PORTLAND, Maine — Loons are on the mend in Maine, filling more of the state’s lakes and ponds with their haunting calls, although conservations say the birds aren’t out of the woods yet.
Maine is home to a few thousand of the distinctive black-and-white waterbirds — the East Coast’s largest loon population — and conservationists said efforts to protect them from threats helped grow the population. An annual count of common loons found more adults and chicks this year than last, Maine Audubon said this week.
The group said it estimated a population for the southern half of Maine of 3,174 adult loons and 568 chicks. Audubon bases its count on the southern portion of Maine because there are enough bird counters to get a reliable number. The count is more than twice the number when they started counting in 1983, and the count of adult adult loons has increased 13% from 10 years ago.
“We’re cautiously optimistic after seeing two years of growing chick numbers,” said Maine Audubon wildlife ecologist Tracy Hart. “But it will take several more years before we know if that is a real upward trend, or just two really good years.”
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Maine lawmakers have attempted to grow the population of the loons with bans on lead fishing tackle that the birds sometimes accidentally swallow. Laws that limit boat speeds have also helped because they prevent boat wakes from washing out nests, conservation groups say.
It’s still too early to know if Maine’s loons are on a sustainable path to recovery, and the success of the state’s breeding loons is critical to the population at large, Hart said. Maine has thousands more loons than the other New England states, with the other five states combining for about 1,000 adults. The state is home to one of the largest populations of loons in the U.S., which has about 27,000 breeding adults in total.
Minnesota has the most loons in the lower 48 states, with a fairly stable population of about 12,000 adults, but they are in decline in some parts of their range.
While loons are not listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, they are considered threatened by some states, including New Hampshire and Michigan. The U.S. Forest Service also considers the common loon a sensitive species.
The birds migrate to the ocean in late fall and need a long runway to take off, meaning winter can be a treacherous time for the birds because they get trapped by ice in the lakes and ponds where they breed, said Barb Haney, executive director of Avian Haven, a wildlife rehabilitation center in Freedom, Maine.
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“We’re getting a lot of calls about loons that are iced in,” Haney said, adding that the center was tending to one such patient this week.
Outrage and empathy are palpable here, as residents want to know why Durán Guerrero was shot while driving near his apartment. Senator Angus King of Maine was told by Markwayne Mullin, the US Homeland Security secretary, that Durán Guerrero had not been the intended target of an arrest warrant and deportation order, according to King’s office.
King, an independent, said Mullin initially told him that Durán Guerrero had “weaponized” his car while agents tried to stop him about 7 a.m. Monday.
A witness to the shooting said Durán Guerrero was streaked with blood as officials dragged him out of his white sedan and onto the street.
For a hardscrabble, blue-collar city that was built by immigrants — French-Canadians, Irish, Albanian Muslims, and newer arrivals from Africa and Latin America — any sense of powerlessness is tough to stomach.
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“This place was worthy, it was strong, and it was a true community during its hard times,” said state Representative Marc Malon, who represents part of Biddeford. “This used to be a depressed place, and that has changed. I haven’t even begun to reconcile how angry I am.”
A Bluey toy was seen with the words, “I am fatherless because of ICE” written on it at a makeshift memorial for Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Many of Biddeford’s 22,000 residents, Malon said, did not fully appreciate the fear that permeated immigrant communities in Portland and Lewiston early this year, when an ICE surge swept up more than 100 people in what the agency called Operation Catch of the Day.
Now, Durán Guerrero’s killing has brought the immigration crackdown, tragically and directly, to the streets of this coastal city, once called Trashtown USA by its detractors. Until a decade ago, more than 100 trucks rumbled down Main Street every day to deliver load after load of pungent waste to a large trash incinerator, residents said.
“That smell of garbage, you could smell it from Scarborough,” said Holly Culloton, who cofounded the Biddeford chapter of Showing Up for Racial Justice.
Where once there were vacancies up and down Main Street, Culloton said, now there are small businesses that inject vitality to the once-beleaguered city, although rents are rising and gentrification is a concern.
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Old mills have been converted into mixed-use developments. The University of New England is here, and industrial parks have sprouted. But Durán Guerrero’s killing, Culloton said, has scarred the community like the strike of a lightning bolt.
“To have it hit home has been really tough,” said Culloton, part of a team that responds to ICE sightings by driving to the scene, asking agents for warrants, photographing their vehicles, and seeking explanations on the spot.
Holly Culloton, a leading racial justice activist in Biddeford, posed for a portrait beside a message chalked on a wall that reads, “We are not mad enough.”Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
“They’re creating an element of danger. This is not normal, nor do we want it to become normal,” Culloton said, adding that ICE encounters are becoming more frequent in the city.
