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‘Our democracy in action’: High turnout reported as voters across central Maine flock to polls

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‘Our democracy in action’: High turnout reported as voters across central Maine flock to polls


Like so many other people, it was the presidential race that brought Randy Wyman to the polls Tuesday.

But the 65-year-old Madison man said he was still undecided as he came in to vote around 11:15 a.m. at the former Old Point Avenue school. Wyman said he was “pretty sure” but had not yet made up his mind.

“I’m going to make my decision when I get in the booth,” he said.

As voters across Maine and the nation cast Election Day ballots Tuesday, uncertainty loomed over the outcome of the race between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump.

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Clerks in towns big and small said they were expecting record-high voter turnout. High rates of absentee voting and same-day voter registrations have driven up vote totals throughout Maine.

Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, speaking from a Bangor polling station Tuesday night, said more than 1 in 3 registered Maine voters had already voted prior to Election Day and “today we are seeing strong voter turnout everywhere” and “strong same-day voter registration.”

“One gentleman was registering his daughter for the first time and had tears in his eyes at her opportunity to participate in democracy,” Bellows said.

In fact, the volume of ballots was so great in Belgrade that the ballot counter malfunctioned, Town Clerk Mary Vogel said.

“The ballots are filling up on the inside of the machine and causing problems. The ballots are not dropping when they are inserted into the machine,” Vogel said. “In hindsight, maybe we should have another machine, but who knew it would be like this? We didn’t expect it.”

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Officials did get help from some Messalonskee High School students who volunteered at the polls.

Since the students are under 18, they can’t handle the ballots, but they are able to direct voters through the polling center at Belgrade’s Center for All Seasons and help them register to vote, all while earning college credit.

DEMOCRACY IN ACTION

In Waterville, Heidi Mitchell walked out of the polling place at Thomas College just after 7 a.m., having been one of the first people to vote.

“I voted for Kamala because I want somebody to work for us, the people of America, not the corporate America,” said Mitchell, 53.

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Longtime election warden Roland Hallee said officials were expecting a voter turnout of about 80% of the approximate 10,000 registered Waterville voters, which is more than the typical 70% for a presidential election. He said 3,700 had voted by absentee ballot.

Moriah Davis, 26, and her 1-year-old daughter, Penelope, exit the Waterville polls at Thomas College just after 7 a.m. Tuesday. Amy Calder/ Morning Sentinel

Moriah Davis, 26, was carrying her 1-year-old daughter, Penelope, as she exited the polls.

“I voted for Harris,” she said. “First of all, I love all of her policies. She’s not racist or xenophobic.”

Already by around 8 a.m. in Oakland, 163 out of 5,053 registered voters had cast ballots at the fire station and about 2,000 had voted absentee, according to Town Clerk Jan Porter.

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Richard Principato, 58, leaving the polls, said he voted for Trump.

“The biggest thing is the economy, the immigration and our military,” Principato said.

Principato said he also voted for Austin Theriault, the Republican challenging incumbent Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat, in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District. “Jared Golden, he always voted Democratically all the way,” he said.

A steady stream of voters trekked in and out of the James H. Bean School in Sidney on Tuesday morning, where 185 people had cast ballots by 9:15 a.m.

Haileigh Miller, 19, voting for the first time, at left, stands with her mother, Melissa Moulton, at the James H. Bean School in Sidney after voting Tuesday. Both said they voted for Donald Trump for president. Amy Calder/Morning Sentinel

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First-time voter Haileigh Miller, 19, received applause as she registered. Later, she said she voted for Donald Trump.

“He aligns with my morals,” Miller said. “He’s the best candidate. Going into my 20s, I’m starting to become an adult. Hopefully, I’ll be able to live on my own. Right now, I can’t afford to.”

Sidney Town Clerk Sara Morey said that as of Monday night, 1,604 voters had returned absentee ballots, out of 3,919 registered voters.

“To put it in perspective, we had less than 400 total voters for the (June) primary,” she said.

