Maine
A former Camden tannery embodies Maine’s fight over growth
For eight years, Tom Resek has labored to determine what’s subsequent for the previous Apollo Tannery property in Camden, a three-acre website the place animal conceal tanning and different industrial actions had been carried out for greater than a century. So far, there hasn’t been a growth proposal he likes, although.
The tannery closed in 1997, and the city acquired the land six years later after the proprietor didn’t pay property taxes. Since then, the way forward for the location has been a giant query mark hanging over Camden’s Millville neighborhood — particularly for neighbors like Resek.
A self-employed businessman, Resek is evident on what he needs for the property alongside the Megunticook River. He’d wish to see a multi-use neighborhood park with a devoted house for the Camden Farmers’ Market, in addition to reasonably priced housing alternatives.
What he doesn’t need is the opposite proposals which were launched up to now, which embody a startup film studio, an ambulance middle, a three-story house constructing and a mixture entrepreneurial makerspace and housing growth. The 2014 ambulance middle proposal, which he thought can be too noisy and harmful for Millville, is what pushed him to assist kind the Pals of Tannery Park group. He needed the residents to have some company in what was constructed there.
However what Resek actually doesn’t need is for his activism in preventing for the way forward for his neighborhood to be given the often-negative label of NIMBY, or “Not In My Yard.” A couple of individuals have used that time period, which he sees as a phrase used to belittle those that desire a say in what occurs of their neighborhoods.
“It’s simply significantly better to speak in regards to the problem itself,” he stated. “It’s a label, and a label that’s used, typically, in a destructive approach, to marginalize a gaggle.”
The talk taking part in out across the former tannery website in Camden is echoed across the state, however maybe most acutely alongside the coast, the place growth pressures abound and residents wish to shield property values and their lifestyle.
From land-based fish farms to replacements for getting old bridges, to vitality transmission traces, to reasonably priced housing developments, numerous Mainers consider that their backyards — actually or metaphorically talking — aren’t the suitable place to construct them.
This pushback to growth has excessive stakes, and infrequently slows or stops tasks of their tracks. Relying on the problem and on an individual’s perspective, this may be both constructive or troubling for Maine’s future.
NIMBY 101
Although the acronym NIMBY started as a Nineteen Seventies rallying cry adopted by lower- and middle-income individuals preventing for environmental justice, it has advanced within the years to indicate selfishness. Critics of those that embody the phrase embody the rising YIMBY, or “Sure In My Yard,” housing advocacy motion. They consider that individuals who have already got one thing — a home, a job, cash, a view — are preventing to maintain others from having their share, too.
However it additionally is smart that, in a time when so many political or international issues really feel uncontrolled, fights over what occurs in an individual’s city and neighborhood really feel properly value having.
“Yeah, I care about what’s in my yard. I imply, who doesn’t?” Resek stated. “Would you desire a neighborhood that doesn’t care?”
Caroline Noblet, a College of Maine economics professor, stated that native opposition to proposed developments is occurring all over the place.
“We maintain seeing it over and over. There’s a sample,” she stated. “However it’s not a uniquely Maine factor to say that one thing’s proposed and we don’t prefer it.”
Causes embody “established order bias,” which is when individuals want issues to stay the identical. It’s a well-known chorus in Maine, the oldest state within the nation and the place many residents have deep generational roots. That issues, she stated, utilizing the instance that if somebody’s grandfather proposed to their grandmother on a bridge, it may be exhausting to help changing it — even when it’s a bit rickety these days.
“I feel we’ve all been someplace and cared about one thing, and seen it not be straight in our management,” she stated.
One thing else on her thoughts is the “drawbridge concept,” a time period to explain when individuals retire or transfer to Maine as a result of they just like the surroundings and different idyllic points, and don’t need that to vary.
“After which they wish to pull up the drawbridge behind them,” Noblet stated.
This group typically has schooling, time and sources, and is properly positioned to battle change, she stated. Which means they will discover themselves preventing for a similar issues because the generational Mainers, which might create highly effective, if barely uncommon, coalitions in opposition to proposed change.
“Maybe it’s uncommon for these two teams of individuals — rich, well-educated … retirees, and the oldsters who’ve lived on the town for a very long time and don’t have lots of sources, to agree on one thing,” Noblet stated.
And it’s simpler now than ever for opponents to seek out one another, because of social media and the web.
“I feel there have been all the time opponents,” Noblet stated. “Now, I feel typically a small minority [of people] appears larger, as a result of there are extra instruments to get the message out.”
