Auxiliary observes Military Child Month

Madison American Legion Auxiliary, front row, left to right, Amy Cody, Irma Fluet, Betty Price, Merrilyn Vieira and Grace Rollins. Back row, Holly Kinney, Pauline Bell, Diane Pinkham, Harriet Bryant, Amy Washburn and Nancy Drew. (contributed photo)

Military Child display (contributed photo)

Members of the Madison American Legion Auxiliary wearing purple conducted the Military Child’s Table Setting Ceremony at their recent meeting. The potted flowering plant symbolizing that a military child may flower and flourish where they are planted.

The hand spade recognizes that they may be transplanted to a new place in the world at a moment’s notice.

Birthday hat and unlit candles, along with the baseball and glove and ballet slippers represent special occasions that are missed.

Family photo depicting a child with his or her uniformed parent/parents demonstrates our country’s strength.

American flag to remind us that families are united in their commitment at home or away.

China planners express frustration with virtual meetings

by Mary Grow

China Planning Board members held a short virtual meeting April 13, at which they expressed their frustration with virtual meetings and, they hope, resolved one of the annoying issues.

The agenda called for continued discussion of the two draft ordinances board members are working on, a shoreland stabilization ordinance and a solar ordinance. The former is intended to describe what lakeshore residents can and cannot do to prevent erosion into the lake. The latter is to provide specific regulations for future solar developments, so board members won’t need to continue adapting other ordinance provisions.

The documents are on a site that members can theoretically share, but not everyone has been able to access it. Several are also unhappy with reading documents and changes on line; they want paper copies.

Codes Officer Jaime Hanson said he would immediately see about having copies made at the town office for board members to pick up.

This offer led to the next question, from board member Toni Wall: when can we go back to in-person meetings?

Hanson said he would ask the town manager.

With Scott Rollins, one of the two computer-savvy board members, absent, the four who were connected briefly discussed the shoreland stabilization ordinance, referring back to their March 23 meeting (see The Town Line, April 1, p. 3). Chairman Randall Downer again advocated reviewing Maine and New Hampshire documents that he thinks contain helpful ideas.

An important issue is where China Lake (and Three Mile Pond and other water bodies) get their water from – inflowing streams and their sources, direct rainfall and rainfall run-off, underwater springs. No one knew of a map of springs in China Lake.

Hanson reported issuing an increasing number of building and plumbing permits. China is seeing “a lot of real estate action, too,” he said.

The next regular China Planning Board member is scheduled for Tuesday evening, April 27, and is unlikely to be in person.

China emergency group works on updating document

by Mary Grow

At a short April 15 meeting, members of China’s Emergency Preparedness Committee continued discussion of the two documents they’re updating this year.

The Emergency Action Municipal Operations Plan is in near-final form. It gives information and instructions in case of an emergency in a town building, including the town office complex, the transfer station and the public works garage.

It covers such things as fires, explosions or chemical spills or leaks; bomb threats; robberies or acts of violence; and medical emergencies.

The second document, 44 pages long, is called the Emergency Checklist Plan and applies to an emergency affecting all or part of the town and/or surrounding towns. It covers three categories of emergencies:

• Natural hazards, like ice storms, severe thunderstorms, hurricanes, tornados and earthquakes;
• Technological hazards, like long-term, widespread power outages and interruptions to internet or telephone service; and
• Natural security issues, like threats to public buildings and public meeting places.

Each plan tries to specify in advance of any emergency who takes charge; what he or she does and directs others to do; and what is done. Since each plan includes names and contact information, frequent revisions are needed.

Copies of the plans are supposed to be readily available. Public Works Director Shawn Reed said he posted a copy of the plan for public works in his office.

Town Manager Becky Hapgood said once the committee finishes its revisions, the updated plans will be on the China website, www.china.govoffice.com.

Training is part of each plan. Reed reviews procedures with public works employees annually, he said.

Committee members intend to review draft revisions and to meet again at 1 p.m. Thursday, May 20. Hapgood hopes by then they will be able to meet in person in the former portable classroom behind the town office.

