Maine
Maine health care providers warn of service cuts due to budget stalemate
AUGUSTA, Maine — Hospitals and health care providers are feeling pressure after the Legislature once again failed Tuesday night to pass a short-term budget that fills a $118 million MaineCare shortfall.
The State House dysfunction could cost Mount Desert Island Hospital up to $50,000 a week due to the state now delaying and capping payments from its Medicaid program amid lawmakers not yet passing a supplemental budget to immediately fill the funding gap.
“It will erode services,” MDI Hospital CEO Christina Maguire said Wednesday, describing how the hospital that also covers outer islands and parts of Hancock County will struggle to pay bills and hire staff amid budget delays.
Millinocket Regional Hospital CEO Robert Peterson said payment reductions will make it “increasingly difficult to cover our normal expenses in a timely manner” and noted the budget stalemate delays the state in paying his hospital a “large” settlement following an annual audit.
“It is imperative that our rural Maine hospitals remain viable and available to our residents,” Peterson said. “To risk failure of these hospitals due to a state budget shortfall is abhorrent.”
The dire sentiments came after Senate Republicans opposed Tuesday night a short-term budget that otherwise had bipartisan support in the House to fill a $118 million MaineCare gap and give $2 million to fight spruce budworm infestations. Senate President Mattie Daughtry, D-Brunswick, has called her chamber back Thursday to reconsider the plan.
But it was unclear on Wednesday whether anything had changed to resolve the stalemate. Democrats can pass the measure by a simple majority, but it would not go into effect until June without two more votes from Republican senators.
Daughtry, Senate Minority Leader Trey Stewart, R-Presque Isle, and House leaders crafted an amendment Monday that would limit General Assistance per recipient to 12 months in a 36-month period, force Gov. Janet Mills’ administration to give direct care workers a 1.95 percent cost-of-living increase lawmakers had previously approved and require a third party to study “waste, fraud and abuse” in MaineCare.
After the House overwhelmingly passed it, all Senate Republicans except for Sens. Rick Bennett of Oxford and Marianne Moore of Calais ended up opposing the short-term budget in a final vote Tuesday night. Stewart said his caucus wanted more changes to rein in MaineCare costs, such as work requirements President Donald Trump could push for at the federal level.
Stewart said he had only agreed Monday to bring the amended plan back to his members before making “very clear” to Daughtry and other Democrats on Tuesday his caucus would not support it unless it had “substantive welfare reform.” But Daughtry said Republicans “flipped” on Mainers and walked away “from a compromise that had been negotiated in good faith.”
“This brinksmanship is senseless and counterproductive,” Mills, a Democrat, said in a Wednesday statement. “Senate Republicans should honor this partisan agreement and pass this bill.”
The lack of a supplemental budget is showing up in this week’s pay cycle for MaineCare providers. The Mills administration said certain payments for critical access hospitals are now capped at 70 percent of their normal levels.
The state is also pausing all hospital claims greater than $50,000, all payments for large retail pharmacies and durable medical equipment providers and all payments for out-of-state providers. Independent pharmacies located in New Hampshire towns within 15 miles of the Maine border will continue to be paid, the Department of Health and Human Services said.
Northern Light Health Eastern Maine Medical Center President Ava Collins noted the system has already been struggling financially in recent months and said a lack of a supplemental budget costs the multi-hospital system about $6 million per month.
Rep. Jack Ducharme, R-Madison, a top appropriator who voted in favor of the short-term plan, said the latest indication on MaineCare funding is the state has enough money to last until the end of April. He acknowledged “a whole lot of fear” for health providers and said he is not sure what the Senate may do Thursday but is hopeful for a deal.
Ducharme added if Republican senators have opportunities to “get something that you want … then you should do that.”
Penobscot Community Health Center CEO Lori Dwyer, who leads Maine’s largest federally qualified health center that serves about 60,000 patients, said they will not see payment reductions until March 26. But Dwyer said PCHC does not yet know how much of a reduction it could see amid 38 percent to 40 percent of its patient revenue coming from MaineCare.
This delay and bigger cuts could force the health center with locations in Penobscot County as well as in Belfast and Jackson to reduce hours or temporarily close clinics, Dwyer added.
“This is a completely manufactured crisis that’s entirely avoidable,” Dwyer said.
BDN writers Marie Weidmayer and Michael Shepherd contributed to this story.
Maine
Lawmakers advance bill to provide death benefits after two DOT workers killed on the job
Maine
Maine man accused of lighting bed on fire after fight with girlfriend
WISCASSET, Maine (WMTW) – A Maine man has been arrested after police say he intentionally set a bed on fire after a dispute with his girlfriend, while they were still in it.
Police responded Monday, March 9, to a report of a fire that had been intentionally set inside a home on Beechnut Hill Road, according to the Wiscasset Police Department.
Investigators say the homeowner, Terry Couture, 41, set the bed on fire following an argument while both he and his girlfriend were in it. Authorities said the fire was extinguished and no serious injuries were reported.
Couture was arrested and charged with attempted murder, arson, aggravated criminal mischief, and domestic violence criminal threatening with a dangerous weapon.
The investigation is ongoing.
Copyright 2026 WABI. All rights reserved.
Maine
Celebrate Maine Maple Weekend at Williams Family Farm
CLIFTON, Maine (WABI) – Maine Maple Sunday is less than two weeks away, and the Williams Family Farm in Clifton is gearing up for one of the sweetest seasons yet.
A long stretch of frost and snow meant a late start this year, but the first boil of sap has finally run through the evaporator, and maple season is officially underway.
At Williams Family Farm, everything is done by hand:
- Fresh maple syrup, bottled on-site
- Maple sugar, carefully extracted in small batches
- Baked candied pecans, cashews, and more
The Williams family has spent years working with whatever weather sends their way.
Long winters, surprise warmups, and everything in between—they’ve learned how to adapt so community members can enjoy their products.
As co-owner John Williams explains, the key is in the temperature.
“You need to have it warm during the day and still freezing at night, so typically that’s the middle of February,” said Williams. “We have a lot of trees, so we have to start tapping them before the conditions are ideal, so we start tapping way before it’s time for it to run just so we can get them all tapped. If you have ten trees in your backyard, you want to wait until roughly now, the middle of February to now, and when it’s actually running and put them in then because you can put all your taps in, in one day.”
They’re excited to welcome the community during Maine Maple Weekend on March 21 and 22.
They will be boiling up sap, hosting demonstrations, and providing free samples.
Locals can also join them for their third annual pancake breakfast where all proceeds are donated to Holbrook Recreation.
Follow the link to find out their hours for March and more.
Copyright 2026 WABI. All rights reserved.
-
Wisconsin1 week agoSetting sail on iceboats across a frozen lake in Wisconsin
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMassachusetts man awaits word from family in Iran after attacks
-
Pennsylvania6 days agoPa. man found guilty of raping teen girl who he took to Mexico
-
Detroit, MI5 days agoU.S. Postal Service could run out of money within a year
-
Miami, FL7 days agoCity of Miami celebrates reopening of Flagler Street as part of beautification project
-
Sports6 days agoKeith Olbermann under fire for calling Lou Holtz a ‘scumbag’ after legendary coach’s death
-
Virginia7 days agoGiants will hold 2026 training camp in West Virginia
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz on the Real Locations in These Magical and Mysterious Novels