Maine
Cold front moving through Northern Maine this evening; Mostly sunny skies for Labor Day!
BANGOR, Maine (WABI) – This evening, a cold front enters Northern and Western Maine bringing some showers and thunderstorms with it. These showers will make their way throughout the Northern half of the state past sunset. Rainfall shouldn’t accumulate to more than a tenth of an inch, although some thunderstorm cells could produce more. Showers let up in the overnight hours. Dewpoints will drop significantly overnight, from the sticky 60s down to the dry 40s. Overnight wind gusts reach up to 20 mph. Low temperatures tomorrow morning range from the mid 40s to low 60s with skies mostly clear to start Labor Day.
Monday (Labor Day) will be mostly sunny. A very light and short-lived spot shower is possible in Northern Maine throughout the afternoon. High temperatures will be cool from the upper 50s to mid 70s. Dewpoints are dry in the upper 40s and low 50s. Wind gusts will reach up to 20 mph.
Tuesday will be sunny with patchy morning fog. High pressure from the Great Lakes works into New England. Temperatures remain cool with highs ranging from the low 60s to low 70s. Dewpoints stay dry in the upper 40s and low 50s. Wind gusts will reach up to 25 mph.
Wednesday will be sunny with patchy morning fog. High temperatures increase into the 70s for all of Maine. Dewpoints remain dry in the low to mid 50s.
Thursday will be sunny with patchy morning fog. High temperatures remain throughout the 70s with a couple isolated lower 80s. Dewpoints are comfortable in the mid 50s.
Friday looks to be mostly sunny with some patchy morning fog and will most likely conclude a beautiful week of sunny skies. High temperatures range throughout the 70s. Dewpoints remain comfortable in the mid to upper 50s.
Saturday brings the long-awaited return of shower chances with some slight shower chances across the state. Skies will be partly to mostly cloudy. High temperatures range from the upper 60s to mid 70s. Dewpoints in the upper 50s. Shower chances continue Sunday.
MONDAY (LABOR DAY): Mostly sunny skies. High temperatures from upper 50s to mid 70s. Gusty conditions remain. Dewpoints dry off.
TUESDAY: Sunny skies. High temperatures from low 60s to low 70s. Gusty conditions remain with dewpoints still very dry.
WEDNESDAY: Sunny skies. High temperatures throughout the 70s.
THURSDAY: Sunny skies. High temperatures in 70s and low 80s.
FRIDAY: Mostly sunny skies. High temperatures throughout the 70s.
SATURDAY: Partly to mostly cloudy skies. Slight shower chances across Maine. High temperatures from the upper 60s to mid 70s.
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Maine
Maine Mariners games postponed amid labor dispute between league, players union
Both Maine Mariners games in Portland scheduled for this weekend have been postponed amid a labor dispute between the hockey league and a players union.
Members of the Professional Hockey Players’ Association announced earlier this week that players in the league were prepared to strike, accusing the ECHL of obstructing collective bargaining with unfair labor practices.
The strike notice became effective Friday, when games were scheduled to continue after a holiday break, according to the association, which represents players in the ECHL, formerly known as the East Coast Hockey League.
The Cross Insurance Arena box office confirmed Friday afternoon that both Friday and Saturday’s games have been postponed and will be rescheduled.
The Mariners were set to play the Worcester Railers on Friday night and the Trois-Rivières Lions on Saturday afternoon.
The ECHL issued a statement Friday, saying the league had made its “last, best and final offer” to the players’ union Thursday. Any future offers by the league “likely will need to account for losses in revenue attributable to missed games from player strike,” the statement read.
The union said in its own statement that it had filed an unfair labor practice charge against the league after several months of bargaining.
“We are asking for basic standards around health, safety and working conditions that allow the players to remain healthy, compete at a high level and build sustainable professional careers,” Brian Ramsay, the executive director of the hockey players’ association, said in the statement Monday. “Our members have never been more united and remain ready to return to the bargaining table at any time.”
The Mariners team social media account shared a statement from the ECHL in posts Friday that accused the union of forcing all players in the league to go on strike.
“This could also result in the postponement or rescheduling of additional games, and we will be in direct communication with our fans and supporters as soon as practicable if that is the case,” the statement read. “But know that we’re working to have a team on the ice for our next regularly scheduled home game.”
A reporter’s efforts to reach Michael Keeley, director of media relations and broadcasting for the Mariners, were unsuccessful Friday afternoon.
As of Friday, the Mariners are 11-8 on the season, with three overtime losses and one shootout loss, good for fifth place out of nine in the Eastern Conference’s North Division and 16th overall in the 30-team league.
The ECHL is the third tier of North American professional hockey, below the NHL and the American Hockey League. Most ECHL teams serve as developmental teams for nearby NHL and AHL teams; the Mariners are affiliated with the Boston Bruins and their AHL team, the Providence Bruins.
This story will be updated.
Maine
Federal funding cuts are straining the nonprofits that keep this Maine island afloat
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Since René Colson started working for Healthy Island Project in Stonington a decade ago, the small nonprofit has grown to do far more social work than anyone expected.
What began as a community health organization 35 years ago has become a multi-pronged social service agency for the bridged island in Penobscot Bay, which also includes the town of Deer Isle. The nonprofit runs three food pantries, sends schoolchildren home with food, delivers meals to seniors, helps people find and apply for resources, visits them in their homes, and tries to meet whatever needs they have.
“We create our own programs here because we have to. No one is coming here to save us,” said Colson, its executive director. “That did not take me long to figure out.”
The needs just keep growing, according to Colson and members of the organization’s board.