China broadband committee agrees to keep Spectrum “on the shelf”

by Mary Grow

China Broadband Committee members continued discussion of their proposal to continue working with Machias-based Axiom Technologies to provide a town-owned network that would extend improved internet service throughout the town.

Before the April 15 committee meeting, Chairman Robert O’Connor had received more information from Spectrum Community Solutions, the company that provides internet and other services to a majority of China households. Axiom and Spectrum both responded to the committee’s request for proposals at the beginning of the year.

Committee members found nothing new in the latest Spectrum communication. They agreed Spectrum should remain “on the shelf” – to be considered only if negotiations with Axiom fail and the committee returns to square one.

A major problem Spectrum still did not address, committee member Tod Detre said, is the legal one: as presently proposed, financing the project requires issuing a bond; towns can issue bonds only for tangible projects like a new building; but Spectrum does not plan to accept town ownership of the network infrastructure.

Committee members have previously insisted on the value of town ownership, because it ensures local control. The present assumption is that Axiom would subcontract building the network and would run it (or possibly subcontract operations, too). If operations were unsatisfactory, the town could replace Axiom with a new service provider.

Committee members plan to explain these issues and others to China selectmen at their Thursday, April 29, meeting, to which the selectboard is invited. O’Connor said consultants Mark Van Loan and John Dougherty, of Mission Broadband, are expected to attend the (virtual) meeting, and he hopes Axiom President Mark Ouellette will be available.

Committee members are preparing an information summary to share with selectmen, covering financial and technical issues, possibilities of sharing the project with other towns and plans for community outreach. The draft is on a shared site on line so each member can suggest changes.

The committee will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 22, to review the summary. After the April 29 meeting, committee members hope selectmen will endorse their plan and approve continuing to hire Mission Broadband’s services. The committee’s goal is a question on the Nov. 2 local ballot asking voters to approve the project and authorize a bond issue to finance it.

SCORES & OUTDOORS: A closer look at the significance of the beaver in our ecosystem

A beaver lodge in the Muldoons, in China, near the China Road. (photo by Roland D. Hallee)

Roland D. Halleeby Roland D. Hallee

Part of my daily routine is when I first get up in the morning, I grab the local daily newspaper, and a cup of coffee, and get caught up on what happened the day before. A ritual that I have done for more than 50 years.

Recently, I noticed articles, and letters to the editor, that have brought beavers to the forefront of conversations. From articles about beaver trappers, to critics of the avocation.

So, let’s take a look at those rodents and their contributions to the world around us.

North American beaver.
(internet photo)

Beavers are large, semiaquatic rodents native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere. Beavers are the second-largest living rodents after the capybaras. We all know what a beaver looks like so I won’t go into any descriptions.

Beavers build dams and lodges using tree branches, vegetation, rocks and mud; they chew down trees for building material. Dams impound water and lodges serve as shelters. Their infrastructure creates wetlands used by many other species, and because of their effect on other organisms in the ecosystem, they are considered a keystone species. Adult males and females live in monogamous pairs with their offspring. When they are old enough, the young will help their parents repair dams and lodges and may also help raise newly-born offspring. Beavers hold territories and mark them using scent mounts made of mud, debris and castoreum, a urine-based substance excreted through the beaver’s castor sacs. Beavers can also recognize their kin by their anal gland secretions and are more likely to tolerate them as neighbors.

Historically, beavers have been hunted for their fur, meat and castoreum. Castoreum has been used in medicine, perfume and food flavoring, while beaver pelts have been a major driver of the fur trade. Before protections began in the 19th and early 20th centuries, overhunting had nearly exterminated the species. Their populations have rebounded, and they are listed as least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of mammals. In human culture, the beaver symbolizes industriousness and is the national animal of Canada.

The English word “beaver” comes from the Old English word beofor or befor (recorded earlier as bebr) and is connected to the German word Biber and the Dutch word bever. The ultimate origin of the word is from an Indo-European root for “brown.”

Beavers belong to a rodent suborder along with kangaroo rats, kangaroo mice, pocket mice and spiny pocket mice, and the gophers.

