1. Machias Selectboard Extends Solar, Wind Farm Moratorium 180 Days

    By Paul Sylvain

    The Machias Selectboard voted on Aug. 13 to extend the current moratorium on new solar and wind farm applications an additional 180 days. The current moratorium, which began in March, was set to expire sometime in September.

    The selectboard delegated the town’s planning board to draft the ordinances after the first moratorium was voted on nearly six months ago. Until the planning board’s meeting earlier this month, little had been done to begin work on the ordinances.

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  2. Flagg Basketball Camps a Slam Dunk with Youngsters

    By Will Tuell

    Cooper Flagg is one of the most recognizable names — and faces — in sports today. The Newport, Maine, native, who has taken the basketball world by storm since he exploded onto the scene several years ago, returned to his home state last weekend to host a youth basketball camp at the University of Maine Orono, where his brother, Ace, is set to begin his freshman season as a Black Bear. 

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  3. Tumultuous Trump: Deals, Division, Drama

    by Jonathan Reisman

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  4. ‘The Pringle Family Re-enactors’ one Wicked ‘Awesome’ Funny Blueberry Festival Musical

    By Doss Dennison

    Gene Nichols, who wrote, arranged, produced, and directed “The Pringle Family Re-Enactors,” never ceases to deliver. Year after year, audiences are delightfully entertained by the comical skits and witty song lyrics that Gene and his selected crew of performers provide as part of the Blueberry Festival. This year proved to be no different, as Gene and Company hit another home run production.

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  5. Machias Planning Board Revisits, Approves Sinclair Development Corp.’s Self-Storage Project

    By Paul Sylvain

    If time is money, the long-delayed work on Sinclair Development Corporation’s self-storage facility on Dublin Street, Machias, must have cost owner Randy Sinclair a fortune in lost revenue and legal fees. 

    Halted for the past nine months following the discovery of numerous critical violations to the permit originally approved by the town’s planning board on March 1, 2023, Sinclair received the planning board’s blessing on Aug. 6 to resume work on the storage facility. 

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  6. ‘From Sunrise to Sunset’ Area Churches Share the Wonder of Christ in Annual Bible School

    By Will Tuell

    Depending on the day, anywhere between 150 and 175 children, aged 4 to 12, flocked to Larrabee Baptist Church in Machiasport last week for what has become the pre-eminent Vacation Bible School, or VBS, in Downeast Maine. From a numbers standpoint, the school, organized by several area evangelical churches in the greater Machias area, was a success. 

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  7. Self-Taught at 98, Maralyn Mazza Adds ‘Artist’ to Resumé

    By Nancy Beal

    While coastal and riverside communities were crystallizing into the state of Maine 100 years ago, artists memorialized their existence on paper and canvas. The Moosabec area was no exception; the work of artists in Beals and Jonesport is often exhibited at home and abroad. 

    Last week’s Reception for the Artists at Jonesport’s Peabody Memorial Library was one of several for those who frequently show their work on the library’s walls.

    A week earlier, not half a mile down Main Street from the library, there was a different sort of art

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  8. Bodies of Two Fishermen Recovered Near Baileyville

    By Jayna Smith

    The Maine Warden Service recovered the bodies of two fishermen in Baileyville after their boat was found drifting unattended on Grand Falls Flowage.

    Officials were alerted Friday afternoon, Aug. 8, when an unoccupied boat was spotted drifting with its motor running and fishing lines in the water, but no one on board.

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  9. Bureau of Motor Vehicles Warns of New Text Scam

    By Will Tuell

    Maine’s Bureau of Motor Vehicles is warning of a deceptive new scam designed to steal your most personal data, and it is circulating locally. On Saturday, Aug. 9, both publisher Pierre Little and correspondent Paul Sylvain received the text pictured, in which unnamed officials from the “Department of Motor Vehicles” urged them to pay a supposedly outstanding traffic ticket or lose their driver’s license for 30 days, be subject to increased tolls, and have their vehicle registrations yanked. 

