1. Machiasport’s Clammers Urged to Attend, be Heard at Nov. 3 Machias Dike-Bridge Meeting

    ‘Nothing but a Money Grab’ by Conservation Nonprofits, Machias Businessman David Whitney Says

    By Paul Sylvain

    According to Machias businessman David Whitney, the efforts to replace the 150-year-old Machias dike and its flapper gates with a full-span bridge, mainly led by several nonprofit conservation groups, are simply a bridge too far.

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  2. RIP Friend, Teammate Mike Worcester

    By Phil Stuart

    On Sept. 16, my dog and I had just finished high on the Lower Duck Pond Trail in Campobello, when I got a phone call. When I saw who was calling, my heart sank into my stomach. Sharon Worcester was on the other end, and she informed me that Mike Worcester’s six-year battle with dementia was about over. She said that things had gotten worse and he had maybe a few hours or just a couple of days left. 

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  3. Angry West Kennebec Road Residents Present Speed, Safety Concerns at Machias Selectboard Meeting

    By Paul Sylvain

    Machias residents on West Kennebec Road may be few in number, but many showed up in force at the Machias Selectboard’s Sept. 24 meeting to voice their concerns about unabated traffic and safety concerns in their neighborhood.

    Residents say they’ve been nearly hit in their yards and while walking their dogs by vehicles traveling well beyond the posted 35 mph speed limit. The road is narrow, barely measuring 18 feet wide in places, and features a steep, blind hill lacking painted divider lines. 

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  4. Jonesport Officials Irked by Disaster Money Delay

    By Nancy Beal

    Jonesport selectmen recently solicited bids on repairing the embankment between Richardson Cemetery and Moosabec Reach, promising to open them and select one at their Sept. 24 meeting.

    The embankment was severely eroded by the infamous January 2024 storms. Three bids were submitted by the board’s deadline, and one of the contractors was present at the meeting. What was lacking and would end up stalling the process was the disaster money promised by the federal government and earmarked for the damage caused by those storms.

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  5. Fishermen, Regulators Respond to Lobster Industry Survey

    By Will Tuell

    This summer, about 1,400 lobster fishermen — nearly 40% of the active fleet — participated in a survey of all license holders designed by Maine’s Department of Marine Resources (DMR) and the Lobster Advisory Council (LAC), which informs state policy on lobster fishing. At a Sept. 25 Zone A  meeting in East Machias, newly appointed DMR Commissioner Carl Wilson noted a key change: there are 2,000 fewer lobster license holders than there were 15 years ago when fishermen were last surveyed. 

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  6. Machiasport Clam Committee Revises Shellfish Ordinance, Vice Chair Quits Under Pressure

    By Paul Sylvain

    The Machiasport Selectboard will be asked in October to consider a number of revisions to the town's shellfish ordinance by Shellfish Conservation Committee Chair Zach Wood. The revisions will result in a new ordinance being written.

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  7. Beals Selectmen Seek Contractors

    By Nancy Beal

    At their Sept. 23 meeting, Beals selectmen chose a contractor for repair of the town landing, damaged nearly two years ago in fierce winter storms. Carver Construction Inc. of Jonesport, whose bid was $25,600, was the only bidder on the job, which includes replacing a piling and removing and replacing asphalt in the parking lot. The town was awarded $21,350 for the job and has used $2,000 already. The board agreed to invite Jim Carver to their Oct. 14 meeting to sign a contract and discuss the timing and end date of the project.

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  8. Short Takes and Unfinished Business

    by Jonathan Reisman

    Riots Versus Revivals

    When career criminal and fentanyl-infused George Floyd died in police custody, the left’s response was months of violence, arson, riots, and grievances. When conservative evangelist and faith-infused Charlie Kirk was assassinated, his political brethren responded with a revival and forgiveness.

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  9. Crocker Featured Artist in October at H.D. Moore Library in Steuben

    Nina Crocker is the October Featured Artist at the Henry D. Moore Library in Steuben. Her show, titled “Intimate Landscapes,” is available for viewing daily during regular library hours. 

