Address Newsletter
Our weekly digest on buying, selling, and design, with expert advice and insider neighborhood knowledge.
Sheri Biller is a cancer care advocate, philanthropist and the co-founder and president of The Sheri and Les Biller Family Foundation. Brandon Hotham is the president and CEO of the Dempsey Center.
Anyone who has faced cancer — or stood beside someone who has — knows that cancer is not just a medical condition. It is a life-altering experience that affects every part of a person’s world.
And yet, too often, patients and their caregivers are left to navigate that journey alone. That’s especially true in rural communities like many across Maine, where access to comprehensive support can be limited.
As a national cancer care advocate and as the leader of Maine’s Dempsey Center that provides cancer care services, we know it doesn’t have to be this way.
There is growing recognition of an approach to care called supportive cancer care — a model that focuses on treating the whole person, not just the disease. Supportive cancer care goes beyond clinical treatments like chemotherapy, radiation and surgery and includes a broad range of services such as financial guidance, counseling, pain and symptom management, caregiver support and help navigating practical challenges like transportation, insurance and goals-of-care conversations.
These services are delivered across both healthcare and community-based settings, often through a combination of providers and organizations working together to support patients and families throughout their cancer journey.
When these systems work well, the impact is clear. Access to supportive care improves quality of life and treatment adherence, reduces unnecessary emergency room visits and helps patients and families feel more confident navigating an incredibly complex experience. Just as importantly, it reinforces something deeply human: no one should have to face cancer alone.
Maine is helping show what’s possible in cancer care for the whole person.
The Dempsey Center is part of that broader network — providing community-based, evidence-informed supportive cancer care services that complement clinical treatment. We offer counseling, nutrition support, integrative therapies, movement and fitness programs and caregiver support, all designed to meet the evolving needs of individuals and families affected by cancer.
As a nonprofit organization, these services are provided at no cost to clients and are made possible entirely through philanthropy — through the generosity of donors, sponsors and community members who believe that everyone deserves access to this kind of care.
You can see the power of that community every year through the Dempsey Challenge, where thousands of participants — from Maine and around the world — come together to raise critical funds that sustain these services and ensure that no one faces cancer alone. As the need for these services continues to grow, so too does the importance of that support.
Maine is also making meaningful progress at the policy level. The state has taken important steps to support access to palliative care through MaineCare reimbursement, reinforcing that supportive care is not a luxury, but an essential part of high-quality cancer care. Initiatives like Maine’s specialty cancer license plates further invest in programs that provide patient support, fund research and expand access to care across the state.
Across Maine, a growing network of community-based supportive cancer care organizations — including members of the Association of Maine Cancer Support Centers — is working collectively to expand access to these services for as many Mainers as possible. And yet, despite this progress, access remains far from universal — both in Maine and across the country.
Nationally, only a fraction of patients can access supportive cancer care services like counseling, financial navigation or structured conversations about goals of care. Even when services exist, patients may not know to ask for them — or may assume they are not accessible or affordable. This leaves too many people and their loved ones carrying burdens they should not have to carry alone.
We need to continue building and strengthening these networks of care — across Maine and across the country. That means investing in community-based organizations, supporting policies that expand access and ensuring that patients and caregivers understand what supportive cancer care is and how to access it.
That’s also why the Dempsey Center is proud to support Support Is Care, a national campaign by The Sheri and Les Biller Family Foundation. It’s focused on helping people living with cancer and those who love them understand that this kind of support exists, that it’s part of high-quality care and that everyone has every right to ask their provider for it.
Last month, we gathered in our nation’s capital alongside providers, patients, caregivers and advocates from across our country — uplifting their voices, sharing their stories and advancing the case for supportive cancer care on Capitol Hill. We have to make sure that supportive cancer care is more widely understood, more consistently delivered and more equitably accessible.
Supportive cancer care isn’t “nice to have” — it’s a “must-have.” Research continues to show that when people have access to this kind of support, their outcomes and quality of life improve, and they experience fewer unnecessary visits to the emergency room.
Our work cannot stop there. We must all commit to building and sustaining the networks that make supportive cancer care accessible to everyone — regardless of where they live. That means continued investment in community-based programs, training providers and ensuring that every patient — regardless of ZIP code — knows what supportive cancer care is and feels empowered to ask for it.