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  10. Golden Cosponsors Bill to Prevent Eastport Cost Shifts

    Congressman Jared Golden (D-ME-02) is supporting the Securing Ports and America’s Commerce and Economy (CBP SPACE) Act, which would prevent Customs and Border Protection (CBP) from offloading additional costs and responsibilities onto local ports while threatening closure for noncompliance. 

    Eastport Port Authority, which Golden says is already shouldering many costs offloaded by CBP, is one of many ports across the country being strained by the agency’s moves.

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  11. AI, Robots, and Climate: Endanger Will Robinson!

    by Jonathan Reisman

    Increasing encounters and concerns with Artificial Intelligence, robots, challenges to prove my humanity/not-a-robot, and the Trump administration’s decision to challenge the 2009 Obama era “Endangerment finding” that is the basis and foundation for our flawed, opaque, dishonest, and ultimately ineffective climate policy regulation of greenhouse gases, led me to a Baby Boomer-centric memory/meme from the 1960s sci-fi TV series “Lost in Space.”

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  12. Maine Business and Consumer Court Sides with Machiasport in Eminent Domain Case

    Judge Finds ‘Free’ Upland Easement Road Offer Anything but, Instead More Costly, Complex

    By Paul Sylvain

    The eminent domain portion of a years-long lawsuit against the town of Machiasport by Starboard district property owners Carmine and Christine DeFalco, and their neighbor, Paula and her late husband Michael Aschettino, was decided in favor of the town, in a highly detailed, 17-page ruling issued July 30, by Maine Business and Consumer Court Judge Michael A. Duddy. 

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  13. Jonesporters Elect Merchant to Select Board, Amend Building Permit Ordinances to Clear Way for Kingfish Maine

    By Nancy Beal

    Well over 100 Jonesporters filled the bleachers of their elementary school gym last week to select an interim selectman and amend two building ordinances. Newspaper posting errors threatened to derail the meeting, but the crowd voted overwhelmingly to continue.

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  14. Clear as Mud — Machiasport Clammers, Clam Committee, Select Board at Odds over Faas Clamming License Application

    By Paul Sylvain

    It’s still anybody’s guess whether the Town of Machiasport will grant Kenny Faas a resident clamming license, even after the select board’s members revisited the question on July 28, and following a non-binding vote three nights later by the town’s “clam committee”, as the shellfish conservation committee is referred to locally.

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  15. Jonesport SB Talk Roads, Buildings

    By Nancy Beal

    Roads and buildings dominated the Jonesport select board’s July 30 meeting, held prior to that evening’s special town meeting to elect a new select board member to fill out the remainder of outgoing selectman Logan Alley’s term.

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  16. In Excellent ‘SHAPE’ — Maine Veterans’ Home Machias Receives State Labor Safety and Health Award

    By Paul Sylvain

    What’s in a name? Quite a lot, especially if it’s an award that recognizes public sector employers “who maintain an exemplary safety and health management system, reflecting a strong commitment to workplace safety.”

    And it is especially noteworthy when the award’s recipient is entrusted with the assisted living needs and care of up to 30 proud military veterans who served our great nation, oftentimes during periods of conflict, such as during the Vietnam War. Spouses of eligible veterans may also qualify for care at the homes.

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  17. The Making of an Economist

    by Jonathan Reisman

    Economists were invented to make weather forecasters and astrologers look good.

    An economist is a trained professional paid to guess wrong about the economy.

    How many economists are needed to run a country? It doesn't matter, because nobody listens to them.

    What do you get when you cross an economist with a Mafia godfather? An offer you can’t understand.

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  18. Porter Memorial Library News

    Join us from 10 to 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, for the Walking Tour of Historic Machias Architecture with Porter Memorial Library Board President Allison Paprock. This tour is supported by a Revitalize ME grant from Maine Downtown Center, in partnership with the Maine Historic Preservation Commission.

    The library building and Last Page Honesty Bookstore will be closed Aug. 14-16 during our annual book sale. The book sale will be held indoors, at the Machias Savings Bank Community Room, in conjunction with the Machias Wild Blueberry Festival.