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  10. Dennysville Selectman Under Fire for Saying Kirk Assassination was ‘Karma’, Formal Complaint Filed

    By Paul Sylvain

    The assassination of conservative Christian activist Charlie Kirk, who was gunned down while giving a speech at a Utah college campus on Sept. 10, has rippled across every fabric of American society, and in communities big and small.

    One such small community is the Washington County town of Dennysville, where Selectman Scott Corey is drawing fire from locals angered by social media posts he made, including one characterizing Kirk’s death as “karma.”

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  11. Constitution Day Celebrated at Historic Burnham Tavern

    By Will Tuell

    Machias’s iconic Burnham Tavern — long recognized for its role as a gathering place during the Battle of the Margaretta, the first naval engagement of the American Revolution — provided a fitting backdrop on Sept. 17, as residents and history enthusiasts, some in period regalia, gathered to mark the 238th anniversary of the signing of the United States Constitution.

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  12. County Budget Committee Begins Work Forging 2026 Spending Package

    Edwards Decries 10% WCSO Wage Hike

    By Paul Sylvain

    Admitting that the county is facing “profound challenges,” Washington County Budget Committee Chairman Brian Schuth opened the committee’s inaugural budget forging session for fiscal year 2026, on Sept. 17.

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  13. Brownfields Cleanup Underway at Cutler Navy Base

    By Paul Sylvain

    Thanks to a $500,000 Brownfields Cleanup Grant that was awarded to the Washington County Development Authority (WCDA) in 2021 by the federal Environmental Protection Agency, work is now underway to remove contaminants at the former Cutler Navy base recreation building.

    That’s according to a press release issued last Friday by Washington County Manager Renee Gray. The statement notes that Brownfields cleanup funding is used to remediate contaminated properties and prepare the site for redevelopment and reuse for the community’s benefit

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  14. Machias Savings Bank Awards $100,000 in Community Development Grants

    Machias Savings Bank has awarded more than $100,000 in Community Development Grants to 23 nonprofit organizations across Maine.

    The grants support projects that promote financial health, community wellness, youth and education, and economic development, with emphasis on workforce development, basic needs, digital equity, and financial stability.

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  15. New Hickey Road Lot Sale, Shoreland Zoning Map Issues Top Machiasport Selectboard Meeting

    By Paul Sylvain

    These days, it’s a rare meeting of the Machiasport selectboard when it’s over less than 40 minutes after it started, and without stirring up drama, tempers or controversy. However, such was the board’s monthly meeting on Sept. 16, It also was the first meeting in many months that didn’t include an executive session.

    The meeting opened with discussion about selling a 10-acre, town-owned lot on New Hickey Road, a short distance north of the former Air Force housing area, on the opposite side of Route 92 from Jasper Beach.

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  16. Jonesport Selectmen Take Action on Rec Area Plans

    By Nancy Beal

    The former Cummins & Norton store, now referenced by the town office as “46 Main Street,” was the subject of discussion at an extra, out-of-schedule selectmen’s meeting held at noon Sept. 15 to expend $5,000 of the donated funds that had been received and/or promised as of that date for stabilization of the building. 

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  17. 19 Scallop Drag, Dive Licenses Up for Grabs

    By Will Tuell

    Maine’s Department of Marine Resources (DMR) is offering 19 scallop drag and dive licenses to qualifying fishermen this fall, the agency said in a press release last week. Because Maine’s scallop fishery is “closed” to general entry, lawmakers and DMR have set up a system where newcomers wanting a chance at a license can enter either the drag or dive lottery based on the number of fishermen who have left the fishery in the past year. 

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  18. Carpe Diem and Hiatus Hiatus

    by Jonathan Reisman

    August brought my 69th birthday and big personal, political, and policy challenges which shocked and shattered my retired widower/curmudgeon existence. My initial reaction to the personal challenges was a hiatus from Freedom Studies, as I was pretty upset and not thinking or writing clearly. When Charlie Kirk was assassinated, my depression deepened. 