Issues and questions
Peter DelGreco of Maine & Co., a Portland-based nonprofit group that works to convey companies to the state, stated that opposition is slowing growth of all types. Court docket circumstances, appeals and extra can alarm buyers and add a sense of threat to tasks. City conferences about growth tasks can run scorching, leaving communities solely extra divided and fewer prone to discover consensus on proposals.
“Native opposition is totally an element,” DelGreco stated. “What’s bought to occur — and that is in all probability an excellent factor — is that [companies have] bought to spend so much of time attending to know the neighborhood and what’s necessary to the neighborhood. That additionally means it’s incumbent on the neighborhood to seek out out for themselves what’s necessary to them.”
In any other case, what’s at stake for Maine is way bigger than the person growth battles counsel.
“A few of these questions are actually exhausting and difficult. We’re speaking about what’s our technique for progress? What does our future appear to be?” DelGreco stated.
He feels that what’s taking place in Maine is mirroring a nationwide pattern: America is a polarized place, and one the place individuals are fast to problem concepts and choices they don’t like.
“I feel there’s a pure mistrust of the whole lot, and other people throughout the nation are saying no to lots of issues,” DelGreco stated. “Generally simply because they wish to say no, and typically as a result of it makes them really feel empowered.”
However to him, a minimum of, the danger of simply saying no is obvious. That’s very true with regards to aquaculture, one thing that has been a part of the state’s financial growth agenda for many years. Corporations that wish to construct land- or water-based farms on the coast typically have run into sharp opposition from individuals who have the sources to maintain tasks in limbo, typically for years.
“What we now have is a handful of well-heeled those who have determined that we don’t need that,” DelGreco stated. “They’re fully altering the financial growth plans of a complete state simply because they’ve cash … I feel that’s driving NIMBYism.”
Vote of confidence
Past aquaculture, current points which have divided Camden embody whether or not so as to add paid downtown parking and what to do in regards to the tannery website and the Montgomery Dam on the Megunticook River.
“It’s positively a problem to make community-wide choices on advanced points,” Choose Board member Alison McKellar stated. “Generally all people simply has totally different objectives. Some individuals need there to be extra vacationers on the town, and a few individuals need there to be fewer vacationers.”
The query of what to do with the tannery website is nuanced, she stated. When the Apollo Tannery was working, it leaked chemical compounds onto a portion of the property. Whereas probably the most critical contamination was excavated and eliminated in 2008, extra low-level decontamination work nonetheless must be finished.
On a gradual stroll across the perimeter of the Camden tannery website, it’s not exhausting to see why Resek and different members of the chums group consider there’s potential within the property. Regardless of close by building work and the warmth of the July day, the trail is shady and peaceable because of the timber lining the banks of the Megunticook River. Milkweed, goldenrod, Queen Anne’s lace and meadow grasses develop unchecked over a portion of the property.
“It doesn’t take a lot creativeness to see this as a park,” he stated. “I feel we could possibly be perceived as NIMBYs if all we stated was, ‘Don’t do this.’ However it’s not a egocentric pursuit to try to get one thing finished for the neighborhood.”
Nonetheless, although proponents of turning the property right into a park have stated that no different critical entities needed to purchase it from Camden, when the city put out a request for proposals, that turned out to not be the case, McKellar stated.
“I don’t actually have an enormous or any agenda, myself,” she stated. “I’m simply so uninterested in having choices be made by speculating about what individuals need.”
So the city put it to a vote. Final month, residents voted 871 to 618 in opposition to giving the Choose Board the authority to get rid of tax-acquired property, together with the tannery website. In addition they voted 900 to 628 in opposition to giving the board energy to barter to promote the tannery property for a minimum of $250,000.
Resek and the Pals of Tannery Park consider the outcomes present a public vote of confidence within the park concept.
“So long as you will get a consensus or a gaggle of people that don’t simply reside subsequent to it, it goes from being a NIMBY problem to a neighborhood problem,” he stated. “We gained over the entire city. The group that’s behind making an attempt to make it a park has members in the entire neighborhood, not simply within the neighborhood.”
Extra articles from the BDN
Maine
Maine real estate mostly unaffected by commission changes
New rules that went into effect in August changing who pays real estate commissions have resulted in more paperwork and some anxiety for home buyers and sellers but have had little, if any, impact on home prices in the state’s hot real estate market.
The changes, which stem from a settlement in a lawsuit accusing real estate agents of conspiring to keep their commissions high, altered the way commission fees are set nationally.
For decades, most home sales in the United States have included a commission fee, typically between 5 and 6 percent of the sale price.
