FAIRFIELD: Picchiotti, Lawrence win council seats

Looking south down Main St., in Fairfield. (Internet photo)

Unofficial election results according to Town Clerk Christine Keller, for the town of Fairfield are as follows:

State referendum question #1: An initiative to ban the CMP transmission line: 984 Yes, 623 No, 11 Blank.

Question 2: Transportation bond: Yes, 1,078, No, 525.

Question #3: Maine Constitutional Amendment on Food Sovereignty: Yes, 1,020, No, 577, 21 blank ballots.

Municipal election: Fairfield Town Council – 3-year term, 2 seats: John Picchiotti, 693; Peter P. Lawrence 673; Beverly Busque, 423.

Vassalboro voters reject mass gathering ordinance

In Vassalboro, voters rejected the proposed Vassalboro Mass Gathering Ordinance, by a vote of 615 in favor to 698 opposed. Town Clerk Cathy Coyne said she thought many people voted “no” because they did not know what the ordinance was about.

Select board members and Town Manager Mary Sabins developed the ordinance to provide town regulation for large gatherings, in response to notice of a planned country music festival in Vassalboro in July 2022.

The ordinance was the only local question on Vassalboro’s ballot.

On the three state questions, Coyne said results were:

  • Reject the CMP corridor: 848 in favor; 587 opposed; and 9 ballots left blank.
  • Approve the transportation bond issue: 930 in favor; 505 opposed; and 9 blank ballots.
  • Approve the Constitutional amendment: 920 in favor; 509 opposed; and 15 blank ballots.

Coyne said a total of 1,444 Vassalboro residents voted, a turn-out she considers good. The 2020 census put the town’s population at 4,520.

China broadband initiative defeated, 876-547; Chadwick, Marquis win seats on select board

Wayne Chadwick on the left, Jeanne Marquis on the right.

by Mary Grow

China voters had one referendum question and annual elections on their Nov. 2 local ballots.

The referendum question asked whether voters would authorize, but not require, select board members to borrow money to finance expanded internet infrastructure in town. Town Clerk Angela Nelson reported they said no, by a vote of 547 in favor to 876 opposed, with 62 ballots left blank.

The only contested election was a four-way race for two two-year terms on the select board. Voters re-elected Wayne Chadwick with 789 votes and elected Jeanne Marquis with 579 votes. Brent Chesley received 417 votes, Peter Foote 396.

In uncontested races, Natale Tripodi was re-elected the alternate member of the planning board, with 971 votes. Budget committee District 2 representative Thomas Rumpf was elected the committee’s chairman with 998 votes, and Kevin Maroon was re-elected to the District 1 Budget Committee position with 1,060 votes.

There were four positions with no candidates on the ballot. For one, China’s representative to the Regional School Unit #18 Board of Directors, Thomas Jamie Bachinski received 42 write-in votes, and Nelson’s report indicated that he is elected.

Town office staff will get in touch with residents whose names were written in for the other positions, one on the budget committee and two on the planning board, to ask if they are willing to serve.

China voters approved all three questions on the state ballot, as follows:

  • Question 1, the citizens’ initiative to reject the Central Maine Power Company corridor: yes, 845; no, 631; 11 ballots left blank.
  • Question 2, the transportation infrastructure bond issue: yes, 951; no, 521; 15 blank ballots.
  • Question 3, the Constitutional amendment establishing a right to food: yes, 916; no, 551; 20 blank ballots.

Nelson said a total of 1,487 ballots were cast in China. The 2020 census showed the town’s total population as 4,408.

These fish have been waiting 200 years for this moment

The Maine Rivers team at the location of the new fishway constructed at the head of Outlet Stream, from left to right, Landis Hudson, executive director; Matt Streeter, project manager; and Nate Gray of the Maine Department of Marine Resources. (photo by Eric W. Austin)

by Eric W. Austin

It’s been more than 200 years since an alewife has successfully made its way, under its own power, from the ocean and up the Sebasticook River to Outlet Stream before arriving at China Lake, but all that’s about to change. After nearly seven years of hard work, oceans of red tape, scores of harrowing town meetings, contentious public debate and skeptical property owners, the Maine Rivers team has succeeded in their efforts to bring a fish back to China Lake.