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  19. Machiasport Committees to get Schooled on Record-Keeping Procedures, Taking Meeting Minutes

    By Paul Sylvain

    Long overdue record-keeping changes are on the horizon for Machiasport’s advisory boards and committees, thanks to a decision by the town’s select board on July 28.

    Town Clerk Marcia Hayward has been pushing groups, like the town’s clam committee, to ensure they make and keep audio recordings or written minutes of their meetings, to include items discussed and any votes or action taken at those meetings. Machiasport’s select board and  planning board already do that, but that hasn’t always been the case with the town’s committees.

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  20. Ham Radio Path To Public Service

    A percentage of people seem to be hard-wired or drawn to community service, leadership roles, and events in which they can serve their neighbors and fellow citizens. The Amateur "HAM" Radio Service offers a path to many rewarding public service opportunities.

    Amateur Radio is regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, and one of the primary purposes for the existence of the Amateur Radio Service is "the value of the amateur service to the public as a voluntary noncommercial communication service, particularly with respect to providing emergency communications."

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  21. Holmes’ Three-Run Blast Propels Machias All-Stars to Historic State Championship Win at Beal Field

    Connecticut Bound: Machias Area Little Leaguers Representing Maine in its First Ever New England Tournament

    By Will Tuell

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  22. Milbridge Days Celebration Featured Tons of Sun, Fun for Everyone

    By Paul Sylvain

    While Machias might serve up one heck of a July 4th parade, and throw a pretty good Blueberry Festival, the western Washington County town of Milbridge is not to be outdone when it comes to celebrating its annual weekend-long Milbridge Days each July. 

    Whether you spend only a few hours or most of every day there, you’ll find plenty to see and do. And when you wrap up the entire weekend in clear, sunny, near perfect summer weather, as it was this past weekend, it can’t get much better than that.

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  23. Area Veterans Honored at Jacksonville Camp Meeting

    By Paul Sylvain

    It seemed only fitting, somehow, that an event first held at the Jacksonville Campground in East Machias, just months after the carnage and destruction of the Civil War ended, should — on July 23 — turn to honoring a group of area military veterans with the presentation of Quilts of Valor.

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  24. Upper Machias Bay Plan Tops Machias SB Discussion

    By Paul Sylvain

    More often than not, the first couple of select board meetings following the annual town meeting are fairly routine. Such was the case at the Machias select board’s July 23 session. While it was light on business, it was long on discussion, where the bulk of the 80-minute meeting centered on the Upper Machias Bay Master Plan.

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  25. Beals Selectboard Kept Busy in July

    By Nancy Beal

    The Beals selectboard was kept busy this July, holding two regular meetings and a third session related to a proposed aquaculture ordinance with an attorney. Sandwiched in between money issues was an effort to recognize all those who had contributed to the town’s successful centennial celebration during the weekend of July 11.

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  26. From London to Machias, Zafar Ahmad — DECH’s New Orthopedic Surgeon Shoots from the Hip

    By Will Tuell

    Dr. Zafar Ahmad, who began practicing orthopedics at Down East Community Hospital (DECH) in Machias late last year, may be a long way from Great Britain where he grew up and studied medicine, but the Pakistani native said in an interview last week that he feels right at home in Downeast Maine mending broken bones, replacing hips, and helping patients from the area’s labor-intensive fishing industry get back on their feet. 

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  27. Elm Students Learn Coastal Traditions on the Water

    By Will Tuell

    On a bright sunny day in late July, the last place you would expect to find a group of ten junior high school boys and girls is waiting for a school bus at 6:45 a.m. Yet, it was just such a day on July 24 when the very bus that delivers many of them and their friends to and from Elm Street School in East Machias during the school year rolled up to take the youths and their four chaperones on a mackerel fishing trip none will soon forget. 

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  28. Moscow on the Hudson

    by Jonathan Reisman

    The increasingly likely prospect that the voters of New York City will select Zohran Mamdani as mayor has left me appalled but not really surprised. Nominating an openly antisemitic communist is at least an honest move by the Democratic Party, and perhaps it follows the sage advice of AOC (top House Democratic fundraiser) and “JC” (Jasmine Crockett) for “authenticity.”