The typical Maine home went for around $400,000 this fall. A 5 to 6 percent commission on a $400,000 home would be between $20,000 and $24,000, split between the agents for the buyer and the seller.
Before the changes in August, the split for each agent was predetermined by the seller, who paid the fee for both agents. That usually resulted in fees being baked into the list price of a home.
In some states (although not in Maine) agents were able to search the multiple listing service, a catalogue of homes for sale, by the commission split, which critics said incentivized agents to steer clients toward more expensive properties with higher commissions.
Now, fees are negotiated sale-by-sale. Buyers and sellers are now each responsible for paying their own agents, meaning a buyer may have to come with more cash up front if a seller doesn’t want to pay the commission fee for a buyer’s agent. Sellers are also no longer allowed to include commission fees in their listings.
Tacy Ridlon, a listing agent with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate The Masiello Group in Ellsworth, who has been in real estate for 32 years, said it is a bit jarring to have a conversation with buyers about whether they are willing to pay part of their agent’s commission.
Once the commission is established and the agreement signed, she said, the buyer’s agent then approaches the seller’s agent to see what part of their commission the seller is willing to cover, if any.
Ridlon said 3 percent for the buyer’s agent is a typical starting point.
“We have to start high. If the seller is willing to offer 2 percent for the buyer’s agent, then our buyer only has to pay one percent… If the seller is not offering anything, then we ask the buyer to pay a certain amount. Some can pay and some can’t. For some it’s very difficult because they don’t have a lot of money to play around with.”
Some agents said they found the changes minimal; others find the paperwork and negotiating with buyers daunting. One agency owner said the ruling has done little to bring prices down.
“This ruling has done nothing to save buyers or sellers any money,” said Billy Milliken, a designated broker and owner of Bold Coast Properties, LLC, in Jonesport. “If anything, it’s made the cost of buying a home even more expensive.”
Milliken said his sellers have had no problem agreeing to pay both buyers’ and sellers’ commissions. The cost has been embedded in the price of the property.
“The real loser is first time home buyers who are not educated in buying a home and also have limited cash resources,” said Milliken. “It puts them at a disadvantage.”
The change has resulted in some confusion for many buyers and even some agents around the country, as rules differ from state-to-state.
People are slowly getting used to the changes, said Monet Yarnell, president of the Midcoast Board of Realtors, who owns her own agency, Sell 207 in Belfast, adding that Maine’s real estate practices were already more transparent than many other areas of the country.
“I think it was a little confusing in the beginning, more doom and gloom,” said Yarnell. But sellers are still incentivized to offer something to the buyers’ agents, she said. And the changes have increased the level of communication between agents and their clients.
“It’s more how the money flows rather than the actual dollars.”
Ridlon, in Ellsworth, said she has been fortunate that most sellers have offered some compensation toward the buyer’s agent commission. “I have not had a buyer who can’t do the 3 percent.”
Ridlon had one seller who was not willing to pay any part of the buyer’s agent’s commission. The property had a lot of showings, but many of the buyers asked for closing costs to be covered or for concessions in lieu of picking up part of the commission.
“That didn’t really work for my seller either,” she said. “Then he relented and said he would pay one percent.”
The property sold.
Debbie Walter sold her condominium in Stockton Springs via Yarnell and then bought another condominium in New London, N.H., with another real estate agent.
“We’re kind of guinea pigs,” said Walter. “We were very concerned about that whole piece, both as sellers and buyers.”
Fearful the sale of their house might not proceed smoothly the couple readily agreed to pay a 3 percent commission for the buyer’s agent.
When they made their offer to buy the condominium in N.H., they offered as buyers to cover their buyer’s agent’s commission as well. But the seller in that case took an equally cautious approach and offered to cover 2.5 percent of the buyer’s agent’s commission, which Walters’ agent accepted.
“It was very stressful,” Walter said. Offering to cover their buyer’s agent’s commission, she said, created “one less headache for the whole closing procedure.”
Tom McKee, president of the Maine Realtors Association, said the settlement and new rules have had little impact.
“It hasn’t changed anything for me,” said McKee, who is with Keller Williams in Portland. Now that the commission split is no longer listed in the M.L.S., said McKee, “there are just more questions in the transaction.”
McKee said there is no set percentage, that everything is negotiable.
“If we do our job right and are meeting with the client first, they already understand.”
Maine
Maine’s highest court proposes barring justices from disciplining peers
The Maine Supreme Judicial Court has proposed new rules governing judicial conduct complaints that would keep members of the high court from having to discipline their peers.
