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Wabanaki Health and Wellness receives $1 4M in federal funding
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News: Newsroom: Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry
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The Wabanaki Gathering Place supports programs for indigenous people who need recovery or healing services. Author: Hannah Yechivi (NEWS CENTER Maine) Published: 9:25 PM EDT July 28, 2021 Updated: 9:25 PM EDT July 28, 2021
MILLINOCKET, Maine Wabanaki community members gathered in Millinocket on Wednesday to see the new Wabanaki Gathering Place recovery center, an effort tribal leaders and community members have been working on for many years.
The campus along the Penobscot River stretches 45-acre property and offers support programs for indigenous people who need recovery or healing services.
In addition, medicinal gardens, traditional music and foods, and simply enjoying what the Penobscot River has to offer are just some of the things indigenous community members can enjoy for free at the center.
Departures | Ghost Tours
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The decades-long quest by Maine tribes to open casinos or other gambling venues in Maine suffered another setback Thursday when lawmakers upheld Gov. Janet Mills’ veto of a tribal gaming bill.
After nearly an hour of debate, supporters of the bill to allow Maine tribes to offer gaming on tribal lands failed to muster the two-thirds majority needed to override Mills’ veto. The 80-53 vote comes after lawmakers had already postponed work on a larger and more complex suite of bills to overhaul Maine’s 31-year-old legal settlement with the tribes.
The bill, L.D. 554, would have granted the four federally recognized tribes in Maine – Passamaquoddy, Penobscot, Aroostook Band of Micmacs and Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians – the same level of sovereignty over gambling afforded to more than 500 other tribes across the country under federal law.