The Forecaster, Mid-Coast edition, November 4, 2011
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Transcript of The Forecaster, Mid-Coast edition, November 4, 2011
November 4, 2011 News of Brunswick, Topsham, Bath and Harpswell Vol. 7, No. 44
INSIDE
Bowdoin field hockey advancesPage 17
Dam inspections lag while inspector coaches rugbyPage 5
Index Meetings ........................23Obituaries ......................16Opinion ............................9Out & About ...................22
People & Business ........18Police Beat ....................14Real Estate ....................31Sports ............................17
Arts Calendar ................20Classifieds .....................27Community Calendar .....23
See page 24
See page 16
See page 24
See page 24
www.theforecaster.net
Town weighs waterfront park opportunitiesBy Alex Lear
TOPSHAM — A waterfront park for the town could be get-ting closer to fruition as a site suitability study nears comple-tion.
Town Planner Rich Roedner was scheduled to update the Board of Selectmen on a draft waterfront access study report at the board’s meeting on Thurs-day, Nov. 3. The board was also expected to decide whether to recommend appropriating mon-ey from reserves to help pay for conceptual design services for a Lower Village Waterfront Park.
Topsham has about $26,000 in a reserve account for a water-front park, Roedner said. Voters
Judge throws out cell tower lawsuit against TopshamBy Alex Lear
TOPSHAM — A federal judge in Portland on Monday dismissed a lawsuit that chal-lenged the town’s refusal to allow construction of a cellular communications tower.
U.S. District Court Judge John Rich III granted the town’s request for summary judgment. Town Planner Rich Roedner said Wednesday that Rich de-cided there was no need for a trial, based on the argument that the appellant, Mariner Tower, did not properly follow the ad-ministrative appeal process.
Home-schoolers reap science from farm lifeBy Emily Guerin
HARPSWELL — In Joe Grady’s science class, feeding the turkeys is much more than just a farm chore.
As six home-schooled students pulled wagons of feed and dragged fences through the field at Two Coves Farm, where Grady
Muriel Grady, 8, and Nick Comey, 13, both of Harpswell, and Drew Walden, 8, of Bath, move turkeys from one pasture to another during a farm science class at Two Coves Farm in Harpswell.
EMily GuERin / ThE FORECASTER
Joe Grady, who teaches a farm science class in Harpswell for homeschooled students, holds togther
a box that Drew Walden, 8, of Bath, is making to hold compost and worms. Nick Comey, 13, of Harpswell,
looks on.
Had the judge decided that Mariner did follow proper pro-cedure, the lawsuit would have continued and the judge would have considered the merits of arguments by Mariner and the town, Roedner said.
Chris Ciolfi, chief develop-ment officer for Mariner Tower, declined to discuss the decision, except to say that “we’ve got to take a look at (the matter) and see what our next steps will be.”
The case began after the Plan-ning Board denied Mariner’s
will decide how much to take from that account for design work at a Nov. 30 special Town Meeting.
The area of Green Street, near the old fire station and the An-droscoggin River, has long been eyed by the town, but suggested proposals did not fit the space, Roedner said.
The town recently used a $20,000 grant from the Maine State Planning Office to hire consultants to gather input from the public. The study also inves-tigated what would make sense for the area.
The old fire station stands
Consumers, some oil companies shifting toward alternative fuelsPage 4
Bath council OKs armory renovation bond; skatepark future uncertainBy Alex Lear
BATH — The City Coun-cil gave preliminary approv-al Wednesday to borrowing $308,000 for a basic renovation of the former National Guard Armory.
The 5-3 decision, opposed by
Councilors Steve Brackett, Kyle Rogers and Ruthe Pagurko, will go to a final vote Dec. 7.
The council also tabled an order that would have allowed the Bath Youth Meetinghouse and Skatepark to move into the Old Brunswick Road building.
Councilors, however, unani-mously approved borrowing up to $450,000 to demolish the dilapidated former YMCA on Summer Street, where the skate-park now operates. Demolition is due to start next month.
Ron Norton of Construction
Management Consulting Ser-vices, the firm asked to come up with the armory renovation cost, focused on what he called a “base-line” scope of work necessary to run the skatepark to arrive at the $308,000 renova-tion cost.
He told the council last month that the savings came from “do-ing work only in the areas that are to be used for the skateboard park. The lower level work is only to the level necessary for
November 4, 20112 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
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ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, VOTE
BILL DANAfor Brunswick Town Council At-LargeI will work hard for Brunswick, listen respectfullyto all parties, carefully research the issues, andseek to build consensus on the Council.
Anna Agell & Paul DenisonRichard W. MollPeter BernierBob & Mary BietteSteve & Kathy CareyPat LivesayLillian ConnorsMary J. HermanChrista CornellSteve & Julia WhiteBob & Nan MorrellJim Merritt & Diana MccainDiane FrieseJoan & Don GerrishCharlie & Andrea GordonDennis LucasChris & Matija BurtisDeborah GouldBarbara ManterMartin & Nancy GrimnesMike & Moreen HalmoLou HardingHarry & Judy WarrenRob PeabodyRich & Tess HartfordDan McLaughlin
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Dana SmithAllen & Anne SpringerDennis & Paula TefftMarybeth Latti
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I am honored to announce the following endorsements:
Policy sets hurdle for potential users of Harpswell schoolBy Emily Guerin
HARPSWELL — West Harpswell School will remain unused this winter un-less community groups can show they’ll occupy 30 percent of the building on a regular basis.
That threshold is important because it would allow the town to replace its insur-ance policy on the vacant building, which costs $13,000, with a policy that would cost less than $2,000 a year.
At its Oct. 27 meeting, the Board of Selectmen authorized town staff to draft an application form to request use of the school. Users would have to be affiliated
with a nonprofit or a for-profit entity that would be responsible for any incurred costs or liabilities.
Resident Donna Frisoli, who is trying to organize a group to create a temporary library in the school, said it’s been challeng-ing to find an organization willing to take responsibility for the Village Library, as the project is called.
Still, she is hopeful that her group of library fans and parents who home-school their children will be able to use the space throughout the winter for educational events, Internet access and community dinners.
But Town Administrator Kristi Eiane said unless the town receives enough applicants to receive the reduced insurance rate, it’s unlikely the space will be used at all.
That’s because the $25,000 that Harpswell voters allocated to maintain the school until March 2012 is nearly ex-hausted, thanks to unexpected fuel expenses and boiler repairs. Eiane said the budget anticipated minimal use of the school over the winter, and did not account for ad-ditional heat and electricity expenses that would come with using the school more frequently – unless the town can spend less on insurance.
She encouraged community members to submit their requests to use the school,
with the understanding that they may not be granted.
“We’re going to be able to take applica-tions, but I don’t know if there’s going to be any final commitment until there’s a sense that we have enough entities” to occupy 30 percent of the building on a regular basis, Eiane said.
Emily Guerin can be reached at 781-3661 ext.123 or [email protected]. Follow her on
Twitter: @guerinemily.
CorrectionAn Oct. 28 story about the Topsham
Board of Selectmen incorrectly stated Fire Chief Brian Stockdale’s last name.
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2 Council candidates outspend everyone elseBy Emily Guerin
BRUNSWICK — Two at-large candidates for the Town Council have spent more than four times more than anyone else in next week’s town elec-tions.
Finance reports filed with the town clerk on Oct. 28 show that current District 7 Councilor Benet Pols and William Dana spent $2,480 and $2,323, respectively, on their campaigns.
The third candidate in the race, By-ron Watson, spent $577.
All three at-large council candidates out-spent the candidates running for the at-large seat on the School Board. William Thompson spent $349 for placards and posters for his School Board campaign, while John Jones spent $75.
Pols not only leads the candidates in expenditures, he has also raised the most money: $2,070.
He has attracted financial support
from two other elected officials: $250 from at-large School Board member Michelle Small, and $50 from District 2 Councilor Ben Tucker.
Pols also netted several contribu-tions from residents of the Bouchard Drive and Hennessey Street area, who publicly opposed the Northern New England Passenger Rail Authority’s decision to build a train maintenance building in the neighborhood. Pols op-posed that site.
Although he spent almost as much as Pols, Dana didn’t raise any money because he chose to self-finance his
campaign. Watson raised $560.Thompson was the only person in
either contested race who received do-nations from a political organization. He netted $108 in in-kind contributions from the Brunswick Republicans for paper and printed fliers. He also raised $150 in contributions of less than $50.
The only uncontested candidate to spend money on a campaign is council District 7 hopeful Sarah Brayman, who spent $345 of her own money.
The finance reports cover the pe-riod ending Oct. 25. Candidates must disclose any additional spending and donations 42 days after the Nov. 8 elec-
tion. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. at Brunswick Junior High School.
Emily Guerin can be reached at 781-3661 ext.123 or [email protected]. Follow her on
Twitter: @guerinemily.
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November 4, 20114 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
City of BathAbsentee Voting and New Voter Registration
October 29, 2011 11am - 2pm
The City Clerk’s Department will be offering Saturdayhours for residents of Bath to conduct absentee votingand allow new residents of Bath to register to vote.
The office will be open from 11am - 2pm on Saturday,October 29, 2011. The City Clerk’s Office is located onthe first floor of City Hall at 55 Front Street. Questionsmaybe directed to the City Clerk’s Office at 443-8332.
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Comment on this story at:http://www.theforecaster.net/weblink/104839
Consumers, some oil companies shifting toward alternative fuels
Emily GuErin / ThE ForEcasTEr Downeast Energy auditor Rick Mathieu shows homeowner Whitney Campbell, of Yarmouth, how to see where cold air is leaking into her
home by looking at a thermal imaging camera. The fan in the doorway sucks all the air out of
the house, drawing in outside air.
By Emily GuerinYARMOUTH — On a cold day in early
November, employees of Downeast Energy arrived at a home in Yarmouth for an ap-pointment.
They didn’t drive an oil truck, or come to refill a propane tank.
Instead, they closed all the windows and doors and set up a fan powerful enough to suck outside air in through cracks and poorly insulated walls. A thermal camera revealed where the leaks were so the ho-meowner could prioritize her efficiency
like wood pellets, propane or natural gas, oil companies are looking elsewhere, too.
“Nothing stays the same forever,” said Mike McCormack, vice president of energy at Downeast. “We don’t look at (the de-creasing consumption of heating oil) as the black hole of our future. We embrace that.”
Why oil?Even though Downeast now offers so-
lar power, bio-fuels and propane, heating oil still makes up a significant portion of its business. That makes sense for an en-ergy company in the state with the highest percentage of homes heated by oil – 75 percent.
Why do so many Mainers heat with oil?Jamie Py, president of the Maine Energy
Marketers Association, said the fuel is easy to use, reliable and safe. And, unlike natural gas, customers can shop around to find the lowest price.
“Historically it’s been a great value,” Py said. “That’s why its been so popular in a cold climate.”
Py said in the past, alternative fuels were either too time consuming, like chopping wood, or too pricey; natural gas was more expensive than oil for 25 out of last 32 years, he said.
But that’s starting to change as the cost
of alternative fuels has dropped, and the price of oil has skyrocketed. This winter, industry analysts are predicting the highest price ever. As of Oct. 31, the average price was $3.56 per gallon, an increase of 5 cents over the previous week.
The prices aren’t just high, they fluctuate dramatically, something that Jeffrey Marks, deputy director of the Office of Energy In-dependence, cited as a reason more Mainers are switching away from oil.
“As consumers become more aware of al-ternative heating options, and as petroleum prices continue to experience volatility, consumers will be educated and motivated to increasingly seek other ways to heat their homes, including wood and natural gas,” Marks said in an email.
Dealing with decreased consumption
Area oil companies are coping with the shift away from their core product in dif-ferent ways.
Not every company has the resources of Downeast, to offer multiple alternative fuels. Some are focusing on one or two.
Mike Feenstra, owner of South Portland-based Our Oil, decided to sell wood pellets after noticing that many of his customers aren’t getting rid of their oil furnaces, but are adding pellet stoves to help cut costs and use less heating oil. He has been think-
improvements.Weatherization and thermal imaging
consultations are just one example of how Brunswick-based Downeast Energy and other oil companies are adapting to changes in the marketplace.
While still the No. 1 fuel in the state, the percentage of Mainers who heat their homes with heating oil is down about 5 percent from 2004, according to the Gov-ernor’s Office of Energy Independence and Security.
As more Mainers choose alternative fuels
5November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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Maine dam inspections lag while inspector coaches rugbyBy John Christie and Naomi Schalit
WATERVILLE — Around 3:50 in the afternoon on Wednesday, Oct. 12, a state-owned pickup truck pulled into the park-ing lot at the Colby College rugby field.
A man in a blue windbreaker got out of the truck, took a cardboard box of equip-ment from the cab and headed to the field, where members of the men’s and women’s teams had gathered for practice.
The man was their coach.But he is also the Maine dam inspec-
tor who has fallen years behind the legal schedule for safety inspections of the nearly 100 dams across the state catego-rized as potentially dangerous.
His name is Tony Fletcher, and he has held the paid coaching job at the private college since 2001, except for one semes-ter, according to Colby.
For eight weeks each fall, four days a week, Fletcher leaves his Augusta office around 3:30 p.m. to drive the 19 miles to Colby, according to his boss at the Maine Emergency Management Agency.
MEMA Director Robert McAleer said Fletcher also coaches during the three-week spring rugby season, when practices are sometimes indoors in the evenings because of the weather.
Neither the college nor Fletcher will reveal what he is paid for his coaching contract. His state salary is $56,800. With benefits, his total state compensation is $87,000.
In an email exchange with the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting last week, McAleer said “I am aware that Mr. Fletcher coaches the Colby Rugby Teams on a part-time basis. Such work is neither prohibited nor discouraged.”
McAleer, stating he was also speaking for Fletcher, said Fletcher makes up the time spent coaching by coming in early or working nights or weekends.
However, Fletcher’s official time sheets do not show weekend work and do not specify what time he starts and ends his work days.
McAleer also said in an email that driving to a part-time job in a state ve-hicle was not authorized, and Fletcher has been told to stop.
Informed about the center’s finding, Gov. Paul LePage’s spokeswoman, Adri-enne Bennett, said, “this particular matter is one MEMA staff is on top of, and I am
John ChristieMaine state dam inspector Tony Fletcher
coaching the Colby College mens’ and womens’ rugby teams on Wednesday, Oct. 12, in
Waterville.
confident the appropriate action will be taken if needed.”
Fletcher’s schedule comes up at a time when questions have been raised about the productivity of the state’s dam inspec-tion program. Until recently, Fletcher has been the only state inspector.
‘Loss of life’An examination by the center of dam
safety inspections reports provided by MEMA earlier this year found that Maine is not living up to the state law that requires regular inspections of the 93 dams in the state classified as hazardous for their potential to take lives or sweep away buildings, roads and bridges.
Thousands of Mainers live below the potentially hazardous dams, from San-ford to Norway to Camden.
The state classifies 24 of the 93 dams as “high hazard potential,” meaning that a failure could “probably cause loss of life.” The other dams are “significant hazard dams,” meaning a failure could cause property or environmental damage.
Half of the high hazard dams are two to seven years overdue for their mandated inspections, for example.
Of the 93 dams, the state could produce records showing only 10 percent have been inspected on time.
McAleer admitted to a legislative committee on Sept. 26 that the dams are not being inspected when the law says they should be. But he also said he was confident in the assurance he got from Fletcher that none of the dams pose a danger.
McAleer told the committee that com-pleting safety inspections of the dams “at the rate specified in the law is virtually impossible” with one or two inspectors.
‘Do the math’In an interview on Aug. 18, McAleer
said, “Do the math on the whole numbers of dams that have to be inspected. ... It’s very difficult to keep up.”
But “the math” suggests it would be possible to keep up with the inspections if a dam was inspected about every week and a half.
With 93 dams that have to be inspected every two or four years, the math shows that if the state inspected 29 or 30 high
and significant hazard dams each year, it would be on target to meet the legal requirements.
Dam inspector Fletcher’s time sheets for 2010, the most recent full-year for which records are available, show he worked 230 days, eight hours per day. That means that if he inspected a po-tentially hazardous dam every week and half, he would meet the annual inspec-tions benchmark.
But the records supplied to the center for 2010 showed that only six of the hazardous dams were inspected during that year.
How many dams can be inspected in a year depends on whom you ask, and even then the answers are not precise.
Dana Murch, former supervisor of environmental regulation of dams for
the state Department of Environmental Protection and co-author of the current dam safety law, said, “if one person can’t do 30 dams in one year, something is wrong.”
In an interview in May, Fletcher said “a full-on inspection can take a couple weeks. It ranges from that to just going in and eyeballing the situation.”
He later said in the same interview, “We look at about two (dams) a week. A lot of them are low hazard dams,” which are not among the dams that require inspections every two or four years; the law does require an inspection of a low hazard dam if a problem is reported.
A dam is classified as low hazard if a breach would likely cause damage only to the owner’s property, not to lives, roads, bridges or environmentally sensi-tive areas.
McAleer, the MEMA director, was
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Another friend at the end: Yarmouth couple offers hospice greeting cardsBy Alex Lear
YARMOUTH — Having to say good-bye to a dying loved one is arguably the hardest time in anyone’s life.
Drawing from their own experiences and talents, Katherine and Gordie Hol-mes of Cousins Island hope to bring comfort to those dealing with the end of life through a new line of hospice-themed greeting cards: Hospice Sentiments by Katherine.
Katherine said last week that in her
Alex leAr / The ForecAsTerKatherine and Gordie Holmes of Cousins Island have created a new line of cards for
hospice patients and their loved ones.
work as a hospice nurse she “noticed the patients have no cards. They have no greeting cards. They would have like an old Christmas card on the wall from last Christmas, or a Mother’s Day card that was 8 months old. And the families would come in ... they would sit there for days and have no visitors, or no interac-tion with people.”
A self-described “big card person,” Katherine said she saw a need for a dif-ferent kind of product. She approached her husband, a real estate broker who recently completed a novel, and Gordie researched the idea. He could find noth-ing except thank-you cards to be sent to nurses after patients die.
Gordie noted that certainly there are cards that can be sent to dying patients, like sympathy and “thinking of you” cards, “but nothing that addresses this
issue of death the way (we have done it).”The couple had three notions in mind
when creating their line of cards, a proj-ect that Katherine noted is independent of her hospice work: acknowledgement that the patient is dying, and the patient knowing he or she is loved, and will be remembered.
“All of the cards say that in different ways from different people to different folks,” said Gordie, who wrote the text for all the cards. Donna Stackhouse cre-ated the art adorning each card.
continued page 30
7November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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Unsung Hero: Mary Lou Sprague grabs life by the reinsBy David Treadwell
CAPE ELIZABETH — Some people of means spend their lives protecting their as-sets, seldom considering the common good.
