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Overseers clear Maine surgeon of all counts of misconduct but 1

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Overseers clear Maine surgeon of all counts of misconduct but 1


The Maine board that oversees doctors has cleared a surgeon from MaineGeneral Medical Center in Augusta of nearly every allegation of unprofessional behavior against him, closing an inquiry into the doctor’s conduct that has largely centered on his treatment of women.

The Maine Board of Licensure in Medicine, which is primarily made up of doctors, voted on Tuesday that Dr. Ian Reight had only violated one of the 16 counts against him. It found that he had acted unethically when he made an inappropriate sexual comment in front of a nurse who had also been his patient, prompting her to find a different physician.

The board imposed a year-long term of probation on his Maine license that will require him to pay up to $3,000 toward the cost of the disciplinary hearing. He will also be required to continue to meet with a professional mentor, something he said he has been doing since becoming aware of the extensive board complaint against him.

His coaching appeared to factor into the board’s reluctance to impose harsher disciplinary sanctions. One board member, Gregory Jamison, asked if the board had to call the discipline “probation” at all because it sounded too “pejorative.”

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Reight, who has denied the allegations against him and continued to defend himself in testimony on Tuesday, will have the opportunity to appeal the decision when it becomes final during the board’s next meeting.

However, Reight plans to leave his position at MaineGeneral soon and does not plan to practice in Maine, he said. The press coverage of his conduct and the complaint against him “has done a pretty good job at making sure I can’t do that,” he said Tuesday.

Reight was the subject of an investigation by the Bangor Daily News in 2022 that found he rose to a leadership position at MaineGeneral despite at least five women submitting complaints about him to hospital officials. He stepped down as president of medical staff and the hospital’s board of directors in November 2022, shortly after publication.

Several of Reight’s former colleagues complained to the licensing board, which began holding an adjudicatory hearing this summer, into whether to discipline the doctor, an action that could have involved anything from a reprimand to revoking his license to practice in Maine. The hearing was held over individual days each month.

The original complaint included 15 counts related to sexual harassment, bullying and demeaning behavior, and concerns about patient safety. In August, the board dropped the patient safety counts.

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Then, last month, the board added an additional count against Reight when a former social worker at the hospital brought forward allegations after reading about the hearing in a news story. That count ended up being the only allegation of unethical misconduct that the board found violated professional licensing rules.

During a hearing in November, the social worker testified that she saw Reight crawl on the floor toward a nurse until he was near her crotch in 2016; then he described how long he could hold his breath. The social worker reported what she saw to hospital officials.

The nurse, who also testified last month, said she had been embarrassed and did not report the incident because she was already dealing with the stress of a breast cancer diagnosis. In addition to working together, Reight had also been her surgeon. The nurse described how he called her later to ask if she had reported him. She then switched to a different surgeon for her medical care.

Members of the board noted on Tuesday that, unlike some of the other allegations against Reight, he did not deny that he made the comment, and it had a clear negative impact on the nurse. The board found he violated “a standard of professional behavior” that was likely to “interfere with the delivery of care.”

“I think this was a serious violation professionally,” said board member Dr. Renee Fay-LeBlanc. “I don’t think Dr. Reight intended that. I think he’s been honest and has problems with boundaries and thinks he’s being funny, but I think this is pretty significant.”

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Reight addressed the allegation for the first time during his testimony on Tuesday. While he denied ever crawling on the floor, he characterized the comment as a joke made in poor taste with a person he considered a friend who enjoyed “salty” banter. He did not mean to upset her and expressed dismay at the offense he caused, he said.

Reight, 52, spent much of his testimony on Tuesday expressing regret for how he hadn’t learned to separate personal and professional boundaries. He struggled to do so at MaineGeneral when the social dynamics within his tight-knit surgery group began to break down and grew “toxic” in March 2020, he said.

But he denied specific allegations related to demeaning or inappropriate comments he made to colleagues or about patients, claiming he was not a person who would speak that way. For instance, he said he did not compare someone’s appearance to that of a chemo patient, noting his own mother’s battle with cancer. He also did not speak to a female colleague in a disparaging way when he expressed concerns about her qualifications to perform a job during a surgery.

 

He described his unlikely path to medicine that began with a difficult childhood in the Washington D.C. area, dropping out of high school and becoming a firefighter and emergency medical technician. He never truly shed the “firehouse” camaraderie that blurred the lines between personal and professional relationships — something he realized was a “theme” among complaints, he said.

