Maine
OP-ED | Lobster Or ‘Porcupine?’ Malloy In Hot Water In Maine | CT News Junkie
These of us who know former Gov. Dannel Malloy are conscious that he might be prickly and unpredictable. Confronted with this actuality and his low approval rankings as he was operating for reelection in 2014, Malloy as soon as advised former WNPR host John Dankosky: “I feel folks have a judgment to make. You don’t have to like me. I’m a porcupine. That’s okay.”
If a leopard can’t change his spots, absolutely a porcupine can’t shed its barbed quills. So it’s that Malloy’s detractors — and even a few of his erstwhile supporters — ought to scarcely be shocked that he rubbed some folks the incorrect means in his new gig as chancellor of the College of Maine system.
College at two of the system’s universities have handed resolutions of no-confidence in Malloy, whereas college students at a 3rd staged a 24-hour sit-in. These actions, which quantity to a tsunami of dangerous information for Malloy, all occurred inside the span of three days this month however have been brewing nearly from the beginning of Malloy’s tenure. The explanations for his troubles might sound relatively easy however, as with all issues Malloy, the fact is sophisticated.
Almost 90 p.c of the College Senate on the College of Southern Maine voted in favor of the decision, “citing the departure of three UMaine System presidents in lower than a 12 months and an absence of college enter in necessary selections,” in accordance with the Portland Press Herald. By way of e-mail, Malloy dismissed the considerations of the school as the results of “anxiousness” concerning the transition to a brand new chief.
“The e-mail he despatched to college is insulting and labels our considerations on account of anxiousness,” mentioned one professor, including that Malloy’s e-mail made it sound as if the school have been “frightened kids.”
Three days earlier, College of Maine at Farmington college students convened a 24-hour sit-in to protest funds cuts, particularly the elimination of 9 social research and humanities school positions.
However maybe Malloy’s greatest downside lies on the College of Maine at Augusta, the place the school additionally handed a decision of no-confidence. That nugget of censure was primarily motivated by considerations with the varsity’s presidential search course of, which resulted within the hiring of a controversial candidate who — unbeknownst to the committee that beneficial his hiring — had obtained a vote of no confidence from the school at his earlier establishment, the State College of New York at Delhi.
Worse but, as Malloy acknowledged in a press release in early Might, he had recognized of the candidate’s issues since February and didn’t inform the search committee as a result of “the SUNY Delhi school allegations resulting in the no-confidence vote weren’t substantiated and shouldn’t be given severe consideration within the search.” Malloy apologized for the oversight and vowed to enhance however the injury was finished.
Let’s acknowledge right here and now that the protestations of tenured professors must be taken with a grain of salt. They and their unions are typically skinny skinned and their loud protestations are sometimes performative workout routines designed to point out the administration they aren’t simply intimidated. Nonetheless, as Malloy acknowledged in his assertion, “Any school senate’s vote of no confidence in a sitting president is a severe matter.”
Malloy’s missteps prompted the Press Herald, the biggest newspaper within the state, to publish a sharply important editorial headlined, “UMaine System chancellor shedding belief following errors at UMA, UMF.” Of Malloy’s blunders, the editorial board concluded: “The errors at UMA and UMF are separate, however they’re associated. In each instances, the school and college students have been made to really feel as in the event that they didn’t matter — as in the event that they have been simply numbers on a spreadsheet.”
Malloy’s destiny is claimed to be on the agenda for the following assembly of the College of Maine system’s trustees. Malloy’s first three-year contract expires on June 30:
<blockquote class=”twitter-tweet”><p lang=”en” dir=”ltr”>The destiny of College of Maine Chancellor Dannel Malloy is on the agenda as trustees meet over the following two days in Portland. <a href=”https://t.co/PJp8DlFZO9″>https://t.co/PJp8DlFZO9</a></p>— WABI_TV5 (@WABI_TV5) <a href=”https://twitter.com/WABI_TV5/standing/1528379059864059910?ref_src=twsrcpercent5Etfw”>Might 22, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src=”https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js” charset=”utf-8″></script>
One other supply of hysteria amongst college staff was Malloy’s transfer, shortly after he took workplace in 2019, towards consolidation of the Maine system’s operations, together with unified accreditation. That motion, the Press Herald experiences, “transfers sure governance and oversight powers from the person faculties to the system.”