Some of that comes from a yearslong decline in other resources on the island, ongoing inflation and rising housing costs. But federal funding cuts under the Trump administration also mean Healthy Island Project and nonprofits like it are seeing larger gaps, less money available to fill them and more demands on their small staff.
In Stonington, other nonprofits build housing for its workforce, conduct research that helps its lobster industry, run its community center, conserve its land and provide arts programming. It’s an example of how much of the responsibility for providing such services is shifting to outside organizations, which are also filling holes in the state’s social safety net. Those gaps are now being stretched by abrupt changes in federal priorities — and locals are trying to patch them back together.
“Our nonprofits funnel revenue into our towns, and services into our towns, that towns and even state government can’t and don’t provide,” said Linda Nelson, Stonington’s economic development director, who is also a consultant for nonprofits. “So, we’re extremely dependent on those nonprofits for both delivery of services [and] actually acting as pipelines to the funding available for those services.”
Since January, nonprofits nationwide have seen funding abruptly cut, grants canceled and research projects terminated by the Trump administration. That’s taken a toll across sectors in Maine, but particularly health, human services and education, according to Jennifer Hutchins, executive director of the Maine Association of Nonprofits.
“Nonprofits are Maine’s invisible backbone, delivering critical services efficiently, contributing to economic growth and strengthening communities,” she said.
In 2023, about 20% of the state’s workforce was employed by nonprofits, which contributed $16 billion to Maine’s economy that year, the group said.

On a recent Wednesday morning, a former church building bought by Healthy Island Project was bustling. A Good Shepherd truck delivered food to supply its pantries, volunteers packed 130 lunches to deliver to seniors, and people arrived for coffee at tables decorated for Christmas.
“I don’t know, seriously, what seniors would do without HIP,” said Fran Roudebush, 89, as friends stopped to greet her before coffee hour.
There’s a need for its senior programming because resources have been dwindling on the island, particularly for residents over 65, who made up more than 30% of Stonington’s population in 2023. About 20% of its population lives at or below the poverty line, and almost a quarter of households on the island make less than $25,000 a year, according to a local housing report completed this year.
Hancock County’s last skilled nursing home shut down in neighboring Deer Isle in 2021, meaning people are staying in their homes for longer, according to Colson. Northern Light Health, which runs the nearest hospital and has ongoing fin ancial problems of its own, no longer employs an island social worker or sends visiting health care specialists.

Federal heating assistance funds previously reached towns through Downeast Community Partners, a community action agency that collapsed this year. Its contracts have been taken over by a similar agency based in Aroostook County, which is in the process of forming a new tri-county agency. Even organizations that have resources available in theory often don’t have enough money or staff to make it to the island, Colson said.
At the same time, inflation continues while a worsening shortage of affordable year-round housing threatens the economy and community, according to local officials and residents.
Island Workforce Housing, a nonprofit that creates housing that workers can afford, has built apartments on the island and is building more to help meet that need.
It has never received federal funding, which isn’t available for people in the middle-income range. But its work is an example of how nonprofits fund projects that communities need by attracting donors when public money isn’t available, according to Pamela Dewell, its executive director.
Some of the housing is needed for the town’s lobster industry, the busiest in Maine. A local report earlier this year said lobster dealers often house their own employees in order to keep a workforce.
Other aspects of the industry are researched and supported by the Maine Center for Coastal Fisheries, another local nonprofit that aims to keep fisheries sustainable and economically viable.
Grants it received during the Biden administration were canceled earlier this year, according to Executive Director Alexa Dayton, who declined to say what projects were affected. Some were later reinstated.
The center’s work reaches beyond Stonington, but it runs a free museum there, offers a maritime mentoring and education program for high school students, and conducts research relevant to the town’s fishing community, like opportunities for lobstermen to diversify their income with scallops and a cost survey of lobstering that could help inform new gear rules. Those three initiatives received federal money.
Dayton is less sure what will happen a year from now when current grants come to an end and new ones don’t open up, though she said she sees opportunities to get creative.
Fisheries research matters for Stonington because it needs to stay on the “cutting edge” and be able to help drive policy, according to Nelson.
Still, she and others interviewed for this story noted, federal funding has waxed and waned under different administrations; the island has been through lean times before.