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  19. Citizens Demand Answers, Accountability in County Budget Crisis at Lengthy Public Hearing

    Former Washington County Commission Chairman Gardner Accepts Blame, Admits, ‘I’m Your Huckleberry’

    By Paul Sylvain 

    A packed trial room at Washington County Superior Court was the setting for a highly anticipated, often fiery public hearing on the county’s fiscal crisis last week with County Commissioners David Burns (R-Whiting), Courtney Hammond (R-Harrington), and Billy Howard (R-Calais) presiding. 

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  20. Jonesport’s Voters Grant the Selectboard Conditional Authority on Gifts

    By Nancy Beal

    The article on Jonesport’s annual town meeting warrant allowing the selectboard to accept a variety of state and federal grants will be enhanced at next year’s annual town meeting in March. 

    The additional language is being added to include “gifts, donations and pledges for specific town projects” to the traditional list. That language arose in connection with Jonesport’s current controversy over what to do with the old Cummins & Norton store in West Jonesport, now called the Dow building.

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  21. Sleep Tight, Machias PD Beginning ‘Round-the-Clock Coverage Sept. 21

    By Paul Sylvain

    Machias business owners and residents should sleep a little easier at night beginning Sept. 21. That’s when the Machias Police Department will initiate 24-hour, ‘round-the-clock law enforcement coverage at least three nights a week.

    Machias Police Chief Keith Mercier told the selectboard on Sept. 10 that providing a 24-hour presence had been a priority goal for him since his arrival in Machias four years ago. His biggest hurdle, he said, was building a department with enough reserve officers to make it happen.

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  22. County’s Town-Led Budget Advisory Committee Organizes

    By Paul Sylvain

    Washington County’s budget advisory committee — made up of municipal officials and staff from across the Sunrise County — did not waste any time rolling up their sleeves and getting down to business at their Thursday, Sept. 11, inaugural meeting. 

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  23. Whiting Woman Leaves Over $207,000 to DECH

    Bonnie Ellen (Bassett) Healy of Whiting leaves $207,716 of her estate to Down East Community Hospital.

    CEO, Steve Lail, on the donation, “We are very appreciative and humbled to receive this very generous donation from Bonnie Healy. It is coming at a time when hospitals are experiencing challenging changes in state and federal reimbursements. This donation will help us to continue our mission to improve healthcare for those in Sunrise County. I didn’t have the pleasure of knowing Mrs. Healy but am so grateful she thought of us and the healthcare of the people in this county.”

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  24. Machias Police, Sheriff’s Deputies Arrest Three Men on Aggravated Drug Trafficking Charges

    By Paul Sylvain

    Three men were arrested last Friday by Machias police and charged with aggravated drug trafficking, Class A. 

    According to a prepared statement issued by the  MPD Monday, officers were called to a reported disturbance at 1 Pleasant Street, in Machias, at 12:08 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12.

    “Upon investigating the call, officers determined that a physical altercation had occurred, with two of the parties subsequently being transported to Downeast Community Hospital for cuts and bruises,” police said.

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  25. Community Rallies Behind Pembroke Family Who Lost Everything in Fire

    By Will Tuell

    But for the heroic actions of the family’s St. Bernard, Jeremiah and Katherine Jurdak of Pembroke, their daughters, and infant grandchild would not have escaped a blaze that took their Pembroke home, and virtually all of their belongings recently. 

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  26. Machias Selectboard Votes to Designate Longfellow Newest Official Wreaths Across American Cemetery

    By Paul Sylvain

    Thanks to a vote of support by the Machias Selectboard, on Sept. 10, Longfellow Cemetery on Route 1A in Machias will become an official Wreaths Across America cemetery.

    “This cemetery is more than just a place on a map to me,” Jennifer Vane told the board last week. “It’s where my family is.” She explained that when she visits the cemetery she is reminded of the many veterans laid to rest there.