Not Mary Lou Sprague.Some people, as they age, get timid about
engaging in physically strenuous activities.Not Mary Lou Sprague.Some people view old buildings as just
old buildings, not structures that provide insights into our past and inspiration for our future.
Not Mary Lou Sprague.Sprague, 83, continues to live life to the
fullest with her husband, Phineas, on Spur-wink Farm in Cape Elizabeth, near the start of the widely acclaimed annual TD Bank Beach to Beacon 10K road race.
Her history with the Portland area goes way back. She’s a descendant of George Cleave, the founder of Portland, and her many contributions to the city are as im-pressive as her lineage.
A graduate of Waynflete School in 1946, Sprague has been a major supporter of the
Natalie CoNN / For the ForeCasterMary Lou Sprague with her mother-daughter horse team Lady, 15, and Missy, 9, at Spurwink Farm
in Cape Elizabeth.
school for decades.“I was in school during the second World
War,” she said. “Bowdoin didn’t have enough students on campus at the time, so the college would send faculty down to teach.”
As a member of Waynflete’s board in the 1970s and ‘80s, Sprague was instrumental in several major changes at the school: construction of a science center, the acquisi-tion of playing fields, and the transition to coeducation.
Given her love of Maine, history and the decorative arts, it’s no surprise that Sprague has also taken a leadership role in preserv-ing Portland’s architectural history. She was recently honored by the Stroudwater Village Association for her “leadership in
Unsung HeroesPart of a twice-monthly series of profiles by
Brunswick writer David Treadwell about people who quietly contribute to the quality of life in
greater Portland. Do you know an Unsung Hero? Tell us: [email protected]
November 4, 20118 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
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Navy awards BIW $14M for destroyer work
BATH — Bath Iron Works was award-ed a $14 million contract extension to provide logistic support for the construc-tion of the DDG-1000 class of ships.
U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, announced the award Tues-day.
“This contract helps keep workers on the job and work moving forward on the DDG-1000 line,” Pingree said. “Bath continues to produce the best built ships in the world and the Navy knows it.”
Under the contract, BIW will provide technical and industrial engineering for the DDG-1000 ship design.
News briefsThe U.S.S. Zumwalt, the first vessel
in the DDG-1000 line, is being built at BIW and scheduled to be delivered to the Navy in 2013.
Eat doughnuts, Occupy Brunswick
BRUNSWICK — Occupy Wall Street is coming to town.
Protesters plan to gather on Saturday, Nov. 5, at 10 a.m. on the Brunswick Mall to make signs, drink cider and eat doughnuts. Then, at 11 a.m. the group will march to Bank of America on Maine Street and protest in front of the bank, spokeswoman Selma Sternlieb said in a press release.
The release said the protest is endorsed
by Greater Brunswick PeaceWorks, Pax Christi Maine, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Maine State Nurses Assn., Code Pink Maine, Bring Our War Dollars Home Campaign, Food Not Bombs, Bowdoin Peace Activ-ists, and Peace Action Maine.
Cell tower rules head to Bath council
BATH — Ordinance language regulat-ing wireless communications facilities may go before the City Council next month or in January 2012, City Planner Andrew Deci said Wednesday.
The Planning Board, which has been reviewing the language for months, voted unanimously Tuesday after almost no discussion to recommend passage to the City Council, Deci said.
The language would generally bar cell towers from open spaces and coastal areas of Bath. The prohibition would
also apply to downtown areas, unless the towers are completely hidden within structures.
Lot reopens, Maine St. work shuts down
BRUNSWICK — Construction is end-ing at the intersection of Maine Street and Route 24, and the Cedar Street park-and-ride lot is open again.
Contractor H.C. Crooker & Sons has completed drainage work and tree stump removal at the Maine Street intersection, according to the Maine Department of Transportation. Work will resume in the spring to install a traffic island and do minor work on Cleaveland Street.
MDOT also announced that the com-muter lot on Cedar Street, closed since last winter, is now open for public use. The lot had been used as a staging area for repairs to railroad tracks in advance of the exten-sion of Amtrak Downeaster service.
9November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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Life in Gaza without GiladTwo weeks ago, the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, look-
ing pale, gaunt and dazed, was led from the darkness and isolation of his confinement at the hands of Hamas, the Palestinian faction that rules Gaza, and handed over to Egyptian intermediaries.
Abducted by Hamas on Israeli soil at the age of 19 and imprisoned for five years without so much as a single visit from the Red Cross, Shalit stepped off a military aircraft into the embrace of a waiting prime minister, his commanding officers and, thereafter, his father, his neighbors and the entire nation of Israel.
Thousands of Israelis watched the scenes unfold on televisions across the country, transfixed by a sight many thought they’d never see. Everyone’s son had emerged from every parent’s nightmare, and then, quickly, he went home as the nation left him and his family to an indescribable reunion.
Meanwhile, in Gaza, buses of Palestinians newly freed from confinement in Israeli prisons in exchange for Shalit’s release snaked their way through waiting throngs of people cheering and lining the streets. This first tranche of 400 prisoners, including some who had kidnapped, killed and who even now expressed their willingness to do so again, returned to a hero’s welcome.
Masked gunmen brandished their weapons, flags waved, women ululated and Hamas’ leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, celebrated with many of his newly freed comrades-in-arms.
It was Carnival and Mardi Gras all rolled into one, and hun-dreds of thousands turned out to be a part of the excitement.
For those in the West hoping for some kind of rational coexistence with Hamas, it was hardly a feel-good moment.
Yet surely, belying the joy and far from the crowds, there must be some in Gaza who dare to mourn what Palestin-ian society has become under Hamas. Perhaps even in that sea of green flags and hooded gunmen, amid all the chants, cheers and euphoria, stood a man or woman who deep down knows that these well-orchestrated moments of triumph, too, shall pass, leaving Gaza not only right back where it started, but with even more challenging problems to confront.
For the day after Shalit came home, after they wept with joy, Israelis went to school and work. They attended concerts and sat in cafes. They went to the dentist, fixed their cars, shopped at grocery stores, planned vacations and wondered what movies to see on the weekend. Some married, some divorced, some bought homes, went to the mall or left work early to beat the traffic. Some cursed the government. Some prayed.
But all were free.In Gaza, however, the made-for-TV party had come to
an end, the crowds had dispersed and it would be months before the next prisoners came home. All the posters that Hamas had printed lay in the streets, and all the slogans and all the banners had come down. The bloom was off the rose, and prospects remained as bleak as ever.
What was there to celebrate now? The return of 400 more unemployed persons, some of whom were hardened criminals? And how would things be better when the next portion arrived?
Yes, one could look forward to another celebration, to tearful family reunions, to more chanting and more slogans. But how would any of that undo Gaza’s miseries?
Israel makes things difficult for Gaza, and while many of the Palestinians imprisoned by Israel certainly belong be-hind bars, there are surely those among the newly released whose crimes were more political than violent.
Never known for its light touch, Israel does not wear white gloves to this party.
But more than anything or anyone else, Hamas is stran-gling Gaza.
There isn’t a single thing that Hamas has delivered to its people in the four years since its violent takeover of Gaza that couldn’t have been accomplished overnight if Hamas would abandon its genocidal covenant against Israel in particular and Jews in general.
And, tragically, there isn’t a single Palestinian in Gaza, except perhaps those privileged few who surface for inter-national photo ops, whose life wouldn’t improve if Hamas was shown the door.
In Israel, Shalit is coming back to life.And in Gaza?The next bus bearing Palestinian prisoners will arrive in
a few months, so there will be another raucous party in the square. Posters, candy for the kids, guns and rockets will be on display.
But beyond that, not so much. Now that Shalit is home, it’s clearer than ever that for the Palestinian people, nothing has changed, and nothing ever will, so long as Hamas has its foot on the neck of Palestinian society.
Perry B. Newman is a South Portland resident and president of Atlantica Group, an international business consulting firm based in Portland, with clients in North America, Israel and Europe. He is also chairman of the Maine District Export Council.
GlobalMatters
Perry B. Newman
November 4, 201110 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
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I am not up on current affairs. “Aggressively unin-formed” is more like it. It’s self-preservation mostly. Thinking about the world’s actual problems makes me want to hyperventilate, and what the media choose to report aggravates me. Everything seems to lie somewhere on the spectrum between sensationalistic and vapid.
Take the coverage of Gaddafi’s death, an event so big even I learned about it. Who cares if he had female bodyguards? At least he was willing to let women work. My favorite “duh” was The New York Times headline that Gaddafi had “tired of” being a fugitive. Shocker. Most people love being chased through sewers by armed men. I think the Times should change its motto to “All The News That’s Fit To Print – And A Whole Lot More!”
Comment on this story at:http://www.theforecaster.net/weblink/104696
The ViewFrom Away
Mike Langworthy
The idiot’s guide to Occupy Wall StreetOccupy Wall Street is another story so big I couldn’t
miss it, although I am puzzled by some of the reactions. Not all of the reactions. Of course people who are doing well don’t like people questioning what they’re doing well at. In my former life, it never bothered me that comedy writers like me made a multiple of what cops, teachers and firemen earned. I was too busy wondering why those hacks on “Frasier” and “Friends” got more for being on shows that practically wrote themselves than I got for heroically making a silk purse out of a sow’s ear every week on (insert show name here).
Maybe it’s nature; any game is great if you’re win-ning it. If dung beetles were in charge, and you told the richest one he was living in a giant pile of feces, he’d say, “Thank you,” convinced it was a compliment and convinced he deserved it because he worked harder and smarter than everybody else, even if he was born on a big-ger dung pile than he could use in a thousand lifetimes.
Any debate about an excretion-based economy would be like the faux debates we have on politics now. Some Fox News pundit would be outraged at the bums who would rather live in a tent and complain than roll up their sleeves and build their own dung piles. An MSNBC com-mentator would tell him nobody should have a lot of dung until everybody has a little. Neither would listen to the other, and they’d both ignore the growing crowd saying, “Excuse me? It’s us, almost everybody. Could we maybe look at some alternatives? Because this constant fighting over dung isn’t working for us.” Neither commentator could afford to look too closely at that crowd because at the end of the day, they would both work for the beetles.
It’s harder to understand the people who have more in common with the occupiers than the hedge fund manag-ers, but still don’t like OWS. I was surprised, for example, by a friend’s recent post on a social media site I won’t plug here – rhymes with “Mace Hook” – one of many
similar comments I’ve seen. He said he was sympathetic to OWS, but he knocked them for not having specific demands. Without asking for something specific and concrete, OWS risked becoming no more compelling than a traffic accident, something you look at but don’t get involved in.
He’s right from one perspective. Without typical protest demands, the movement makes it easy for critics within the status quo. How can we help, they will argue, if you won’t tell us what you want? It’s a fair point, if the point of the movement is saying the status quo needs tweaking. I’m not sure that is the point, though.
I wonder if people objecting to the supposed lack of focus in Occupy Wall Street are really attacking apples for not being oranges. To me the spirit of OWS seems more primal than a simple protest against bailouts, bo-nuses or tax rates for the wealthy. I see the demonstra-tors as seeking something more cathartic. Sure, they are unhappy about the economy, but they are also fighting the hopelessness of being profoundly disenfranchised by a government that doesn’t seem to acknowledge their existence, much less serve them.
An important element seems to be a reality check. Mil-lions of individuals are suddenly experiencing together what they had been experiencing separately. They’re getting a visceral sense that they are not the only ones feeling impotent and invisible. Along with learning there are others, OWS participants go through the related tribal process of sharing their stories. Occupy Wall Street seems at least as much about community building as protesting.
They are protesting, not this policy or that, but nonper-sonhood. They are telling Congress and Wall Street that making shareholder profit not just the most important thing, but the only thing, is not sustainable. Nor can we sustain a government that has largely abandoned gover-nance for politics or that recognizes the existence of only one constituency: the wealthy. If they’re right, specific demands are Band-Aids on arterial bleeding. First, they have to convince our authority figures that the system is broken. The problem is that day to day, it works great for the people they need to convince.
You know, like how, day to day, France worked great for Marie Antoinette.
Portland resident Mike Langworthy, an attorney, former stand-up comic and longtime television writer, is fascinated by all things Maine. You can reach him at [email protected].
11November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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continued page 13
Where we stand: Same-day voter registration, gambling proposals
Mainers will vote Nov. 8 on three controversial statewide ballot initiatives.
Question 1, which would reverse the law that eliminated same-day voter registration, is a matter of voter turnout and Maine’s integrity.
An estimated 6 percent of votes in Maine’s last election were cast by citizens who registered to vote on Election Day.
If Maine fails to preserve Election Day registration at the polls on Nov. 8, we would be saying that, going forward, those citizens don’t matter and those votes shouldn’t count.
That’s not the sentiment of Maine people, nor is it in the public’s inter-est to dismiss a single vote, which is why we must vote yes on Question 1 to preserve Election Day registration.
One of the most compelling reasons to do that comes from town and city clerks themselves, including Orono Clerk Wanda Thomas, who may very well be the state’s top expert on issues of college town registra-tions, since she serves the electorate of the University of Maine.
Thomas told mainecampus.com (the UMaine student newspaper) that she makes sure to staff the campus resi-dent-only district precinct with extra clerks on Election Day to process registrations.
If students lose the Election Day option, Thomas said, they would have to register at the Town Office, where “more staff may need to be hired year-round because there would be no way to gauge when registrants would come in.”
Elimination of Election Day registration would, as Thomas understands it, cost government more to admin-ister.
At a time when all levels of government are doing every-thing possible to cut costs, now is not the time to increase the financial burden on taxpayers.
Then, there’s the burden on government personnel.Eliminating Election Day registration was, according to
lawmakers, designed to give clerks time to verify regis-trants’ legal status. But, there’s no enforcement language in the law requiring clerks to do so, just an understanding that they will.
But will they?In the more than 200 days since 206 public college stu-
dents accused by state Republican Party Chairman Charlie
Webster of possible fraud were registered on Election Day last year, or in the more than 2,000 days since a dozen St. Joseph’s College students accused of the same were regis-tered to vote in 2004, no residency checks were performed. Following Webster’s accusations, all students were checked and all accusations were found baseless.
But, realistically, without enforcement language written into the law to require clerks to verify residency, two days might as well be 200, or 2,000.
But that’s really a minor point.Last year, of the 623 UMaine students who voted on
campus, 500 registered on Election Day, according to Thomas. If Maine had imposed the two-day rule last year, some of those 500 would probably have registered in time to vote, but we can-not assume that all would have because
some people are born procrastinators, which is not a crime.Hindering the full opportunity for any of those students
to vote, without verifiable evidence that we are courting fraud, is not good politics.
Finally, let’s also consider that the impassioned dual arguments presented to the Legislature that resulted in the elimination of Election Day registration: the specter of widespread fraud and the problem of busloads of students rushing poll places each Election Day.
Both assertions were intended to frighten; both were determined to be groundless.
Sure, there are some get-out-the-vote efforts on Election Day among both parties, but no precinct has ever reported being overwhelmed by busloads of students arriving on Election Day to swing elections. And, there is no rampant voter fraud, with only two cases uncovered in decades.
So, what may have seemed to lawmakers to be con-vincing arguments are simply not true. The Legislature was duped and, next week, voters have an opportunity to reverse a law that was adopted based on a campaign of false information.
We urge voters to protect and preserve Election Day registration, to take a stand that every vote counts and to do all possible to ensure that every vote is counted.
Vote yes on Question 1.Questions 2 & 3
The Maine Legislature faced a choice 10 years ago.Gambling was clearly inevitable in Maine, and the state
could have developed a logical process for locating a hand-
ful of strategically placed casinos or racinos here.We could have sold licenses to developers and then
determined how much revenue would go to the state and how it would be used.
But our citizen Legislature failed to act.Largely by happenstance, voters have adopted a different
and far less tidy process: developers approach communi-ties with a plan. If the community supports the idea, the developers risk their own money to run a campaign to get statewide voter approval.
So far, the state’s voters have considered a half-dozen proposals and approved two gambling outlets, one in Ban-gor and another in Oxford.
Bangor has a racino; in 2012 Oxford will have a casino.The process is less than ideal, but it is a process.Now voters in Lewiston, Biddeford and Washington
County have said they would welcome casinos or racinos into their communities.
The Biddeford/Washington County racino is Question 2 on the statewide ballot; the Lewiston casino is Question 3.
Voters should vote yes on both issues.The reasons vary by community, but the common argu-
ment is the same: jobs and development.The case for a casino in Lewiston is particularly com-
pelling.Bates Mill No. 5 is a large, historical structure located at
the gateway to Maine’s second largest city.It has been either empty or marginally utilized for nearly
a quarter of a century. In that time, we have not had a single realistic plan emerge for that property.
Before a group of local citizens came forward with the casino idea, the city was on the verge of knocking it down.
Over the years, suggestions for the site have centered on creating a magnet to draw visitors back into the downtown. More than 10 years ago, discussion focused on a conven-tion center.
But that would have required a huge public expenditure with the prospect of endless taxpayer subsidy.
A casino would accomplish the same goal but without public investment. Instead, the casino would return property taxes and gambling revenue to the city for years to come.
Perhaps the best reason for a yes vote on the Lewiston
November 4, 201112 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
Official Announcement of Municipal CandidatesCity of Bath
Pursuant to the Bath City Charter, Chapter IX Nominations& Elections, Section 906 Certifications, Publication, thefollowing registered voters of Bath have been duly certified asthe nominated candidates for the municipal election for theirrespective office, have duly filed the City of Bath nominationpetition and candidate acceptances and have complied withthe requirements to run as a candidate for the city election:
Councilor Ward 13-year termMeadow Rue Merrill 390 High StreetJames A. Omo 130 Middle Street
Councilor Ward 63-year termDavid Sinclair 48 Meadow Way
Councilor At-Large3-year termCharles J. Turcotte 677 Middle StreetD. Andrew Winglass 15 Judkins AvenuePeter J. Heinz 977 High Street
I certify the Bath residents listed above have been duly de-clared the candidates for the municipal election to be heldon Tuesday, November 8, 2011.
Mary J. White, City Clerk
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Where we stand: Cumberland County Civic Center, Wentworth SchoolTwo local referendum questions are on the Nov. 8 ballot.Residents throughout Cumberland County will be asked
if the county should borrow $33 million to renovate the Cumberland County Civic Center in Portland, and voters in Scarborough will decide if the town should borrow $39 million to build a new Wentworth Intermediate School.
