Coast Guard housing area on Route 187/Mason’s Bay Road, about two miles north of the town center in Jonesport.

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  33. Jasper Beach in Need of a Little Help from its ‘Friends’

    By Paul Sylvain

    There was a time before the internet and social media that a unique, pristine, hidden gem of a beach in Machiasport’s Bucks Harbor district was the town’s best-kept secret. Jasper Beach is — or rather, was — a place of quiet solitude where the only sounds heard were the cries of seagulls and swishing of waves washing over the beach’s namesake jasper stones.

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  34. Cooke USA Cleaning Up Downeast

    Cooke USA organized or participated in shoreline cleanups in six municipalities over five days in April, in and around Earth Day on April 22. The cleanups were coordinated by Cooke USA's fish health team, which includes fish health technicians Jessica Lindsay, Jaelynn Matthews, and Susana DeFrank. 

    One of those cleanup events took place earlier in April and was coordinated by the town of Machiasport and its harbormaster, David Cale. About a dozen employees from Cooke’s operation in Machiasport’s Bucks Harbor district participated in that effort. 

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  35. Closed Machiasport Dump Eyed as Possible Junkyard

    By Paul Sylvain 

    Machiasporter Dylan Nevala is a man with a plan that has captured the interest of the Machiasport select and planning boards, following a discussion with the selectboard on April 28.

    Most people probably would shudder at the idea of having a vehicle junkyard in their community. But what if that junkyard made use of a piece of polluted land that once served as the town’s dump and is virtually unusable for residential purposes?

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  36. Daffodils, Equity, and Forsythia Sage

    by Jonathan Reisman

    Forty Mays ago, my late wife Ernie and I moved into a largely unfinished house on Cathance Lake in Cooper. May is lovely — cool, bugless mornings, full of sunrise concerts from songbirds, ravens, and woodpeckers, with loon warbles and serenades in the evening.

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  37. LAMPS Bringing Music to Area Schools

    By Paul Sylvain

    With the rising cost of education, programs involving the arts — such as music and art — are often the first to go, or be greatly reduced, while non-academic activities, such as sports, continue on.

    Enter the Lubec Area Musicians’ Philanthropic Society, or LAMPS, for short. LAMPS has been busy this winter bringing music in all its forms, from classical to pop, rock, and even traditional First Nation Passamaquoddy drumming presentations, to area schools.

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  38. Worcester Award Winners at Machias Memorial High School

    By Phil Stuart

    Liam O’Connor of Machias and Layla Cates Wright of Machiasport were selected to receive the first Mike Worcester Defensive Player and Hustle Awards at the recent Machias Memorial High School winter sports award ceremony. 

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  39. Addison Man Killed, Another Seriously Injured while Dragging for Scallops in Massachusetts

    Incident Remains Under Coast Guard, Massachusetts State Police Investigation

    By Paul Sylvain

    For the second time in four months, families and friends of Washington County scallop fishermen are mourning the loss of a loved one taken much too soon, while a second man remains hospitalized with broken ribs and other injuries.

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  40. Kitchen Kup Memorial Tournament Prepares to Tee Off for a Good Cause

    By Paul Sylvain

    Plans are taking shape for the first-ever Kitchen Kup Memorial Golf Tournament and fundraiser, slated for May 31.

    Former Machias Town Manager Bill Kitchen’s love for promoting live music might only have been surpassed by his love for golf. Kitchen passed away unexpectedly last Sept. 9.

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  41. Gov. Mills Appoints Hammond County Commissioner

    By Paul Sylvain

    Gov. Janet Mills has appointed Courtney Hammond of Columbia Falls to fill the District III Washington County Commissioner vacated by John Crowley Sr., effective immediately, dependent on Hammond’s being sworn in “as soon as possible” by a Dedimus Justice. 

    Hammond, who owns Lynch Hill Farms and is a former Maine state forest ranger, will complete the unexpired term of John B. Crowley Sr., of Addison, who resigned effective April 30, due to ill health. Hammond’s term will expire on Dec. 31, 2026.

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  42. Porter Library Property Lines in ‘Deed’ Confusing

    By Paul Sylvain

    Paving an earthen pathway to prevent bone breaking slips and falls on snow covered ice in winter should be a simple matter, right?

    Well, think again.

    As an April 23 discussion by the Machias Selectboard and Town Manager Sarah Craughead Dedmon proved, that’s not the case when it comes to property lines at Porter Memorial Library. 

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  43. Machias Planning Board Facing a Full Agenda at its May 7 Meeting

    By Paul Sylvain

    Construction, like spring, is in the air, and a flood of new building permit applications is promising a busy evening for Machias Planning Board members when they gather for their monthly meeting at 6 p.m. Wednesday, May 7, at the Machias Town Office at 17 Stackpole Drive.

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  44. Maine’s only Pyrotechnics Company Unavailable for July 4 Fireworks in Machias

    Parade is On, but Fireworks Moved to Blueberry Festival

    By Paul Sylvain

    Machias area residents expecting a fireworks display this July 4 will have to wait until Aug. 16 to witness the rockets’ red glare rising over Middle River.

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  45. Beals’ Lorna Alley Recognized for Her Volunteerism

    By Nancy Beal

    Every year around this time, a group out of the governor’s office known as Volunteer Maine gives a list of its top volunteers to the Bangor Daily News, which devotes an entire page to the list. It consists of the names of folks who have logged 500 or more hours of volunteerism within the past year, along with the number of hours each has devoted to his or her cause. 

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