No one should face cancer alone. Ask your providers about supportive cancer care. Advocate for systems that expand access. And consider how you can be part of the solution — whether by supporting community-based organizations or by showing up for those in your community who need help — because strength is built through connection, and connection starts with us.
Together, we can create a world where every patient and caregiver affected by cancer feels supported and heard.
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On the Market
Gilbert Head, at the southern end of Long Island in Georgetown, Maine, includes a beautifully kept Federal house, another house that has served as an artist’s studio, a private deep-water dock and pier built of Deer Isle granite, a spacious boat house, and hiking trails on 25 acres of one of Maine’s surpassingly beautiful mid-coast islands. It is a historic site at the mouth of the Kennebec River for sale for $3,850,000. Along with the natural beauty of a Maine island, it has privacy as it’s accessed by water only.
Built in 1837, the 3,346-square-foot main house has the dignified hallmarks of the Federal style: simple rectangular massing topped by a hipped roof, a pedimented entry flanked with side lights, wide-plank pumpkin pine floors, and gracefully proportioned rooms featuring original woodwork.
There are five bedrooms (including a first-floor primary bedroom with an ensuite bathroom) and three full bathrooms, two fireplaces, and a large eat-in kitchen. While the kitchen is equipped with modern enmities like granite countertops, a farmhouse sink, an electric cooktop, twin dishwashers, and a large central island, it retains historic charm with a turn-of-the-20th-century cast iron cookstove, beaded-board wainscoting, and a fireplace with original Federal styling.


The separate house known as the Studio is a one and one-half story farmhouse. Its interior is unfinished, but while it presents a building project, it retains many original features, including old flooring, wainscoting, the stairs, and fireplace surrounds. The structure includes a new roof and chimney.
The current owners, who bought the property in 2000, made significant improvements, including the kitchen updates. They built the dock, a new post-and-beam barn, a new gravel road to the dock, installed a new septic system, drilled a new well, put standing-seam metal roofs on both houses, and brought power to the island via an underground cable.
While the main house has the comforts and amenities of modern life, it is surrounded by mementoes of the past, including old stonework, perennial gardens, an ancient orchard, and waterfront meadows. A large stone bears a plaque installed in 1934 by descendants of the original settlers, John and Joanna Spinney, who moved here with their nine children in 1753.
Notable past owners were Stephen and Elizabeth Etnier, who bought the property in 1935. He was a well-known artist; she wrote “On Gilbert Head” about their life on the island. Although the Spinneys and their descendants farmed and fished here year-round, Gilbert Head served as a vacation home for the Etniers and for the two owners who have held the property since Elizabeth Etnier died in 1994.
From here, residents can take a boat to a number of public landings in Bath, Phippsburg, Georgetown, or Popham Beach, but the property includes deeded access to a dock in Georgetown.
The house is to be sold furnished, and the barn and boathouse are full of the things you need on an island, including a John Deere all-wheel tractor and mower. Gilbert Head is essentially turnkey — all you need is a boat to get there.
Poe Cilley of Vitalius Real Estate Group has the listing.
Our weekly digest on buying, selling, and design, with expert advice and insider neighborhood knowledge.
One person is dead and another is severely injured following an ATV rollover crash in Madison early Sunday morning.
Deputies from the Somerset County Sheriff’s Office were dispatched to the scene on East Madison Road just after midnight, and found driver Tyler Atkinson, 37, had suffered from a severe head injury. Atkinson was pronounced dead at the scene.
Mike Mitchell, Somerset County Sheriff chief deputy, said passenger Corey Gordea, 33, sustained severe leg injuries as a result of the crash. Gordea was transported by the Anson-Madison-Starks Ambulance Service to Redington-Fairview General Hospital in Skowhegan, although his condition is unknown.
A preliminary investigation determined that Atkinson and Gordea were traveling down Abenaki Road when they failed to stop at the intersection of Abenaki and East Madison Road. They continued across East Madison and drove into a ditch where the ATV struck a tree and rolled over.
Somerset deputies and Madison Fire Department officials determined that neither Atkinson or Gordea were wearing helmets. The preliminary investigation also indicated that alcohol and speed were factors in the crash, Mitchell said.
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