Maine Nature
Musing about Maine's Milfoil Summit
Submitted by George Smith on Tue, 04/17/2012 - 3:15pm.The annual Milfoil Summit is always engaging and sometimes entertaining, with a mix of speakers and an audience that is passionate about protecting our lakes from invasive plants.
Be Wary of Lyme Disease This Summer
Submitted by George Smith on Tue, 04/10/2012 - 7:05am.WARNING: The following information may discourage you from venturing outdoors this spring, summer, and fall. Proceed (in both reading this and going outside) with extra special caution.
Lyme disease lurks outside your door. And the alarming statistics about the growing problem here in Maine don’t fully portray the extent of the problem - because this debilitating disease usually goes undetected in medical tests and doctor’s visits.
New LL Bean Book Guaranteed to be Good
Submitted by George Smith on Fri, 04/06/2012 - 7:28am.If there’s one thing that made me a life-long advocate for and customer of LL Bean, it’s the company’s guarantee for everything they sell. If I don’t like it, for any reason, at any time, Bean takes it back. No receipt required.
Land for Maine's Future Out of Gas
Submitted by George Smith on Tue, 04/03/2012 - 8:31am.This week the legislature considers Governor Paul LePage’s three nominees for the Land for Maine’s Future. All three are exceptional. This is an “A” team, but we’re putting them into a race car that is out of gas – with nobody in the pit to fill up the tank or change the tires.
Collins Questions Federal Vernal Pool Rules
Submitted by George Smith on Fri, 03/30/2012 - 10:30am.Why are new federal rules governing Maine’s vernal pools tougher than rules in other areas of the country? Good question, Senator Susan Collins!
The Senator asked this and other vernal pool questions of a federal official this week in a Congressional hearing, and received no answers. But those answers were promised later, in writing, and I’ve already asked Carol Woodcock (the Senator’s state office representative) for a copy of those answers.
Listening for Maine's Last Moo
Submitted by George Smith on Tue, 03/27/2012 - 12:30pm.When Agriculture Commissioner Walt Whitcomb started dairy farming, Maine had 2200 dairy farms. In 1991, I wrote my first newspaper column lamenting the loss of Maine’s dairy farms. Six hundred farmers were still in the dairy business at that time. In 2002, I wrote a sorrowful plea to save the 412 dairy farms still clinging tenuously to their way of life.
Changes Coming for Maine Tourism Agency
Submitted by George Smith on Tue, 03/20/2012 - 3:42pm.With a unanimous legislative committee vote and the support of many key members of Maine’s tourism industry, a bill that revamps the state’s tourism office is on its way to enactment.
Two months ago I reported that some members of the Tourism Commission were disgruntled that the Commission was scheduled to be abolished by this legislation, but Carolann Ouelette, Director of the Office of Tourism, rallied her troops, responded to concerns, and successfully supported an amended version of the bill, sponsored by Rep. Amy Volk.
Chickadee Checkoff In - RV Tax Not Entirely Out
Submitted by George Smith on Thu, 03/15/2012 - 1:27pm.The legislature’s Taxation Committee has acted on two issues that were the subjects of my recent blog posts: the chickadee checkoff on Maine’s income tax form, and a newly-enforced sales tax on RVs. The bill under consideration would have removed all checkoffs from the income tax form.
Compromise Emerges on Takings Bill
Submitted by George Smith on Tue, 03/13/2012 - 9:13am.One of the most contentious and complicated bills of this legislative session resulted into a worthy compromise endorsed by the Judiciary Committee on March 8.
Recognizing that the government should not be able to take most of the value of private property without compensating the owner, the legislature has been wrestling with LD 1810, Rep. Andre Cushing’s “takings” bill.
RVs Won't Clog Maine's Highways Much Longer
Submitted by George Smith on Tue, 03/06/2012 - 9:58am.If those big recreational vehicles filled with tourists that clog up our highways every summer aggravate you, you’ll be glad to hear they won’t be coming to Maine much longer.
Sitting in the audience at a Taxation Committee hearing earlier this week, waiting for a chance to speak against the bill that would eliminate the chickadee check-off on Maine’s income tax form, I happened onto an astonishing issue that explains a lot about why our economy lags the nation.
Here’s the short version of the problem.