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  29. Scenic Backdrop and la Musique de Nichols Highlight Liberty Hall Open House in Machiasport

    By Paul Sylvain

    Efforts to raise funds and community interest to restore Machiasport’s 152-year-old Liberty Hall back to its former grandeur as a hub for activities in the town of about 1,000 residents took center stage, so to speak, at an open house there last Saturday. 

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  30. County Officials Consider Possible Cost Saving Fleet Vehicle Leasing Option with Enterprise

    By Paul Sylvain

    Washington County Sheriff Barry Curtis and Commissioners David Burns, Billy Howard, and Courtney Hammond are weighing the possibility of entering into a county vehicle leasing arrangement with Enterprise Fleet Management Services in Boston.

    If an agreement is reached, it would mean that, instead of replacing aging vehicles by purchasing them through traditional car dealerships, the county would eventually be replacing them at a regular five-year interval through Enterprise.

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  31. Machias 12U Little Leaguers to Play for State Championship

    By Will Tuell

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  32. Second Time’s a Charm, as Revised JES Budget Passes

    By Nancy Beal

    Nearly 40 Jonesporters turned out last week for a second look at a budget for their elementary school. It was a mob compared to the handful of voters who rejected an earlier version of the budget in a late May meeting at which two of the three school board members were absent. 

    Word had spread about the earlier failure, and, as several of the school’s teachers had firmly predicted, the “right” people were there at the second meeting and approved the budget by a vote of 30 to 2.

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  33. Milbridge Days: A Storybook Tale Featuring Parades, Car Show, Concerts, Fireworks and Family Fun Galore

    By Paul Sylvain

    Anyone accusing the people of Milbridge of not knowing how to throw one heck of a summer party has never come out to the town’s yearly Milbridge Days celebration.

    Once again, Milbridge is pulling out all the stops, and is all in, for this year’s event-packed Milbridge Days celebration July 23-25. The theme of this year’s Milbridge Days is “Where Dreams Come Alive One Storybook at a Time.”

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  34. Jonesport Special Town Meeting to Consider Ordinance Change Rescheduled to July 30

    Selectman Alley Resigns, Cites Work Demand

    By Nancy Beal

    Jonesport’s special town meeting on ordinance changes, originally set for July 23, has been postponed a week to 6 p.m. Wednesday, July 30, at the Jonesport Elementary School gymnasium.

    The change was announced at the selectmen’s July 16 meeting and was prompted by the need to comply with posting and publishing schedules by which residents are informed of events on which they have a vote.

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  35. NBRC Grant Enables Beals Marina Expansion to Proceed

    By Nancy Beal

    The town of Beals now has sufficient grant money in hand to proceed with expansion at the marina. At the June 24 selectmen’s meeting, chairman Glenda Beal told Daniel Davis and Lorena Faulkingham that the town’s application for money from the Northern Border Regional Commission (NBRC) had been approved in the amount of $482,237. Along with a previously awarded $144,840 Working Waterfront Grant, the NBRC money will cover the town’s required match and green-light the long-planned improvements and expansion of the town’s marina, Beal said.

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  36. Machias Welcomes Little Leaguers, Families as State Championship Gets Underway

    By Will Tuell

    The Machias Area Little League has enjoyed a renaissance in recent years, as several of its baseball and softball teams have regularly punched their tickets to the state tournament. As Machias’s prestige as a league has grown, so too has enthusiasm amongst players, their families, and fans. 

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  37. Quick Hits: Epstein, PBS, Blaine game, Music Memes

    by Jonathan Reisman

    This week’s “quick hits” column is a consequence of summer-time dreams being interrupted by meteor showers and media powers. I submitted a long-stewing paper on how rural Maine and the Second Congressional District have been well and truly screwed by Maine’s climate, energy, and equity policies. I have my doubts that the paper will be accepted, but completing it amidst a mid-July heat wave (undoubtedly caused by extreme weather, climate change, and Trump) was both cathartic and deeply satisfying.