We support both proposals.Civic Center
Cumberland County voters will be deciding whether the 34-year-old Civic Center enters middle age with a new lease on life or needing life support.
Anyone who has been a spectator at the CCCC is well aware of some of its shortcomings: old seats; crowded, inad-equate restrooms and concession areas; limited access for disabled people. But there are problems behind the scenes, too: an insufficient loading dock that costs the building attractions because crews can’t move staging and equipment in and out quickly enough; outdated locker rooms – even by minor league standards – and electrical and mechanical systems that aren’t up to code.
Opponents of the renovation plan object to the cost and argue that in a shaky economy, a dollar saved is a dollar earned. They argue that repayment of the $33 million – with interest, as much as $55 million over the life of the bond – will place an undue burden on county taxpayers. They also argue that only the city of Portland benefits from a successful, thriving Civic Center.
We don’t buy those arguments.The Civic Center is an economic engine for all of
Cumberland County. Of course it feeds the restaurants, bars and parking lots of downtown Portland. But the cen-
ter and those nearby businesses also employ residents and feed families from one end of the county to the other. The building has a $1.5 million payroll, and two-thirds of its employees live outside of Portland.
If the renovation is approved and successful, the net tax impact on county residents will be negligible. The bond will be repaid through a combination of increased Civic Center revenue, a ticket surcharge and continuation of $1 million a year in existing county debt. Retiring that existing debt, from a bond for the Cumberland County Jail, would
reduce the county’s annual obligation by about $2.1 million; the annual dif-ference to individual taxpayers would, again, be negligible.
We believe its unfortunate that the Civic Center’s major tenant, the
Portland Pirates hockey club, has not been asked to make a financial investment in the renovation (the Pirates orga-nization is a supporter of the political action committee formed to promote passage of the bond referendum). But owners of the Pirates – who generate about a third of the Civic Center’s annual attendance and concession sales, and stand to gain revenue from high-priced club seats – have promised that a new, long-term lease for the building will be signed if the Civic Center is remodeled.
Considering the benefits Cumberland County reaps from the Civic Center – a venue for world-class entertainment enjoyed by people of all ages from throughout the region, the guarantee of professional hockey for many years to come, and up to $15 million annually in economic impact – it makes sense to rejuvenate the building.
Every dollar saved by rejecting the plan will be several dollars lost, not a dollar earned. Vote yes to breath new life
into the Cumberland County Civic Center.Wentworth
In Scarborough, poor air quality, asbestos and mold problems, and inadequate space at the existing Wentworth building make the decision one of health, as well as wealth.
Opponents of the project haven’t argued that the building doesn’t have serious problems. They just believe it’s too much to build, and too costly to build, at this time – espe-cially since the total cost with interest could approach $66 million over the life of a 30-year bond. They contrast the proposal’s size and cost – $240 per student and 181 square feet per student (assuming 15 percent enrollment growth during its lifespan) – with reports of more modest numbers nationwide.
But they fail to compare the proposal with other schools built in Maine; when you do that, proponents have argued, the new Wentworth is squarely in line with what communi-ties throughout the state are spending to provide students with safe, modern educational institutions that are prepared for future growth.
The alternative to building the new school will undoubt-edly cost money, too: millions to continually repair and temporarily mitigate problems that have had only Band-Aid treatments for too many years.
In 2006, Scarborough voters rejected a more ambitious plan to replace Wentworth and build a new middle school. This year, with a more affordable plan on the table, the town should step up. Voters must show that they value education, the health of their young people and teachers, and the role good schools play in attracting businesses and jobs, by approving the Wentworth bond.
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casino is to reject the hypocrisy and parochialism that has characterized this campaign.
Community leaders and some newspapers have argued that gambling would be great for Biddeford and Washing-ton Counties, but somehow bad for Lewiston. According to the Portland Press Herald, a casino could even “block” development in Lewiston.
Lewiston disagrees, and loudly.Believe, instead, what Dan Thayer, chairman of the
Lewiston-Auburn Economic Growth Council has said:“The casino project will create new jobs that pay a
livable wage, bring significant capital investments to an underutilized area, enhance the local property tax base and provide a downtown destination attraction without detracting from the community’s economic vitality, diverse business mix and it’s historic character.”
We urge you to vote yes on Question 2 and Question 3 on Nov. 8.
Editorialfrom page 11
Ranked choice means better choices
The city of Portland, in choosing ranked choice, is taking a serious and important step to update our representative democracy. Voters can choose the people they truly prefer, without the fear of voting for a spoiler.
Columnist Halsey Frank, former chairman of the Repub-lican City Committee, questioned the abilities of Portland voters, saying ranked-choice voting is too “difficult,” and claimed it was “absurd” that the voters could “mean-
ingfully” chose from the cur-rent candidates. The people of Portland deserve more credit than this.
Maine is an example of why we need ranked-choice voting, not only in Portland, but for the state and nation as well. In Maine’s last six gubernatorial elections, only one clear majority candidate was elected, Gov. Angus King in 1998 with 58.6 percent of the vote. We’ve had back-to back minority governors from both sides of the political spectrum in the last two elections: Gov. John Baldacci’s 38.1 percent win in 2006 and Gov. Paul LePage’s 37.6 percent win in 2010 inspired legions of bumper stickers that claimed “I am part of the majority that didn’t vote for that guy.” Mainers deserve clear majority winners.
Our voting method should encourage a diversity of candidates from different backgrounds and beliefs to run for political office. Elections should be about choosing the best candidates, not locking us into limited choices. Ranked choice allows voters the ability to have a more meaningful way of choosing from fields of candidates, while preserving a government where the will of the majority is represented.
M.D. MitchellFreeport
The over-under on Yarmouth issuesMoving to Yarmouth in 1982 was one of the best
decisions we ever made. The schools are great. There’s a real village center. A fine library. Active and engaged citizens. And the public life of Yarmouth is generally conducted with civility by reasonable people. Even folks who don’t agree with you about much of anything will smile and shake your hand warmly at church on Sunday morning.
I’m assuming this cordiality will prevail as Yarmouth decides some tough and potentially divisive issues in the coming months and years. There are usually one or two local issues to give the old bulls at Mr. Bagel something to talk about in the morn-ing, but at the moment there are at least five.
The most burning question of the day is, “What’s the over-under on the Beth Condon Memorial Pathway?”
Beth was a lovely, 15-year-old girl killed in August 1993 when a drunk driver hit her as she walked along Route 1 with her boyfriend. The town built a walking path to make pedestrians safer along the highway, but a section of the path where it will intersect with East Main Street remains to be built.
Common sense would dictate that the pathway go up and over the East Main Street bridge, but the Maine Department of Transportation insists it can only fund a path under the narrow bridge. DOT thinks that lazy pedestrians will still walk under the bridge even if there’s a safer route over it. By that reason-ing, Yarmouth shouldn’t have bothered to build the pathway at all.
Take the over.Then there’s the question of whether to use an acre
and a half of Royal River Park to build more senior housing.
The question pits affordable housing against open space, competing values. There’s organized opposi-tion to the idea. A friend even sent me a computer-generated view of what a 30-unit housing project might look like in the park. Presumably, the point was
to generate opposition, but it actually looked pretty good to me.
Yarmouth has plenty of open space, not much af-fordable housing. So I’m at least willing to listen. There may be a better place downtown to build senior housing, but the real issue is likely to be selling Yarmouth voters on a senior housing project that, because it will use state and federal money, can’t be reserved for current Yarmouth residents.
Two public projects will be competing for our tax dollars in 2012. The Public Works Department needs a new garage, to the tune of $4.8 million. The 10-year old artificial turf playing field at the high school needs to be replaced at a projected cost of $2.4 million. My guess is one of them will lose.
Town garages do not have natural constituents; ath-letic fields do. The garage is going to be a tough sell. So my money is on the turf. But someone is going to have to explain to me why it’s going to cost twice as much to replace the turf as it did to build the whole complex in the first place.
My favorite long-term local issue is whether to blow up the dams on the Royal River. The turgid, 26-mile river has been dammed up since the 18th century, but there is now talk of removing the dams at Bridge Street and East Elm Street to let the river seek its natu-ral level. We may also get something other than turtles, bloodsuckers and pond scum breeding upstream.
In August, the Bridge Street dam was opened for the first time in eons to draw down the water so the dam could be inspected and folks could see how a free-running Royal River might look. Deep, dark, slow and murky versus shallow, light, fast and clear. No contest. Blow the dams.
Finally, one of the more contentious issues in town apparently just got resolved. Residents of the Apple-wood subdivision had sued to stop a permitted residen-tial development from being built on Hillside Street, but the lawsuit was withdrawn last week. Presumably, the opponents either ran out of money or suddenly realized that McKearney Village is just Applewood 2011.
The more things change, etc.Freelance journalist Edgar Allen Beem lives in
Yarmouth. The Universal Notebook is his personal, weekly look at the world around him.
The UniversalNotebook
Edgar Allen Beem
City of Bath Polling PlaceALL VOTING WILL TAKE PLACE AT THE
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8:00 AM and will close at 8:00 PM.Questions may be directed to theCity Clerk’s Office at 443-8332.
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November 4, 201114 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
Batharrests
10/30 Seldon Caton, 46, of Old Stage Road, Woolwich, was arrested on Centre Street on charges of operating under the influence, operating after suspension and violation of conditions of release.
Summonses10/25 Maria Woodman, 25, of Windjammer Way, was issued a summons by Officer Rich-ard Ross on Windjammer Way on charges of operating on a suspended license and violation of bail.10/29 Philip Haskell, 81, of High Street, was issued a summons by Officer Michelle Small on High Street on charges of operating after suspension and violation of condition of release.10/30 George Elwell III, 24, of Tufton Street, Brunswick, was issued a summons by Of-ficer Michelle Small on Route 1 on charges of theft, unlawful possession of Schedule W drugs, unlawful possession of Schedule Z drugs and violation of condition of release.Influenced operation10/30 at 1:18 p.m. Police were informed that a vehicle had just hit a street light pole and wound up in the Amato's parking lot on Centre Street. The operator, Seldon Caton, 46, of Old Stage Road, Woolwich, had left the scene but was ultimately arrested around 1:30 p.m. in the area of Mario's, also on Cen-tre Street. Caton was charged with operating under the influence, operating after suspen-sion and violation of conditions of release, as he was on bail for two operating under the influence arrests from July. The 2006 Ford Focus he operated Sunday was totaled. The damage estimate to the light pole was several thousand dollars, police said, and other signs in the area sustained minor damage.
Fire calls10/24 at 10:30 a.m. Outside fire on West Milan Street.10/24 at 4:58 p.m. Kitchen fire on Front Street.10/26 at 12:31 p.m. Public service call on High Street.10/27 at 11:03 a.m. False alarm at YMCA.10/27 at 5:12 p.m. Smoke check on Oak Street.10/27 at 5:22 p.m. Smoke check on Aspen Lane.10/28 at 4:29 p.m. Motor vehicle accident on Old Brunswick Road.10/29 at 2:39 p.m. Hazmat at Bath Police Department.10/31 at 12:25 a.m. Wire down on High Street.10/31 at 1:20 a.m. Wire down on Western Avenue.10/31 at 1:34 p.m. Motor vehicle accident at Centre and Middle streets.
EMSBath emergency medical services responded to 40 calls from Oct. 24-30.
BrunSwickarrests
10/24 at 10:02 p.m. Kristopher Scott Lud-wig, 28, of School Street, was arrested by Officer Jason McCarthy on Gilman Avenue on a warrant.10/25 at 1:56 p.m. Errol Flynn Staples, 27, of Blake Street, Lewiston, was arrested by Officer Jonathan O'Connor on Cumberland Street on a warrant and on a charge of unlaw-ful possession of scheduled drug.10/27 at 9:22 a.m. Danielle M. Fillion, 26, of Western Prom, Auburn, was arrested by Officer Gretchen Paxton on Bath Road on a warrant and on charges of sale and use of drug paraphernalia and unlawful possession of scheduled drug.10/27 at 4:58 p.m. James Kempf, 36, of Maine Street, was arrested by Officer Brandon Inga-harro on Maine Street on a charge of assault.10/28 at 5:36 p.m. Ralph Myra, 75, of Bal-lard Road, Augusta, was arrested by Officer Kristian Oberg on River Road on a warrant.10/29 at 12:37 a.m. Taylor Briana Birks, 19, of Casco Road, was arrested by Officer Daniel Sylvain on Maquoit Road on a warrant.10/29 at 10:44 p.m. Matthew S. Gaspar, 23, of Baybridge Road, was arrested by Officer Daniel Hebert on Route 1 on a warrant and on charges of violating condition of release.10/30 at 1:50 a.m. Charles E. Bailey, 20, of Winchester, Mass., was arrested by Officer Jason McCarthy on Maine Street on charges of operating under the influence and operating a vehicle without a license.
Summonses10/28 at 2:42 p.m. Vera L. Fisco, 28, of Lin-coln Street, was issued a summons by Officer Jason McCarthy on Elm Street on a charge of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer.10/29 at 7:31 p.m. Angela C. Hennessey, 41, of Burr Lane, Bowdoin, was issued a summons by Officer Brandon Ingaharro on Tibbetts Drive on a charge of theft by unau-thorized taking or transfer.10/28 at 11:24 p.m. Jessica M. McMaster, 25, of Lincoln Street, Richmond, was issued a summons by Officer Brandon Ingaharro on Tibbetts Drive on a charge of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer.10/30 at 4:35 p.m. Arianna C. Kiser, 22, of Pond Drive, was issued a summons by Of-ficer Brandon Ingaharro on Federal Street on a charge of assault.
round dog in a square hole10/28 at 9:55 a.m. A Linnell Drive resident reported that a dog was stuck between his house and the handicapped ramp leading up to it. The dog had chased a cat behind the ramp and gotten stuck in a hole. The homeowner reportedly tried pulling it out and dumped vegetable oil on it, but the animal was still stuck. The Fire Department sent a firefighter, who successfully pulled the dog out of the hole. The dog was not injured.
Fire calls10/24 at 10:36 a.m. Medical emergency on Appletree Drive.
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15November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
10/24 at 2:46 p.m. Vehicle crash on Ray-mond Road.10/24 at 10:59 p.m. Fire on Route 1, Freeport.10/25 at 7:10 a.m. Medical emergency on Bath Road.10/25 at 11:45 a.m. Power outage, electrical smell on Federal Street.10/25 at 2:43 p.m. Vehicle crash on Church Road.10/25 at 10:30 p.m. Vehicle crash on Harpswell Road.10/26 at 7:50 p.m. Vehicle crash on Mill Street.10/26 at 11:42 p.m. Medical emergency on MacMillan Drive.10/27 at 4:25 p.m. Fire on Route 1, Freeport.10/27 at 6:11 p.m. Broken water pipe on Durham Road.10/28 at 9:55 a.m. Assist citizen on Linnell Circle.10/31 at 2:05 p.m. Medical emergency on Bath Road.10/31 at 2:10 p.m. Medical emergency on Baribeau Drive.
EMSBrunswick emergency medical services re-sponded to 43 calls from Oct. 24-31.
HarpSwEllarrests
10/25 at 12:20 a.m. John Lewis Wines, 47, of Steamboat Road, was arrested on Steamboat Road on a charge of domestic violence assault.
SummonsesNo summonses were reported from Oct. 24-31.
TopSHaMarrests
10/26 at 4:06 p.m. Jacob Knight, 25, of Riverview Drive, was arrested by Officer Alfred Giusto on Main Street on a charge of operating without a license.
Summonses10/23 at 8:43 p.m. Daniel Bellefleur, 22, of Harmony Hill Road, was issued a summons by Officer William Collins on Lewiston Road on charges of reckless conduct and attaching false plates.
Slippery situations10/29 at 5:43 p.m. to 10/30 at 1:50 p.m. Police responded to 10 accidents related to the weekend snow storm. Five were on Augusta Road, while the others were on Middlesex, Meadow, Lewiston and Topsham Fair Mall roads, and Abenaki Drive.
Fire calls10/24 at 12:03 p.m. Fire alarm on Stellas Way.10/24 at 11:03 p.m. Mutual aid to Freeport.10/25 at 5:10 p.m. Downed power line on Front Street.10/28 at 5:21 p.m. Smoke investigation on Meadow Road.10/29 at 11:28 p.m. Utility problem on Main Street.10/30 at 7:18 a.m. Motor vehicle accident on Augusta Road.10/30 at 1:04 p.m. Fire alarm on Waxwing Drive.10/30 at 2:49 p.m. Fire alarm on Sewall Lane.10/30 at 5:16 p.m. Mutual aid to West Bath.10/30 at 9:21 p.m. Smoke investigation on Elm Street.10/31 at 5:56 a.m. Carbon monoxide alarm on Taylor Farm Lane.10/31 at 7:14 a.m. Motor vehicle accident on Lewiston Road.10/31 at 7:27 a.m. Low-hanging power line on Williams Drive.
EMSTopsham emergency medical services re-sponded to 21 calls from Oct. 24-31.
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BRUNSWICK — Irene C. Labrecque, 80, passed away Oct. 26 at Midcoast Hospital in Brunswick.
Born in Topsham on Sept. 21, 1931, she was the daughter of Frank and Marie Louice Fortin Beaudoin. She graduated from St. John’s School and at-tended high school in South Berwick.
On Sept., 24, 1959, she married Clement Labrecque who passed away in January, 1994.
When she was a young girl, Labrecque worked at Woolworth’s and then devoted her life to raising her family. A devout Catholic, she incorporated God into every aspect of her life as she raised her chil-dren. Her family was her career, teaching her children how to love the Lord, and each other, as much as she did.
Obituaries
Labrecque
Obituaries policyObituaries are news stories, compiled, written and edited by The Forecaster staff. There is no charge for publication, but obituary information must be provided or confirmed by a fu-neral home or mortuary. Our preferred method for receiving obituary information is by email to [email protected], although faxes to 781-2060 are also acceptable. The dead-line for obituaries is noon Monday the week of publication.
November 4, 201116 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
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Navigating the Journey of Healthcare for SeniorsThis Community Education Series is offered to anyone who isbeginning the journey of care giving for their elder loved one.
Wednesday, November 2, 5:30pm-7:00pmUnderstanding Advance Directivesand “Do Not Resuscitate” Orders
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Wednesday, November 16, 5:30pm-7:00pmHolding on and Letting Go
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Irene C. Labrecque, 80: A devout Catholic, family womanLabrecque was predeceased by sisters
Joanne Beaudoin and Theresa Bernier and her brother Roland Beaudoin.
