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September 7, 2010
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Press releases, events, publications released, etc. from Maine environmental organizations and agencies. Submit content.
Wildlife Tracking, Jan 26 Event - Posted - Saturday, January 24, 2009 Jan 26, 4 PM and 6:30 PM, Lewiston Public Library, Lewiston, ME. |
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Irreplaceable: Wildlife in a Warming World Event - Posted - Saturday, January 24, 2009 Wildlife photography exhibit and panel presentations about climate change. First Parish Church, 425 Congress Street, Portland, Maine, Sunday, February 15, 1:30-3 PM. |
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Meet The Maine Show Announcement - Tuesday, January 20, 2009 The Maine Show is about getting people outside to explore Maine. Want to find something new to do this afternoon, tomorrow or even over the weekend? Watching The Maine Show makes your planning easy. |
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Wilderness Leadership applications available Announcement - Friday, January 09, 2009 The Friends of Baxter State Park invites Maine high school sophomores and juniors to submit applications to the organization's first Maine Youth Wilderness Leadership Program at Baxter State Park, scheduled Aug. 9 through 16. |
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Maine Conservation Corps to hold partners meeting Announcement - Friday, January 09, 2009 The Maine Conservation Corps (MCC) will hold its next Partners Meeting from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Jan. 15 in the basement conference room at the Natural Resources Service Center Building, 6 Beech St., Hallowell. |
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MERI Lecture Focuses On Whales and Climate Change Event - Posted - Thursday, January 08, 2009 The first lecture of the Marine Environmental Research Institute’s 2009 Ocean Environment Lecture Series is titled “From Weather to Whales: Connections Between Climate, Plankton, and Right Whales in the Gulf of Maine.” The lecture will be presented by Andrew Pershing on Thursday, Jan. 15, at 7 p.m. at the MERI Center for Marine Studies in Blue Hill. |
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Seed Starting Class at F.W. Horch in Brunswick Event - Posted - Thursday, January 08, 2009
Learn how to start seeds to grow your own organic food. Join master gardener volunteer Brett Thompson on Thursday, January 8, 7 pm, at F.W. Horch Sustainable Goods & Supplies, 56 Maine Street, Brunswick. We'll show you how to build a light stand and make your own paper pots. The class is free, but seating is limited, so call 729-4050 to reserve a space! |
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DOT works with Army to swap out culverts Bangor Daily News - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 The Maine Department of Transportation plans to replace culverts in several areas in central Maine this fall, pending a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Under the federal Clean Water Act, the Maine DOT must file for a permit because the work might affect the habitat for Atlantic salmon. |
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First Wind developing plans for 33-35 turbines in Bingham area Bangor Daily News - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 Officials with First Wind LLC, a Boston-based wind energy company, told the Piscataquis County commissioners Tuesday that they are eyeing the installation of 33 to 35 wind turbines in Kingsbury Plantation and Blanchard Township. The location of the proposed project in Blanchard is about five miles from the Appalachian Trail. |
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Tidal power turbine being moved to benefit fishermen Bangor Daily News - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 For weeks, Ocean Renewable Power Co. has been working with local officials and the Maine Marine Patrol to find a new location for its tidal power turbine in Cobscook Bay so that the equipment would not negatively affect local fishermen. |
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Homeowners are taking desperate measures against bedbugs Associated Press - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 A resurgence of bedbugs across the U.S. has homeowners and apartment dwellers taking desperate measures to eradicate the tenacious bloodsuckers, with some relying on dangerous outdoor pesticides and fly-by-night exterminators. The problem has gotten so bad that the EPA warned this month against the indoor use of chemicals meant for the outside. |
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Maine to collect old pesticides Associated Press - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 Chemicals, such as DDT, lead arsenate and chlordane, are difficult and expensive to get rid of. The Maine Board of Pesticides Control will accept banned and unusable pesticides at no cost to homeowners. Four sites will be set up throughout the state where people will be able to bring their obsolete pesticides. Homeowners must pre-register by Oct. 1. |
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Maine ocean lab to build permanent home Associated Press - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 Bigelow Laboratory is breaking ground for its permanent home in East Boothbay along the Maine coast. The Bigelow Center for Blue Biotechnology will be the first building on the laboratory's new, 64-acre ocean research and education campus. The lab has received $4.5 million from the Maine Technology Asset Fund for the new center. |
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Carter's solar panels headed back to Washington Associated Press - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 A group of environmental activists set out Tuesday for Washington with a well-traveled and recycled solar panel that once stood atop President Jimmy Carter's White House, carrying hopes of persuading the current president to once again generate energy with the sun's rays. Environmental author and activist Bill McKibben is leading Unity College students and staff on the solar road trip to Washington. |
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Top Maine environmental enforcer named Associated Press - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 Gov. John Baldacci has appointed Beth Nagusky to serve as acting commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection. Nagusky is a former state energy director and recently led the DEP's efforts to provide incentives to businesses to promote conservation and expand renewable energy. |
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Vandalized boardwalk could open Wednesday Bangor Daily News - Tuesday, September 07, 2010 The Orono Bog Boardwalk remained closed Tuesday, two days after vandals caused thousands of dollars worth of damage. Volunteers spent Monday and Tuesday fixing broken wood planks, signs and benches as Bangor police continued to look for clues as to who might be responsible. The boardwalk is a popular spot for walkers and wildlife views. The raised wooden pathway takes people on a one-mile trek through the fertile bog, offering glimpses of various flora and fauna. |