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  38. ‘Pringle Family Re-enactors’ Musical Rehearsals Revving Up as August Blueberry Festival Nears

    By Paul Sylvain

    With scarcely three weeks until the annual Machias Wild Blueberry Festival’s musical opens for its all-too-brief four-night run at the Centre Street Congregational Church, Gene Nichols and company are hitting their weekly rehearsals hard.

    This year’s production, titled The Pringle Family Re-enactors, was written and is being directed by Nichols. With about 30 parodies of mostly well known songs planned for the show, calling it ambitious is an understatement.

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  39. ‘No More Peters to Pay Paul’ — County Cash Flow Budget Crisis Worsens

    By Paul Sylvain

    Washington County’s towns and cities, still reeling after getting broadsided with a hefty 22% county tax increase this year, should begin bracing for a replay next year and perhaps beyond.

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  40. Machias Wins Division, Set to Host State LL Tourney

    Holmes, Pelivanis Smash Grand Slams in Offensive Outbursts

    By Will Tuell

    The Machias Area Little League 12U baseball team has clinched a berth in the state Little League championship playoffs, set to begin later this week at Beal Field in Machias. Despite outscoring opponents 56-7, the squad, coached by Michael Fergerson and Ryan Harmon, still had to play their way into the tourney, where many of them grew up playing ball. 

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  41. Islanders Celebrate Town’s 100th Year with Birthday Bash on Beals

    By Nancy Beal

    Nearly 100 well-wishers gathered last Friday night in the Beals Elementary School gym to celebrate Beals’ centennial anniversary in what was billed by the event’s organizers as an evening of “Refreshments and Recollections.”

    Islanders had been encouraged to share relics of the past, and a table stretching from one end of the gym’s regulation-size basketball court to the other was filled with exhibits ranging from Beals High School basketball uniforms to personal items and remembrances of successfully fighting for a bridge to the mainland.

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  42. Begun Months After Civil War ends, Lincoln’s Assassination, Jacksonville Camp Meet Marking its 160th Anniversary

    By Doss Dennison

    The Jacksonville Campground in East Machias is gearing up for its 160th year of hosting its annual week-long Christian camp meeting July 20-25. But before detailing the camp meeting’s schedule of events, I want to share some of the campground’s fascinating history, including events that led up to its beginning.

    It doesn’t seem possible that the United States of America could be so divided that it would draw a line, choose sides, and fight the bloodiest war in our history amongst ourselves. Or, does it? 

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  43. Work Begins on ‘Make Here Better Stage’ at Middle River Park for 2026 Kitchen Concerts

    By Paul Sylvain

    Unless someone wants to donate $6,000 to the town so it can build a protective roof over the upper-level stage at Bad Little Falls, that project is definitely off the table for this year’s Kitchen Concert Summer Series at the park.

    That’s the estimated cost to put a roof over the stage, but as Machias Town Manager Sarah Craighead Dedmon told the selectboard at their July 9 meeting, a roof might help keep the performers dry, but not necessarily their instruments, amplifiers, and PA gear.

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  44. Down East Community Hospital Invests in State-of-the-Art Imaging with Revolution Ascend CT Scanner

    Down East Community Hospital recently added a new GE state-of-the-art Revolution Ascend CT scanner to its arsenal of state-of-the-art diagnostic tools.

    This project started in December of 2024 by researching different brands of scanners that would best fit the hospital’s Imaging Department’s needs and which brand would provide the high-quality imaging DECH has grown to expect for our patients. Imaging staff fully researched different CT scanners, then visited a GE facility in Milwaukee in January to see what they had to offer.

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  45. Eve of Destruction

    by Jonathan Reisman

    The increasing violence, protests, and division in the country have created a dangerous dynamic whereby policy decisions and events are perceived quite differently across the tribal political spectrum. Division is both a cause and a consequence, and there is often an amplifying feedback loop that increases the division even more. 

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