Lindsay Tice began as the Sun Journal's education reporter in 2001. Today, she covers health care, pets and RSU 4, as well as breaking news, investigative stories and long-form features. She was named Maine Journalist of the Year for 2012-13. When she's not working, Lindsay enjoys reading, kayaking and traveling — particularly to Universal Studios in Orlando or Space Camp in Alabama (where she's been a camper twice as an adult.) She graduated from the University of Maine at Farmington with a degree in creative writing.
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PublishedNovember 30, 2013
Necklaces, support groups, fingerprints, faith: ‘Each one of us grieves in our own way’
The death of a loved one is one of life’s most stressful events, a loss that’s magnified during the holiday season. “You sit around the Thanksgiving table and you think about who’s around the table and you think about who’s not around the table,” said the Rev. Jay Turner, director of pastoral care at Central […]
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PublishedSeptember 15, 2012
2012 Investigation: Seeking a safer way: Route 4 drivers say deaths, injuries prove changes needed
More than a dozen years after a Maine Department of Transportation study found Route 4 to be a high-speed, high-volume road with crashes more severe than similar rural highways, residents, city officials, lawmakers and transportation experts are pushing to make the Auburn section safer.
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PublishedMay 13, 2007
Published May 13, 2007: Safer at school: Security better in retest, but some still fall short
The Sun Journal sent reporters to the same schools tested last October. Most had improved, but some got worse.
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PublishedNovember 5, 2006
Published Nov. 5, 2006: How long did it take your school to respond?
The times are unsettling. Should it take 22 minutes for a stranger to be stopped in an elementary school? And should strangers be allowed to wander unconfronted in high schools? That’s what happened when a team of reporters tested security at 37 schools on a breezy October morning. The results are startling
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