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Reight has since attended professional development courses, he said. He has also met regularly with a therapist and with two doctors who served as professional mentors, one of whom recently defended him before the board. One of the most helpful lessons he took from those meetings is a greater understanding of women’s perceptions, he said.

“It helped me have empathy,” Reight told the board.

Board members credited that work when discussing the terms of his probation on Tuesday. They also asked him why he took those steps if he denied any wrongdoing.

The surgeon said he took advantage of the opportunities for self-improvement.

“In surgery, you’re always trying to make someone better, and I wanted to be better,” he said.

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Fighting back tears, he said the allegations against him in the 2021 board complaint  “were horrifying to me” and made him question who he was as a person and a surgeon.

He called the public airing of those complaints, both in the BDN and in the public disciplinary hearings, “devastating.”



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Rangeley Heritage Trust creates Friends of Western Maine Dark Sky

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Rangeley Heritage Trust creates Friends of Western Maine Dark Sky


The ‘Friends of Western Maine Dark Sky’ group meets March 3 at the Rangeley Lakes Heritage Trust office in Rangeley. They discussed the formation of the group as well as the process for designating the town as a dark sky community. (Quentin Blais/Staff Writer)

Looking up at the night sky in northern and rural Maine, it is a sight to behold, almost unique in today’s lit-up world. The Rangeley region is one of the last areas in the Northeast largely untouched by light pollution.

It is also a draw for many tourists and stargazers who come to the region for the clear view of the night sky.

A new group called Friends of the Western Maine Dark Sky hopes that by limiting the amount of light pollution, those views will be preserved for generations to come.

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The group gathered at the Rangeley Lakes Heritage Trust on March 3 to talk about ways to educate the community on the importance of dark skies to the region.

One of their primary efforts is to try to designate Rangeley as an official Dark Sky community.

The designation will require a few steps. First, an application will be submitted to DarkSky International expressing an interest. Then, the town of Rangeley will need to adopt a new lighting ordinance at the June town meeting.

A new state law taking effect in October will require publicly funded outdoor lighting across the state to be dimmed at night to protect wildlife and dark skies. This includes using warm, yellow-toned bulbs, dimming or turning off nonessential lights and shielding lights so they don’t shine upward into the sky.

The town ordinance would create guidelines similar to the state laws on the kinds of lights used in town, as well as restrict some signs, such as LED message boards. Existing boards would be allowed to remain in place.

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“The fact that the existing signage is grandfathered in perhaps bodes well for getting an approval of the town meeting,” said Linda Dexter, Dark Sky community certification coordinator at the Rangeley Lakes Heritage Trust, who is leading the effort. “It’s going to impact businesses in the town … right out of the gate, folks will tend to not vote for it.”

Even if an ordinance passes, change would likely be slow. Most of the group’s efforts will be on community education, such as informing seasonal residents to turn off the lights at their camps while they are gone for the winter. Also, the application may not be approved for up to six months after it is submitted, Dexter said.



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This Classic New England-Style Cottage in Maine Has 200 Feet of Atlantic Ocean Frontage

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This Classic New England-Style Cottage in Maine Has 200 Feet of Atlantic Ocean Frontage


A waterfront home with open ocean views on the coast of Maine came to market Tuesday asking $4 million. 

Built in 1978, the three-bedroom cottage is at the southern point of Cape Elizabeth, less than 10 miles from downtown Portland. The 1.1-acre property on Sunny Bank Road features 200 feet of south-facing water frontage on the wide open Atlantic. 

It is bordered by a rocky sea wall that’s about 28 feet high, according to listing agent Sam Michaud Legacy Properties Sotheby’s International Realty

“The views are like a Monet painting,” he said via email. “The water sparkles and the waves are endless.”

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MORE: Laid-Back Costa Rica Is Getting a $7 Million Mega-Penthouse

The 3,364-square-foot home was built in classic New England style, with shingle siding, a single sloped roofline and large windows—complemented by white-washed walls, exposed-beam ceilings and wide-plank flooring on the interiors. 

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The main common area features cathedral ceilings with a step-down between the living and dining room, and a partial wall divides the dining room from the kitchen. There is also a wood-paneled family room off the kitchen, a gym and a covered porch. 

The sellers purchased the property in 2010 for $1.562 million, according to property records accessed through PropertyShark. They could not immediately be reached for comment. 

