1. Bill to Cap Publicly Owned Land Gets Feb. 6 Hearing

    Public Hearing Thursday February 6 on LD 183 9:00 AM, Cross Building, Room 214, in Augusta.

    The Legislature’s Agriculture, Conservation, and Forestry Committee has scheduled a public hearing on Thursday, Feb. 6 on LD 183, “An Act to Cap Publicly Owned Land Area at No More Than 50 Percent of Any County. The proposal is sponsored by House Minority Leader Billy Bob Faulkingham, R-Winter Harbor, and the entire Washington County legislative delegation. 

    The bill summary reads as follows:

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  2. Trump sworn in as 47th President

    Donald Trump is sworn in as the 47th US President in the US Capitol Rotunda in Washington, DC, on January 20, 2025. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / POOL / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/POOL/AFP via Getty Images, licensed to the Calais Advertiser, Inc.)

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  3. Lost at Sea: Coast Guard Calls Off Search for Missing Scallopers

    Vessel Found Under 160 Feet of Water Off Long Point Believed to be Sudden Impact

    By Paul Sylvain

    After a more than 25-hour search involving 11 rescue vessels over two days, and encompassing 950 square miles of open sea and coastline in eastern Washington County, the U.S. Coast Guard officially called off its search Sunday evening for a South Addison scallop dragger and its two-man crew reported missing since Jan. 18. 

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  4. Community Rallies for Toddler Battling Leukemia, Raises $50,000+ in Days

    By Will Tuell

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  5. Manaford’s — Jonesport’s Only Full-Service Grocery Store — to Close for Good Jan. 31

    By Nancy Beal

    After 17 years as the town’s only complete grocery store serving shoppers in the greater Jonesport-Beals area, Manaford’s Grocery will close its doors for good on Jan. 31.

    That news was announced in a recent post on Manaford’s Facebook page, which stated, “With a heavy heart and deep regret, we want to let you know that after 17 years, Manaford’s Grocery will be closing its doors, effective Jan 31, 2025. With great appreciation and gratitude to our customers and employees. Thank you all.” 

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  6. Washington County Sheriff Cuts Assistance to Machias, Other Rural PDs

    By Paul Sylvain

    In the latest wrinkle involving law enforcement services provided by the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, Sheriff Barry Curtis has notified Machias Police Chief Keith Mercier and other municipal police departments around the county that the sheriff’s office “will no longer be able to provide the same level of assistance as in the past.”

    The undated letter tops new business to be discussed by the Machias Selectboard and Chief Mercier at the selectboard’s Jan. 22 meeting.

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  7. Jonesport Working Waterfront Delayed as DEP Requests ‘More Info’

    By Nancy Beal

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  8. Sheriffs, Lawmakers Meet Over Breakfast to Discuss Rural Counties’ Dwindling Resources

    By Paul Sylvain

    Just because parts of Maine are considered “rural” and “sparsely populated” doesn’t mean there’s any lesser need for a strong law enforcement presence in places that fit those descriptions, like Washington County.

    The county’s legislative delegation heard that message loud and early last week at a legislative breakfast sponsored by the Maine Sheriff’s Association. Among those traveling to Augusta for the 7 a.m. gathering were Washington County Sheriff Barry Curtis and Chief Deputy Mike Crabtree.

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  9. Opening Moves: Public Advocate, Equity Schadenfreude

    by Jonathan Reisman

    The opening weeks of 2025 have brought home the consequences of mixing climate alarmism with identity/woke politics. The Energy, Utilities and Technology committee held a Public Advocate confirmation hearing where the Senate Chair ruled that any discussion of Maine’s energy and climate policies would not be allowed. 

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  10. Washington Academy Students Launch Indie Rock Band

    Washington Academy is excited to share campus news in the Raider Report. We hope you join us monthly to read and celebrate Raider students, staff, and faculty achievements. Students have set a vibrant tone for the year, and our first Raider Report features the musically talented Georgia Marsceill, ’26. Georgia shares her recent experience joining a WA indie rock band. 

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  11. Maine DMR Nixes Lobster Size Limit Increase as Pressure from Commercial Fishermen Mounts

    Drouin Calls U-Turn ‘Unprecedented’

    By Will Tuell

    The long and fraught battle over legal lobster size changes took another dramatic twist last week as Maine’s Department of Marine Resources (DMR) bowed to pressure from fishermen and withdrew a proposed 1/16th-inch gauge increase that was set to take effect July 1. The news came as fishermen and other industry stakeholders gathered for a Jan. 9 public hearing on the proposal. 