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Despite plentiful water, states draft river rules Associated Press - Monday, September 06, 2010 Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island rules will regulate so-called stream flows governing how water utilities and businesses can tap into waterways -- while trying to allay environmentalists' concerns over fish habitats and recreation. Maine has had regulations in force for three years. |
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Work begins on Maine ski resort's expansion Associated Press - Monday, September 06, 2010 Work is under way to create hundreds of acres of new skiing terrain at the Sugarloaf ski resort in western Maine. Two five-man crews on Monday began cutting trees on Burnt Mountain, adjacent to Sugarloaf Mountain, to add 270 acres of glades skiing for the upcoming season. |
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Acadia park bustling after reopening Bangor Daily News - Monday, September 06, 2010 Acadia National Park weathered heavy rain as Tropical Storm Earl blew through Friday night and Saturday morning. Crowds flocked to the park after the rains stopped. “It was so busy that at the information center, we were advising people to see the rest of the park first and see Cadillac Mountain later.” Most park areas were operating normally Monday. |
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Maine seeks developers for offshore power Associated Press - Sunday, September 05, 2010 Maine utility regulators are inviting bids for developing offshore wind and tidal energy projects. Initial proposals are due by May 1, 2011. During its 2010 session, the Maine Legislature passed a law requiring the Public Utilities Commission to authorize one or more long-term contracts for offshore wind pilot projects and demonstration tidal projects. |
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Hunters: Spare a bear tooth for science, state requests Associated Press - Sunday, September 05, 2010 Wildlife biologists are using extracted teeth from black bears to monitor Maine’s bear population and determine how best to manage it. The Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife is asking bear hunters to give up a tooth from their harvested animals in the name of science. In the past two years, 2,032 hunters have answered the call. |
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Portland has 10th-straight hotter-than-normal month Associated Press - Sunday, September 05, 2010 August is going down as the 10th straight month with above-normal temperatures in Maine’s largest city. The National Weather Service says August’s mean temperature in Portland was 2.1 degrees above normal. |
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Lobster catch is one in a million Bangor Daily News - Saturday, September 04, 2010 Stockton Springs lobsterman Todd Ritchie caught a rare blue lobster off Castine earlier this week, a one in a million find. |
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Maine organic milk company to stay open Bangor Daily News - Saturday, September 04, 2010 A Maine farmer-owned organic milk company, Maine's Own Organic Milk, or MOOMilk, says a number of individuals and foundations have provided enough money to enable the company to sell its product to two Maine food banks. The Augusta-based MOOMilk had said it would suspend production on Sunday because it was out of money. |
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NMCC to invest in green projects Bangor Daily News - Saturday, September 04, 2010 Northern Maine Community College has undertaken several projects in recent months designed to reduce both energy costs and the campus’s carbon footprint. The college has invested more than $2.2 million in the effort. |
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Small businesses hot topic in debate Bangor Daily News - Friday, September 03, 2010 Gubernatorial candidates Paul LePage and Eliot Cutler addressed a room full of loggers, pulp mill operators and professional foresters Thursday night. Both men took aim at the Land Use Regulation Commission. LePage said, “I think LURC is too big for its britches. [Land use decisions] need to be sent back to the counties.” Cutler said it is impractical and likely politically impossible to eliminate LURC. But he proposed transferring LURC’s permitting responsibilities to the DEP. Cutler also has said he would eliminate the Board of Environmental Protection. “I am going to create an Office of Regulatory Review and Repeal that is going to be headed by someone called the ‘grim repealer,’” Cutler said. |
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Early foliage coloring ‘looking good’ for fall Bangor Daily News - Friday, September 03, 2010 While the foliage typically begins to turn colors in Aroostook County sooner than anywhere else in New England, the process seems to be starting earlier this year. |
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Bowers Mountain wind farm gets commission approval Bangor Daily News - Friday, September 03, 2010 The Washington County commissioners unanimously threw their support behind a new project by First Wind, the state’s largest wind power developer, to expand its Stetson Mountain project to Bowers Mountain. First Wind is proposing a 700-acre, 26-turbine wind farm about eight miles south of the Stetson Mountain project. |
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Environment Maine launches downtown ‘CarnivOil’ Bangor Daily News - Friday, September 03, 2010 Maine group is using a tongue-in-cheek midway-style street carnival to decry the influence of oil companies’ influence on national energy policy. Environment Maine on Friday hosted CarnivOil: The Biggest Mess on Earth, in Portland’s Monument Square. Director Emily Figdor said the goal is to point out that big oil interests have blocked efforts to move to clean energy and want to roll back critical Clean Air Act protections. |
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Mainers give Obama administration plenty of outdoor ideas Bangor Daily News - Friday, September 03, 2010 Federal officials descended on the Bangor Civic Center on Thursday in search of ideas that can help rejuvenate the nation’s conservation and outdoor recreation landscape. Three hundred Mainers were happy to oblige. Many offered suggestions, critiques and solutions to representatives of President Barack Obama’s America’s Great Outdoor Initiative. |
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Newport residents press EPA to monitor Corinna pollution Bangor Daily News - Thursday, September 02, 2010 Edward Hathaway, the EPA’s project manager for the clean-up of the former Eastland Woolen Mill site in Corinna, spent more than an hour Wednesday night trying to convince about 30 people at a meeting of the Newport selectmen that further monitoring of the East Branch of the Sebasticook River isn’t necessary because the level of toxins there are not a threat to humans. Hathaway’s assurances didn’t convince several residents. |
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Clifton to vote on wind ordinance Bangor Daily News - Thursday, September 02, 2010 A group of Clifton residents has petitioned for changes to the wind turbine portion of the recently enacted land use ordinance and requested a secret ballot vote on those changes in November. The town attorney says portions of the proposed changes are illegal, but even so, planners voted Tuesday to allow the vote to move forward and to hold a public hearing Sept. 17 to present residents with the proposed amendments. |
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Natural Resources Council of Maine
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