As polls opened at 7 a.m. in the town of China, a line of about 50 voters formed to get into the municipal portable building. Town Manager Becky Hapgood, wearing a fluorescent vest, helped direct traffic.

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“The amount of work the town clerk and deputy clerks put in, in the course of preparing for an election, is phenomenal,” Hapgood said. “We’re focused on voter integrity. We just want people to come vote.”

In Gardiner, about 80 people were lined up waiting to vote when the polls opened at 8 a.m., including Peggy Williams, who was first in line.

Williams works in Portland and wanted to make sure she voted before heading to work, because she wasn’t sure she’d be back in Gardiner in time. She said voting is an important part of our freedoms. She said she planned to vote for Harris “to protect our country from tyranny.”



Next in line behind her was Kevin May who also came in around 7:30 a.m. to vote before going to work at the shipyard in Kittery. He, too, said he planned to vote for Harris, in part because he has two nieces and he’s concerned about abortion rights if Trump were to win.

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Just behind May, third in line, Pete Hersom said he was voting for Trump because, he said, Democrats have damaged the country and the economy.

In Gardiner, several voters brought their children into the polls with them to vote.

Adam Lemire carried 3-month-old Hazel in his arms as he made his way through long lines, while his partner, Rachael Thomas, carried 3-year-old Reid on her shoulders.

“It’s kind of hard to explain to a 3-year-old what voting is, but he asked, so we talked about it,” Lemire said. “He’s getting it. We were driving by the State House and he got excited … That’s where the people go that we vote for.”

The line of voters stretches out of the building just before doors open at 8 a.m. Tuesday at the Boys and Girls Clubs of Kennebec Valley in Gardiner. Joe Phelan/Kennebec Journal

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In Gardiner, 38% of registered voters voted absentee, the most City Clerk Kathy Cutler has seen in the 17 years she’s been working elections in the city.

Turnout was strong Tuesday, as well, with a line of about 80 people queued up to vote by the time the polls opened.

“It’s an honor to do this — this morning swearing people in I had a lump in my throat,” Cutler said. “This is our democracy in action.”

‘UNPRECEDENTED TURNOUT’

Voting was also heavy Tuesday morning in Madison, Town Clerk Cheyenne Stevens said. Her office issued 1,007 absentee ballots, and had received all but 28 back as of Tuesday around noon. Another 500 or so registered voters had cast ballots by that time, including Lori Knowlton.

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Knowlton, 61, said she was voting for Trump. She said she did not vote in the 2016 presidential election and voted for President Biden in 2020.

“I don’t love his personality or how he can be condescending and rude sometimes,” Knowlton said of Trump. “But I think about how the country was when he was the president. Our life and our household was all much better. And I also think that, as a country, we are much safer in the world when he’s president.”

At Mill Stream Elementary School in Norridgewock around noon, kids were at recess playing on the playground while voting took place in the auditorium.

Officials had discussed closing the school — the town’s usual polling place — for Election Day but decided against it. Instead, the school resource officer and an additional Somerset County sheriff’s deputy were assigned to the school during the day.

Town Manager Richard LaBelle, who also is the town clerk, said he was aware of reported threats made to other schools in Maine today but was confident in the safety measures in Norridgewock. Turnout has been steady, and most voters have quickly and quietly made their way in and out to vote, LaBelle said.

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The biggest challenge of the day so far, LaBelle said, has been confusion around the ranked-choice voting system in the presidential and congressional elections.

“We are spoiling an unusually large number of ballots,” LaBelle said. “I don’t know if people are trying to be strategic, or largely they just don’t understand. But it remains an obstacle.”

Voting was heavy at the Monmouth Recreation Center as well.

“It’s an unprecedented turnout,” said Kent Ackley, an independent running for state representative, as he stood outside the polls.

“I’ve never seen this many people show up to be heard,” he said.

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Sarah Jones, Monmouth’s election clerk, holds the registrations of around 70 new voters. Emily Duggan/Kennebec Journal

Sarah Jones, the election clerk for Monmouth, said at least 70 residents registered to vote for the first time by noon.