She is survived by her daughters Mo-nique Story and her husband Tom of Brunswick and Theresa Labrecque of Brunswick; son Raymond Labrecque of Richmond; sister Pauline Avery of Col-chester, Conn.; two grandsons, James Leavitt and his wife Kathleen of Portland and Andrew Leavitt of Brunswick; great-granddaughters Audry and Ida Leavitt of Portland; and her extended family of Guardian Angels at Winship Green in Bath.
Visiting hours were held Nov. 1 at Stetson’s Funeral Home, 12 Federal St., Brunswick followed by a Mass of Christian Burial and internment at St. John’s Cemetery, Brunswick. Memorial condolences may be expressed at stet-sonsfuneralhome.com.
Lauraine Thomas Pluto, 64WEST BATH — Lauraine Thomas
Pluto, 64, passed away at home on Oct.
1 after battling pancreatic cancer.She was born Nov. 25, 1946 in Beverly,
Mass., the daughter of Elmer B. Thomas III and Laura Catherine Cooney. Raised in Rockport, Mass. and Brunswick, she graduated from Brunswick High School in 1965 and Bates College in 1968.
After college she got married and had two sons, later moving to Arizona. As that marriage ended, she returned home to Maine and spent the majority of her life in her adopted state.
She spent her life raising her children and devoting herself to activities pur-sued by her family. It was through her children’s activities that she met Joseph Pluto, a naval officer. They were mar-ried May 7, 1977 and traveled with the Navy to Bermuda, the Azores and the Philippines.
She enjoyed all manner of sewing and was skilled enough to make her own wedding dress. A true outdoorswoman, she enjoyed fishing and was skilled at archery and riflery. She served for years as a dance and figure judge for the U.S. Figure Skating Association and later in her life turned her attention to civic du-ties such as being an election clerk and acting as a member of the Mayflower Society.
She is survived by her husband of 34 years, Joseph, and their daughter Laurie
Pluto of Hebron and her partner Jason Strong and his children Joanna, Jordan, and Spencer. She also leaves behind her two sons, Jim Gameros of Gray and his partner Karen Hall, and Bill Gameros of Dallas, Texas, and his wife Kathryn and their children Zoe, Isabel, and Nina.
A celebration of Pluto’s life will be held on Nov. 12 at 10 a.m. at Stetson’s Funeral Home, 12 federal St., Brunswick, ME. Burial will take place at 1 p.m. at Oak Grove Cemetery, Bath.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to any of the following: Maine State Music Theater, 22 Elm St., Brunswick, ME 04011; Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, 1500 Rosecrans Ave., Suite 200, Manhattan Beach, CA 90266; or the Patrick Dempsey Center for Cancer Hope & Healing, 10 High St., Suite 301, Lewiston, ME 04240.
Memorial condolences may be ex-pressed and a video tribute viewed at stetsonsfuneralhome.com.
Bath councilfrom page 1
Comment on this story at:http://www.theforecaster.net/weblink/105120
code compliance and safety. Work be-yond this can be designed, priced and completed based on the actual future use of the space.”
Norton also said spending $308,000 would allow the skatepark “to function as efficiently as, and probably more ef-ficiently than, in its current location.”
The council last month authorized the Parks and Recreation Department to move the existing assets of the Bath Youth Meetinghouse and skatepark to the Old Brunswick Road armory for stor-age, until a use for the building has been determined.
Besides being a possible new home for the skatepark, another proposed use for the armory – purchased by the city last year with $175,000 of borrowed funds – is to have it house the local Box 19 Club’s antique fire trucks. Parks and Recreation Director Steve Balboni, whose department maintains the old Y, said he thinks the facility could accom-modate both uses.
With interest included over a 10-year loan, the estimated cost of the $308,000 bond is between $35,000 and $40,000 a year. Balboni said the skatepark board is willing to give up its $40,000 annual subsidy from the city so that the cost of the borrowing would not fall on taxpay-ers. He said he is confident in the board’s ability to make up the funds through fundraising.
Balboni said he expects the skatepark’s revenue and use to increase if it moves to the armory, since that building is closer to Bath Middle School, which many of the
skatepark’s young patrons attend.Claire Berkowitz, chairwoman of the
skatepark board, called $308,000 an in-vestment in the future of the community’s children.
“I’m concerned that we’re going to walk away from these kids, and that breaks my heart,” she said.
Brackett said 11 people had contacted him about the issue, all of whom said the bond question for the armory renovation should go to the voters, and not be de-cided by the council.
He said after the meeting that he does support the skatepark, and that “if I had to vote tomorrow, in the voting booth, I personally would vote to (bond the money).”
But he said he has “heard loud and clear, clearer than I’ve heard in the one year I’ve been on the council, that people want to speak on this matter. That’s why I voted as I did.”
Rogers requested tabling the skate-park’s move to the armory until after the Dec. 7 second vote on the armory bond.
“I just feel that there’s no reason to have this order put in place if we don’t have the funding,” he said.
Councilors James Omo, Sean Paulhus, Mari Eosco and Andrew Winglass op-posed the motion to table, while Coun-cilors David Sinclair, Rogers, Brackett and Pagurko favored it. With the council split 4-4, Chairman Bernard Wyman cast the deciding vote in favor of tabling the matter.
Alex Lear can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 113 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @learics.
17November 4, 2011
Editor’s noteIf you have a story idea, a score/cancellation to report, feedback, or any other sports-related information, feel free to e-mail us at [email protected]
A few fall teams still aliveWith just soccer and football
still remaining on the fall sports docket, a handful of Mid-Coast teams are still kicking. Here’s a glimpse at the week that was:
Cross countryBrunswick and Mt. Ararat
took part in the Class A state cross country meet Saturday at Twin Brook Recreation Center in Cumberland.
The Eagles girls’ tallied 92 points to finish second behind three-time champion Cheverus (41). Mt. Ararat was led by sophomore Kelly Lynch, who completed the 5,000-meter course in 20 minutes, 37.53 seconds, good for seventh place. Also scoring for the Ea-gles were senior Emma Wood (14th, 21:04.44), freshman Olivia Swan (22nd, 21:41.53), junior Lauren McNett (23rd, 21:44.20) and junior Brennie Radulski (26th, 21:53.81).
The Dragons had 112 points and came in fourth. Leading the way was sophomore Teresa Murphy (sixth, 20:34.95). Also scoring were junior Madsy Schneider (20th, 21:23.24), se-nior Kathleen McMahon (21st, 21:33.71), freshman Brooke Es-coe (29th, 22:05.09) and senior Jasmine Boyle (36th, 22:14.28).
In the boys’ meet, won by Scarborough with 85 points, Mt. Ararat placed fourth with 140. Senior Andy Reifman-Packett led the way by coming in fifth (17:16.83). Also scor-ing were sophomore Nathan Mackenzie (12th, 17:46.59), sophomore Sam Wood (26th, 18:07.35), sophomore Jake De-mosthenes (40th, 18:31.52) and junior Zach O’Connor (57th, 18:56.00).
Brunswick had 217 points and was ninth. Senior Benson Worthington wound up fourth with a time of 16:58.94. Also scoring were sophomore Ja-mie Ross (14th, 17:53.39), senior Jacob Schwab (55th, 18:49.12), sophomore Dono-van Shea (63rd, 19:04.77) and sophomore Alex Nichols (81st, 19:38.48).
RogeR S. Duncan / FoR The FoRecaSTeRBrunswick sophomore Ryan
Maciejewski turns the corner and heads for a big gain during the
Dragons’ 51-0 win at Mt. Ararat in the regular season finale Saturday.
John JenSenIuS / FoR The FoRecaSTeRBrunswick senior Benson
Worthington sprints toward a fourth-place finish in the Class A boys’
cross country state meet Saturday afternoon. The Dragons finished
ninth as a team.
RogeR S. Duncan / FoR The FoRecaSTeRMt. Ararat sophomore Kelly Lynch holds off Massabesic’s Gabrielle
Johnson to finish seventh in the Class A girls’ race. The Eagles finished runner-up to three-time champion Cheverus.
Bowdoin field hockey advances
BRIan BeaRD / FoR The FoRecaSTeRBowdoin senior Liz Clegg possesses the ball during the Polar Bears’ 2-0 home win over Hamilton in last Saturday’s
NESCAC quarterfinal. Bowdoin advanced to host Trinity in the semifinals Saturday at 11 a.m. If the Polar Bears win that game, they’ll host either Amherst or Middlebury Sunday at 12 p.m., in the championship contest.
Taylor tip-off upcoming
The third annual Taylor tip-off basketball tournament will be held Sunday at Falmouth High School and Middle School’s gyms. The tournament is a fund-
raiser for the Taylor Memorial Fund which supports children across the state of Maine who have lost parents to domestic violence. The entry fee is based on donation with the target mini-mum of $200 per team. FMI, taylortipoff.org.
FootballMorse football’s playoff run
came to a quick end last week-end. The Shipbuilders, ranked eighth in Eastern B, were humbled by top-ranked Leavitt, the two-time defending regional champion, 61-12. Morse fin-ished its season at 4-5.
The Eastern A regular season came to a close Saturday when Brunswick went to Mt. Ararat and prevailed, 51-0.
The Eagles finished 0-9.The Dragons, meanwhile,
completed their regular season at 7-2 and wound up third in the final Crabtree Points standings. As a result, Brunswick will go to No. 2 Bangor (7-2) for the semifinals Friday at 7 p.m. In the opener, way back on Sept. 2, the Dragons dominated the Rams statistically, but turned the ball over six times and lost, 21-20.
Boys’ soccerThe boys’ soccer season
concluded for local teams last week.
In Eastern A, Brunswick took its fifth seed to No. 4 Hampden Academy for the quarterfinals and suffered a tough 1-0 loss to the Broncos to finish the year 7-4-4.
Mt. Ararat, ranked third, hosted No. 6 Messalonskee in the quarterfinals, but was upset, 1-0, to finish the year 8-2-5.
In Western B, fifth-ranked Morse had to go to No. 4 Ma-ranacook for the quarterfinals and suffered a 2-1 loss to finish 8-6-1. Cody Snyder scored for the Shipbuilders.
“It was playoff soccer, a great crowd, good play and chances
both ways,” said Morse coach Tom Rackmales. “We had our chances over the last half hour and even in the final couple of minutes, but didn’t find the net. We had a wonderful crowd come up to support us and we’re grateful. The boys played their hearts out.”
Girls’ soccerOn the girls’ side, two local
squads reached Wednesday’s regional final round (played too late for this edition)
In Western B, top-ranked Morse continued its dream season by eliminating No. 9
Lake Region (4-0) and No. 5 Maranacook (3-1) to improve to 16-0. Christina Stuart had two goals against the Black Bears while Bess Howell also scored. The Shipbuilders hosted defending state champion and No. 3 seed Falmouth (11-4-1) in the regional final. It was the first ever meeting between the schools. If Morse advanced, it would face either Presque Isle (14-1-1) or Hermon (13-2-1) in the Class B state final Saturday at a time to be announced at Hampden Academy.
In Eastern A, Brunswick, the No. 2 seed, had no problem with No. 7 Hampden Academy (6-1) or No. 3 Oxford Hills (5-0) to advance to a regional final showdown at top-ranked, undefeated, defending regional champion Bangor. The Drag-ons lost at home to the Rams, 5-1, on Sept. 24. If Brunswick could spring the upset, it would face either Gorham (16-0) or Scarborough (13-1-2) in Saturday’s Class A state final, at a time to be announced at Falmouth High School.
Mt. Ararat, the fifth seed, had its season end at 9-5-1 after a 1-0 quarterfinal round loss at No. 4 Waterville.
Roundup
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Tilson Technology Management recently hired Tom Kinney as a principal consultant and Cameron Kilton as a senior consul-tant. Both are also members of the firm’s wireless and telecommunications group.
IBec Creative of Portland hired Seth Storey as the company’s web advisor. He will be responsible for growing iBec’s cli-ent base, providing sales and development plans for the company, and working with current clients to develop creative options to fit their needs.
Lindsay Harris of Scarborough recently joined Gorham Savings Bank as the as-sistant vice president and portfolio loan officer. She has been working for the bank since 1996.
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New Hires
Highliner Events, a South Portland-based event management company, has made the following new hires: Imogene Altznauer has been hired as a partner, overseeing event operations for the company; Jay Perrotta was hired as the sales director for commercial marine events; Karen Thomas is the new sales director for the seafood and technology sector events; and Kristi Braun joined the company as an event coordinator.
Mercy Health System of Maine recently hired Dr. Bianca Monteiro as a new phy-
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sician for its pulmonary practice located at Mercy Hospital on State Street. She will assist Mercy’s pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine department in the diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary lung disease and sleep disorders.
Willaim T. Olsen Jr. was hired as senior relationship manager and team leader in commercial lending at TD Bank in Portland. He will be responsible for managing a commercial lending team and developing commercial banking relationships with business clients throughout Southern Maine.
United way of Greater Portland recently promoted Kerry Smith of Portland to senior associate, resource generation. Ad-ditionally, Alison Hickey of Cape Elizabeth was hired as vice president, resource gen-
eration and Ainsley Wal-lace of Portland was hired as director of major gifts and planned giving.
Dr. Jodee Mosher recently joined South-ern Maine Geriatrics of Freeport. Mosher com-pleted medical school at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, Neb., and com-pleted her residency at the University of Vermont/Fletcher Allen Health Care Inter-nal Medicine Residency.
GEI Consultants Inc. has hired Sarah Christian as a hydrologist at the Port-land office. She will focus on providing
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The Maine National Guard has made the following promotions: Cory Major of Brunswick and Steven Dee Jr. of New Gloucester were promoted to sergeant; Keith Laroche of Portland was promoted to specialist.; Kane Lapid Isiah of Port-land, Theodore Phadungthin of Portland, Lisa Bryant of Scarborough, Adam Stod-dard of Scarborough, and Christopher Wayland of Portland were all promoted to private first class; and, Brandon Briggs of Freeport and Grace Miller of Portland were promoted to private.
Susan Danly was promoted to senior curator at The Portland Museum of Art. She was hired by the museum in 2002 as curator of graphics, photography, and contemporary art.
Keith J. Bourgeois of Portland is now the director of operations for Amedisys Home Health Care. His experience ranges from the critical care arena, specifically hemodynamic monitoring, to all aspects of comprehensive skilled health care.
Appointments
The Kiwanis Club of Portland hired Eliz-abeth Richards of Westbrook as its new president. Angie Dougherty was appointed vice president and David Bouffard was ap-pointed secretary/treasurer. The following members will serve as the Club’s directors: Jason Briggs, Pete Brown, Phil Haskell, Nelson Haynes, and Beth Tatro. Angela Wright of Auburn and Mary Fasulo of Portland were inducted as new members.
At the annual meeting of the Maine As-sociation of School Libraries, a new slate of officers was appointed for a two-year term: Eileen Broderick of Bethel was appointed president; Joyce Lucas of Smithfield is vice-president; and Dorothy Hall-Riddle continues as treasurer. Tina Taggart of Foxcroft Academy is the new secretary.
Good Deeds
Bangor Savings Bank Foundation re-cently donated $2,500 to The Cancer Com-munity Center in South Portland. The gift will enable The Cancer Community Center to promote and support the well-being of all adults impacted by cancer through high-quality, free programming.
Golf & Ski Warehouse of Scarborough
recently donated a percentage of the rev-enue generated at its Scarborough store during the Columbus Day Weekend Sale to Maine Handicapped Skiing, a year-round adaptive recreational program that teaches adaptive sports activities to people with physical disabilities. The donation totaled $1,313.82.
Portland Pie Company recently do-nated more than $6,000 to Maine Handi-capped Skiing. The company raised $6,000 through its third annual Ryan Fitzpatrick Memorial Golf Tournament at the Woodlands Club. They also donated $700 of proceeds from a recent Portland Pie Cares Night at the company’s three Maine locations in Portland, Scarborough and Westbrook.
Staff members at Vreeland Marketing & Design in Yarmouth have planted 300 pink tulips in support of the Maine Cancer Foundation’s Pink Tulip Project. The pink-on-pink Cancer Victory Garden on Forest Falls Dr. was planted to raise funds for the Foundation in its fight against breast cancer and other cancers affecting women.
Time Warner Cable recently made a $10,000 contribution to the Gulf of Maine Research Institute to support the participation of Kennebec County students in GMRI’s Lab Venture! science program.
Awards
Three charter members of the Scarborough Police Volunteers in Police Services (VIPS) program received the Silver Award for their service from June 30, 2010 to July 1, 2011. Jane Thurlow logged 470 hours, Ralph Masciovecchio logged 359 hours and Ed Libby volun-teered 274. The VIPS assist the police department by performing administrative duties at the police department, assisting with traffic direction at special events, providing volunteer public safety/crime prevention patrols and assisting with parking control.
Garrand, a marketing and communi-cations firm in Portland, recently received a Gold and Silver Award at the Golden Arrow Awards ceremony at the Maine Public Relations Council annual confer-ence. The award honors excellence and provides a forum for exhibiting exem-plary work, promoting public recognition of high quality communications, and gaining corporate recognition for public relations.
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Arts CalendarAll ongoing calendar listings can now be found online at theforecaster.net.Send your calendar listing by e-mail to [email protected], by fax to 781-2060 or by mail to 5 Fundy Road, Falmouth, ME 04105.
November 4, 201120 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
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Mid CoastAuditionsMonday 11/7”A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” auditions for adult actors (over 18), 6-9 p.m., to schedule call 729-8584, prepare a two minute monologue, The Theater Project, 14 School St., Brunswick.
FilmsWednesday 11/9”The Far North,” a Donald Millan lec-ture film, 7 p.m., Kresge Auditorium, Bowdoin College, free, FMI 725-3062.
Friday 11/11Robert Freson film presentation, 1:30 p.m., Thornton Oaks Retire-ment Community, 25 Thornton Way, Brunswick, FMI 729-8033.
MusicSaturday 11/5The Bob Band, 7:30 p.m., Frontier Cafe, 14 Main St., Brunswick, tickets $8 advance, $10 door, FMI 725-5222.
Sunday 11/6Oratorio Chorale Open rehearsal, 6-9 p.m., Mid Coast Presbyterian Church, Topsham, Rachael Bair-stow, 329-5708.
Thursday 11/10The Novel Jazz Septet, 7 p.m., Sikompha Library, Main St., Dam-ariscotta, tickets $12 adults/$10 seniors/$5 ages 12-18, FMI 563-5513.
Monday 11/14Listener’s Guide to Chamber Mu-sic, 7 p.m., Curtis Memorial Library, 23 Pleasant St., Brunswick, larkso-ciety.org, 761-1522.