“A friend of mine saw ICE agents surround a car at night with guns in their hands. And this is Biddeford, Maine!” Culloton said. “We’re all living on edge.”
A local advocacy group is helping raise funds for Durán Guerrero’s partner, Martha Karolina Rojas Alvarez, and their 3-year-old daughter, Dulce, so they can move from their apartment, which overlooks the street corner where Durán Guerrero was killed.
For them, Biddeford had once been a happy place — where Durán Guerrero would take Dulce to the park every afternoon.
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“My daughter asks for Papá, and I don’t have the strength to tell her that Papá isn’t coming,” Rojas Alvarez said Thursday as she shared an emotional statement she had prepared with reporters. “That she can’t hug him anymore, or tell him, ‘Papi, I love you.’ ”
On Wednesday, Governor Janet Mills, a Democrat and fierce critic of the Trump administration, was heckled while visiting the shooting scene. “You ignored us!” Biddeford resident Kelsey Cummings screamed at the governor.
Cummings said later that political leaders had not done enough to curb ICE, although state and local officials, such as Malon, have limited power to influence the federal agency’s agenda. Those officials are calling for a robust investigation of the shooting.
“I don’t have much trust in the federal government right now,” Malon said. “I don’t think ‘lying’ is too strong a word to use in this circumstance.”
Protesters gathered for a vigil.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
In a separate encounter in June, Brandy Rogers of Biddeford said she was stopped by ICE agents in an unmarked vehicle after she had volunteered to drive a neighbor, whom Rogers said is in the country legally, from district court here.
ICE agents pounded on the car’s doors and threatened to shatter its windows if Rogers did not unlock the vehicle, she said.
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“I initially refused, shook my head no, but they weren’t having any of it and just kept knocking on the door,” Rogers recalled.
Eventually, Rogers unlocked the car and her neighbor, whom she did not identify, was taken into custody. She was held for three weeks before being released, Rogers said.
Brandy Rogers, a mental health therapist, posed for a portrait with her children, Zephyr Aman (left) and Angus Aman at Mechanics Park.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
LaFountain, the mayor, recalled that Biddeford residents had stood against the Ku Klux Klan more than a century ago, in 1924, when Klansmen paraded in neighboring Saco and planned to cross the bridge into Biddeford.
But Biddeford’s residents, many of them Franco-Americans and Irish immigrants, banded together to block the Klan from entering their city, LaFountain said.
“In essence, they were doing something similar,” LaFountain said of the many people who have gathered in remembrance and protest after Durán Guerrero’s death. “They were standing up for immigrants in our community and across the nation.”
A woman and child walked past the makeshift memorial.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Since Monday, hundreds of people have come to the shooting scene at Hill and Pool streets, where a memorial has blossomed from just a few flowers to a growing array of bouquets, balloons, American flags, candles, and notes to Durán Guerrero and the community.
“We are not criminals,” one person had written in Spanish in a message left there. “We are fathers, brothers, sons, friends, workers.”
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A handwritten note in English recalled seeing Durán Guerrero often when the victim worked for DoorDash. “I wish I had asked about your daughter,” the note said.
Tarlicia Aldrich brought her grandson, 8-year-old De’Marcus, who had asked to leave pictures of Bluey, a cartoon character. Durán Guerrero’s 3-year-old daughter had been seen in Bluey pajamas the morning he was killed.
“I want love in my town,” adults helped De’Marcus write on one of the drawings.
Karen Monzon, 21, said she had heard the shots that killed Durán Guerrero. “You feel the injustice. We are not here to be delinquents,” she said in Spanish.
A sign at the makeshift memorial read: “Stop staining the streets with the blood of the people who built this country.”Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Monzon, who is from Nicaragua and has been living in the United States for two years, works at a Mexican restaurant in Biddeford and said she often saw Durán Guerrero picking up food deliveries there. She also would see him leaving his apartment in the morning.
Monzon said that the positivity she has seen since the shooting outweighs the racism she has encountered. However, she also has noticed drivers yelling support for ICE as they pass the memorial, thrusting their middle fingers in the air.
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“The majority are really good people,” Monzon said. “It’s a small group of people who don’t want us here.”
On Wednesday evening, more than 100 people gathered for a vigil at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Saco & Biddeford, where the pews were packed and donations collected for Durán Guerrero’s family.
Religious leaders talked about “welcoming the stranger,” immigrants, and others.
The ripple effect of Monday’s shooting is expected to linger in Biddeford, residents said, just as the memory of the town’s opposition to the Klan has for more than a century.
“We didn’t ask for this to happen,” Malon said. “We will persevere through this together, but we will carry this together for a long time.”