“This is by far the most (registered voters) that I’ve seen. They all realize it’s important,” Jones said.

Among the newly registered votes was Hannah Demello, 20.

“I wanted to vote for Trump,” she said. “I agree with a lot of the things he wants to change in the government, including lowering taxes.”

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Polls were busy first thing in the morning in Augusta, and steady throughout the day, despite the fact that nearly 45% of active registered voters cast their votes absentee.

By midday the number of voters coming in waned, though it was expected to pick back up in the evening, when residents get out of work and go vote.

Bobby-Jo Bechard, a candidate for an at-large Augusta City Council seat, said this election is so important her three adult sons each voted for the first time.

“I’m sure part of it was I’m running for office, and they see how passionate I am about it, but I also think they realized this is a very important election, and that every vote does matter,” Bechard said.

Kathryn Mastricolo, a volunteer with Marcus Emerson’s campaign for Legislature, said most voters Tuesday seemed friendly and upbeat, in contrast to some national media reports she’s seen about the contentious election.

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EVERY VOTE COUNTS

Kristin Parks, town clerk in Readfield, said turnout was good Tuesday, and she also issued some 800 absentee ballots before the election. The town has around 2,440 registered voters.

After an afternoon lull, the line to vote at the Skowhegan municipal building started to grow around 4 p.m. Town Clerk Gail Pelotte said she was expecting an afternoon rush to end around 4:30 p.m. following a busy morning with a steady line.

As of about 3:30 p.m., a total of 3,200 ballots had been cast in Skowhegan, including 1,900 absentee ballots, according to Pelotte. The town had just over 5,000 registered voters as of June.

“For like the first two hours, there was no stop,” Pelotte said. “We had to take one of our books and divide it in two.”

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The wait to register was long too.

Megan Ellis, 37, was waiting in the hallway for her daughter’s boyfriend to register to vote. She was not sure why some people wait until Election Day, but took it as a good sign.

“At least that means there’s a lot of people taking interest,” Ellis said.

Pelotte said voters coming in throughout the day have been polite and happy. “It’s pretty heartwarming,” she said. “All of the horror stories we thought we were going to see — it’s been awesome.”

Colby College student Mariella Laria, 19, of Massachusetts was among those who took a minibus to the polls Tuesday to vote. Mairead Levitt/Morning Sentinel

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Tuesday afternoon, a white minibus pulled up outside Thomas College, shuttling students from nearby Colby College to cast their votes in Waterville.

Many of the students cited reproductive rights as a deciding factor in the presidential race. Mariella Laria, 19, of Massachusetts said she was voting for Harris because of her policies on abortion rights as well as her general character.

“I think she is a good person,“ Laria said. “Also, the rule of law — I don’t think we should have a felon as a president.”

Colby College student Connor Ransom, 21, of Poolsville, Maryland is shown volunteering Tuesday at the Waterville polls. Mairead Levitt/Morning Sentinel

Another Colby student — Connor Ransom, 21, of Poolsville, Maryland — was volunteering in Waterville to help make sure the polls run smoothly.

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“Most people who volunteer are retired,“ Ransom said, “so it’s helpful to have young people who are more energetic and can move heavy things like voting machines around.”

Ransom pointed out that a lot of races, especially the local ones, can be decided by a few votes.

“People forget how important voting in local elections is,“ he said. “They can come down to less than a 100-vote difference.“

Amy Calder, Emily Duggan, Keith Edwards, Jake Freudberg, Hannah Kaufman, Mairead Levitt and Scott Monroe contributed reporting. 



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Maine

Tell us your Maine hunting hot takes

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Tell us your Maine hunting hot takes


Now that deer season has wrapped up, hunters across Maine are returning to their usual off-season routine: processing meat, watching football and passionately debating the “right” way to hunt and fish.

Anyone who spends time in the woods knows opinions run deep.

So, what’s your hunting hot take? Is camo really necessary, or do deer not care what you’re wearing? Can they really smell a Swisher Sweet on your clothing? Should hunting licenses be harder to get, or should crossbows be classified as firearms?

