-
PublishedJuly 27, 2022
Number of asylum seeking families coming to Portland appears to slow, but many still wait in hotels
It's also hard to track the numbers now that the city of Portland isn't involved with as many arrivals.
-
PublishedJuly 18, 2022
Family of man killed by Portland policeman gets $225,000 settlement
Chance David Baker's mother and grandmother agreed to settle more than two years after filing their lawsuit against Lt. Nicholas Goodman.
-
PublishedJuly 14, 2022
Governor’s conference requires state’s biggest security presence in decades
Thought it's unclear how much the three-day-long National Governor's Association conference will cost Maine, it took law enforcement months to plan for the event.
-
PublishedJuly 13, 2022
Protesters greet nation’s leaders as they descend on Portland
Abortion-rights protesters greet the governors, their families and staffers, as they kick off the three-day National Governors Association conference with dinner on the waterfront.
-
PublishedJuly 10, 2022
Latest impact of PFAS contamination: Rising sewer rates
The looming cost to homeowners in public sewer districts is the latest impact of an expanding crisis that has contaminated agricultural fields and drinking wells, closed farms and left some fish and game unsafe to eat.
-
PublishedJuly 7, 2022
Portland policy aims to improve response to homeless camps on public property
Under the policy, staff will not require the removal of campsites on city property when emergency shelters are full, and a plan will be in place for personal belongings to be recovered when camps are removed.
-
PublishedJune 19, 2022
Bomb threat forces Maine Medical Center to temporarily cancel visits to patients
But the Portland hospital reopened to visitations Sunday evening after Portland police and Maine State Police gave the all-clear.
-
PublishedJune 14, 2022
Portland Planning Board questions Roux campus developers at proposal’s first public airing
A proposal to give the former B&M Baked Beans factory a special institutional designation came under scrutiny because the campus would include substantial commercial development in support of the high-tech graduate school.
-
PublishedJune 2, 2022
After food truck furor boils over, city adds spots on Eastern Prom
After food truck operators and employees protested outside City Hall on Thursday morning, the city found a way to accommodate all applicants in the Cutter Street parking lot beginning June 15.
-
PublishedJune 1, 2022
Food truck lottery for coveted Eastern Prom spots leaves 5 trucks out in the cold
Operators of the trucks that weren't chosen Wednesday met with the city manager to voice their concerns.
- ← Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- …
- 18
- Next Page →