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Alexandra Pratt, of Westbrook, Maine, placed a flower at the makeshift memorial for Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Brian MacQuarrie can be reached at brian.macquarrie@globe.com. Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio can be reached at giulia.mcdnr@globe.com. Follow her @giuliamcdnr.
Leyland Streiffis the principal officer of the Protect Girls’ Sports in Maine ballot committee and leader of the Maine Girl Dads, a coalition of fathers whose mission is to restore single-sex competitive sports and private spaces in schools.
We — the Maine Girl Dads, a nonpartisan coalition of 8,000-plus dads united by a mission to protect the sex-based rights of our daughters — believe that Graham Platner has created a significant opportunity for the Democratic Party. Will any candidate take it?
It’s an opportunity to challenge establishment thinking, to reclaim common sense and to reassure females of all ages that their personal boundaries — and their sex-based rights — actually matter (and aren’t just a talking point on the campaign trail).
This is an opportunity to listen to the dozens of women and girls who have come forward to say the current system is broken. That any policies prioritizing gender identity over biological sex are inequitable. That they are sexist, regressive and an affront to their federal civil rights (specifically Title IX, which was a civil right hard-won by women 54 years ago). Rights that the U.S. Supreme Court just affirmed 9-0 are sex-based rights as it relates to competitive sport.
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This is an opportunity to believe the young girls and women who have risked everything to courageously come forward and testify on April 14 in Augusta, detailing how current school and Maine Human Rights Act policies have resulted in exposure to voyeurism, masturbation, violence and mental trauma from males in their private spaces and on their sports podiums in our public schools. This should shock and shame us all and spur our leaders into action.
This is an opportunity to restore equality, inclusivity and progressive thinking in school and in sport, as everyone has a sex. Sex is not gender, and there is no right or wrong way to be a male or female (dress, feel, present, identify however you want). Sex is big enough for everyone. It always has been, and always will be. It’s the common, innate and immutable trait that every human shares. Recognizing biological fact doesn’t mean disrespecting personal identity.
This is an opportunity to restore and rebuild the growing fragmentation of the Democratic Party, driven by a voting base that does not carry the radical views of the elected elite. A voting base that increasingly wants progress, not regress, of sex-based rights. A voting base of girls and women that simply want single-sex private spaces and sports (both in our schools and in our jails). And a rapidly growing base of fathers that are no longer willing to watch the political establishment strip away their daughters’ civil rights and dignity for campaign funding.
This is an opportunity to end the sex-based discrimination that happens every day in Maine’s schools, and even in our jails. If a female wants a female-only space or sport (or jail cell), they are owed that legally and morally. We should listen to these girls and women. Believe them. Stop gaslighting them (as so many of our “progressive” institutions like the Maine Women’s Lobby chooses to do). We should honor them. Encourage them. Respect them. Protect them. Seek their consent. Not force them to undress or compete next to a male after they’ve told us they don’t want that.
This is an opportunity to stand up for the sex-based rights of all kids and — in doing so — stand out from the other candidates who will surely continue touting the regressive idea that females are undeserving of private spaces or competitive sports free of males.
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Democrat Mainers want a hero. Platner just created an opportunity. Will anyone take it?
Which candidate will step up and meet the moment? Who will believe women and girls? Who will respect their personal boundaries and protect their sex-based rights? Who will stand against the sex-based discrimination that’s currently aimed at our state’s most vulnerable population: our schoolchildren?
We’re rooting for common sense. We’re rooting for candidates of all parties to stand up for every child’s right to single-sex sports and private spaces in our public schools.
We hope they all stand with us and stand with our girls.
The Maine Trust for Local News has hired two reporters to cover key areas in central Maine.
Abigail Pritchard
Abigail Pritchard earned her master’s in journalism from Boston University and was formerly the editor-in-chief of American University’s student newspaper, The Eagle. Her work has appeared in various Massachusetts-based publications and she previously worked as the Statehouse correspondent for The New Bedford Light.
Pritchard covers the Waterville area and writes the weekly Kennebec Beat North newsletter.
When she’s not working, she enjoys cooking, reading and taking long drives.
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Sara Coughlin earned a degree in English and government with a concentration in creative writing from Bowdoin College, where she served as an editor for the student newspaper, the Bowdoin Orient, and wrote for Bowdoin Communications.
Sara Coughlin
Originally from Brunswick, she previously interned for the Portland Press Herald and the Harpswell Anchor.
Couglin covers the Augusta area and writes the weekly Kennebec Beat South newsletter.
Outside of work, you may find her doing yoga — she’s training to become a yoga teacher —or crocheting a hat.
The Maine Trust for Local News, a subsidiary of the National Trust for Local News, is the parent company of the Kennebec Journal in Augusta, Morning Sentinel in Waterville, Portland Press Herald, and Sun Journal in Lewiston, as well as a host of weekly print and online publications.