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Falling gas prices give Maine drivers a break heading into summer

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Falling gas prices give Maine drivers a break heading into summer


Maddy Michaud, of Windham, gases up Thursday at Citgo in Westbrook, where prices matched the statewide average of $3.42 a gallon. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Staff Photographer

Gas prices that typically spike in summer as vacationers hit the road are instead falling due to weak demand and strong global supplies. But not so much that motorists notice.

“Not really,” Maddy Michaud said Thursday when asked if she’s seen a drop in prices. The Windham resident, who was putting gas in her SUV – a $75 tab, she said, to fill it completely – said as far as she can tell, the price has hovered from $3 to $3.50 a gallon “for a while now.”

She doesn’t plan long trips this summer, using her vehicle to get to her job in Portland and allowing her to fill up just once a month.

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At the Citgo station on Main Street in Westbrook where Michaud was making her purchase, gas was selling at $3.42 a gallon, which is the average price statewide.

That’s down from $3.52 on Memorial Day and $3.60 a gallon two weeks earlier, according to data from GasBuddy. In the same two-week period last year, gas prices in Portland rose to $3.53 a gallon from $3.44.

The price of gas peaked at $3.65 a gallon on April 30 and has been falling since, with Maine prices remaining close to national averages.

In 2022, three months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine rattled global energy markets, gas prices reached $4.77 in Portland on Memorial Day, up from $4.63 two weeks earlier, according to numbers from GasBuddy.

The U.S. price on June 10 was $3.39 a gallon, down from $3.58 May 6, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. U.S. demand slipped to about 9 million barrels a day in early June, about 200,000 gallons less than the same time last year, the EIA said.

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Industry analysts say the drop in prices at the pump is due not only to lackluster demand, but also to strong supply and relatively mild global oil prices.

Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, said reduced demand can be traced to a “COVID hangover” in many markets.

“With the reopening of the economy in 2022 everyone hit the road,” he said. “Those who didn’t pushed back to the following year when prices were down.”

Inflation also is a culprit, driving up the cost of restaurants and lodging, and giving vacationers second thoughts about summer driving plans, De Haan said.

Prices also typically rise in the spring because there’s less capacity as refineries are scheduled for maintenance, he said. Capacity is now 95% and prices are “drifting a little bit lower,” De Haan said.

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Another factor helping push down prices is a burgeoning supply. The International Energy Agency reported recently that global oil production is “set to ramp up, easing market strains and pushing spare capacity toward levels unseen outside of the COVID (pandemic).”

Andy Price, president and chief executive officer of Competitive Energy Services, a Portland consulting group, said oil “has been struggling to maintain high prices” and seems to be “locked in” at $80 a barrel, plus or minus.”

“The consensus is the market is well supplied,” he said.

Lower gasoline prices could help President Biden in his bid for a second term. The U.S. Department of Energy has announced it will sell 1 million barrels of gasoline by June 30, ahead of the Independence Day holiday, “strategically timed and structured to maximize its impact on gasoline prices, helping to lower prices at the pump as Americans hit the road this summer.”

Observers say it’s too small to make much of a difference. The U.S. used about 9 million barrels of gasoline a day in 2023, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

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“It sends a message he’s doing something,” Price said. “It’s more symbolic than anything, I’m sure.”


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Proposed changes to Maine cannabis laws won’t appear on November ballot

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Proposed changes to Maine cannabis laws won’t appear on November ballot


Mainers will not weigh in on whether to cease recreational cannabis sales in Maine — at least not this November.

Organizers of the petition drive, which seeks to close the recreational cannabis market in Maine and strengthen state oversight of the medical marijuana market, did not submit their petition signatures by Monday’s deadline, the secretary of state’s office confirmed Wednesday.

At least 67,682 signatures, or 10% of the votes cast for governor in 2022, would have had to be submitted by Feb. 2 to put the cannabis question on the November ballot.

That does not necessarily mean the effort is dead, but it does mean it will not go to voters this year. Madison Carey, one of the organizers of the petition drive, did not answer a phone call Wednesday evening and their voicemail inbox was full.

