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From the Editor: No break for the health care industry or its wellness counterparts
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From the Editor: Family-owned businesses are at the heart of Maine economy
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From the Editor: An L/A story with some serious investment behind it
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April elections bring in new boards and councils in May.
For the first part of the month, area communities have been seeing new and familiar people raising their right hands, repeating after judges and other dignitaries, stating their names and promising to uphold the sanctity of their position.
The Southland communitiesâ boards are just settling in after all the April 6 votes were certified by the officials in Cook and Will Counties.
Here is a look at highlights of some of the area municipal races.
Orland Park
Mayor Keith Pekau and former Mayor Dan McLaughlin had a lively and heated election filled with mailers sent to residents seemingly on a daily basis.
In the past year, small businesses in Maine weathered quarantines, shutdowns, mandates of all kinds. Many dealt with a loss of revenue and an even more significant loss of employees.They adapted their business to online ordering and curbside pickup, often investing dollars they didn’t necessarily have to spend. They scrambled to apply for Paycheck Protection Program relief.
Yet if those businesses survived 2020 if they’re still standing today they’re likely stronger than they were a year ago.
This focus on small business has a range of stories not only of survival, but change and growth.
In a round-up looking at different businesses, Laurie Schreiber talks to the captains of a tall ship whose home port is Rockland, the owners of a general store in Machias, the partners in a Cape Elizabeth lumber yard that started during the pandemic and others. See “Small businesses keep their cool,” which starts on Page 14.