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Farmington Planning Board approves solar power project on Farmington Falls Road.‌
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When I moved to Maine I had never voted for anything in my life, never mind attended an annual town meeting. The first time I voted, I distinctly remember lining up at the Buckfield Fire Station to register before casting my ballot. It was a delightfully social experience.


I also remember attending my first town meeting, where I was surprised to learn it was how residents decided how much money to spend on things like winter roads and youth recreation programs. Where I grew up, in New York, those decisions were all made at the board of trustees level, and the townspeople were never asked for input – never mind being able to vote on budget line items.


It was a revelation to me that Mainers held the power to decide municipal budgets themselves, and that they decided what ordinances to adopt and how much to pay town officials. Most of the annual town meetings I went to were cordial, although I do remember one particularly lively discussion about junkyards.


As we put a chunk of annual town meetings from March behind us, and look forward to dozens more in May and June, we’re holding a Monitor Talks event about the role annual town meetings serve in Maine’s rural governance.


The event will be held from 5:30 to 7 p.m. on Wednesday, April 29, at the Greene Block+Studios in Waterville. It’s free and will feature an in-person audience and an option to tune in by Zoom.


I invite you to attend. Bring questions. You can register here


I hope that you are enjoying this newsletter and encourage you to share it with family members and friends. They can sign up on our website to have it delivered to their own inbox each Saturday.

April 29: Monitor Local editor Judy Meyer will lead a
panel discussion during a Monitor Talks event at Greene Blocks+Studio in Waterville about Maine’s quirky local home rule governance structure. The event is in cooperation with Colby College and will begin at 5:30 p.m. Register to attend in-person or virtually.

Farmington Planning Board unanimously approves solar power project on Farmington Falls Road: The project still must go through a Tier 3 review with the Maine Department of Environmental Protection because of wetlands on the site. Read this story by Ben Hanstein

Somerset County adopts food‑sovereignty ordinance for unorganized territories: The ordinance waives certain licensing and inspection requirements for direct producer‑to‑consumer sales, including at farmers markets. Read this story by Judith Meyer

Sole resident attending Waterville City Council meeting calls for more opportunity for public input: No decision was made on a suggestion that the council hold a special meeting — or a series of meetings — to hear from the public. Read this story by Charley DiAdamo

Farmington Select Board appoints interim director to RSU 9 board: The board reversed a plan to require $250 deposits from teams using Hippach and Philbrick fields after receiving pushback from coaches. Read this story by Ben Hanstein

Paris officials say it is too late in the budget cycle to consider alternatives to Police Department staffing: The debate over contracting with the Oxford County Sheriff’s Office is not fading, even as Norway and Oxford make clear they are not interested in a regional partnership. Read this story by Jon Bolduc

Jay Select Board drafts new trash pickup plan, sets police merger referendum wording: The board renewed its contract with Wilton, Livermore and Livermore Falls to share equipment and operators for public works projects. Read this story by Bob Neal

Maine is tightening limits on “forever chemicals” in drinking water. Are communities ready?: As federal funds lapse and state grants expire, dozens of Maine schools, mobile home parks and homeowners could be left to pay for filtration alone. Read this story by Emmett Gartner

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The following stories are from other newsrooms. While The Maine Monitor does not place its content behind a paywall, some newsrooms we link to below may. Paywalled stories are followed by a ($). We encourage you to consider supporting local Maine newsrooms.

Chronic absenteeism has been a challenge for Spruce Mountain Primary School in Livermore, with 19 percent of students considered to be chronically absent | WGME


State approves $4M for county jails, Penobscot County officials say permanent increase needed | News Center Maine


Community members buying in to new Farmington food co-op | WABI


The refunds promised to Maine electric customers have been delayed a year | Maine Public


Gov. Mills says it’s ‘a concern’ data center temporary ban doesn’t exempt Jay | Spectrum News Maine


A Carrabassett Valley man has been indicted for murdering his girlfriend last month | WABI


MaineHealth Franklin Hospital is doubling its emergency room capacity | Franklin Journal ($)


Latest legislative session proves successful for education initiatives | Maine Public


Maine’s Department of Health and Human Services is capping MaineCare payments for the second year in a row, in order to address a $62 million shortfall | Maine Public


New law aims to get Mainers to use "off peak" electricity | Maine Public

Know of a Western Maine story The Maine Monitor should look into? Click the banner to contact the newsroom.

Have feedback, a correction or know of something we should look into? Send it to our newsroom. You can reach Monitor Local editor Judy Meyer directly via email:  judy@themainemonitor.org


The Maine Monitor is a publication of the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, an independent and nonpartisan nonprofit news organization that produces investigative journalism. We believe news is a public good and keep our news free to access. We have no paywall and do not charge for our newsletters. If you value the reporting we do for Maine, please consider making a donation! We cannot do this reporting without your support.

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