The proposed rules would establish a panel of eight judges — the four most senior active Superior Court justices and the four most senior active District Court judges who are available to serve — to weigh complaints against a justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court. Members of the high court would not participate.
The rule changes come just weeks after the Committee on Judicial Conduct recommended the first sanction against a justice on the Maine Supreme Judicial Court in state history.
The committee said Justice Catherine Connors should be publicly reprimanded, the lowest level of sanction, for failing to recuse herself in two foreclosure cases last year that weakened protections for homeowners in Maine, despite a history of representing banks that created a possible conflict of interest. Connors represented or filed on behalf of banks in two precedent-setting cases that were overturned by the 2024 decisions.
In Maine, it’s up to the Supreme Judicial Court to decide the outcome of judicial disciplinary cases. But because in this case one of the high court’s justices is accused of wrongdoing, the committee recommended following the lead of several other states by bringing in a panel of outside judges, either from other levels of the court or from out of state.
Connors, however, believes the case should be heard by her colleagues on the court, according to a response filed late last month by her attorney, James Bowie.
Bowie argued that the outcome of the case will ultimately provide guidance for the lower courts — a power that belongs exclusively to the state supreme court.
It should not, he wrote, be delegated “to some other ad hoc grouping of inferior judicial officers.”
The court is accepting comments on the proposal until Jan. 23. The changes, if adopted, would be effective immediately and would apply to pending matters, including the Connors complaint.
Maine
Maine’s marine resources chief has profane exchange with lobstermen
Maine Department of Marine Resources Commissioner Patrick Keliher said “f— you” to a man during a Thursday meeting at which fishermen assailed him for a state plan to raise the size limit for lobster.
The heated exchange came on the same day that Keliher withdrew the proposal, which came in response to limits from regional regulators concerned with data showing a 35 percent decrease in lobster population in the state’s biggest fishing area.
It comes on the heels of fights between the storied fishery and the federal government over proposed restrictions on fishing gear that are intended to preserve the population of endangered whales off the East Coast. It was alleviated by a six-year pause on new whale rules negotiated in 2022 by Gov. Janet Mills and the state’s congressional delegation.
“I think this is the right thing to do because the future of the industry is at stake for a lot of different reasons,” Keliher told the fishermen of his now-withdrawn change at a meeting in Augusta on Thursday evening, according to a video posted on Facebook.
After crosstalk from the crowd, Keliher implored them to listen to him. Then, a man yelled that they don’t have to listen to him because the commission “sold out” to federal regulators and Canada.
“F— you, I sold out,” Keliher yelled, prompting an angry response from the fishermen.
“That’s nice. Foul language in the meeting. Good for you. That’s our commissioner,” a man shouted back.
Keliher apologized to the crowd shortly after making the remark and will try to talk with the man he directed the profanity to, department spokesperson Jeff Nichols said. The commissioner issued a Friday statement saying the remarks came as a result of his passion for the industry and criticisms of his motives that he deemed unfair, he said.
“I remain dedicated to working in support of this industry and will continue to strengthen the relationships and build the trust necessary to address the difficult and complex tasks that lay ahead,” Keliher said.
Spokespeople for Gov. Janet Mills did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether she has spoken to Keliher about his remarks.
Lobstermen pushed back in recent meetings against the state’s plan, challenging the underlying data. Now, fishermen can keep lobsters that measure 3.25 inches from eye socket to tail. The proposal would have raised that limit by 1/16 of an inch and would have been the first time the limit was raised in decades.
The department pulled the limit pending a new stock survey, a move that U.S. Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat from Maine’s 2nd District, hailed in a news release that called the initial proposal “an unnecessary overreaction to questionable stock data.”
Keliher is Maine’s longest-serving commissioner. He has held his job since former Gov. Paul LePage hired him in 2012. Mills, a Democrat, reappointed the Gardiner native after she took office in 2019. Before that, he was a hunting guide, charter boat captain and ran the Coastal Conservation Association of Maine and the Maine Atlantic Salmon Commission.
-
Sports1 week ago
The top out-of-contract players available as free transfers: Kimmich, De Bruyne, Van Dijk…
-
Politics1 week ago
New Orleans attacker had 'remote detonator' for explosives in French Quarter, Biden says
-
Politics1 week ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country
-
Politics7 days ago
Who Are the Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
-
Health6 days ago
Ozempic ‘microdosing’ is the new weight-loss trend: Should you try it?
-
World1 week ago
South Korea extends Boeing 737-800 inspections as Jeju Air wreckage lifted
-
News1 week ago
21 states are getting minimum wage bumps in 2025
-
Technology2 days ago
Meta is highlighting a splintering global approach to online speech