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  12. County Commissioner Howard Pushes to Catch up on 4 Years of Back Audits

    By Paul Sylvain

    In his first official meeting as one of two newly elected Washington County commissioners, Billy Howard wasted little time, on Jan. 9, identifying his top priority for the upcoming year.

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  13. Sen. Moore Submits Bill to Restore Maine State Police Presence in Washington County

    By Paul Sylvain

    In July 2023, Maine State Police (MSP) quietly ceased patrolling the state’s rural counties and instead focused their limited patrol resources on higher traffic and more populated parts of the state. Among those counties most affected by that decision was Washington County, in which Sheriff Barry Curtis and his deputies assumed the sole burden of providing law enforcement coverage once shared with state police.

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  14. Machias Officials Waver on Sept. Annual Town Meeting, Could Return to June Date

    By Paul Sylvain

    Scarcely a week into the new year, and Machias town officials are already busy preparing for the upcoming budget season and a possible return to a June annual town meeting schedule, after trying a September meeting with mixed results last year.

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  15. Machias Science Students to Undertake River Study

    By Paul Sylvain

    Storm-driven floods are nothing new to downtown Machias. According to Tora Johnson, with the Sunrise County Economic Council, there have been nine such floods in the past six-and-a-half years.

    But, Jim Lenke, a physical sciences teacher at Machias Memorial High School, is about to embark on a roughly three-year project with his students to measure water levels from the public dock behind Helen’s Restaurant, near the Route 1 dike and causeway over Middle River.

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  16. Nate Bean Becomes Newest Deputy with the WCSO

    By Paul Sylvain

    Washington County Sheriff Barry Curtis recently welcomed his department’s newest deputy, Nate Bean, to the Patrol Division. 

    “While he might be new to the Washington County Sheriff’s Office (WCSO), Deputy Bean is no stranger to law enforcement,” the Washington County Sheriff’s Office said in a social media post last week. “Deputy Bean served the citizens of Franklin County Maine for 27 years as a Deputy with the Franklin County Sheriff’s Office. He retired from Franklin County this past December.”

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  17. January Alarms

    by Jonathan Reisman

    January has brought an array of alarms in California, Maine, and North America

    Fire alarms in California

    The California wildfires are both a natural and human-enhanced disaster. Governor Gavin Newsom’s inferno was made worse by decades of water policies prioritizing endangered snail darters and green liturgy over reservoirs and aqueducts. Controlled burns and fuel load management are apparently not consistent with a conviction that the cause of wildfires is anthropogenic (human-caused) climate change.

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  18. Spotlight on Four Cutler Wildcat Basketball Players

    By Doss Dennison

    Haleigh Bryant — 

    Haleigh is an 11-year-old sixth grader who attends Whiting Village School. She has only participated in one team sport so far — basketball — and she loves it. 

    Haleigh wears jersey #12 and scored 14 points once as a peewee player. She enjoys roller skating, especially at the skate park in Lubec. Haleigh has one younger sister, her favorite food is baked potato soup, and her favorite subject in school is spelling. 

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  19. The Last Dance: Longtime Refs Take the Court One More Time

    By Phil Stuart

    Three Downeast Board basketball officials with over 120 years combined experience worked their last game together on Dec. 19 at Gardner Gymnasium in East Machias when the host Lady Raiders of Washington Academy played the Old Town Coyotes. 

    Wallace “Alvin” Hall of Gardner's Lake, Walt “Candy” Cummings of Deep Cover, and “The Doctor” Kevin Barbee of Milbridge, each have had over 40 years on the basketball court, and all three are tournament veterans as well. 

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  20. New Era Dawns as Burns, Howard Sworn in as First New County Commissioners in 12 Years

    By Paul Sylvain

    The Washington County commissioners have a new look for the first time in a dozen years, following the swearing-in of District 1 Commissioner Billy Howard and District 2 Commissioner David C Burns at a brief ceremony at the commissioners’ meeting room on Jan. 2. 

    Looking on was District 3 Commissioner John B. Crowley, whose seat was not up for reelection in 2024. 

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  21. Snowmageddon: Remembering the Winter of 2014-15 a Decade Later

    By Paul Sylvain

    Maine winters aren’t what they used to be, considering the string of relatively mild winters we’ve enjoyed Downeast the past several years. Of course, with the snowiest and coldest winter months yet to come, it remains to be seen how Washington County will fare in this winter of 2024-25.

    Still, the lingering memory of that last truly harsh, “old-fashioned” Maine winter a decade ago is one that anyone who experienced it won’t ever forget. 

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  22. Rep. Tuell Outlines Bills He’s Submitted for Jan. 8th Start of the 132nd Legislature

    By Paul Sylvain 

    (This is the first in a series of articles spotlighting legislative bills being submitted by the Washington County Legislative Delegation.)