Beavers have massive skulls adapted for withstanding the forces generated by their powerful chewing muscles. Their four chisel-shaped incisors grow continuously. The incisors’ outer enamel is very thick and colored orange due to the presence of iron compounds. The eyes, ears and nostrils are arranged so they can remain above water when the rest of the body submerges. The nostrils and ears have valves that close underwater while membranes cover the eyes. Unusual among mammals, the epiglottis ­ – the thin lidlike piece of cartilage that folds back over the opening of the windpipe during swallowing thus preventing food from entering the lungs – is contained in the nasal cavity rather than the throat, preventing water from flowing into the larynx and trachea. In addition, the back of the tongue can rise and create a waterproof seal. A beaver’s lips can close behind the incisors, allowing for chewing in water.

Beavers can hold their breath for as long as 15 minutes. However, they typically remain underwater for no more than five or six minutes. Dives generally last less than 30 seconds and are usually shallow. When diving, their heart rate decreases to 60 beats per minute, around half its normal function, while blood flow to the brain increases. Beavers also have a high tolerance for carbon dioxide in their body. When surfacing, the animal can replace 75 percent of the air in its lungs in one breath, compared to 15 percent for a human.

The North American beaver is widespread throughout most of the United States and Canada and can be found in northern Mexico.

Historically, the North American beaver was trapped and almost extirpated because its fur was highly sought after. Protections have allowed the beaver population on the continent to rebound to an estimated 6.2 million by the late 20th century; this is a fraction of the originally estimated 60 – 400 million North American beavers before the days of the fur trade.

Beavers prefer areas with flatter terrain and diverse vegetation close to the water. North American beavers colonize an area where trees are near the water but can harvest trees several hundred feet away. Beavers have also been recorded in mountainous areas. Dispersing beavers will use certain habitats temporarily before arriving at their final destinations. These include small streams, temporary swamps, ditches and even backyards. These sites lack important resources, so the animals do not remain there for long. Beavers have settled increasingly at or near human-made environments, including agricultural areas, suburbs, golf courses and even shopping malls.

Beavers need trees and shrubs as building material for dams, which impound flowing water to create a pond for them to live in, and lodges, which provide shelter and protection. Without such material, beavers dig burrows into a bank to live. Construction begins in late summer or early fall, and they repair them whenever needed.

When chewing down a tree, beavers bite the trunk at a 45-degree angle and chew with the side of the mouth; alternating between the left and right sides. Tree branches are cut and carried through land and water using the powerful jaw and neck muscles. Other building materials, like mud and rocks, are carried under the chin with the forelimbs.

The sound of running water appears to stimulate dam-building, and the sound of a leak in a dam triggers them to repair it.

Beavers make two types of lodges; bank lodges and open-water lodges. Bank lodges consist of tunnels and holes in steep-sloped banks with sticks piled over them. The more complex freestanding, open-water lodges are built over a platform of piled-up sticks. The roof is sealed up with mud apart from an air vent at the top. Both types are accessed by underwater entrances. The space inside the lodge is known as the living chamber which is above the water line. A dining area may exist near the water.

Beavers are mainly nocturnal and spend the daytime in their shelters. They do not hibernate during winter, and spend much of their time in their lodges.

Beaver pelts were the driving force of the North American fur trade.

Beavers have been hunted, trapped and exploited for their fur, meat and castoreum. Since they typically stayed in one place, trappers could easily find the animals and would kill entire families in a lodge. Ancient people appear to have believed the castor sacs of the beaver were its testicles. Aesop’s Fables describes beavers chewing off their testicles to preserve themselves from hunters, (which is impossible because a beaver’s testicles are inside its body); this myth has persisted for centuries. Tools for hunting beavers included deadfalls, snares, nets, bows and arrows, spears, clubs, firearms and steel traps. Castoreum was used to bait the animals.