Now, Nelson is encouraging wealthy and seasonal residents to make larger donations. So far, nonprofits said, they have been generous.
“When you say communities have to do it for themselves, we mean that the people that have resources need to take care of the people that don’t,” Nelson said. “It’s really as simple as that.”
As other organizations lose funding, Colson, of Healthy Island Project, expects to see more gaps that her nonprofit and its small staff will try to fill.
Though the group doesn’t receive federal money directly, fruits and vegetables for its ever-expanding food pantries come from Good Shepherd, which was hit by cuts earlier this year. People are still anxious about what’s ahead, what aid they might lose, or if their insurance costs will rise, according to Colson.
“We have grown, and our budget has continued to grow, in response to the needs around us at a time when the federal government has made severe cuts,” she said.
Competition for outside grants has also increased dramatically as other organizations lose federal funding and look to make up the difference. A growing Healthy Island Project is also applying to more of them than ever before.
But some funders are now limiting how much they award and how often, according to Susan Toder, a member of the group’s board. The organization is ready to do the work whenever money becomes available, she added.

Toder spoke with a reporter while packaging biscuits with Edythe Courville, 89, who has lived on the island since she was 3 years old — before a bridge connected it to the mainland. Throughout her life, the island has always been close knit, with residents ready to help each other, Courville said.
Despite the challenges and continued uncertainty, the women love both their work and a community ready to meet whatever needs arise. Spirits seemed high as the coffee hour started.
“What we do should be filled with light and joy and happiness,” Colson said. “We’re not defeated in any sense.”
Maine
Maine Republican plans to call for probe into alleged interpreter fraud
A top Republican on the Maine’s Legislature’s watchdog committee said he plans to call for an investigation into interpreter fraud following reporting from the Bangor Daily News.
Sen. Jeff Timberlake of Turner, who sits on the Government Oversight Committee, said he needs to study the issue more ahead of the Legislature convening in January but expects he’ll file a letter asking the panel look into the fraud within MaineCare, the state’s version of Medicaid, the federal and state health care program for low-income people.
His comments came Wednesday, a day after the Maine Department of Health and Human Services halted payments to a provider that allegedly overbilled for interpreter services by more than $1 million. The BDN also published a story detailing a never-before-seen report written by a federal agent that raised concerns five years ago about potential widespread fraudulent billing for interpreter services in Maine.
“I think it’s something that we need to take a serious look at,” Timberlake said.
The 2020 report from a federal agent flagged Maine’s expenditures on interpreter services as entering the territory of waste, abuse or fraud. Claims were rising despite a steady or falling number of newly arrived refugees. The report came about a year after the federal government prosecuted three providers along with two interpreters, who fraudulently billed MaineCare for millions of dollars’ worth of interpreter services that didn’t happen or were overinflated.
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Data obtained by the BDN shows the levels of spending that were flagged by the reports have continued. A review of claims submitted and dollars spent on interpreters shows that consistently over the last 10 years, a handful of organizations by far have filed and gotten the most of the $41 million the state has spent.
One of them is Gateway Community Services, the Portland-based company that has faced allegations of overbilling from a former employee, first published by The Maine Wire, the media arm of the conservative Maine Policy Institute.
The move by DHHS came a day after U.S. Rep. James Comer of Kentucky, the top Republican on the House oversight committee, sent a letter to the U.S. Treasury that flagged Gateway along with a host of current and former employees as potential targets of a broader welfare fraud investigation being conducted by the panel. Comer’s letter directly tied for the first time Gateway to the committee’s investigation that has largely been focused on Minnesota.
There was no reaction from top elected Democrats on Wednesday. A spokesperson for Gov. Janet Mills, who is running for U.S. Senate in 2026, did not respond to a request for comment. Nor did Sen. Henry Ingwersen of Arundel and Rep. Michele Meyer of Eliot, the co-chairs of the legislative committee overseeing MaineCare.
Several candidates running to succeed the term-limited Mills have put pressure on her administration over the issue this month. One of them, health tech entrepreneur Owen McCarthy, praised The Maine Wire’s reporting and called for an audit of government agencies in a Facebook post.
Assistant Maine Senate Minority Leader Matt Harrington, R-Sanford, has raised concerns since May about Gateway and more broadly about the state’s spending on interpreting services. He said for months now he’s wanted top state officials to open an investigation into the spending.
As the new legislative session approaches, Harrington said he thinks more calls for action and investigation are coming. However, the calls won’t be new, he said. State republicans have been calling on Mills for months now to look into these issues, Harrington said.
“For me, I would just like to see it taken seriously, from [Attorney General Aaron Frey], from the Mills administration,” he said. “The silence is really deafening.”
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