    In the days leading up to the Jan. 8 start of the 132nd Legislature, District 10 Rep. Will Tuell, R-East Machias, has provided a preview of bills he’s already submitted or plans to enter by the Jan. 10 filing deadline for proposed legislation.

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  23. A Year After Historic Floods, Jonesport Struggling with Disaster Aid

    Selectmen Make Offer on Dow Building, State Rejects 2nd Liquor Licensee in Town

    By Nancy Beal

    Jonesport selectmen Harry Fish and Denise Cilley met Jan. 2 and, although it was not on the agenda, difficulty accessing disaster aid took up much of the public part of the meeting. 

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  24. First Baby of the New Year Arrives at DECH

     Down East Community Hospital in Machias delivered its first baby of the new year — Davis Joseph Green — at 6:36 p.m. on Jan. 5.

    Green is also the first child born to Brenna Davis and Austin Green of Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Canada. He arrived weighing in at nine pounds, seven ounces. and measured 21 ¾ inches in length. Both parents said Dr. Christian Inegbenijie and all the nurses involved were “phenomenal,” and were impressed by and happy to be at DECH.  As to what they had to say about baby Davis, the parents stressed, “We are in love; he is just perfect”!

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  25. New Marine Patrol Officer to Serve in Milbridge

    Zachery Allen was sworn in as a Marine Patrol Officer (MPO) by Department of Marine Resources Commissioner Patrick Keliher Dec. 9 in Augusta. MPO Allen has been assigned to the Milbridge patrol in Washington County and previously served as a Hancock County deputy sheriff, a position he held since 2017. 

    Zach holds a bachelor’s degree in Criminal Justice from Husson University and is currently working on his master’s degree. Zach is also a 2018 graduate of the Maine Criminal Justice Academy’s Basic Law Enforcement Training Program. 

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  26. State Fire Marshal’s Office Rules Cause of New Year’s Eve Bluebird Fire ‘Undetermined’

    Water, Wi-Fi Issues Force Motel to Cancel Bookings Until February

    By Paul Sylvain

    The cause of a Christmas Eve fire that destroyed two-thirds of the Bluebird Motel’s main lodging building, fronting Route 1/Dublin Street in Machias, has been classified as “undetermined” by investigators with the state Fire Marshal’s Office.

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  27. Pre-Inaugural Sturm Und Drang

    by Jonathan Reisman

    The events in New Orleans, Las Vegas, and the Swamp have quickly turned post-election optimism and confidence to pre-inaugural Sturm Und Drang fear, uncertainty, and turmoil. I am, and have been certain, Joe Biden was never “sharp as a tack” or “in charge,” despite having been told that repeatedly over the last four years. A wide swath of the left and the media chose to ignore and cover up Biden’s decline.

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  28. DECH Auxiliary 51st Holiday Craft Fair a Success

    The Down East Community Hospital Auxiliary hosted the 51st Annual Holiday Craft Fair on Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024. The Rose Gaffney Elementary School generously allowed the Auxiliary to use their gym and hallways in the school.

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  29. Floods, Festivals, and a Christmas Eve Fire Among News Toppers in 2024

    By Paul Sylvain

    As we prepare to put 2024 in the proverbial rear-view mirror and usher in 2025, let’s take a look back at some of the local stories and events that topped the news in this 366-day leap year.

    Barely 10 days into the new year, coastal Maine was slammed with the first of two major winter storms, three days apart, that could have been named “Peat” and "Repeat” for their similarities.

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  30. Downeasters’ Resilience Tested in 2024 with High-Profile Deaths

    By Will Tuell

    From the sudden passing of Machias Town Manager Bill Kitchen on Sept. 9 to the loss of beloved family physician Dr. John Gaddis weeks later, Downeasters had a lot to grapple with in 2024.

    Avowed environmental activist Nancy Oden passed away in May. Three Machias mainstays — former selectman and first responder Les Haynes; former Machias lawmaker, businessman, and philanthropist Ed Pellon; and former selectman Stephen “Smitty” Smith — died within two months of Kitchen. 

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  31. PFAS Remediation Tests Using Hemp Plants at Machias Valley Airport Planned for 2025

    By Paul Sylvain

    The long talked about plan for PFAS remediation research testing at Machias Valley Airport, appears to be cleared for take-off in 2025, according to Machias Selectboard Vice Chairman Ben Edwards.

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  32. Machiasport Celebrates New Town Office with Well-Attended Open House

    By Paul Sylvain

    On Dec. 20, Machiasport Town Clerk Marcia Hayward and Deputy Clerk Ashley Warren put out the red carpet and opened the doors for an open house and tours of the new town office building at 3 Bayview Drive.