Native American myths emphasize the beaver’s skill and industriousness. In the mythology of the Haida, beavers are descended from the Beaver-Woman, who built a dam on a stream next to their cabin while her husband was out hunting and gave birth to the first beavers. In a Cree story, the Great Beaver and its dam caused a world flood. Other tales involve beavers using their tree chewing skills against an enemy. Beavers have been featured as companions in some stories, including a Lakota tale where a young woman escapes her evil husband with the help of her pet beaver.

The beaver has long been associated with Canada, appearing on the first pictorial postage stamp issued in the Canadian colonies in 1851 – the so-called “Three-Penny Beaver”. It was declared the national animal in 1975. The five-cent coin, the coat of arms of the Hudson’s Bay Company and the logos for Parks Canada and Roots Canada use its image. Bell Canada used two cartoon beavers, Frank and Gordon, in their advertising campaign from 2005 to 2008. However, the beaver’s status as a rodent has made it controversial, and it was not chosen to be on the Arms of Canada in 1921. The beaver has commonly been used to represent Canada in political cartoons, typically to signify it as a benign nation, and as subject to both affection and ridicule. In the United States, the beaver is the state animal of New York and Oregon. It is also featured on the coat of arms of the London School of Economics.

But one thing beavers don’t have, and it’s a cartoon character. You have a rabbit, mouse, duck, moose, squirrel, and many other animals used as cartoon characters, but no beavers. The closest you can come is Theodore “the Beaver” Cleaver, on the TV show, Leave it to Beaver.

Sometimes, they just don’t get any respect.

Roland’s trivia question of the week:

Which two Red Sox stars share the record for the most All-Star Game appearances with 18 each?

Answer can be found here.

Roland’s Trivia Question for Thursday, April 22, 2021

Trivia QuestionsWhich two Red Sox stars share the record for the most All-Star Game appearances with 18 each?

Answer:

Ted Williams and Carl Yastrzemski.

Victor Grange to host drive-thru supper

Victor Grange in Fairfield (photo: facebook.com/victorgrangefairfield)

Victor Grange #56, in Fairfield Center, hosts a drive-through supper from 4:30 to 6 p.m., Saturday, April 24. The meal includes baked beans and hot dogs, macaroni and cheese, coleslaw, rolls or biscuits, desserts and (non-alcoholic) drinks. Cost is $10 per meal, with proceedings to be used for work on the Grange Hall.

Children’s book author Jeanine Deas to hold book signing

Jeanine Deas

Local children’s book author Jeanine Deas will be signing copies of her new book, Twinkle, Twinkle, Where You Are at an appearance at Retail Therapy Consignment Boutique, 270 Kennedy Memorial Drive, Waterville, on Saturday, April 24, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Masks, social-distancing, and a limited number of customers at any given time will be required. Personally-signed copies of Twinkle, Twinkle Where You Are and the author’s previous book, Anna’s Little Buddy, will be available for $10 each.

Twinkle, Twinkle, Where You Are is about love and longing,” Jeanine Deas says. “During COVID – and after that – it offers a magical way for children (and adults) to endure times of isolation and separation from family and friends. My desire is that readers will come to understand that when distance, time, or even death separate us physically from those we love, we are always connected through the ever-present energy of our relationship. It’s the ‘TWINKLE’ that gives us hope.”

For more information, please call (207) 213-4600.

Leadership luncheon to feature Dr. Khoury

Dr. Melik Peter Khoury (photo: Unity College)

Enjoy a fabulous lunch and meet Dr. Melik Peter Khoury, president and CEO of Unity College (UC). He will share his vision for the future of the college, his notable leadership path and lifelong experiences that prepared him for his current position on April 29, 2021 – 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., at Amici’s Cucina~ 137 Main St., Waterville.

Dr. Khoury holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Maine Fort Kent, an MBA from the University of Maine, and a doctorate in Business Administration from the University of Phoenix.

He is an energetic visionary, passionate about the environment, technology, education, and sustainability science. Under his leadership Unity College has successfully launched The Enterprise Model, which offers traditional and adult students educational opportunities through UC: Distance Education; UC: Hybrid Learning; and UC: Sustainable Ventures. In the process, Dr. Khoury has begun to break down the traditional barriers associated with higher education – making it more affordable, accessible, flexible, and relevant for students locally and around the world.

