Posted inOur View

Open-carry puts shoppers on edge

Shoppers at Best Buy in Auburn Sunday may have seen a young man in a black T-shirt, hat, sunglasses and camouflage pants. But what really set him apart from other shoppers was the large handgun strapped to his hip. As Mainers, of course, we realize citizens have the right to carry their firearms openly in […]

Posted inOp-Eds

We have to pay up if we want safe roads, bridges

There are many issues concerning Maine’s substandard transportation system, but it mostly comes down to money. Maine struggles with a large network of state roads, at least a quarter of which have never been brought up to standard. David Bernhardt, a career engineer at the Department of Transportation, was Gov. Paul LePage’s surprise choice as […]

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Posted inOur View

Video dramatic, but we need to audit the system

Gov. Paul LePage reacted appropriately Thursday, without jumping to conclusions, to an undercover video purportedly showing Maine at risk of welfare fraud. At a news conference, two conservative groups unveiled a secretly recorded video showing an interaction between an actor pretending to apply for MaineCare benefits and two state employees. The response of the first […]

Posted inLocal Sports

College football: For now, Black Bears staying off schedule

ORONO — Looking for a 2011 University of Maine football schedule? Don’t ask any of the players for one. Maine started practice this week with its Sept. 3 opener against Bryant, not to mention subsequent meetings against Pittsburgh and CAA rivals Delaware, UMass or UNH, the furthest things from its mind. In fact, head coach […]

Posted inLocal & State

University of Maine System vehicles used sparingly for student voting

LEWISTON — Data from the University of Maine System released this week show university vehicles were used sparingly to take student voters to the polls on Election Day in 2008 and 2010. The information contrasts sharply with claims by Maine Republican Party Chairman Charles Webster that university resources were used to help Democratic organizers flood […]

Posted inBusiness, Local & State, sj-web

Maine settles allegations of unfair trade practices with debt-management company

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — The state of Maine has reached an agreement with a Texas debt management company to settle allegations of unfair trade practices. Attorney General William Schneider said Tuesday that the settlement with Credit Solutions of America Inc. and its owner Douglas Van Arsdale was reached after two days of trial that began […]

Posted inOur View

Annual Maine festival season benefits us all

The late summer festival season is in full swing, bringing color, entertainment and tourist dollars to Western Maine. While we’re not the overcrowded coast of Maine, the three-county region — particularly Oxford and Franklin counties — draws hundreds of thousands of seasonal visitors. Many come for a week or two. Some for the entire summer, […]

Posted inOur View

Theater space rescued by deal

The Auburn City Council took a sticky problem and guess what? They solved it. Politely. Logically. Cooperatively. Key Handel’s “Hallelujah Chorus,” please. This has happened so rarely over the past two years that it’s worth taking time to recognize the feat. When councilors first voted in November to tear down the Great Falls School, we […]

Posted inOp-Eds

Incumbency benefits some more than others

Will being incumbents help President Barack Obama when he runs next year and Maine Gov. Paul LePage, should he seek re-election in 2014? History suggests that Obama may get less from incumbency than LePage. The governor might benefit from a three-way race — an unlikely event on the national level. Political wisdom is that incumbency […]

Posted inOur View

Maine leads in banning smoking in public housing

The Auburn Housing Authority made a radical decision in 2004: new residents moving into its buildings would not be allowed to smoke indoors. While that doesn’t seem like a novel idea today, it was then, and Auburn became the first housing authority in the state, and only the fifth in the U.S., to do so. […]