Maine
Potsdam Specialty Paper acquired by Maine-based company
TOWN OF POTSDAM, New York (WWNY) – A company headquartered in Maine has purchased Potsdam Specialty Paper Inc.
Twin Rivers Paper Company announced on Tuesday that it has acquired the mill, which it described as “a recognized leader in the development and manufacturing of specialty latex, acrylic, and other saturated base papers.”
“This strategic acquisition adds exciting new papermaking capabilities to Twin Rivers’ portfolio,” said Tyler Rajeski, CEO of Twin Rivers. “PSPI’s strong focus on product development and customer collaboration aligns closely with Twin Rivers’ core competencies and builds upon our commitment to innovation, operational excellence, and customer-focused growth.”
“The Potsdam team is energized by the opportunity to join the Twin Rivers Paper team. Twin Rivers boasts a solid portfolio of papermaking assets, which will be complemented by our strengths in Potsdam,” said PSPI CEO Mike Huth. “We’re excited about the ability to build upon our mutual legacy of papermaking excellence, enhance the value we bring to existing Potsdam customers with the expertise and resources of Twin Rivers Paper, and serve new customers.”
Twin Rivers says the acquisition adds 26,000 tons of annual production capacity to its asset base.
“With specialized on-machine capabilities including latex saturating, nonwoven/synthetic fiber handling and wet creping, extensive color capabilities, and an advanced off-machine coater, the Potsdam, New York, mill produces highly engineered papers for a wide range of market sectors. Applications include tape base, abrasive backer, durable label, medical (sterilization), wallpaper base, wide format digital substrates, durable book cover and high-end retail packaging,” the company said.
Twin Rivers also owns two other paper mills in New York, including one in Lyons Falls and another in Little Falls.
Copyright 2026 WWNY. All rights reserved.
Maine
Maine Labor Commissioner on Searsmont
AUGUSTA — Laura Fortman, Maine’s Labor Commissioner, announced Saturday that workers who were displaced from Rollins Lumber would soon have access to a program that would help them get unemployment help faster.
“The Department of Labor’s Rapid Response team has been in contact with the company,” Fortman wrote. “The team will do a needs assessment on Monday and identify the range of service employees need, including unemployment insurance, and the best way to provide those services,” she wrote.
Fortman said that she would encourage any worker impacted to apply for unemployment insurance by going to the Maine Department of Labor website or calling the department Monday through Friday at 1-800-593-7660. The Rapid Response team will also provide information about how to apply for unemployment insurance at their meetings.
Maine
Opinion: Experience should matter in Maine’s Senate primary
The BDN Opinion section operates independently and does not set news policies or contribute to reporting or editing articles elsewhere in the newspaper or on bangordailynews.com
David Costello of Brunswick is a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate.
While many, including most in the press, have essentially declared Maine’s Democratic U.S. Senate primary over, there’s still time for voters to consider whether the Democratic Party’s presumptive nominee is the best person to take on Sen. Susan Collins in November. Perceptions of political viability can, and often do, change overnight.
I believe that my personal story, education, and government experience contrasts more sharply with that of Sen. Collins than does Graham Platner’s. My lived experience is rooted in many of the same challenges working-class Mainers face every day, and my extensive government service is broader, deeper and more hands-on than Sen. Collins’. Moreover, I believe that my experiences equip me with the kind of knowledge and perspective sorely needed in Washington today.
I was born in Bangor and raised in Old Town by my mother and mill-working grandparents. My father, an Army veteran and labor organizer, died at the age of 31 due to hazardous working conditions he faced as a teenager. I know what it’s like to have to hustle to pay bills, compile years of debt and go long periods without health insurance and healthcare.
Like many in Maine, I began working at an early age and worked my way through the University of Maine, George Washington University and the London School of Economics. And I subsequently served for more than 30 years in senior-level government and non-governmental organization positions, both in the United States and abroad.
These positions included serving as a top aide to Maine’s secretary of state, the mayor of Baltimore and governor of Maryland; as a deputy and acting secretary of the Maryland Department of the Environment; and as a county program manager and regional team leader for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). These positions involved implementing and managing, not simply legislating or talking about, complex multimillion-dollar programs and operations.
These programs and operations included working closely with the U.S. Army, State Department, United Nations and foreign aid organizations overseas — and various state and local government agencies, businesses and non-governmental organizations in Maine, Maryland and elsewhere.
They are programs and operations that resulted in election and motor vehicle safety reforms in Maine; improved schools and family assistance programs in Baltimore; the implementation of ambitious job creation, education, healthcare, crime reduction and environmental protection programs in Maryland; and the completion of more than 3,500 peace and community-building projects in conflict-torn Cambodia, Haiti, Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo and Serbia.
I believe experience matters, but so too does my decades-long commitment to substantially reforming our nation’s governing policies, practices, and institutions and eliminating the excessive and corrupting influence that money, wealth and disinformation have over our politics and government. Like many Democrats, I am fully committed to enacting far-reaching legislative and constitutional reforms, among them: Medicare for All; universal childcare; expanded Social Security benefits; a national minimum living wage; increased taxes on the wealthy; a ban on gerrymandering; federal clean elections financing; comprehensive immigration reform; judicial and legislative term limits; codification of Roe v. Wade; an assault weapons ban; and an aggressive national climate action plan.
Reforms designed to not only salvage our democracy, but to also better protect our rights and freedoms and to enable us to finally tackle such pressing challenges as: unaffordable housing and healthcare; insufficient retirement security; economic inequality; gun violence; shoddy infrastructure; and climate change. Because only then are we likely to achieve the more perfect union envisioned by our most thoughtful founders and forebears.
Maine
MaineHealth Maine Medical conference highlights trauma care challenges
PORTLAND, Maine (WGME) — Maine’s healthcare workers are discussing solutions to the many challenges of providing high-quality trauma care.
On Friday, medical leaders met at MaineHealth Maine Medical Center Portland to discuss Maine’s trauma care system and how they can take steps to improve it.
Officials say rural communities are feeling the effects of hospital and especially trauma center closures.
Right now, there are only two trauma centers in the state of Maine.
Dr. Bryan Morse, the medical director of trauma at MaineHealth Maine Medical Center in Portland, says providers often struggle with finding transportation and pediatric support for patients in trauma situations.
“We have challenges that have come about relating to transporting patients across the system and across the state. There has also been challenges with pediatric patients and how to best optimize their outcomes as well,” Dr. Morse said. “The care of trauma in the state of Maine right now is really under distress.”
Morse says he hopes with conferences like Friday’s, Maine can improve their trauma response care.
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