To register for this event please email Cindy@midmainechamber.com, check the website at www.midmainechamber.com, or call 873.3315.

Cost for the Leadership Luncheon is $20 per person for members; $25 at the door and for non-members. Lunch is included with the reservation.

SOLON & BEYOND: Finally got down to town office for annual meeting report

Marilyn Rogers-Bull & Percyby Marilyn Rogers-Bull & Percy
grams29@tds.net
Solon, Maine 04979

This week, I finally went down to the Solon Town Office and picked up the papers for the Solon annual town meeting which was held on March 6. My apologies for being so late but the fall I took slowed me down a bit. The moderator elected was Peter Miles. Article 2 elected municipal officials and school committee members as are required to be elected. Nominated candidates: Selectman, three-year term: Wayne Johnson received 42 votes; Road commissioner, one-year term: Gary Bishop received 44 votes; MSAD # 74 School Board Director, three-year term: Robert Lindblom received 44 votes.

Forty-seven voters participated in the election of municipal officials and a school committee member. All candidates ran unopposed. All candidates retained their seats. Article 3: To see if the Town will vote to take the following amount from the 2020 surplus for overage in the following accounts: Chairman of selectmen $.04, Town Office Security System $30.40, Trio Computer Programs $283.36, Unemployment Insurance $.48, Fire Department $1,193.40 , Moto Vehicle Money $39.25, State Plumbing Fees $400 and State Plumbing Surcharge $90. Selectmen and budget committee recommend Yes.

Article 4: To see if the Town will vote to increase the property tax levy limit of $584,990, established for the town of Solon by state law, in the event the municipal budget approved under the following articles will result in a tax commitment that is greater than that property tax levy limit. Selectmen and budget committee recommend Yes motion to accept Article 4 as written: was signed by Michael Golden and Lois Miller.

There were six full pages of the Solon annual town meeting that I was given when I went to the office to ask for it, but I don’t have enough room to print all of them. Everything seems to have passed and I don’t know how long it took, as to whether there was very much discussion or not. Sorry I can’t give you more information, but I didn’t feel up to par through March this year. But I can also count my blessings! It was a rough tumble that I took down some stairs in a store but it never broke a bone! I have always said that I am tough, but at my advanced age, I think it is a miracle!

Another paper I was given along with the town meeting results states, Advisory Committee Ordinance, Proposed 3-6-2021; The existing budget committee is hereby renamed the advisory committee and all current budget committee members will continue to serve until their term expires.

The advisory committee shall be composed of 15 members and two alternate members. The selectmen shall appoint five (5) members each year for a three (3) year staggered term. The selectmen shall appoint two (2) alternates for three (3) year staggered terms. In the event a member is unable to complete his or her term, the most senior alternate will be appointed to fill that vacancy and will complete that member’s term. The selectmen shall then appoint a new alternate to complete the former alternate’s term.

Alternate members can fully participate in the meetings except for voting. When a member is absent from a meeting, most senior alternate in attendance will be allowed to vote. When a member has three (3) consecutive unexcused absences, the selectmen have the option of terminating his or her membership on the committee and may replace that member with the most senior alternate.

All warrant articles shall be reviewed by the advisory committee prior to any annual or special town meeting. Committee members shall approve or disapprove each article.

No articles will be accepted for an upcoming town meeting after the advisory committee has met, except by agreement of the selectmen and the advisory committee and time allows for a special advisory committee meeting.

This ordinance hereby rescinds all prior budget committee ordinances or policies.

And now for Percy’s memoir: It is called Don’t Give Up, and it is on just a little piece of paper and when I turned it over it says I have used it before, but it doesn’t say when. Hope you will like it and remember it. “You may be tempted to, but don’t give up, when you’ve lost the desire to try, and you’ve misplaced your hopeful dreams, dare to believe again in the impossible; Catch a ray of sunshine, and hold on tightly; The One who holds your hand… will never let you go.