Monday 11/21Listener’s Guide to Chamber Mu-sic, 7 p.m., Curtis Memorial Library, 23 Pleasant St., Brunswick, larkso-ciety.org, 761-1522.
Theater/DanceFriday 11/11Dinner theater comes to Harpswell, 6 p.m., Grange Hall, Route 123, Harpswell, tickets $15 advance, FMI 725-2438.
Greater PortlandCalls for ArtDurham Community School PTA, seeking crafters, business owners for a fair on Nov. 19 at the Durham Community School Gymnasium, 654 Hallowell Road, $20 for 8-foot table, proceeds support field trip funding, FMI, Nancy Decker, [email protected], 751-1323 or Laurel Gervais, [email protected].
Books & AuthorsWednesday 11/9”Dispelling the Myth:” How America can achieve high-quality, lower cost health care, 7 a.m., Holi-
day Inn By the Bay, 88 Spring St., Portland, $17 members/$27 non-members, register by Nov. 4, FMI 772-2811.
”L.L. Bean: The man & his compa-ny” author Jim Witherell to speak, 12 p.m., Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Square, Portland, FMI 871-1700.
Saturday 11/12John McDonald 20th Anniver-sary radio broadcast and book signing, 8-11 a.m., Nonesuch Books and Cards, Millcreek Shop-ping Center, 50 Market St., South portland, 799-2659, nonesuch-books.com
Film”Conversations with Edd Bon-ney,” now available for sale at Freeport Public Library, 10 Liberty Dr., Freeport, freeportpub-liclibrary.com.
Wednesday 11/2”Play Again,” 7 p.m., Congrega-
tional Church of Cumberland, 282 Main St., Cumberland. Free. FMI 699-2989.
Thursday 11/3Get the scoop on acid rain in Casco Bay, short film and talk by Mike Doan, 7 p.m., Foreside Com-munity Church. Free. FMI 781-5880.
Saturday 11/5Wild and Scenic Film Festival, 4 p.m., tickets $15 + service fee in advance and $20 door. FMI cas-cobay.org.
GalleriesFriday 11/4Addicted to Love, opening 5-8 p.m., exhibit runs through Nov. 31, The Green Hand Bookshop, 661 Congress St., Portland, FMI Michelle Souliere 450-6695
”Arboretum,” 5-8 p.m., Wayneflete School Main Gallery, 380 Spring St., Portland, FMI 774-5721 ext. 201.
Aria Tuki Exhibition Opening,
CITY OF BATHHOURS OF VOTER REGISTRATION
The Registrar of Voters for the City of Bath is openfrom 8:30am - 4:30pm Monday through Friday and
Saturday, October 29, 2011 from 11:00am to 2:00pm.The Registrar will process new registrations, changeof addresses, change of name and changes in political
parties. The office of Registrar of Voters is located inthe City Clerk’s Office on the first floor of City Hall,
55 Front Street. Voters can also register at the polls onElection Day 8:00am to 8:00pm. Be sure to bring proof
of residence and a photo ID for registration processing.Questions can be directed to 443-8332 or 443-8333.
Arts & Entertainment Calendar
from previous page
21November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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Bango to show at Museum of African Culture
“Wire Tree” is one of the works on display by Clyde Bango at the Museum of African Culture’s Contemporary Gallery, 13 Brown St., Portland. An opening reception for Bango
will take place on Nov. 4 at 5:30 p.m. For more information, call Oscar at 871-7188.
Contributed
5-8 p.m., Lifeworks Chiropractic Center, Falmouth.
”At Work and Play,” opening 5-8 p.m., Addison Woolley Gallery, 132 Washington Ave. Show runs through Nov. 26. FMI 415-4279
”Blue Butterfield,” opening 5-8 p.m., runs through Nov. 28, The Gallery at Harmons & Bartons, 584 Congress St., Portland, FMI 774-5948 or harmonsbartons.com.
”Darfur at Our Doorstep,” open-ing 5-8 p.m., runs through Nov. 30, Meg Perry Center, 644 Congress St., Portland, FMI 772-0680.
”Davidson and Daughters Revis-ited,” opening 5-8 p.m., closes Dec. 2 reception 5-8 p.m., 3 Fish Gallery. FMI 772-6467.
”Perspective,” Nov. 4-27, Richard Boyd Art Gallery, Peaks Island, FMI 712-1097.
”Piece by Piece: My journey through mosaics,” opening 5-8 p.m., runs through Nov. 27, Heron Point Gallery, 63 Market St., Port-land. FMI 773-0822.
SMCC Senior Art Exhibition, 5-8 p.m., Eastland Hotel, on exhibit through Nov. 18.
Smash Knock ‘Em Dead & Run-ning With Scissors group show, open by appointment Nov. 4-25. Contact Kate Anker, Robert Nason or Julian Moran, 831-5682.
”Save Them,” 5-7 p.m. Mayo St. Arts.
Sunday 11/6”About Face,” photography of
James Allen Walker, Merrill Memo-rial Library Gallery, 215 Main St., Yarmouth, FMI 846-0697.
Friday 11/18 “The Black Power Mixtape,” doors 7 p.m., film 7:30 p.m., SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St., Portland, FMI 828-5600.
MusicFriday 11/4Free music at Bayside Bowl, Jon Nolan & the Working Girls, the Molens, Splendora Colt, 8:30 p.m., Bayside Bowl, Portland.
Further featuring Bob Weir & Phil Lesh, doors open 5:30 p.m., Cumberland County Civic Cen-ter, tickets $40, ticketmaster.com, 1-800-745-3000 or at the box office.
Matt Wallace Benefit Show, 9 p.m., The Big Easy, 21+, $10 sug-gested donation at door. Proceeds go to Matt Walla benefit fund.
Sunday 11/6 Shape Note Singing, 1-4 p.m. The New Church, 302 Stevents Ave., Portland.
Wednesday 11/9The Michael Williams Band, doors 6:30 p.m., show 7:30 p.m., The State Theater, 609 Congress St., Portland, tickets $45-55 avail-able through ticketmaster.com, FMI 956-6000.
Thursday 11/10Presumpscot River Bottom Boys, 2 p.m., Scarborough Terrace, 600 Commercial Dr., Scarborough, lim-
ited seating, reservations required, FMI 885-5568.
Royal River Philharmonic Jazz Band, 12:15 p.m., First Parish Uni-tarian Universalist Church, 425 Congress St., Portland, free, FMI 775-3356.
Friday 11/11Occidental Gypsy, 8 p.m., Mayo St. Arts, 10 Mayo St., Portland, tickets $10, FMI 615-3609.
Sunday 11/13Rossini Club Concert, 1-3 p.m., Cathedral of St. Luke, 143 State St., Portland, FMI 772-5434.
Theater & Dance”August: Osage County,” Nov. 2-20, Wed./Thu. 7 p.m. $20, Fri. ($25)/Sat. ($30) 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $30, St. Lawrence Arts, reser-vations and info 885-5883.
”Fieldwork:” Dance and Storytell-ing with Lida Winfield & Ellen Smith Ahern, Workshop Nov. 3-4, 8 p.m., performance Nov. 4-5, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., tickets $12 performance, $40 workshop, Lucid Stage, FMI 899-3993.
”A Fate Worse Than Death:” or Adrift of Life’s Sea! Nov. 3-5, Cape Elizabeth Middle School, Nov. 3, 2:30 p.m.; Nov. 4, 7 p.m., Nov. 5, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m., admission $3 students, $5 adults, FMI 799-8176.
”The Boyfriend,” Nov 3-5, 7 p.m, additonal 1 p.m. show on Nov. 5, Scarborough High School Audito-rium, 259 Route 1, Scarborough, $9 adults/$6 seniors and students, FMI 937-2081.
OpenHouseat
Husson University
1 College Circle • Bangor, ME 04401 • 800-4HUSSON • www.husson.edu
We invite you to visit the Husson University campus during ourFall Open House. Learn about our new facilities, exciting aca-demicprogramsandenriching student activities. Meet currentstudents, faculty and staff. Experience firsthand a dynamic,student-centered campus!
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 20119:00 A.M. - Registration - Newman Gymnasium9:30 A.M. - Open House Welcome10:00 A.M. - Faculty and Admissions Presentations,
to 12:30 P.M. Tours, Student Organizations, and Coaches
To pre-register, go towww.husson.edu/openhouse orcall 207-941-7100.
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Portland Ovations presents ‘101 Years of Broadway’By Scott Andrews
Musical theater has been a fixture of the New York scene since the middle of the 1800s, but the past century has represent-ed a golden age. That’s the central concept of Neil Berg’s historical revue,“101 Years of Broadway.” It’s a touring show, and it motors into Merrill Auditorium on Friday thanks to Portland Ovations.
Opera is another, much older form of musical theater. Excerpts and highlights from a number of shows will be presented on Friday when the University of South-ern Maine’s Spotlight Series features a husband-wife duo of opera singers in a revue titled “Cornucopia of Songs and Arias” on the Gorham campus.
Jorma Kaukonen was a founding mem-ber of Jefferson Airplane, the seminal San Francisco psychedelic rock en-semble of the 1960s. The Airplane’s been grounded for decades, but Kaukonen still flies around the world singing and play-ing guitar. He flies into Portland’s One Longfellow Square on Saturday.
‘101 Years of Broadway’Neil Berg is a pianist, composer,
lyricist, accompanist, music director and producer who has been active on the New York theatrical scene for three-plus decades. For the past few years he’s been combining these many talents in a revue that’s titled “100 Years of Broadway.” It’s been traveling around the country and it’s been so extraordinarily successful – including a 2010 stop in Portland – that Berg has produced a sequel: “101 Years of Broadway.”
That show visits the Port City on Friday, under the auspices of Portland Ovations.
The formula is simple. A team of five singers – each having starred in at least one Broadway show – performs a retro-spective revue of great songs and scenes from the past century, which represents a sort of golden age of American musi-cal theater. Berg himself will play piano, plus there’s a small orchestra to back up the singers.
ContributedA cast of five will sing favorite show tunes from the past century in Neil Berg’s “101 Years of
Broadway,” which plays Merrill Auditorium in Portland on Friday night under the auspices of
Portland Ovations.
The show also represents a microcosm of American culture. “The American musical is like the Frankenstein monster of musical art form,” Berg said. “Pieces have been liberally borrowed from opera, vaudeville, operetta, jazz, blues, pop mu-sic, rock ‘n’ roll, etc. This variety matches the ‘melting pot’ of immigrant cultures which makes up America. All these styles are represented are inherent to the ‘Broad-way’ sound.’”
American musical theater has evolved through a number of different eras, and “101 Years of Broadway” begins during the heyday of George M. Cohan, who was the leading impresario of the early 1900s. It continues through the dazzling era dominated by Florenz Ziegfeld’s an-nual “Follies” revues, and continues into the era dominated by the integrated book shows pioneered by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. It concludes with the present day, including a number of mega-hits that originated in Europe.
Portland Ovations presents “101 Years of Broadway” at 8 p.m. Nov. 4 at Merrill Auditorium at Portland City Hall. Call PortTix at 842-0800.
‘A Cornucopia of Songs and Arias’
Voice students at the University of Southern Maine School of Music have long benefited from the expertise of two senior teachers who have vast experience on the global opera scene. Remarkably, the pair are also celebrating their 36th wedding anniversary this fall.
Students and the public are invited to hear them this Friday as Malcolm Smith and Margaret Yauger present highlights from their operatic careers in “A Cornuco-pia of Songs and Arias,” part of the school of music’s Spotlight Series, which features faculty artists.
Smith and Yauger don’t intend to merely showcase their own considerable talents, but to turn the evening into a learning experience.
Yauger and Smith selected the collec-
tion of masterworks to demonstrate the variety and flexibility American singers need. “We’re trying to bring a little bit of our experience – everywhere we’ve sung and what we’ve done,” Smith said. “We didn’t want to specialize in something but to show the young artists that are going to be singers and teachers that they have to have this flexibility.”
The two also want to emphasize to their students that having performed a piece successfully doesn’t mean you’re done learning about it. Yauger is returning to the Gustav Mahler work that she sang in her own senior recital. “I later sang it with symphony orchestras, and now with this recital, which underscores the principal of varying and reworking a piece that I never finish,” Yauger said.
And Smith is singing the duet from “La Gioconda” that he performed in his Metropolitan Opera premiere. “After I premiered ‘La Gioconda’ at the Met, Margaret and I both sang the opera in Fort Worth, Texas. You never finish some-thing; you always go back and rework the songs,” Smith said.
One of America’s leading basses, Smith has appeared with the world’s major operatic and symphonic organizations.
He has performed with such renowned companies as the Metropolitan Opera, La Scala, Deutsche Oper Berlin, Ham-burg Opera, Munich Opera, Vienna State Opera and the Paris Opera Bastille. He has been heard in concert repertoire with such leading orchestras as the Chicago Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Vienna Philharmonic, the Baltimore, Montreal and National symphonies.
Yauger was the leading mezzo-soprano of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein (Duessel-dorf-Duisburg, Germany) for more than 10 years where she performed in more than 21 productions. In her operatic career she has performed more than 50 roles.
Both have sung with the Portland Sym-phony Orchestra and performed roles with PORTopera.
Catch the Cornucopia at 8 p.m. Nov. 4 at Corthell Hall on the Gorham campus of the University of Southern Maine. Call the music box office at 780-5555.
Jorma KaukonenGuitarist-singer-songwriter Jorma
Kaukonen is still enjoying a career that began more than half a century ago when he started playing clubs and music rooms in San Francisco during the early 1960s. (Among his early efforts was accompany-ing the young Janis Joplin in her pre-Big Brother days.)
Kaukonen skyrocketed to fame as a founding member of Jefferson Airplane, the seminal San Francisco psychedelic rock band. Around 1970 he also co-found-ed another group that still plays together, at least occasionally: Hot Tuna.
As a guitarist, Kaukonen pioneered the finger style that helped define Jefferson Airplane’s distinctive sound, and he’s been rated by Rolling Stone as the 54th greatest rock guitarist of all time and the 14th great-est acoustic guitarist. Plus he’s a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Catch Jorma Kaukonen at 8 p.m. Nov. 5 at One Longfellow Square (corner of Congress and State streets) in Portland. Call 761-1757.
Community CalendarAll ongoing calendar listings can now be found online at theforecaster.net.Send your calendar listing by e-mail to [email protected], by fax to 781-2060 or by mail to 5 Fundy Road, Falmouth, ME 04105.
Meetings
23November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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BrunswickMon. 11/7 1 p.m. Staff Review Hawthorne SchoolMon. 11/7 7 p.m. Town Council BSTue. 11/8 4 p.m. Police Station Building Committee BSTue. 11/8 4:30 p.m. Teen Center Advisory People PlusWed. 11/9 5 p.m. Conservation Commission BSWed. 11/9 7 p.m. School Board BSThu. 11/10 7 p.m. Cable TV Committee BS
HarpswellMon. 11/7 4 p.m. Energy Committee THMon. 11/7 5:30 p.m. Mitchell Field and Affordable Housing Workshop with Board of Selectmen THTue. 11/8 8 a.m. Voting (polls open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.) THWed. 11/9 3:30 p.m. Budget Advisory Committee THWed. 11/9 6:30 p.m. Selectmen Meeting w/Harpswell Businesses THThu. 11/10 6 p.m. Selectmen’s Meeting TH
BathMon. 11/7 7 p.m. Zoning Board of Appeals CHThu. 11/10 4:30 p.m. Community Development Committee CH
TopshamMon. 11/7 7 p.m. Board of Appeals MBTue. 11/8 6 p.m. Energy Efficiency Workshop MBTue. 11/8 6:30 p.m. Conservation Commission MBWed. 11/9 7:30 a.m. Topsham Development Inc. MBWed. 11/9 3:30 p.m. Tree Committee MBWed. 11/9 6 p.m. Historic District Commission MBThu. 11/10 2:30 p.m. History Committee MBThu. 11/10 6:30 p.m. Comp Plan Implementation Committee MB
BenefitsFriday 11/4Benefit Book signing by Dahlov Ipcar proceeds benefit Mid Coast Hospital Auxiliary, 10 a.m.-12 p.m, Midcoast Hospital Cafe Corridor, 123 Medical Center Dr., Brunswick, FMI 373-6015.
Saturday 11/5Auction to benefit St. John’s Catholic School, 5 p.m., Knights of Columbus Hall, Brunswick, FMI 725-5507.
Saturday 11/12Opus One Big Band Performance, to benefit Brunswick High School, 6 p.m., 116 Maquoit Road, Bruns-wick, $10 adults/$5 students, FMI Mary 798-2064
Christmas Fair, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Mid Coast Presbyterian Church, 84 Main St., Topsham, FMI 729-3193.
Saturday 11/19Thanks for Giving Gala Charity Event, 6-10 p.m., Inn at Brunswick Sta-tion. Proceeds benefit the Dean Snell Cancer Foundation. FMI 789-5891.
Bulletin BoardFriday 11/4Maine Association of Payroll Professionals Seminar, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m., Augusta Civic Center, to register or FMI 626-2405.
Saturday 11/5Bells of St. Mary Christmas Fair, 8 a.m.-2 p.m, St. Mary’s Church Hall, 114 Lincoln St., Bath, FMI Pauline 443-6170.
Christmas Fair, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Eli-jah Kellog Church, 917 Harpswell Neck Road, Harpswell, FMI Gladys Wright 729-5702 or Carrie Bubbier 729-6267.
Sunday 11/6Interfaith Memorial Service, 2 p.m., Bath United Church of Christ Congregational Sanctuary, 150 Congress Ave., Bath, 721-1357.
Tuesday 11/8Fishing Regulations, public hear-ing, 6:30 p.m., Brunswick High School, 116 Maquoit Road.
Wednesday 11/9Bath-Tsugaru Japan Exchange Program, public meeting, 6-8 p.m., Winter St. Church, 880 Washington St., Bath, 443-8330.
Personal Finance & Investing: Doing your own research, 5:30 p.m., Curtis Memorial Library, 23 Pleasant St., Brunswick, FMI 725-5242 ext. 216.
Friday 11/11Art and Book Sale, Nov. 11, 12-3 p.m and Nov. 12, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Maine Maritime Museum’s Long Reach Hall, Bath, FMI mainemari-timemuseum.org or 443-1316.
Saturday 11/12Curtis Kids book sale, 9:30 a.m. - 12 p.m., Morrell Meeting Room, Curtis Memorial Library, Brunswick, 725-5242, [email protected].
Sunday 11/13Bath Antiques Show, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Bath Middle School, $4 ad-mission. FMI 443-8983.
Tuesday 11/15Midcoast Retired Educators As-sociation Annual Meeting, 11 a.m., Maine Vocational Region 10 High School, Church Road, Brunswick. FMI 721-0659.