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  27. Proposed 2026 County Budget Ring’s in with a Hefty 40% Increase over This Year’s Budget

    By Paul Sylvain

    If last week’s special meeting of the Washington County Commissioners meeting is a preview of budget discussions to come, the 2026 county spending package could be in for a long, rocky ride over the next two months. 

    Commissioners Billy Howard, Courtney Hammond and Chairman David Burns bounced around between three versions of the budget, trying to decide which one they would turn over to the county budget advisory committee this week at the commissioners' Sept. 11 meeting.

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  28. Remains of Korean War Hero Oscar Sprague Returns Home 75 Years Later

    By Will Tuell

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  29. Machias Planning Board Misreads Permit Application Leading to Possible Delay on Bluebird Motel Rebuild

    Board Mistook Existing Motel Buildings as Proposed New Construction

    By Paul Sylvain

    A misread of a building permit application by the Machias Planning Board at its Sept. 3 meeting may have cost the owners of the Bluebird Motel valuable time in their effort to rebuild a 20-unit building that was destroyed by fire last Christmas Eve.

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  30. Union 103 Board Considering Policy Barring Boys in Girls’ Sports in Moosabec Area Schools

    Supt. Refusing to Comply with Fed Order

    By Nancy Beal

    When members of the joint board that governs Union 103 schools (Beals and Jonesport Elementary Schools and Jonesport-Beals High School) come together for their October meeting, they will take up a request from one of their group to change the district’s policy governing boys playing on girls’ sports teams.

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  31. County Treasurer Resigns Amid Growing Fiscal Crisis

    By Paul Sylvain

    A special meeting of the Washington County Commissioners on Sept. 3 has left those who were there asking when is a resignation a resignation?

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  32. Machias Planners Continue Work on Wind/Solar Ordinances, Grants Permits for House, Deck, Greenhouse, Pot Shop

    By Paul Sylvain

    The Machias Planning Board met on Sept. 3 to consider a handful of building permit applications and continue work on a solar and wind farm ordinance.

    In all, four permits were approved and one — for a rebuild of the Bluebird Motel’s main, 20-unit building destroyed by fire on Christmas Eve — was tabled. (See related story on page 1). 

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  33. Peals of Laughter Welcome Puppeteer Downeast

    By Will Tuell

    Peals of laughter ripped through the Elm Street School gymnasium Friday morning as Missouri-based ventriloquist Doug Mickan regaled the nearly 200 students and staff with a puppet show featuring a fourth grader dressed as a pirate, a talking rooster named Roscoe, and an animated drawing aptly named Drew. While Mickan and his puppets deftly told fairy tales, sang songs, and bantered back and forth, the message was clear — we all have unique talents and abilities that distinguish us, and it is how we use them that makes each of us special. 

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  34. Living History Days Returns to Harrington Sept. 11-14

    The 4th Annual Living History Days will take place Sept. 11-14 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Hardwood Point in Harrington. The four-day event brings together tribal nation and colonial-era reenactors, offering an immersive experience in pre- and post-contact history spanning the 1600s and 1700s.

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  35. Outward Bound Students Give Cross Island Coast Guard Station a Little TLC

    Reshingles Main Building, Boat House

    By David Cale

    Cross Island is a hidden gem for visitors passing through our waters off Machiasport’s Bucks Harbor and Starboard districts. It offers a place to camp for the night, along with walking trails to enjoy the scenic views. 

    As Machiasport’s harbormaster, my position is more than just placing moorings, helping with the upkeep, and seeing to improvements and upgrades to our working waterfront. A lot of time is spent on the phone taking calls. 

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  36. Fiscal Concerns Deepen as Washington County’s Government Faces Possible New Year’s Day Shut-Down

    Manager Confirms County Contacted State Auditor, Offers No Help

    By Paul Sylvain

    Washington County Commissioners Dave Burns, Courtney Hammond, and BIlly Howard were meeting Sept. 3 to continue their work on a 2026 budget package. What that budget ultimately looks like is anybody’s guess, given the turmoil stirred up by the current fiscal crisis at the county.