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It’s not just about laws, either — it’s about ethics, tradition and your personal style.

Your hot take might spark a friendly debate — or a fiery one — but either way, we want to hear it.

Share your thoughts in the comments or email Outdoors editors Susan Bard at sbard@bangordailynews.com.



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Portland greenlit its tallest building this month. Will more skyscrapers follow?

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Portland greenlit its tallest building this month. Will more skyscrapers follow?


At 380 feet, the Old Port Square tower on Union Street in Portland would be the tallest building in Maine. It is meant to resemble a lighthouse beacon. (Courtesy of Safdie Architects)

Portland’s skyline is changing.

First, the iconic B&M Baked Beans brick smokestack came down. Then the 190-foot Casco building went up. And soon, the city will add a sweeping new Roux Institute campus and an “architecturally significant” expansion of the Portland Museum of Art.

But perhaps no change will have as much visual impact as the 30-story, nearly 400-foot tower the planning board approved earlier this month. 

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The proposal has ruffled feathers, with many bemoaning what they say sticks out like a sore thumb (or middle finger) on the city’s idyllic skyline. They fear if more high-rises pop up across the city, Portland might slowly morph into a northern version of Boston.

So will this project usher in an era of skyscrapers for Maine’s largest city?

Experts say that’s unlikely.

“We’re not expecting a windfall of 30-story buildings,” said Kevin Kraft, the city’s director of planning and urban development. 

Under new zoning laws, only a small section of downtown along Temple, Federal and Union streets allow buildings as tall as the tower. That means even if there was an appetite for more high-rises, there simply isn’t much undeveloped space.

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Furthermore, much of Portland ‘s peninsula is covered in historic districts, and “contributing buildings” can’t be torn down, Kraft noted. 

Chapter 14 Land Use Code – Revised 12-3-2025 (PDF)-Pages by julia

GROWING UP

Vertical development, experts say, is a sustainable way to squeeze more housing into a smaller footprint, something cities have been doing for decades. And Portland needs housing in spades. 

Last year, city leaders updated its zoning laws with the goal of allowing growth while preserving character. The overhaul included an increased maximum height for buildings in some of the city’s major corridors, permitting buildings up to 380 feet in a section of downtown.

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That part of the city has always allowed the tallest buildings, but until last year’s recode, the maximum height was 250 feet. And that height cap was in place for nearly 30 years before it was even remotely tested when Redfern Properties built the 190-foot Casco in 2023, currently the tallest building in Maine. 

The new proposal from Portland developer East Brown Cow Management LLC, tentatively called Old Port Square tower, would be twice that tall. It would include more than 70 residential units, commercial space, an 88-room hotel and a restaurant at the top, and is just one piece of a development project that could fill an entire city block.

Whether any other developers follow suit with similar proposals could depend more on market conditions than Portland’s updating zoning. 

“People aren’t going to build speculative high-rises,” Kraft said. 

If the building ends up being successful, though, it could be an important “proof of concept” for other developers in the area, said Tim Love, assistant director of the Master in Real Estate Program at Harvard University.

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Love is generally supportive of the project, which he said is in a great location.

“A lot of these proposals don’t happen because at the end of the day, the financing doesn’t work or the numbers that were plugged in for rents aren’t supported by the underwriting,” he said. “So I think it would be good for Portland if this project is a success,” because it could lead to additional residential development downtown.”

And more people living downtown is exactly what the city needs, he said. 

“I hope this is a model for more residential mixed-use development at densities that can extend the kind of not 24/7 but 18/7 life of the city all the way to the museum,” he said. 

If Portland is going to get an influx of high-rises, it won’t be for some time, said Jeff Levine, a former planner for the city of Portland who now divides his time consulting and teaching urban studies and planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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“I don’t think you get instant results in anything,” he said.

Real estate is complicated. Beyond just zoning changes, there are building regulations, financial restrictions and even simply individual personalities that impact whether a building will go up, Levine said.