Wednesday 11/16eReader Information Session, 6 p.m., Patten Free Library, 33 Sum-mer St., Bath, FMI 443-5141 ext. 25.
Thursday 11/17Tedford Housing Annual Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Cram Alumni Building, Bowdoin College, suggested $20 donation, RSVP by Nov. 9, FMI 729-1661 ext. 101 or [email protected].
Saturday 11/19Brunswick Visitor Center Craft Fair, 8 a.m.-2 p.m., Brunswick. FMI 789-5891.
Early Bird Downtown Sale Day, 7-11 a.m., Downtown Brunswick. FMI 729-4439.
Call for DonationsChildren’s Books Needed for Curtis Kids book sale, Nov. 12, do-nate outgrown books, CDs, DVDs, audio books, puzzles, games, all proceeds to benefit Curtis Kids programs, Curtis Memorial Li-brary, Brunswick, FMI, 725-5242 or [email protected].
AniMeals is accepting dog and cat food donations for homebound se-niors that receive Meals on Wheels, to donate or volunteer, call Sarah, 729-0475.
Call for VolunteersMidcoast CA$H Coalition, seeks volunteers for free tax prep and financial asset coaching. Training, early Dec. and Jan. 2012. FMI Sha-ron Ross 373-1140, [email protected], visit cashmaine.org/locations/midcoast.
Dining OutFriday 11/4BOA Breakfast - Redesigning Brunswick for a better downtown, 7:15 a.m., Inn at Brunswick Station, $20, FMI or reservations 789-4439.
Saturday 11/12Baked Bean and Casserole sup-per, 5-6:30 p.m., Brunswick United Methodist Church, $8 adults, $4 kids. FMI 725-2185.
Baked Bean and Casserole sup-per, 4:45 p.m., Parish Hall of Holy
Trinity Church, 67 Frost Hill Ave., Lisbon Falls, $8 adults/$4 children, FMI 353-5636.
Saturday 11/19Turkey Supper, 4:30-6:30 p.m., adults $7.50, kids $3.50, Bath Unit-ed Methodist Church, 340 Oak Grove Road, Bath, FMI 443-4707.
Gardens and OutdoorsSaturday 11/5Waterfowl of Sabattus Pond, John Berry, meet at Hannaford, Brunswick, 8 a.m. to car pool, FMI, John Berry, 725-2051, Merrymeet-ing Audubon, maineaudubon.org/merrymeeting.
Winter Farmers Market, Open-
ing Day, 9 a.m., Topsham Grange Hall, 47 Pleasant St., Topsham, FMI 882-6374.
Wednesday 11/9Topsham Garden Club Meeting, 12 p.m., Topsham Public Library, 25 Foreside Road, Marie 729-1295.
Getting SmarterWednesday 11/9Unleashing Your Child’s Po-tential: Tools to Develop Inner Peace, Success and Happiness in Your Children, parenting series by Bambi Thompson, Occupational Therapist, workshop on how to
teach goal achievement strategies, 7-9:30 p.m., $40, or $68 for 10/19 and 11/9 workshops, Grace Episco-pal Church, 1100 Washington St., Bath, FMI, bambithompson.com/events.html
Health & SupportFriday 11/4Coming to Your Senses and See-ing Things as They Are, Nov. 4, 7-9 p.m.; Nov 5-6, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Shambhala Meditation Center, Brunswick, $140 a weekend, FMI Joy Kish to register 840-9859.
Wednesday 11/9Preparing for Impermanence,
7-9 p.m., Brunswick Shambhala Meditation Center, to register/FMI visit shambhalabp.org or 998-4809.
Just for SeniorsFriday 11/4Muscle Testing, 2 p.m., Spectrum Generations, 521 Main St., Damar-iscotta, $15, FMI 563-1363.
Tuesday 11/15AARP Driver Safety Program, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m., Coastal Com-munity Center, 521 Main St., Damariscotta, FMI Spectrum Gen-erations 563-1363.
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Energyfrom page 4
ing of selling coal, too, which he said is cleaner and more efficient than it used to be.
But Feenstra is also relying on a niche to carry his oil business: customers in the Low Income Energy Assistance Program and municipalities.
“We’re one of the few companies that will go out and do a 25-gallon or 50-gallon drop” without charging extra for the small amount of fuel being delivered, he said. Most other oil companies charge a fee for anything less than 100 gallons.
“We do a lot of general assistance to the towns,” he said. “We’re there for the people.”
Some other oil companies aren’t adding any new products. Instead, they’re trying to win customers the old-fashioned way: by under-cutting their competition.
Dale Brown, owner of Richmond-based Dale’s Cash Fuel, which delivers in the greater Portland area, said he has definitely noticed that his customers are switching to alternative fuels, and he doesn’t blame them. In fact, he heats his home with pro-
pane, he said, “because it’s cheaper.”But as the only employee of his company
– he answers the phone, drives the truck, pumps the oil and does the accounting – he’s not in a position to offer his customers anything else.
Instead, he thinks his one-man company works to his advantage by allowing him to sell oil more inexpensively than larger com-panies with more overhead. For example, Dale’s Cash Fuel was selling heating oil for $3.39 on Oct. 31, while Dead River Co., one of the largest in the region, charged $3.60 on Nov. 1.
“I can sell fuel cheaper than a lot of people because it’s just me and a truck,” Brown said.
But unlike Dead River, Brown doesn’t offer pre-payment plans, emergency deliv-ery, boiler service or lines of credit. He’s cash only, and delivers only if the drop is arranged in advance.
“I’m as small-scale as you can get be-cause I haven’t invested in a bulk plant and all these things,” he said. “That’s why I can sell my oil cheaper than anyone else.”
As a one-man operation, it may seem that
Cardsfrom page 6
There are cards to and from a patient, and to and from family members. There are also announcement cards that help a family member send word that the difficult decision has been made to put that patient into hospice.
The cards are available at Shirley’s Hallmark in Falmouth and Wilson’s Drug
Home-schoolersfrom page 1
Cell towerfrom page 1
Comment on this story at:http://www.theforecaster.net/weblink/105026
Comment on this story at:http://www.theforecaster.net/weblink/105094
and his wife, Laura, grow organic veg-etables and raise livestock, he prompted them to think about what they were doing.
The answer – distributing the manure adds nutrients to the soil – led to a discussion about soil formation and decomposition.
Experiences like these form the core of Grady’s farm science class, called “Na-ture’s Design on the Farm.” This is the first time Grady, a former high school sci-ence teacher, has offered the class, which integrates his family’s work on the farm with a science curriculum tailored to 8- to 13-year-olds.
His goal is that his students, who include his two daughters, gain a better understand-ing of where food comes from and the sci-ence behind growing what they eat, as well as learning about farming.
“Kids are not nearly connected enough to what happens on a farm,” he said.
Grady also wanted to make learning more physical and interactive.
application to build a 75-foot monopole tower at 14 Oak St., in Topsham’s Heights neighborhood, in June 2010. The company needed conditional approval for the tower
before undergoing site plan and transmis-sion tower reviews.
Mariner and T-Mobile, which would have been a carrier on the tower, sued the town in July 2010 to obtain the permits the Planning Board denied. The lawsuit sought an injunction and a conditional use permit, along with every other permit required for the tower to be built and operated.
T-Mobile withdrew from the case in September 2010. Topsham residents voted 2,358 to 1,933 two months later to ban new cell towers in the town’s Urban Residential Zone. The ban was retroactive to April 1, 2010.
Alex Lear can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 113 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @learics.
Although the class ends next week, Grady hopes to offer it again in the spring, and eventually to take his programming on the road to local schools.
“Part of it is bringing kids here and work-ing, but part of it is bringing a little taste of what we do into schools,” he said. “That’s a niche that needs filling.”
Emily Guerin can be reached at 781-3661 ext.123 or [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter:
@guerinemily.
Waterfrontfrom page 1
Comment on this story at:http://www.theforecaster.net/weblink/105036
partly on half an acre of town property and on waterfront land owned by the Fore River Co., which also owns the Bowdoin Mill.
Roedner said the constraints and oppor-tunities of the space – a total of about two acres – are being investigated.
One constraint is a 24-foot drop to the water.
“It’s not this gentle walk to the water, car-rying your boat with you; it’d be a process to get there,” Roedner said.
The Wright-Pierce engineering firm, the
Brown is vulnerable to the ups and downs of the price of heating oil, as well as any circumstances that could interfere with his ability to deliver oil.
But he’s not nearly as vulnerable as mid-sized oil companies with more staff, infrastructure and equipment, Py said.
“The one-, two-truck operators are the most flexible and have the lowest over-head,” Py said. “They may have some difficulties, but really it’s the mid-level companies that have a lot of overhead they have to carry.”
He pointed to last January’s sudden col-lapse of Brunswick-based Thibeault Energy as an example.
It’s still unclear what contributed to Thibeault’s demise, but owners of other oil companies speculated that Thibeault may have been struggling to pay off its new oil terminal, constructed in 2003, or incorrectly guessed the price of oil and been forced to buy it at a higher price than what was offered to customers in pre-paid contracts.
“If you’re a company and you’re guessing on what your commodity costs will be ... that’s a bad place to be,” Py said.
From oil to ‘energy’Perhaps the clearest indication of how
oil companies are adapting to the change in the market may be the way Maine Energy Marketers Association, a trade group for fuel companies, has rebranded itself.
Two years ago, the organization changed its name from Maine Oil Dealers Associa-tion, “to reflect the business practices of our existing membership, which included pro-viding other products besides oil,” Py said.
“While the branding was good, the reality was the members were not just doing that anymore,” he said.
Downeast Energy recently announced a new partnership with ReVision Energy, a solar panel manufacturer, which will help to further its identity as an energy company, not just an oil company.
“We’re not fighting the tide,” McCor-mack said. “... We need to find out what people will be buying for energy, and adapt and change.”
Emily Guerin can be reached at 781-3661 ext.123 or [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter:
@guerinemily.
lead consultant on the project, produced a draft waterfront access study report.
That report noted that as a result of the input-gathering process, there was general consensus in favor of hand-carry boat ac-cess, with some public gathering space or an area for a park. Improvements to pedes-trian and bicycle access and vehicular traf-fic flow throughout the Lower Village were also desired, as well as adequate parking for local businesses and park users.
The draft report recommends the town proceed with a preliminary design plan out-lining “the scale and location of park and waterfront improvements with the Village
Area that it feels will best meet the needs of the community.”
Its plans should consider the immediate and long-term goals for waterfront access in light of existing resources, the report states.
Those plans should also consider the need to acquire additional land or ease-ments if necessary, and show any possible private landowners a clear plan of Top-sham’s development goals “with the un-derstanding that it may be unlikely that the Town will be able to acquire a significant
portion of remaining undeveloped land in the Lower Village with waterfront access,” according to the report.
The document also notes that the scale of project construction costs and impact on environmentally regulated resources should be closely examined to come up with a real-istic schedule for implementing the project, and its funding needs.
A public meeting on the preliminary plan will be held Nov. 21, with a final plan expected in December.
Alex Lear can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 113 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @learics.
“The need to sit down and be quiet all day is brutal,” he said, especially for boys. Grady believes that education centered around doing activities is not only better for many students, but is more realistic than shuffling between classrooms inside a school building.
“What we want to provide our kids, more than anything else, is that knowledge and understanding of what life is like day to day,” he said. “School in general is not realistic in a lot of ways.”
Every Monday and Wednesday, a group of students from Harpswell and surrounding towns spend most of the day at Two Coves Farm learning how farm life works. They care for animals, make compost, and use tools, while also studying ecology, physics and chemistry.
The blurring of the lines between work, school and play is what makes the class so appealing to students and parents.
When asked if they enjoyed Grady’s class, the six students who attended on
Monday were quick to answer with a re-sounding yes.
“It feels like having fun, it doesn’t really feel like school,” said 13-year old Nick Comey, of Harpswell.
“We get to be outside a lot and we spend time with animals,” said Yvette Grady, 10, Joe Grady’s daughter.
Parent Elizabeth Davis, whose 10-year old daughter Rose participates in the class, is equally thrilled.
“This morning (Rose) was shoveling cow manure,” she said. “That’s fabulous. And she really gets what’s going on with cow manure and why it makes the soil rich when it goes into the earth.”
After feeding the turkeys during Mon-day’s class, the students walked back up the hill to the woodshop to learn about worms and the role they play in decomposition.
They assembled wooden boxes to hold worms and compost, and as they took turns hammering and holding the wood, Grady moved between the pairs, straightening bent nails and wiggling the pieces into place. Then they rooted through the compost for worms.
Store in Bath, and the Holmeses are hop-ing to expand. Two cards in their line of 24 designs have been acquired for worldwide publication.
One card, to someone’s dying loved one, is called “On the Other Side.” It reads, in part, “Do promise me this / as you go on your way— / That you’ll wait for me there / because I must stay. / When I come to be with you / on the other side / Just beyond
the wind / and beyond the tide / You’ll be there for me, / just like before / With love everlasting, / for you I adore.”
Another states simply, “It has been a joy to have you as my friend. / My thoughts and prayers / are with you every day.”
Log onto myhospicecards.com or call 653-9449 for more information.
Alex Lear can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 113 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter: @learics.
25November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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Inspectionsfrom page 5
asked at a recent legislative committee meeting how long it typically takes to inspect a dam.
“I don’t know the answer to that,” he said.
Even if it took two weeks to inspect a dam, that would mean 26 could be in-spected per year, very close to the bench-mark needed to keep up with the law.
In an email, McAleer, replied:“If all ( Fletcher) did was inspect dams,
then one might expect that more than six inspections could be completed in a year. (It should also be noted that Mr. Fletcher has completed external inspec-tions on approximately nine other dams and is scheduled to complete the internal inspections when water levels will allow him to gain entry.) I have provided a list of Mr. Fletcher’s responsibilities that de-tails the numerous duties his job entails. Mr. Fletcher must decide on a daily basis which of those numerous tasks are most important for him to do based on the pri-orities of the Agency.
“Given the fact that most of the State’s dams are in reasonably sound condition, spending time inspecting a healthy dam may not be as important as working with dam owners to ensure they have a work-able Emergency Action Plan. The real crux of the matter, however, is in having a clear understanding of what a thorough dam inspection entails ... .”
The list provided by McAleer includes 24 “Job Tasks,” from conducting hazard classification inspections to ensuring that
Emergency Action Plans are completed for the high and significant hazard dams.
Dams: safe or not?McAleer’s statement that most of the
state’s dams are in “reasonably sound condition,” however, is not in accord with previous statements by him and Fletcher.
In May, Fletcher said, “There are dams that are in poor condition. It’s very diffi-cult to predict if a dam’s going to breach. ... There are no dams that I can say are in an imminent stage of failure, but it’s a very difficult call to make.”
Two months ago, McAleer said, “It’s incumbent on you to inspect them and see what their condition is. You can’t assume that a dam that was built 100 years ago is as solid today as it was 100 years ago.”
MEMA records shows 25 of the 93 hazardous dams are 100 years old or more.
Uncompensated hoursMcAleer defended Fletcher’s work
habits: “Tony is a unique individual who could probably make a lot more money who is also dedicated to this program. It’s phenomenal the times of day I get emails from him. We basically have to chase him out of the office.”
In his email, McAleer added, “Unlike many State employees, the nature of Mr. Fletcher’s position does not afford him the luxury of a regular eight-hour-per-day schedule. Because of travel requirements and the frequent necessity to meet with dam owners at their convenience, Mr. Fletcher very frequently works early in the morning, late into the night and on weekends. ... Because of this requirement, we are flexible with exactly what hours he works in the office.”
For example, he said on Oct. 12, one of the days Fletcher coached the rugby team, he worked 8.5 hours, not the eight hours on his time sheet, because he began work at 7 a.m. in Newport.
“Generally speaking,” McAleer wrote, “on practice days (Fletcher) will arrive at work early and/or return to work after practice. Given the tremendous number of non-compensated hours he works on a regular basis, any concerns about him working a full 40-hour work week are simply baseless.”
“This past weekend he worked over seven hours on Sunday,” McAleer said, referring to Oct. 22-23 “All of those extra hours are uncompensated.”
State carMcAleer estimated that Fletcher has
used his state vehicle to drive to Colby “10 percent of the time or less.”
“Technically speaking, this is not an authorized use of the vehicle,” McAleer said. “Mr. Fletcher lives north of Water-ville, so some might consider a slight detour to Colby ‘incidental’ use. However, we have taken steps to avoid such use in the future.”
Fletcher lives in Farmington. Driving from Augusta to Colby and then to Farm-ington adds another 20 miles to Fletcher’s trip home from the office in the state car.
McAleer said Fletcher is authorized to use the state vehicle to commute to his job because he “often leaves directly from home to do field work or returns late in the evening from trips.”
Lax approach not newIn McAleer’s defense of his program, he
cites the improvements made in producing
Emergency Action Plans for the hazard-ous dam locations. The EAPs set out procedures in the event a dam fails, such as notification to downstream residents to evacuate.
But those plans improved only after media scrutiny.
“I believe we are running as strong a program as can be expected with the re-sources we have available and it is getting better,” McAleer wrote. “As an example, in the last five years, EAP compliance on State-regulated high hazard dams has risen from around 5 percent to 100 percent and significant hazard dams are now at 87 percent.”
But the state began improving its EAP program only after a news story by Kevin Wack in the Blethen Maine Newspapers in 2006 revealed that 71 percent of the high and significant hazard dams had no emergency plans or the plan expired.
Fletcher told reporter Wack the emer-gency plans are needed because “a dam is like a loaded gun.”
McAleer, though, remains certain MEMA can do the job:
“I am confident that we have met the intent of the Legislature to ensure the safety of Maine’s citizens,” he said. “And we will continue to do so in spite of the challenges we face.”
John Christie and Naomi Schalit are senior reporters at the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, a nonprofit, nonpartisan journalism organization that provides in-depth reporting as a public service to its Maine media partners. The e-mail address is [email protected]. The website is pinetreewatchdog.org.
November 4, 201126 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
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Political advertisement
VOTE FOR MARIEFreeport Town Council
www.GoGunning.comPaid for by Elect Marie Gunning 207-208-0052
ALTERATIONS
Custom Sewing,Alterations and
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Phone Miriam at865-4299
ANIMALS
“Dogs of allcolors welcome!”
RT 136N Freeport1 mile off Exit 22 I-295
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lis #F872
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Freeport, ME865-4279
81 Pleasant Hill Rd.
Boardingwith Love,Care& More!
