At Mercy, the cuts would lower revenues by an estimated $6 million a year, said- John C.L. Morgan
Eileen Skinner, president and chief executive officer. As a result, the hospital
would likely close the Mercy Recovery Center, the largest substance-abuse
treatment center in Maine. Closing the Westbrook facility, which serves people
from all over the state, would eliminate 100 jobs. Mercy supports the governor's
goal of being fiscally responsible, Skinner said. "But we obviously endorse an
approach that is more gradual and targeted so things can adjust and people can
understand the unintended consequences of whatever action they take," she said.
Friday, January 27, 2012
Cuts in State Spending Could Close Westbrook Drug Rehab Center
PPH:
Swimmer Looks to Raise Funds to Fight Heart Disease
AJ:
Related: Westbrook Woman Swims English Channel (August 22, 2011)
An informal effort to raise money for heart health- John C.L. Morgan
research and education, started last year by a Westbrook woman, has blossomed
into a worldwide event scheduled for Valentine’s Day. Participation in Swim for
Your Heart Feb. 14 has grown exponentially since last year, said the event’s
founder, Pat Gallant-Charette, who drew international acclaim after swimming the
English Channel last summer.
Related: Westbrook Woman Swims English Channel (August 22, 2011)
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
City Officials Weighing Options for New Public Services Facilities
PPH:
Building a new facility for the Westbrook Public- John C.L. Morgan
Services Department could cost as much as $17 million. The proposal is the most
expensive of four options that a 10-member building committee is considering to
replace the department's facility on Saco Street, which has been in need of
upgrades since 2006. The committee plans to make a recommendation to the City
Council in coming weeks. The $17 million plan calls for a six-building complex
that would include offices, a warehouse, covered areas for equipment and school
buses, and a storage shed for salt and sand. Other options call for fewer
buildings and would cost from $10.6 million to $14.4 million, according to
estimates from Westbrook-based Sebago Technics, the project's engineering firm.
Plans call for completing construction in 2014.
Friday, January 20, 2012
Pike Faces Fines for Exceeding Blasting Limit
PPH:
Pike Industries will pay $4,500 in fines for blasts- John C.L. Morgan
in its Spring Street quarry that violated vibration limits set in a consent
agreement reached by the city, Pike and neighboring Idexx Laboratories. The
city's code enforcement officer issued the fine on Jan. 11. Tom Spellman, Pike's
crushing manager for Maine and New Hampshire, said today that the company plans
to pay the fine. The consent agreement reached in the fall of 2010 set the
maximum ground vibration of a blast at 0.5 inches per second. A blast on Dec. 9
registered at 0.73 inches per second, and a blast on Dec. 14 registered at 0.59
inches per second. A third blast on Dec. 16 did not violate the standards set in
the agreement.
Labels:
westbrook,
westbrook business,
westbrook politics
New Development Being Planned for Warren Avenue
AJ:
The building that was once home to a short-lived- John C.L. Morgan
Westbrook strip club is part of a new proposal designed to develop a large
parcel of industrial property off Warren Avenue. A copy of the proposal,
submitted to the city last month, indicates the property’s owner, Selden Von
Herten, wants to turn his 20.5-acre parcel into a commercial and industrial
condominium site.
Labels:
westbrook,
westbrook business,
westbrook politics
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Westbrook Soccer League to Host Poker Tournament
The Westbrook Soccer League is hosting a state-sanctioned poker tournament this Saturday at the Stockhouse Restaurant and Sports Pub.
The tournament begins at 4p, but you can register as early as 2p. There will be a 100-player cap, and the buy-in to participate is $60. Seventy-five percent of the net proceeds go to the eventual winner.
- John C.L. Morgan
Full disclosure: I serve on the Westbrook Soccer League Board of Directors.
The tournament begins at 4p, but you can register as early as 2p. There will be a 100-player cap, and the buy-in to participate is $60. Seventy-five percent of the net proceeds go to the eventual winner.
- John C.L. Morgan
Full disclosure: I serve on the Westbrook Soccer League Board of Directors.