FEAR OF CHANGE

Nancy Smith, CEO of GrowSmart Maine, a nonprofit that helps communities grow in sustainable ways, says the Old Port Square tower will certainly be symbolic for the city, but it’s not a “game-changer.”

Game-changers, she said, were the Franklin Arterial and the demolition of Union Station — projects that transformed the city (though arguably not for the better) and made a statement about what Portland wanted to be in the future. 

But some feel like the tower could do that, too. It just might take time.

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“We’re not (just) trying to capture the current moment, we want to anticipate the growth we could see in the next 15, 20, 30 years,” Kraft said. “We want to accommodate that growth (and) be more proactive than reactionary.”

Cities are constantly changing and evolving, he said. At one point, the Time and Temperature building on Congress Street seemed to dwarf those around it, including the Fidelity Trust building, which was once known as Maine’s “first skyscraper.” Now, they blend in.

Additionally, Smith said, the uses intended for the proposed tower area already commonplace downtown: a hotel, restaurant, apartments and shops.

Still, a big element of early opposition to the tall tower is fear of change, and that’s natural, she said.

“The challenge is moving beyond that deeply personal response to actually consider what you’re looking at,” she said. “This building has a lot of symbolic value. Portland is changing, but stopping the building isn’t going to stop that change.”

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3 ways to enjoy the winter solstice in Maine

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3 ways to enjoy the winter solstice in Maine


The shortest day of the year, also known as the winter solstice, is Sunday. Maine ranks among five states with the shortest winter daylight, with about 8.5 hours. Averaging day length across the year, Maine is also near the bottom, with roughly 11.5 hours, second only to Alaska.

Day length varies strongly with latitude, even within Maine. On Sunday, Fort Kent will see almost a half hour less daylight than Portland, with 8 hours, 28 minutes compared with 8 hours, 56 minutes.

Why acknowledge the solstice?

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The sun sets over West Grand Lake, marking the end of an early winter day. Credit: Susan Bard / BDN

The winter solstice serves as both a scientific marker of Earth’s orbit and a cultural symbol of the cycle of darkness and light. It is a time to look forward to longer days and opportunities for outdoor recreation, including winter-specific activities.

Watch the sunrise or sunset

The sun rises over Pocomoonshine Lake in Down East Maine, casting a golden glow across the winter landscape. Credit: Susan Bard / BDN

With such a short day, take time to appreciate the daylight we do have. Head to a scenic spot near Bangor, such as Black Cap Mountain or the Waterfront, or for a longer drive, visit Bass Harbor Head Light in Acadia National Park or Mount Battie in Camden. Watch the sun rise or set over the winter landscape. Cross-country ski or snowshoe these areas to make the outing even more exciting. Rent equipment if needed, and carry a headlamp. Don’t let the waning light shorten your plans.

Visit holiday-themed lights

The Stillwater River Trail in Orono features a free light display with tunnels and wrapped trees, open nightly from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Holiday lights line the Stillwater River Trail in Orono, creating a festive winter display. Credit: Susan Bard / BDN

For those willing to travel farther, the Gardens Aglow display at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens in Boothbay lights up nature-themed paths with thousands of beautiful lights.

L.L. Bean in Freeport is always decorated with lights and holiday music, and the Cape Neddick Light in York has lights outlining its tower, keeper’s house and surrounding buildings.

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Evening walkers are drawn to the Stillwater River Trail in Orono, lit by festive holiday lights. Credit: Susan Bard / BDN

Make winter crafts

After the sun sets, residents can mark the winter solstice with indoor activities such as creating seasonal crafts using Maine materials.

A handcrafted Christmas wreath made with Maine balsam fir brings natural holiday cheer to any home, and can be embellished with other natural trimmings like turkey feathers. Credit: Susan Bard / BDN

Options include wreaths and simple candle holders made from evergreens, pinecones and berries.

Many Maine land trusts allow public access to conserved forests and trails, providing materials for crafts with a permit. Creating your own wreaths and decorations is not only rewarding; they also make great gifts and are traditions worth starting.



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