This could not have come as a shock to anybody in Maine who has been paying consideration or did any analysis into Malloy’s governorship in our state. In 2011, Malloy moved to consolidate Connecticut’s 12 neighborhood schools and their 4 regional state universities, with a board of regents to supervise all of them. UConn, which is usually derisively known as the “fourth department of state authorities,” was exempted from the consolidation. A phrase to Mainers with a stake in increased training: count on extra consolidation efforts if Malloy weathers this storm and stays chancellor.
Moreover, whereas governor, Malloy appeared to take a perverse enjoyment of making educators really feel uncomfortable. In his 2012 funds deal with, Malloy blasted the thought of tenure for public college lecturers and steered it meant nothing when it comes to competence: “And to earn that tenure – that job safety – in at present’s system principally the one factor you must do is present up for 4 years. Try this, and tenure is yours.” Evidently, Connecticut’s lecturers — an necessary Democratic constituency — have been insulted, so Malloy spent the following 12 months and half atoning for his sins.
Mainers ought to know that armchair psychologists in Connecticut have attributed his antipathy towards the training institution to a tough childhood during which the learning-disabled Malloy was advised by lecturers that he was “retarded” and wouldn’t quantity to something.
When Malloy left the Capitol for the final time in 2018, I in contrast him to Rodney Dangerfield — the politician “who don’t get no respect.” I’ve all the time had a grudging respect for the person, having interviewed him within the Capitol twice with my colleagues Christine Stuart and Susan Bigelow. However his poor social filters typically get him in hassle.
A lot of the protection within the Maine media has repeatedly forged Malloy as a tough character and infrequently repeats that he was at numerous instances the least fashionable governor within the nation.
In a information evaluation documenting how “Furor adopted Malloy from Connecticut to Maine,” a Press Herald reporter noticed that, “He has a repute of being bristly and confrontational and infrequently mentioned reputation and effectiveness weren’t suitable.”
There’s a grain of reality to that assertion. But when a frontrunner turns into too unpopular, it turns into a distraction that makes it tough to perform something. I believed The Porcupine had realized that lesson after he left his workplace on the Capitol for the final time, however evidently, I used to be naive. Brace your self for extra of the identical, Mainers.
Contributing op-ed columnist Terry Cowgill lives in Lakeville, blogs at PolitiConn and is managing editor of The Berkshire Edge in Nice Barrington, Mass. Observe him on Twitter @terrycowgill or e-mail him at tcowgill90@wesleyan.edu.
DISCLAIMER: The views, opinions, positions, or methods expressed by the writer are theirs alone, and don’t essentially replicate the views, opinions, or positions of CTNewsJunkie.com.
Maine
Shenna Bellows sworn in for third term as Maine Secretary of State
AUGUSTA, Maine — Secretary of State Shenna Bellows was sworn into office for her third term Wednesday. Governor Janet Mills conducted the formal swearing-in of all the constitutional officers, which includes Bellows, State Treasurer Joseph Perry, Attorney General Aaron Frey and State Auditor Matthew Dunlap. In her remarks following the swearing-in, Bellows shared a message of transparency and accessibility in continuing to serve the people of Maine. “It is incumbent upon us as elected officials to make government work for the people of Maine,” Bellows said. “We must reduce bureaucracy, improve efficiency, modernize our systems, and above all, bring people together in community to make life better for the people of Maine.”
The Department of the Secretary of State includes three bureaus: The Maine State Archives, the Bureau of Motor Vehicles and the Bureau of Corporations, Elections and Commissions.