State Chops Down Elm Trees to Aid Bridge Work
AJ:
[T]he Department of Transportation first had to- John C.L. Morgan
make room for relocated power lines and poles. That meant taking down a number
of large trees growing by the side of the road, including some growing on the
property next to The Elms, a bed-and-breakfast inn across the street from the
mill. The inn was first built byS.D. Warren as a retreat for visiting company
executives, and is now privately owned.
Labels:
maine,
maine politics,
westbrook,
westbrook business,
westbrook politics
City Begins Negotiations with Labor Unions
AJ:
When running for re-election, Westbrook Mayor- John C.L. Morgan
Colleen Hilton said she wanted to keep finding ways to make the city run more
efficiently, and she anticipated carrying that philosophy into the next round of
collective bargaining negotiations. Last week, Westbrook officials, including
Hilton, met for the first time this year with representatives of all five of the
city’s bargaining units, in what she called a "frank" discussion.
Monday, January 16, 2012
On Paul LePage's Horatio Alger Years
Author and reporter Colin Woodard has written an article on Paul LePage's upbringing.
And though Woodard is receiving some criticism that he should've included a possible conflict-of-interest disclosure in the piece, he deserves high praise for penning an informative essay in which he synthesizes previously published material with original reporting. The result is a rich portrayal of the Maine executive's formative years.
The second part of the essay, which will be about LePage's climb in the business and political arenas, will be published by the Portland Phoenix on January 20.
- John C.L. Morgan
And though Woodard is receiving some criticism that he should've included a possible conflict-of-interest disclosure in the piece, he deserves high praise for penning an informative essay in which he synthesizes previously published material with original reporting. The result is a rich portrayal of the Maine executive's formative years.
The second part of the essay, which will be about LePage's climb in the business and political arenas, will be published by the Portland Phoenix on January 20.
- John C.L. Morgan
Westbrook Residents Among Mainers Paying for FEMA's Errors
PPH:
Last year, 370 Maine property owners appealed to the Federal Emergency- John C.L. Morgan
Management Agency to remove their homes or businesses from flood plain status,
according to the Maine State Planning Office. Most of them had to hire surveyors
at an average cost of $750 to prove they didn't need to pay for costly flood
insurance policies required to obtain a mortgage.
Friday, January 13, 2012
In the Blood
For the context of this video, read Bob Keyes's feature on Maine musician/filmmaker Sumner McKane's "In the Blood."
- John C.L. Morgan
The Improvised Puppet Project to Play Show at WHS
The Improvised Puppet Project will be playing a show in the Westbrook High School auditorium tomorrow night (1/14) at 7p. The show will benefit the Sock 'N Buskin, the drama club at Westbrook High.
More information can be found here.
- John C.L. Morgan
More information can be found here.
- John C.L. Morgan
Labels:
westbrook,
westbrook arts,
westbrook schools
Parents Give Feedback at School Budget Forum
AJ:
Most of the discussions in the forum, which lasted- John C.L. Morgan
more than two hours, centered not on whether to close the school, but what the
reconfiguration of the city’s educational districts would mean for
fifth-graders, who would be thrust into the middle school with much older kids.
"We know they're very different children, with very different needs," School
Superintendent Marc Gousse said.
Labels:
westbrook,
westbrook politics,
westbrook schools
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Historical Society Prepares for Move to Community Center
AJ:
Related: On Location: Westbrook Historical Society (June 24, 2008)
Diane Dyer, the society’s director, said the move-John C.L. Morgan
in part is to make the society more accessible. Right now, the society gets
about 25 people visiting per month, but she is sure there could be more. "A lot
of people don’t even know we’re here," she said. The community center, on the
other hand, is a far more visible location, she said, and first-floor access
there will make visiting the collection even easier. Right now, visitors
must travel up a steep flight of stairs. "The idea was to make it more available
to people," [president Mike] Sanphy said. The other goals, he added, are to make
the collection safer. Its new home, he said, will have fire alarms and
sprinklers, something the society doesn’t have at the legion building. The city
also won’t have to pay $600 per month in rent to house the collection, either,
Sanphy said.
Related: On Location: Westbrook Historical Society (June 24, 2008)
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