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“I have received quite a few inquiries since hitting the market two days ago,” Michaud said. “Buyers understand that this is a golden opportunity to own over an acre with 200 feet of bold oceanfront in Cape Elizabeth.”

MORE: Iranian Strikes on Dubai Put the City’s Roaring Real Estate Market to the Test

There are currently just seven three-bedroom homes available for sale in Cape Elizabeth and fewer than five waterfront properties, according to Sotheby’s and Zillow data. It is also the most expensive listing in the town, with another waterfront property on a tiny lot just south of Portland coming in a close second, according to Zillow. 

Michaud sold the former Cape Elizabeth home of Bette Davis this past summer for $13.4 million, the priciest sale on the cape in at least a decade—and even those views can’t compare. They’re “just magical,” he said. 



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NECEC conservation plan will not protect Maine’s mature forests | Opinion

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NECEC conservation plan will not protect Maine’s mature forests | Opinion


Robert Bryan is a licensed forester from Harpswell and author or co-author of numerous publications on managing forests for wildlife. Paul Larrivee is a licensed forester from New Gloucester who manages both private and public lands, and a former Maine Forest Service forester.

In November 2025, the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) approved a conservation plan and forest management plan as mitigation for impacts from the NECEC transmission corridor that runs from the Quebec border 53 miles to central Maine.

As professional foresters, we were astonished by the lack of scientific credibility in the definition of “mature forest habitat” that was approved by DEP, and the business-as-usual commercial forestry proposed for over 80% of the conservation area.

The DEP’s approval requires NECEC to establish and protect 50,000 acres to be managed for mature-forest wildlife species and wildlife travel corridors along riparian areas and between mature forest habitats. The conservation plan will establish an area adjacent to the new transmission corridor to be protected under a conservation easement held by the state. Under this plan, 50% of the area will be managed as mature forest habitat.

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Under the forest management plan, a typical even-aged stand will qualify as “mature forest habitat” once 50 feet tall, which is only about 50 years old. These stands will lack large trees that provide wildlife denning and nesting sites, multiple vegetation layers that mature-forest birds use for nesting and feeding habitats and large decaying trees and downed logs that provide habitat for insects, fungi and small mammals, which in turn benefit larger predators.

Another major concern is that contrary to the earlier DEP order, the final approval allows standard sustainable forestry operations on the 84% of the forest located outside the stream buffers and special habitats. These stands may be harvested as soon as they achieve the “mature forest habitat” definition, as long as 50% of the conserved land is maintained as “mature.”

After the mature forest goal is reached, clearcutting or other heavy harvesting could occur on thousands of acres every 10 years. Because the landowner — Weyerhaeuser — owns several hundred thousand acres in the vicinity, any reductions in harvesting within the conservation area can simply be offset by cutting more heavily nearby. As a result, the net
mature-forest benefit of the conservation area will be close to zero.

Third, because some mature stands will be cut before the 50% mature forest goal is reached, it will take 40 years — longer than necessary — to reach the goal.

In the near future the Board of Environmental Protection (BEP) will consider an appeal from environmental organizations of the plan approval. To ensure that ecologically mature forest develops in a manner that meets the intent of the DEP/BEP orders, several things need to change.

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First and most important, to ensure that characteristics of mature forest habitat have time to develop it is critical that the definition include clear requirements for the minimum number of large-diameter (hence more mature) trees, adjusted by forest type. At least half the stocking of an area of mature forest habitat should be in trees at least 10 inches in diameter, and at least 20% of stands beyond the riparian buffers should have half the stocking in trees greater than or equal to 16 inches in diameter.

Current research as well as guidelines for defining ecologically mature forests, such as those in Maine Audubon’s Forestry for Maine Birds, should be followed.

Second, limits should be placed on the size and distribution of clearcut or “shelterwood” harvest patches so that even-aged harvests are similar in size to those created by typical natural forest disturbance patterns. These changes will help ensure that the mature-forest block and connectivity requirements of the orders are met.

Third, because the forest impacts have already occurred, no cutting should be allowed in the few stands that meet or exceed the DEP-approved definition — which needs to be revised as described above — until the 50% or greater mature-forest goal is reached.

If allowed to stand, the definitions and management described in the forest management plan would set a terrible precedent for conserving mature forests in Maine. The BEP should uphold the appeal and establish standards for truly mature forest habitat.

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