Now offering:Daycare & Grooming
DOG TRAINING, FALMOUTHSign up your puppy or dogfor obedience classes with 3of Maine’s best dog trainersat PoeticGold Farm. We offereverything from STAR Puppyto Agility, from Family Dogbasics to Rally O and CanineGood [email protected] 899-1185
Paul CarrollDog Walking/Cat Care, Feeding
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Cell 400-6465 20 plus years experience
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AKC BORDER TERRIERPUPS. $800 each. Born10/3/11, ready to go on12/12/11. 5 boys, 2 girls. 688-2282.
ANIMALS
PURRRS PETSITTING forcats and dogs in Freeport &Yarmouth area. Experienced,refs available. 838-9317 [email protected]
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ANTIQUES
ALWAYS BUYING, ALWAYSPAYING MORE! Knowledge,Integrity, & Courtesy guaran-teed! 40 years experience buy-ing ANTIQUE jewelry (rings,watches, cuff links, pins, ban-gles, necklaces and old cos-tume jewelry),coins, sterlingsilver, pottery, paintings, prints,paper items,rugs, etc. CallSchoolhouse Antiques. 780-8283.
ABSOLUTE BEST PRICESPAID FOR OLD THINGSGlass-China-Jewelry-Silver-ware-Old Books-Postcards-Buttons-Linens-Quilts-Trunks-Tools-Toys-Dol ls-FountainPens-Military-Games-Puzzles-Furniture-Bottles etc.Cumberland Antiques Cele-brating 28 years of trusted cus-tomer service.Call 838-0790.
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Call John 450-2339BOOKS WANTED
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2 OLD TRUNKS. NEW PRICE:$50 each. 653-5149. Freeport.
AUCTIONS
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ASK THE EXPERTS
ASK THE EXPERTS: Adver-tise your business here forForecaster readers knowwhat you have to offer in69,500 papers. Call 781-3661for advertising rates.
AUTOS
TOPDOLLARCA$H
Paid for unwantedvehicles
CALL 671-1911
Body Man on Wheels, autobody repairs. Rust work forinspections. Custom paintingand collision work. 38 yearsexperience. Damaged vehicleswanted. 878-3705.
2001 FORD RANGER-Extended Cab 4x4. No Rust.Very good condition. Sticker. V-6. 90K. Gray. Bedliner. Auto,AC, CD. Power windows. So.Portland. $4900. 712-6641.
BUSINESS RENTALS
PORTLAND - Sweet officespace for rent, in-town,spacious, $500/month. Be partof a welcoming communityof counselors and therapists.Call Stephen at 773-9724, #3
ROUTE ONE YARMOUTH.Great space for Office orRetail use. Easy access,lots of parking, great visi-bility.1000 to 3000 SF. Joinother happy tenants. 846-6380.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Administrative Assistance -Bookkeeping (QuickBooks),Consulting, Desktop Publishing(Flyers, Invitations, Newslet-ters), Filing (archiving, organi-zation), Mailings, Typing, BasicComputer Software Instruction.Call Sal-U-tions at (207)797-2617.
CHILD CARE
BRINDLE BEAR DAYCARE06:30-05:30, Mon-Fri130.00 per wk-full timeState lisc-22 yrs expBrkfst,lunch & snackWeekly progress notesActivities & outdoor playAges-6 wks to school ageCall Renee at 865-9622BRINDLEBEARDAYCARE.COM
CHIMNEY
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CLEANING
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(207) 798-0313
ARE YOU TIRED OF HAVINGyour house clean superficially.Reina does the old fashionedway meticulously. Weekly,Monthly or One time cleaning.12 years experience. Excellentreferences. 831-2549 or 854-2630.
COMPUTERS
892-2382
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Mon-Sat 8-8 • 799-7226Repairs on all Makes & Models
&B J ELECTRONICSEst.1990
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CRAFT SHOWS/FAIRS
November 5th9am-2pm
Elijah Kellogg Church,917 Harpswell Neck Road
(Rt. 123), Harpswell
Crafts, Treasures, lunch, raffle at1pm for 6x11 garden/tool shed
Questions: 725-1445
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Juried Craft fair9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday
November 5, 2011Brunswick High School,
Maquoit Road, BrunswickHandmade products by over 75New England artisans & crafters!
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Sat. Nov. 5th 9-2Breakfast, Lunch, Bake Sale,Pickles & Jams, Knit Goods
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CRAFT SHOWS & FAIRS-HAVING A CRAFT FAIR ORSHOW? Place your specialevent here to be seen in69,500 papers a week. Call781-3661 for more informa-tion on rates.
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FIREWOOD
*Celebrating 26 years in business*
Cut/Split/DeliveredQuality Hardwood
State Certified Trucks for Guaranteed MeasureA+ Rating with the Better Business Bureau$220 Green $275 Seasoned
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Visa/MC accepted • Wood stacking available353-4043
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Freeport, ME865-4279
81 Pleasant Hill Rd.
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November 4, 201128 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
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Everyone Needs SomeoneWe need your help to make a difference in the lives of older adultsin Cumberland County. We are looking for proactive, flexible people,who are looking for a challenging and satisfying part-time job.If you love the idea of being a “difference maker” call today toinquire about joining our team of non-medical in home CAREGivers.Part-time day, evening, overnight and weekend hours.Currently we have a high need for awake overnights and weekends.
Home Instead Senior Carewww.homeinstead.com/321
Call Today: 839-0441
Kind HeartedIf this describes you and you are recently retired,an empty-nester, a grandmother, stay at homemom, or simply looking for meaningful part orfull time work, we’d love to speak with you. Com-fort Keepers is looking for special people to joinus in providing excellent non-medical, in-homecare to area seniors. We offer some benefits,along with ongoing training and the opportunityfor personal growth and satisfaction.
152 US Route 1, Scarborough • www.comfortkeepers.com
885 - 9600
Independence Association, a non-profit organization that assists adults andchildren with disabilities throughout Cumberland, Androscoggin, Sagadahoc,and Lincoln Counties is seeking people who share our vision. We are currentlytaking applications for full and part time Direct Support Professionals, InHome Support Professionals, and Independent Living Coaches. If you areover 18, have a HS Diploma/GED, and can pass a background check, wewill train you!
Independence Association Offers• Competitive Pay• Generous Benefits Package• A wonderful working environment• Paid Training and Mileage Reimbursement• Full, Part Time, and Relief Positions Across all Shifts
Independence Association
How to Apply: We have walk-in interviews every Tuesday from 10:00-4:00 inour office at 87 Baribeau Drive, Brunswick, ME. Or call 725.4371, or email
us at [email protected] .
VNAHomeHealth&Hospice
CNA/HHAVNA Home Health & Hospice has a great position for a CNA/ HHA wantingto make a positive difference in someone's life! You would be responsiblefor providing personal care to a designated group of clients in their homesas directed by an RN, PT, OT or SLP. Utilizing the latest information tech-nologies and telecommunication systems, VNA provides you with a variety ofexperiences, ranging from caring for clients with medical/surgical needs aswell as caring for clients with hospice and palliative care needs.
JOB REQUIREMENTS:A High School graduate or GED equivalency. Certification as a CNA on theMaine State CNA Registry. Certified as a HHA either through completion ofan approved home health aide training course or through competency testingat VNA, and evidence of effective communication skills, using verbal, writtenand telephonic means. Current ME Drivers license. Reliable transportationand Agency required auto liability insurance.Come work for an organization that provides clinically excellent, compassion-ate care to families in Southern Maine. We are Medicare/Medicaid certifiedand accredited by The Joint Commission. Since 1921, we've been helping fami-lies and their loved ones receive care and comfort in the Southern Maine area.In partnership with Mercy Health System of Maine, we provide a range ofhome-based nursing, therapy, and hospice services, as well as mental health,community & corporate wellness, telehealth, companionship care, independentliving services and geriatric care management. We are committed to hiringand retaining staff who want to deliver quality care and make a difference inpeople's lives. We offer rich benefits and a family friendly working environ-ment. We look forward to hearing from you!
VNAHomeHealth&Hospice
Apply online at: www.mercyhospital.org/content/CareersVNA.htmAn Equal Opportunity Employer.
FIREWOOD
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Contact Don Olden(207) 831-3222
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LEE’S
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Call 831-1440 in Windhamhttp://hstrial-LeesFirewood.homestead.com/
FLEA MARKETS
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FOODS
Do you have a Function orSpeciality in Food? Let read-ers know about all you haveto offer in our Food categoryto be seen in over 69,500papers. Call 781-3661 forrates.
FOR SALE
HOT TUB84X74
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FURNITURE
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HEALTH
ORIENTAL BODY CAREACCUPRESSURE,Deep Tissue Massage,Swedish Massage.
Open Daily 8am-10pmCall for appointment
837-5689
168 Pleasant StBrunswick
Alcoholics Anonymous Fal-mouth Group Meeting TuesdayNight, St. Mary`s EpiscopalChurch, Route 88, Falmouth,Maine. 7:00-8:00 PM.
HELP WANTED
The MostRewarding Work
in Greater Portland♦
Call 699-2570for more informationand an application.
Are you looking to makea difference in the lifeof someone in need?
Advantage Home Care isseeking kind, dependableand experienced caregiversto care for seniors in theirhomes in greater Portland.We offer flexible hoursand part-time shifts days,evenings, overnights
and weekends. Experiencewith dementia care is a plus.
LOOKING FOR part timework while the children arein school? Shankman &Associates is looking for amotivated, friendly, part timeLegal Secretary for ouroffice located in Yarmouth,Maine. The applicant shouldhave experience in Domes-tic Relations and have aminimum of 2 years lawoffice experience.Salary will commensuratewith experience. Please for-ward resumes [email protected] No phone calls please.
HELP WANTED
LifeStages
780-8624
We are seeking Caregiverswith personal care skillsfor all shifts. Experiencecounts and certifications
PSS, PCA, CNA andothers are welcome.
Must be professional andcompassionate. If you
would like to become partof an award winning team.Contact
A division of VNA HomeHealth & Hospice
is growing quickly!
HOUSE KEEPER WANTED:We are looking for a part-time house keeper for ourhome in Cumberland. Flex-ible hours- 15-20 hours perweek. $15/hr. Dutiesinclude house keeping,laundry and organizationprojects. Must have owntransportation and experi-ence cleaning. Must pro-vide references.Call 415-1155.
HELP WANTED
PCA or PSS neededpart time for elder care
Call M-F 1-5pmand leave message:
name, telephone and briefdescription of qualifications
781-9074
Driverssta�t up to $.41/m�.HomeWeekly or Bi-Weekly.CDL-A 6 mos. OTR exp. Req.Equipment you'll be proud to drive!
(888)247-4037NEEDED: AFTER schoolcare giver for 16 year oldspecial needs child, Mon-day to Friday from 2:00 to4:00pm. Less than 5 daysweekly considered. $10hour. 846-6679
PCA- BRUNSWICK WOMANWITH MS NEEDS KIND,RELIABLE HELP FORDIRECT CARE. Clean back-ground; valid clean driverslicense. Up to 20 flex hours.590-2208.
HELP WANTED
RTP RIDE Crew Driverswanted! Mileage reimburse-ment, drive your own car.Safe drivers with clean vehi-cles and good people skills,please call 774-2666 ext 110today.
E X P E R I E N C E DFREIGHT BROKERRMX is an established
and growing brokerage inAuburn. Send resume [email protected]
HOME REPAIR
846-5802PaulVKeating.com
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CARPENTRY
CUMBERLAND, FALMOUTHand surrounding areas. Get allthose needed repairs donewith one call. plumbing, car-pentry, insulation, painting, dry-wall, flooring, tile, tree work,tractor work, etc. Friendly serv-ice and my work is guaranteed.Call 939-6184.
WE REMODELINSIDE & OUTCall 776-3218
WERENOVATE!Call 776-3218
PINE STATE POWER WASH,LLC. Offering PressureWashing, Deck and WoodRestoration as well as Car-pet and Upholstery Cleaning.Call for a FREE ESTIMATE(207)420-1646.
29November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
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• Storm Cleanups • Lawn Care/Installation • Fencing• Rototilling • Mulch/Loam/Gravel Deliveries • Tractor Work• Landscape Design/Installation • Tree Removals/Pruning
• Driveway Sealing/Sweeping • Spring/Fall Clean-ups
We haul anything to the dump.Basements and Attic Clean-Outs
Guarenteed best price and service.
INSURED
DUMP GUY
Call 450-5858 www.thedumpguy.com
JUNKREMOVALwe haul ANYTHING to the dump
* Guaranteed Best Price * Attic to Basement clean outs *807-JUNK www.807JUNK.com
* Senior Discounts *
HOME REPAIR
Chimney lining & MasonryBuilding – Repointing – Repairs
Asphalt & Metal RoofingFoundation Repair & Waterproofing
Painting & Gutters20 yrs. experience – local references
272-1442, cellwww.mainechimneyrepair.com
229-9413
NEED SOME REPAIRS OR HELP?
HANDYMANGiveme a call!
GORDON SHULKINReasonable hourly rate
handymanready.biz
TheHOUSEGUY
Home repairs • PaintingPlaster & Sheet Rock Repairs
Small Carpentry Jobs • StagingOrganizing Services
No Job Too SmallReasonable Rates/Prompt ServiceTOM FLANAGAN
Yarmouth 319-6818
NEAT WORKSROOFERS - PAINTERSCLEANERS - SIDINGROOF SHOVELING
PLUS ANY HOME REPAIRFULLY INSURED I
252-7667
Seth M. RichardsInterior & Exterior Painting & Carpentry• Small Remodeling Projects • Sheetrock
Repair • Quality Exterior & Interior PaintingGreen Products Available
FULLY INSURED – FREE ESTIMATES
Call SETH • 207-491-1517
New Construction/AdditionsRemodels/Service Upgrades
Generator Hook Ups • Free EstimatesServing Greater Portland 19 yrs.
207-878-5200RESIDENTIAL
&COMMERCIALJ Home RenovationsWe are professional in generalRoofing, Siding, Painting, Carpentry,
Cleaning, Gutters, Chimney RepairPLUS ANY HOME REPAIR • FULLY INSURED
252-7667
JOHNSON’STILING
Custom Tile design available
Floors • ShowersBacksplashes • Mosaics
829-9959ReferencesInsured
FreeEstimates
EXPERT DRYWALL SER-VICE- Hanging, Taping, Plaster& Repairs. Archways, Cathe-drals, Textured Ceilings, Paint.Fully Insured. ReasonableRates. Marc. 590-7303.
HOME REPAIR
CARPENTER/BUILDER
Roofing Vinyl / Siding / Drywall / PaintingHome Repairs / Historical Restoration
25years
experienceFullyInsured
ContraCting, sub-ContraCting,all phases of ConstruCtion
Call 329-7620 for FREE estimates
BOWDLER ELECTRIC INC.799-5828
All callsreturned!
Residential & Commercial
PROFESSIONALFLOORINGINSTALLER
All Flooring TypesHardwood, Laminate,
Tile, Linoleum, Carpet etc.I can furnishmaterials direct frommanufacturer
or supply labor on yourmaterials
25 years experience • Free EstimatesCall Chris 831-0228
GEORGE FILES IS BACK!Looking for work, House paint-ing, Carpentry, Decks, Drywall,Kitchens, Tile, Interior Painting.Most anything. Great refer-ences. Quality workmanshiponly. 207-415-7321.www.jackalltrade.com
HOUSE SITTING
SNOW BIRDSLocal professional
looking to give your homesome tlc while you spendthe Winter in a warmer cli-mate. I'm in my fifties and anon-smoker. I'm not look-ing for any monetary gain.Please call Terry at2076080849
LANDSCAPINGCONTRACTORS
We specialize in residential andcommercial property maintenance
and pride ourselves on our customerservice and 1 on 1 interaction.
D.P. Gagnon Lawn Care& Landscaping
SERVICES• Leaf and Brush Removal• Bed Edging and Weeding• Tree Pruning/Hedge Clipping• Mulching• Lawn Mowing• Powersweeping• SNOWPLOWING
Call or E-mail forFree Estimate
(207) [email protected]
LANDSCAPINGCONTRACTORS
GARDEN RESCUESERVICE
• Single clean up,weeding• Biweekly weeding service•Transplanting and planting• Fall garden care
829.4335
LAWN AND GARDEN
Why break your back?FALL CLEAN-UPSEfficiently & Affordably
Free Estimates
Commercial and [email protected]
Now Accepting New Customers
Landscaping615-3152
Call 837-1136
Garden GroundsPrep Maint.Estates Residential
Historic Sites Business
Fall Cleanups
Little EarthExpert Gardening
FALL CLEANUP- I can saveU $$ money! $12.00 hr. LEAFRAKING. LAST CHANCE!892-6693.
MASONRY
MASONRY/STONE-Placeyour ad for your serviceshere to be seen in over68,500 papers per week. Call781-3661 for more informa-tion on rates.
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS-Place yourad here to be seen in 69,500papers a week. Call 781-3661for more information on rates.
MOVING
MAKE THE SMART CHOICE-Google DOT 960982 and/orMC 457078 for our companysnapshot from the federalMotor Carrier Safety Adminis-tration. This website will showwhether or not the companyyou choose has the requiredinsurance on file. Also checkwith the BBB. We have linksto all these websites atWilsonmovingcompany.com Toschedule your next move, call775-2581.
SC MOVING SERVICES - yourbest choices for local moves.Offering competitive pricingwith great value for your Resi-dential and CommercialMoves! For more informationcall us at 207-749-MOVE(6683) or visit :www.scmoving.comVISA/MasterCard accepted!
A&A MOVING SERVICES.Residential & Commercial. 25years experience. 7 days aweek. FULL SERVICE. PIANOMOVING. Packing. We also buyused Furniture and Antiques.SENIOR DISCOUNTS. Freeestimates. 828-8699.
MUSIC
PIANO & GUITAR LESSONS
In-HomePrivate Lessons
for all ages...Call Now!GORDON SHULKIN
229-9413inhomelessons.com
PIANO/KEYBOARD/ORGANLESSONS in students` homesin Cape Elizabeth, South Port-land, Portland, Falmouth or myPortland studio. Enjoyment forall ages/levels. 40+ years’experience. Rachel Bennett.774-9597.
ORGANIC PRODUCE
O R G A N I C / H E A L T H YFOODS- Place your ad hereto be seen by over 69,500Forecaster readers! Call 781-3661 for more information onrates.
PAINTING
PaintingCormier ServicesInterior - Exterior Painting
Insured 3 year warranty
207-865-6630207-751-3897
FREE
ESTIMATES
interiorsRepaiRs, pRime & paint“It’s all about the preparation.”