    The event, held from 3 to 5 p.m., attracted a steady stream of residents who stopped in for an up-close look-see inside the former hospice building. There were plenty of goodies to snack on and beverages, including coffee and tea, to wash it down.

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  33. Machias Nearing Completion on Town’s First Ever Shellfish Conservation Ordinance

    By Paul Sylvain

    Machias Selectboard Chairman Jake Patryn is moving closer to presenting a final draft of what will be his town’s first-ever shellfish conservation ordinance, if adopted by town voters.

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  34. Damaged Working Waterfront Towns Focus of State Agency Meetings

    By Nancy Beal

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  35. In the Year 2025…

    by Jonathan Reisman

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  36. Upsets, Gold Balls, and Epic Performances Mark Busy Year in Downeast Sports

    Wood, Shimabukuro, Schwinn Picks for Player, Coach Awards

    By Will Tuell

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  37. ‘From the Mouths of Babes’: Area Children Mark Christmas in Word, Song

    By Will Tuell

    Even as last-minute gift-givers scurried around to finalize those must-have purchases last week, some area youth and their families made sure that the true meaning of the season — a celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ — was not lost in the shuffle. That’s not to say that Santa, his elves, Rudolph, and the gang weren’t on everyone’s minds, but for the children of Larrabee Baptist Church in Machiasport and those attending the Machias Valley Christian School, Christ truly took center stage. 

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  38. Dr. Raymond Howard to Become Medical Director for Machias Ambulance Service Jan. 1

    By Paul Sylvain

    It’s safe to say that the last thing Raymond Howard could have ever imagined as a young boy growing up in Iowa was that one day he’d find himself seeing patients in Jonesport, Maine, and tending to a handful of lobster traps in Moosabec Reach. 

    But, Iowa’s loss became Downeast Maine’s gain, in 2022, when, in the midst of the pandemic, Dr. Howard moved to the tiny fishing village of Jonesport and began seeing patients at Arnold Memorial Medical Center.

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  39. Clerical Error Leads to Corrective Boost in Machias Tax Bills

    By Paul Sylvain

    Machias property owners learned last week that they’ll be paying even more than what their first round of recently received tax bills showed, thanks to a clerical error on the town’s 2024 tax assessment form.

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  40. 2024 Feztival of Trees Brings Christmas Cheer, Raises Funds for Children’s Hospitals

    By Jayna Smith

    The annual Feztival of Trees once again brought festive joy to Charlotte and Washington counties over the weekend of Dec. 13-15, drawing hundreds to Washington County Community College to admire nearly 50 exquisitely decorated Christmas trees, each surrounded by an array of gifts.

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  41. American Legion Post 9 Spreading Christmas Cheer to Youngsters, Seniors Alike

    By Paul Sylvain

    Military veterans and auxiliary members of the Ephriam H. Johnson American Legion Post 9 in Machias have been busy in recent weeks giving Santa a hand to bring Christmas cheer to youngsters and senior members of the greater Machias community alike.

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  42. Balzer, Crowley Named DECH Employees of the Year

    By Will Tuell

    Down East Community Hospital in Machias announced Julie Balzer, RN, and Linda Crowley, EVSI as its 2024 Employees of the Year and recognized several employees for their longevity during a Christmas luncheon for employees Dec. 12.

    Balzer, the hospital said on its social media page, “is a role model” and “a well-rounded nurse. She is constantly thinking of others and how and where she can help [them]. She is always seen with a smile, a positive attitude, and a joke to make you laugh. She helps keep others feeling positive,” the hospital said. 

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  43. December Attention Deficit Disorder

    by Jonathan Reisman

    December has been a bit of an emotional and political rollercoaster, which can make focusing on weekly wordsmithing problematic. End of year Christmas and New Year’s columns often have early deadlines, and that is the case this year. On top of that, my head is spinning from a strange combination of sadness and grief one year after my wife’s passing and confident optimism, pride, and pleasure in my writing and political and policy productivity. The result is a somewhat scattershot column.

    Equity and ME

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  44. Moosabec Economic Data Draws Scrutiny, SCEC’s Smith to Investigate

    By Nancy Beal

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  45. Spotlight on Four Student-Athletes From Fort O’Brien

    By Doss Dennison

    I recently interviewed four student-athletes from Fort O’Brien School in Machiasport, for The Machias Valley News Observer. The following is a summary of those interviews:

    Mattie Huntley

    Mattie came to FOB as an eighth grader at the beginning of this school year. So far this year, she has played volleyball, ran cross country, is now playing on the combined girls FOB/Jonesboro Jets junior high basketball team, and plans on playing softball this spring. 

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