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Organizers were seeking to repeal parts of the Maine Cannabis Legalization Act that allows for commercial cultivation, sale, purchase and manufacturing of recreational cannabis and cannabis products. The 15-page proposal, pushed by the political committee Mainers for a Safe and Healthy Future, would end all recreational sales and home-growing operations beginning Jan. 1, 2028. It would also add tracking and testing standards for medicinal cannabis previously opposed by caregivers.

Legalized by voters in 2016, Maine’s recreational marijuana market has grown from $82 million in 2021, the first full year of sales, to $244 million in 2024, the most profitable year yet. Preliminary sales figures put 2025 on pace to reach about $248 million, but final figures have not yet been released, according to data from the state Office of Cannabis Policy.

The petition effort was subject to criticism after some people accused signature collectors of misrepresenting the initiative. One person who spoke with the Press Herald last month said the petition was represented to them as an effort to ensure cannabis was free of toxic chemicals. They only learned it was to end recreational cannabis sales in Maine after they had signed.

At the time, Secretary of State Shenna Bellows said there was nothing her office could do if signature gatherers misrepresented a ballot initiative.

“You have a right to lie under the First Amendment,” she said. “I do not have authority to take any enforcement action over the truth of what is being said.”

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Funding for the effort came from an out-of-state source. Smart Approach to Marijuana Action Inc., a dark money group from Virginia, was the only donor listed on organizers’ campaign finance reports last month, contributing $2 million.



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Snow showers on tap for Maine on Wednesday before a blast of arctic air, more snow chances

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Snow showers on tap for Maine on Wednesday before a blast of arctic air, more snow chances


PORTLAND (WGME) — Scattered snow showers return to the forecast on Wednesday ahead of a major cool-down coming up this weekend.

Wednesday planner.{ }(WGME)

A weak system is set to swing through the area on Wednesday bringing clouds and some scattered snow showers.

High temperatures on Wednesday will run in the upper 20s and low 30s.

Scattered snow showers.{ }(WGME)

Scattered snow showers.{ }(WGME)

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Scattered snow showers will be in the area around late morning through the early afternoon.

Not everyone will receive a snow shower. There will be little to no accumulation, however.

Weekend planner.{ }(WGME)

Weekend planner.{ }(WGME)

By Thursday, we will turn brighter with highs sinking to the 20s.

A weak clipper will approach from our west late on Friday bringing more clouds to the area.

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Snow chances this weekend.{ }(WGME)

Snow chances this weekend.{ }(WGME)

A round of snow is expected at this time late Friday night through Saturday morning.

There is a possibility of an inverted trough to set up then, which will be difficult to forecast where it will set up.

Cold weekend ahead.{ }(WGME)

Cold weekend ahead.{ }(WGME)

The bigger weather story this weekend will be a blast of cold, arctic air Saturday afternoon into all day Sunday.

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Very cold wind chills late Saturday through Sunday.{ }(WGME)

Very cold wind chills late Saturday through Sunday.{ }(WGME)

Wind chills into the negative 20s and possible close to -30 degrees, specifically late Saturday into the day on Sunday.

Windy Saturday and Sunday.{ }(WGME)

Windy Saturday and Sunday.{ }(WGME)

There will be a gusty northwesterly wind up to 30 MPH as of midweek.

Next 8 to 14 days in the Northeast will experience above-normal temperatures according to NOAA's Climate Prediction Center.{ }(WGME)

Next 8 to 14 days in the Northeast will experience above-normal temperatures according to NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.{ }(WGME)

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On a more positive note, an above-normal temperature trend could possibly take over the Northeast for February 11 – 17. Stay tuned.

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Police Blotter: Brockton murder suspects apprehended in Maine

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Police Blotter: Brockton murder suspects apprehended in Maine


Two suspects in a Brockton murder were arrested in Lewiston, Maine, on Monday, according to the Plymouth County District Attorney’s Office.

Both suspects had been fugitives for months, the DA’s office said in a statement.

Michael Thompson, 35, faces a first degree murder charge while Dayana Slade, 25, was charged with accessory after the fact in connection to the killing of 40-year-old Mike Jonas.

Thompson allegedly shot Jonas following an altercation on September 23, 2025, the statement said, and was then seen on surveillance footage leaving the area of the shooting with Slade and another woman in a car.

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Thompson and Slade are expected to be arraigned in the coming days.



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