Bellows emphasized her commitment to ensuring free, safe, and secure elections, modernizing government services, and preserving Maine’s history through the State Archives. She highlighted the importance of standing up for the rule of law and democracy, referring to the legacy of Civil War General Joshua Chamberlain and referencing the events at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. “This is our Chamberlain moment. We must stand up for the rule of law and do the right thing even when it is hard. As your Secretary of State, I pledge to always ensure that we have free, safe and secure elections and that we adhere to the Constitution and the rule of law in every aspect of everything that we do,” said Bellows. Bellows, Maine’s 50th Secretary of State, previously served two terms in the Maine Senate from 2016-2020 and was the executive director of the Holocaust and Human Rights Center of Maine before her election in 2021.
Maine
An endangered rabbit species is on the rise in parts of Maine
An endangered rabbit can be found in seven towns in Maine, two more than just six years ago, and the number of colonies has more than doubled to 46 known sites in that time, according to the state’s small mammal biologist.
The native New England cottontail rabbit, which is on the Endangered Species list, is found in southern Maine, but its non-native invasive species cousin the Eastern cottontail is rapidly gaining ground, said Cory Stearns, small mammal biologist.
The two species eat similar foods, the main difference being where they live. Easterns will live closer to people under decks or porches or other human structures and are less timid about open space. That allows them to proliferate in areas where the native species won’t because they prefer to hide in bushes and thickets.
The concern is that the Easterns will dominate, making it harder for the New Englands to rebound, Stearns said. Because of that and the state’s ongoing research and monitoring program, biologists are asking Maine residents to report any sightings of the two species of rabbits.
It’s difficult to tell them apart, but often the Eastern cottontail will have a white spot on its forehead. It also has bigger eyes that give them more side vision, he said.
It’s much easier to tell them apart from snowshoe hares in the winter. Snowshoes turn white, allowing them to hide in plain sight on the snow, while rabbits are brown year-round, Stearns said.
The New England cottontail saw its highest numbers in the 1960s when there were a lot of abandoned farms that provided thickets for hiding places. As the forest grew up and matured around those areas, the bushes and hidey-holes disappeared.
It now can be found in Cape Elizabeth, York, Wells, Scarborough, Kittery, Eliot and Kennebunk.
The low point was in 2018, when there were only 21 sites populated by the New England rabbits. The Easterns were first spotted in Maine in 2017 in Portland, Old Orchard Beach, the Berwicks and Wells.
The scientists collect rabbit feces, called pellets, for genetic testing to determine which species is inhabiting a space. They also can figure out how many individuals are in a colony.
If you want to help out by reporting a rabbit sighting, fill in this form on the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife website.
Maine
Maine lawmakers return to Augusta as session begins
AUGUSTA — The 132nd Legislature gathered at the State House Wednesday to open a new session and begin the long process of formally referring new bills to standing committees for hearings and work sessions.
Lawmakers are expected to meet in their respective chambers only one day a week through February, as work slowly ramps up on reviewing hundreds — if not thousands — of bills submitted by lawmakers. Most of the work in the coming weeks will happen during more frequent meetings of the individual committees.
The session is scheduled to end June 18.
The top issue facing lawmakers is state spending.
On Tuesday, the governor’s budget office warned legislative leaders and members of the Legislature’s budget-writing committee about a $118 million shortfall in MaineCare, the state’s Medicaid program, in the current budget, plus a projected deficit in the next two-year budget of $450 million.
The state’s current two-year budget is $10.5 billion, but existing spending commitments already approved by lawmakers would push that spending level to $11.67 billion if they are fully funded, according to the Department of Administrative and Financial Services.
Gov. Janet Mills is expected to present her budget in the coming days. She has said she plans to protect certain investments, including continuing to provide 55% of public education funding, free community college, MaineCare expansion and 5% revenue sharing with municipalities.
In addition to reviewing and amending the budget, lawmakers will take up a slate of new legislation. The deadline submit bills is Friday. During the previous Legislature, lawmakers submitted nearly 2,300 bills.
Democrats remain in control of state government. In addition to the governorship, Democrats retained majorities in the House and Senate, albeit by smaller margins. Democrats have had a trifecta since 2019.
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