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  37. Clam License Denial Stands, Frustrations with Machiasport’s Shellfish Conservation Committee Mount

    By Paul Sylvain

    The Machiasport selectboard on Aug. 28 stood by its original June 4 decision denying former Machiasport resident Kenny Fass a resident clam harvesting license despite a disputed non-binding 2-1 shellfish conservation committee vote recommending that Fass be issued the license.

    Fass, who owns property and resided at 55 Corn Hill Road, lost his home to a fire in 2020. The lot was cleared of debris and has remained vacant during the five years since the blaze. Fass now lives in Machias with his girlfriend.

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  38. Beals Selectboard Eyes Town Landing, Backfield Park Repair, Expansion

    By Nancy Beal

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  39. Déjà Vu All Over Again as ‘Old Cummins & Norton Store’ Tops Jonesport Selectboard Agenda

    By Nancy Beal

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  40. Visiting Boater Forced to Take a ‘Bow’ after Receiving ‘Stern’ Lesson from Machiasport’s Harbormaster

    Upper Machias Bay, Policy Reviews Highlight Selectboard Meeting

    By Paul Sylvain

    The monthly Machiasport selectboard meeting on Aug. 28 was dominated by a presentation on the Upper Machias Bay Master Plan from Sunrise County Economic Council’s Tora Johnson, a discussion about the shellfish conservation committee’s pending work on revising the town’s shellfish ordinance, and the often entertaining monthly harbormaster’s report by David Cale.

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  41. Raider Report

    It has been a busy Raider summer! 

    Shortly after the school year ended in June, rising seniors Lucas Cushing and Jade Gardner participated in an interactive experience at the Cohen Institute's High School Summer Leadership Program on the University of Maine's Orono campus. Throughout their years at Washington Academy, Lucas and Jade have been engaged student leaders as members of the Raider Student Council and National Honor Society. 

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  42. Thousands Flock to Washington County Fair in Pembroke

    By Will Tuell

    Wedged in between Machias’s Wild Blueberry Festival and the Blue Hill Fair on Labor Day weekend, the Washington County Fair, held at the Pembroke fairgrounds, may be the best-kept secret of the summer. Yet, for hundreds if not thousands of locals, the gathering offers a chance to showcase their wares, livestock, or talents or just meet with friends and family over a doughboy. 

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  43. Finger-pointing, but Few Helpful Suggestions Surface, at Commissioners’ Budget Crisis Hearing

    By Paul Sylvain

    “We’re just staying afloat, and I mean just barely.”

    Those words, spoken by Washington County Commissioner Billy Howard at an Aug. 21 public hearing, sum up the current state of the county’s government finances. And the situation could get worse — a lot worse — if a $11 million bond referendum being sought by the county fails in the Nov. 4 election. Among other things, the county will be unable to repay its $7.6 million tax anticipation note that comes due in full on Dec. 31.

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  44. County Commissioners Vote Down Fleet Lease Plan

    By Paul Sylvain

    Washington County Commissioners on Aug. 20 voted down a fleet vehicle leasing proposal, in favor of keeping with the past practice of purchasing three new vehicles yearly, at least until the 2027 budget year.

    The unexpected vote came at an emergency meeting of the commissioners, held as a precursor to determine how to present 2026 budget options to the public at the commissioners’ regularly scheduled meeting the next day.

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  45. Old West Jonesport Landmark Stirs up Controversy

    By Nancy Beal

    “It’s utterly ridiculous!” was Paul Farnsworth’s opening salvo at the Aug. 13 meeting of Jonesport selectmen. His remark was aimed at any rebuilding effort the town might undertake on behalf of the old Cummins & Norton store in front of the firehouse and adjacent to his auto repair business in the part of town that used to be considered West Jonesport.

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