831-8354
WeBBer PAintinG& restorAtion
Fully Insured • References
Clarke Paintingwww.clarkepaint.com
Fully Insured3 Year Warranty
207-233-8584
PAINTING
Violette Interiors: Painting,tiling, wallpaper removal, wallrepairs, murals and small exte-rior jobs. Highest quality ataffordable rates. 25 yearsexperience. Free estimates.Call Deni Violette at 831-4135.www.denivioletteinteriors.com
PHOTOGRAPHY
PHOTOGRAPHY- Place yourbusiness ad here to be seenby over 69,500 Forecasterreaders! Call 781-3661 formore information on rates.
RENTALS
Olde EnglishVillage
South Portland
1 & 2 BEDROOM
H/W INCLUDED
SECURE BUILDING
SWIMMING POOL
COIN LAUNDRY
[email protected] mile to Mall, 295 and Bus Routes503 Westbrook Street, South Portland
207-774-3337
Condo for year round resi-dence. Views of Sebago Lake,impeccable landscaping, 700 ftbeach. Newly renovatedkitchen with granite counter-tops, hardwood floors, opendining/living room area, 2+bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, fin-ished basement and 1 cargarage. $1450.00 per monthplus utilities and sec dep. Call207-892-2698.
SPEND THE WINTER ONVACATION!!! Furnished 1room, 1 person studios withkitchenettes, private bath,screen porch, great views,cable, wifi, heat & elec. includ-ed. $595.00. Shared bath stu-dio-$425.00. Cottages (2 per-sons) $865.00 plus heat. Allunits rent through May. Call892-2698.
YARMOUTH VILLAGE:Charming and convenient 1bedroom apt w/off-street park-ing. Walk to town and RoyalRiver. Easy access to 295. N/S.$850 includes utilities. Avail12/1. 846-3690.
RENTALS
SUGARLOAF TRUE TRAIL-side seasonal rental in Birch-wood I. Three bedroom, postand beam Condo. Walk every-where. Ski to Sawduster Chair.Well appointed. Ski season.$7500. halftime Also one bed-room. Halftime. $4,500. Call207-899-7641.
FALMOUTH- NEWLY RENO-vated adorable cottage w/ lakerights. New wood floors. 2 bed-rooms plus bonus room. Largedeck, very private. Availableyear round. N/S. $1400 permonth plus. Call 207-899-7641.
Yarmouth House for rentWest Elm Street. 2 bedroom,no smoking, pets negotiable.$1200 per month plus heat andutilities, one year lease. 781-4282.
GRAY- CABIN FOR rent. Fur-nished. No pets. All utilities,cable, wireless internet. 657-4844.
2 BEDROOM residential areanear Bates College, heated,hookups, parking, no smoking,$700. 783-4150
POLAND/WINDHAM APART-MENT $140/week Includesutilities. Call 207-951-1399
ROOFING/SIDING
ROOFING/SIDING-Place yourad here to be seen in 69,500papers a week. Call 781-3661for more information onrates.
SERVICES OFFERED
Attic • Basement • Garage • CleanoutsResidential & Commercial
We Recycle & Salvageso you save money!
NEED JUNK REMOVEDCALL THE
DUMP MAN
We will buysaleable salvage goods
Furniture/Doors/Windows/etc.
Guaranteed
Best Price
828-8699
ALL METAL HAULED FREEWashers/Stoves etc.
November 4, 201130 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
Classifieds781-3661fax 781-2060
Place your ad onlinetheforecaster.net
4
STORAGE
Classifieds Instructions Classification
Copy (no abbreviations)Name Address
City, State, Zip Phone
E-mail # of weeks
1st date to run Amount enclosed $
Credit Card # Exp. date
Want to place a Classified Ad in The Forecaster?
DEADLINE: Noon Friday prior to next Wednesday’s publication. Earlier deadlines applied for holiday weeks.TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD: ONLINE at theforecaster.net, click on the Classified ads link; or MAIL this coupon, with payment payable to
The Forecaster, to CLASSIFIEDS, The Forecaster, 5 Fundy Rd., Falmouth, ME 04105; or DROP OFF between the hours of 8:30-4:30 at 5 Fundy Road, Falmouth.RATES: Line ads $15.00 per week for 25 words, $14.00 per week for 2-12 weeks, $13.00 per week for 13 weeks,
$11.50 per week for 26 weeks, $10.50 per week for 52 weeks; 10¢ each additional word per week.
Classifieds automatically run in all 4 editions. Display rates available upon request. No refunds.
Classified ad deadline:Friday @ Noonprior to next Wed.’s publication
You can e-mail your ad [email protected]
781-3661
SERVICES OFFERED
Pools, Privacy, Children,Pets, DecorativeCedar Chain link,Aluminum, PVC
Any style from Any supplier
20+ years experience
FENCESINSTALLED
Call D. Roy + Son Fencing215-9511
JIM’S HANDY SERVICES,INT./EXT. PAINTING, CAR-PENTRY, FLOORS, ROOFS,CLEANING, TREE WORK,ODD JOBS, PRESSUREWASHING, MISC. 30 YR.EXP. INSURED. FREE ESTI-MATES. REFERENCES. 207-239-4294 or 207-775-2549.
SEMI-RETIREDMINISTERAvailable for your wedding
or a loved one’s memorial serviceMany years experience with both
traditional and non-traditional servicesFees Negotiable
Call Richard 650-0877
FA
LL SPECIAL
$139
AnnuAl FurnAce cleAning/Oil Burner ServiceFOR PEAK EFFICIENCY
LOGAN'S HEATINGJim Logan - Owner • 207-319-4239
[email protected] Licensed and Insured
SNOW SERVICES
WORK for Reliable, Reason-able person- Snowblowing,Winter maintenance, Car out,Porch, Steps, Paths. Odd Jobstoo. 781-4860 Leave message.
SNOW SERVICES
ResidentialCommercial
207-233-0168
Granite St.Snowremoval
Full ServiceGreat PricingPlow • Sand
ShovelSnow Blow
COMMERCIAL AND Residen-tial.Plowing and snow servicesincluding sanding and roofshoveling. Reasonable ratesand free estimates.Yarmouth and surroundingareas.846-9734
Snow Blowing, Walkways etc.Salt & Sanding
No Job too Small!Now Taking Bids for Commercial
207-329-7620
SNOW PLOWINGCOMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
GreaterPortland Area
SNOW PLOWING SERVICESParking lots, roads & driveways
Commercial orResidential
Sanding and Salting as neededSeason Contract or per storm
Call Stan Burnham @ 688-4663
[email protected] Cell: 891-8249
SNOWPLOWING&REMOVALROOF SHOVELING
Fully Insured
YANKEE YARDWORKS
SNOW SERVICES
PRECISE PLOWING - Accept-ing Commercial & Residentialcustomers.Foreside to Middle Rd. in Fal-mouth/Cumberland.Best pricing. Call Pays Payson781-2501
TREE SERVICES
www.CanopyMaine.com
Michael Lambert NE-6756A
Free QuotesLicensed and Insured
Locally Owned
TREE SERVICES
FOWLER TREE CARE:Licensed Arborist & MasterApplicator, fully insured. Largetree pruning, ornamental tree,shrub pruning, spraying, deeproot fertilizing, hedges, difficulttree removal, cabling. Free esti-mates. Many references. 829-5471.
TREE SERVICES
McCarthyTreeServiceCasco Bay’sMost Dependable
• Fully Insured• Climbing• Difficult Take-downs
Great Fall Rates
Low Rates Fast Service
232-9828
$100 OFFWITH THIS AD
TREE SERVICES
STUMP & GRIND - Profession-al stump chipping service. Fullyinsured, Free estimates. CallRob Taisey at 846-6338 anytime.“We get to the root of yourproblem.”[email protected]
STORM DAMAGE
ADS TREE WORK• Take Downs • Pruning
• Stump Grinding
Licensed, Insured Maine ArboristScott Gallant • 838-8733
INEXPENSIVE TREE SERVICEExperienced, Licensed, Insured
T. W. Enterprises, Inc.Tree & Landscape Co.
207-671-2700WWW.TWTREE.COM
Tree Removal, Pruning, Stump Grinding
TREE SERVICESAdvertise your Services here to be seenby over 69,500 Forecaster readers!
Call 781-3661formore information on rates.
• Climbing• Limbing• Difficulttake-downs
• Fully insured • Free estimates• Many references
829-6797
REE SERVICEJIM’S• Removals• Chipping• Lots cleared&thinned
TUTORING
MATH TUTOR K-620 years teaching experience
Patient, creative professionalwith balanced approach
Remediation or AdvancementKen Bedder 865-9160
VACATION RENTALS
SCENIC TUSCANY- Charm-ing 1 bedroom apartmentequipped, old world patio,backyard, great views. Historichillside village, ocean and Flo-rence close by. $725.00 week-ly. 207-767-3915.
VENICE, FLORIDA. 3 bed-room Condo. Plantation Golf &Country Club. Christmas &April Vacation. Available 12/17-01/14 and 04/14 on. $700 perweek. 207-799-7448.
WANTED
WWI & WWIIGerman
Military items
IF YOU NEED OLD NEWSPA-PERS please stop by ouroffice at 5 Fundy Rd, Fal-mouth. M-F. 8:30-4:30. 781-3661.
YARD SALES
FALMOUTHMOVING SALE!Fri & Sat. Nov. 4th & 5th
9am-2pm152 Mountain Rd.
FURNITURE, AC UNITS, TV,KIDS TOYS, HOUSEHOLD ITEMSEVERYTHINGMUSTGO!
YARD SALE DEADLINES arethe Friday before the followingWed run. Classifieds run in all 4editions. Please call 781-3661to place your yard sale ad oremail to:[email protected]
October through May 31 $475Mr. Phil Hall, Manager776-5472
Heated, well-insulatedstorage for your
Vintage or Classic car
CAR STORAGE
Herofrom page 7
Comment on this story at:http://www.theforecaster.net/weblink/105070
preserving Portland’s historic Stroudwater neighborhood.”
A press release at the time noted that “her projects have included the Tate House, which operates as a public museum, and which has restored to original condition one of the first houses built in Portland. Our neighborhood and future generations of Portland citizens owe Mary Lou Sprague our profound thanks for her extraordinary
leadership.”Stroudwater is just one of the organiza-
tions dedicated to historic preservation that have benefited from Sprague’s support and vision. Others include the Maine Maritime Museum, the Owls Head Transportation Center, and Strawberry Banke.
In explaining her commitment to keeping history alive, Sprague said, “we have to know where we’ve come from.”
Her many hobbies, most of which she continues to this day, confirm that this is a woman on the move: skiing, tennis, trout
fishing, sailing, and gardening. But driving a pair of Morgan horses around her farm three or four days a week is her greatest outlet.
“Some people study yoga,” she said. “I drive my horses. It’s just fabulous being outdoors.”
A Mainer through and through, Sprague said this of her home state: “Here in Maine we’re comfortable with ourselves. We say
what we darn well please, and we mean it.”With six children and 14 grandchildren
(and a 15th on the way), Sprague has many young people right in her family to whom she can pass on her wisdom and energy.
If you listen to what Sprague might say if she were asked to speak at a Waynflete graduation, you know she has walked the talk: “Don’t just follow your own dream,” she said. “Cultivate companionable dreams so you can work with others to achieve them.”
31November 4, 2011 Midcoastwww.theforecaster.net
www.townandshore.comone unionwharf • portland • 207.773.0262
International Exposure • Local Expertise
Contemporary CapeFederal FarmhouseSeaside Cottage
One UnionWharf, Portland, ME 04101207.523.8114
www.townandshore.com
Distinctive Real EstateExtensive experience
Comprehensive market knowledgeInternational listing exposure
Superior resultsBob Knecht, Broker • Alexa Oestreicher, Assoc. Broker, Lic. Asst.
LEX HOLLEY, BROKER 838-4343www.shoreland-realestate.com
Freeport — New and expansive custom home ingreat area. Bright & open with dramatic entry,lovely master suite w/fp, energy efficient design,quality features & bonus space. Abuts trails andconservation land. Excellent value. $699,000
S h o r e l a n dreal estate
CUSTOM-BUILT HOME
Rob WilliamsReal Estate
Bailey Island, ME 04003 207-833-5078baileyisland.com
WatERfRont
BAILEY ISLAND – Unique site with east and west facing waterfrontage. Enjoy spectacular sunsets over Harpswell Sound aswell as protected gravel beach frontage on Garrison Cove. Threebedrooms, 2 baths, massive stone fireplace, water view deck,detached 2-car garage. Log construction. $359,000
Pam Bonnvie939-3686
50 Sewall Street, Portland, ME207-879-9800
Sebago Lake ~ $619,000
Historic BathBrick Townhouse duplex, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, originalwood doors and built-ins, hardwood floors, screen porch,fenced-in yard, washer and dryer, slate roof and new win-dows.
$110,000
FalmouthCustom home over 5200 sq. ft., 4 bedrooms includes largemaster bedroom suite and master bath. Office, bonus room,finished walkout daylight basement, gourmet kitchen, cherry,stainless, Viking, granite, hardwood, French doors.
$759,000
FalmouthBright and sunny 3 bedrooms custom high-post Cape, 2.5baths, bonus room could be fourth bedroom, first floor mastersuite, large deck, hardwood, cherry, stainless, granite andmore.
$469,000
200’ frontage, access to 1400 acres of walking and cross country skiing trails, sandy beaches, beautiful wildlife , Over 1400 sf, year round, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 cargarage, .52 acre, New Kitchen/Great Room, Granite, Stainless,Wide pine floors…, Only 40 minutes to Portland, 20 Minutes to Shawnee Peak
Lowest Mortgage Rates at:firstportland.com
878-7770 or 1-800-370-5222
Amy [email protected] • 207-522-6490
50 Sewall Street, Portland,ME
OPENHOUSE SUNDAY NOV. 612TO 1:30 PM
8EVERGREENDRIVE, FREEPORT4 bedrooms, newer office/mudroom addition, freshly freshly paint-ed interior, hardwood floors, new windows, 2 decks overlookingprivate yard, easy commute. GREATHOUSE,WONDERFULNEIGH-BORHOOD, EXCELLENTVALUE. $229,000Directions: 295 to Exit 20, north on Desert Road 2 miles, right onMerrill then right on Evergreen to house on right.
November 4, 201132 Midcoast www.theforecaster.net
Diane Morrison Broker/RealtorMorrison Real Estate158 Danforth Street
Portland, Maine 04102207-879-0303 X105
(c) 207-749-3459Fax 207-780-1137
www.MorrisonRealtors.com
SCOTT SCHENKEROffice: (207) 846-4300 x103
Cell Phone: 838-1284
Outstanding Agent, Outstanding Results!
Each office is independently owned and operated
Heritage
765 Route OneYarmouth, Me. 04096
If You’re Not Using Our Services, You’re Losing Money!WHAT IS YOUR TIMEWORTH?
If time is money, then you may be losing money withevery second you spend not employingFishman Realty Group’s Rental Services.
With over 50 years of experience “Helping GreatLandlords find Great Tenants” ...WE CAN HELP YOU TOO!!
Gary Lamberth(207) 775-6561 x 204
[email protected] Rental Listings: www. FishmanRealty.com
Helping GreatLandlordsfind GreatTenants!
Southern Maine’s choicefor exceptional PropertyManagement ServicesLathrop Property Management specializes inproviding a full range of management servicesfor residential apartments in Portland, as wellas commercial properties. We currently managemore than 280 apartments in the Portland areaas well as commercial properties.
Lathrop Property Management maintenancestaff are the best in their field, providing quality24-hour service to make each apartment residentfeel comfortable and secure.
Our goal is not to be the biggest propertymanagers in town but to be the best. If youare a property owner we would welcome theopportunity to discuss what Lathrop PropertyManagement can offer in managing yourproperties. We take pride in each of ourproperties and care for them as though theywere our own homes.
Peter GellersonOffice: 772-8662
Cell: 239-7993www.lathropmgmt.com
It starts with a confidentialCONVERSATION.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Roxane A. Cole, CCIMMANAGING MEMBER/COMMERCIAL BROKER
Roxane A. Cole, CCIMRoxane A. Cole, CCIMNewly Listed For Sale in Portland
RareWest End Commercial Condominium with exposed brickand natural light. Completely renovated. Flexible layout with
striking finishes. Perfect for a variety of commercial uses.Own for less cost than leasing.
WWW.ROXANECOLE.COM
Earle W. Noyes & SonsMoving Specialists, Inc.
Over 20,000 Moves, with a 99%“Willing to Recommend” Customer Rating
www.NoyesMoving.com
Claudia Dodds 207-846-4300 x117(Cell) 207-776-1837 • [email protected] 765 Route One, Yarmouth, Me. 04096
North YarmouthImmaculate 4 BR fully dormered centered chimneyCape w/wonderful details including open conceptkitchen w/custom cabinets, wood stove, front toback formal LR w/French doors. Heated sun roomoverlooking spacious deck. Quiet wooded setting.$319,000mls#1027667.Rt. 115 to Haskell Rd. to #172
Enjoy the easy lifestyle and location of Ridgewood, Falmouth• Quality built, low maintenance homes.• Over 65 acres of surrounding woods & trails.• Yards & grounds maintained by Association.• Prices from $419,000-$592,000
OPEN HOUSE: SUNDAY 1-2:30Directions: Rt. 1 to Depot or Bucknam Rds,
left on Falmouth Rd., Entry on right.
Hona Longstaff & Bruce Lewis I David Banks553-7330 553-7302www.ridgewoodfalmouth.com
Gracious,beautifully appointed 2-3BR,2.5bath Townhouse completely remodeledwith great attention to detail. LR & DRw/fpl & floor to ceiling windows overlookingwoodlands.Handsome kitchen & baths,elegant staircase,wood floors, spaciousdeck,walkout basement, & 1 car garage.Clubhouse,pool & tennis court.
$299,000
Yarmouth
MLS #1032812Sandy Johnson523-8110
One UnionWharf, Portland, ME 04101207.773.0262
www.townandshore.com
Serving Maine Since 1985• Residential • Commercial• Investment Properties
KREKingREalEstatE
Call for all yourReal Estate needs
781-2958, Ext 111www.kingrealestate.com
mainE
miChaEl a. JaCobsonbRoKER
765 Route OneYarmouth, Maine 04096
(207) 846-4300rheritage.com
Mike LePage x121Beth Franklin x126 [email protected] • [email protected] LePageMike LePage x121x121
Impeccable condItIonin this cheerful 2 bR unitat ledgewood. attachedoversized garage & wood
burning fireplace. associationhas pool and tennis.
pets welcome! $180,000mls#1032585