ANDROSCOGGIN VALLEY â A bill before the Maine Legislature to upgrade the classification of a 12-mile section of the Androscoggin River in that state is strongly opposed by the new owners of the Gorham mill as well as the communities of Berlin and Gorham.
Submitted to the Maine Legislature in December, LD 676 calls for upgrading the section of the river from Gulf Island Dam near Lewiston-Auburn, Maine, to Merrymeeting Bay where it flows into the Atlantic Ocean.
Currently classified as a Class C, the bill seeks to upgrade that section to Class B.
Supporters of the bill said data shows the section already meets Class B standards 99 percent of the time. Upgrading the section would allow the entire river to be classified as Class B and would recognize the remarkable transformation of the river since it was considered one of the countryâs most polluted rivers.
Maine eligibility guidelines for COVID-19 vaccine confuse, frustrate
Contradictions and exceptions within an evolving set of rollout rules trouble vaccine providers and those still waiting for their shots, but some in the field say they appreciate a degree of flexibility.
Share
Gov. Janet Mills, during a Jan. 13 press briefing, said a person who is 69 and 10 months old who accompanies a 71-year-old coming in to be vaccinated probably could also get a shot for the sake of efficiency. The statement was seen by some as an example of the state’s lack of clear guidance because clinics had been turning away people who had not yet turned 70.
Maine eligibility guidelines for COVID-19 vaccine confuse, frustrate sunjournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sunjournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
What’s it worth? Tiverton paying to have power plant appraised
Marcia Pobzeznik
TIVERTON Tiverton and Rumford, Maine, a small town of 5,800 residents in the foothills of the western part of the Pine Tree state, are going through the same process right now: figuring out how to tax one of their biggest taxpayers going forward.
The two towns are home to Tiverton Power and Rumford Power, natural gas-fired electric generating plants that were built about the same time by the same company some two decades ago. Both towns entered into 20-year agreements with the original owners, in lieu of taxes. Tiverton’s tax treaty expired at the end of 2020; Rumford’s tax increment financing agreement is due to expire this March, but a new one has been negotiated and will be put to Rumford voters on Feb. 24, said Rumford Town Manager Stacy Carter.