To understand the momentous nature of their success, we must travel back in time to examine the problem they were attempting to address when they first conceived of this project back in 2014.

As European settlers moved up the New England coast and into Maine’s interior in the 1700s, they naturally established communities along the state’s abundant water sources. Beyond their use as fresh water for crops and consumption, fast-moving rivers and streams provided a source of power for the growing lumber and agricultural industries. As a result, dams popped up everywhere. In Vassalboro alone, there were six dams along Outlet Stream, the egress for most of the water in China Lake.

These dams provided an important resource for growing settlements in central Maine, but they also had one major negative effect on the environment: by blocking the flow of water the dams also prevented fish from traveling between the lake and the ocean as they had been doing for thousands of years. Now, two centuries later, these dams no longer offer the benefits they once did, but they have continued to block the movement of migratory fish up and down our waterways. This has had an ecological impact on the food web in the lake and all the way along Outlet Stream to Sebasticook River and beyond.

Maine Rivers, a nonprofit group initially founded by the Natural Resources Council of Maine before becoming an independent organization in 2003, with a mission to “protect, restore and enhance the health and vitality of Maine’s rivers,” has been working with many local groups, including the towns of China and Vassalboro, the Maine Department of Marine Resources, the Kennebec Water District, the Sebasticook Regional Land Trust and the China Region Lakes Alliance, to remove these legacy dams – or build fishways around them – and free up the Outlet Stream for the return of migratory fish like river herring (alewives and blueback herring), sea lamprey and salmon, among others.

The core Maine Rivers’ team consists of executive director Landis Hudson, project manager Matt Streeter, and longtime resident of Vassalboro and Maine Department of Marine Resources’ employee, Nate Gray. I have had the pleasure of meeting with them twice before, in 2019 and 2020, to discuss their progress on this project.

“The fact that the one and only Nate Gray, who works for the Department of Marine Resources, lives in Vassalboro,” Hudson says about one of the reasons for their success. “You cannot find a person with any more expertise, connections and commitment. He’s been a leading light. Vassalboro is lucky to have him. The State of Maine is lucky to have him, and I think it’s fair to say that it’s hard to imagine a project of this scale being done anywhere else in New England.”

Over the course of the project, three dams have been dismantled, Lombard, Masse and — this year — Morneau, and three fishways have been constructed, at Box Mill and Ladd dams, and most recently, at the head of Outlet Stream.

Although Maine’s Department of Marine Resources has been stocking alewives in China Lake since the late ‘90s, the fish could not return to the lake for spawning because of blockages created by these dams along Outlet Stream and must be restocked every year. Nate Gray says he expects the lake can support about one million alewives, although that will fluctuate from year to year.

Alewives play an important role in the ecology of the lake and in the food web all along the water sources leading away from it. Their young feed on the phosphorous-rich plankton in the lake, and carry those nutrients with them back to the ocean where most are eaten by bigger fish. In this way, they serve an important role in maintaining an appropriate nutrient balance in the lake and their return should help increase water clarity over time.

One aspect of the project that doesn’t get enough attention is the work the team does after a dam is dismantled. From the head of Outlet Stream, where the team is finishing the final fishway, we traveled just up the road to the remains of Masse Dam to see how the landscape has changed over the years since it was removed.

A dam stops the flow of water and creates a pond behind it. When it is removed and the stream is allowed to proceed naturally, the pond drains and what is left is a broad, muddy patch of ground devoid of any vegetation. An important part of the Maine Rivers project has been to restore the ecology of these areas and nurture the healthy return of the original habitat. They have worked with the local Vassalboro schools, particularly the fifth and sixth graders, to plant native shrubs, trees and flowers that would have grown here before the dams were constructed.

“The more diverse the habitat, the more diverse the plants are, the greater the habitat value for insects and birds, rodents and everything else,” says project manager Matt Streeter, gesturing across the field that used to be the location of a pond behind Masse Dam.

The new fishway recently constructed at the head of Outlet Stream in Vassalboro. (photo by Nate Gray)

The Outlet Stream will also run cooler as a result of the dam removals, since standing water like the pools created behind the dams tend to heat up and carry that heat downstream. This cooler water should attract new species of fish that appreciate the colder temperatures, such as brook and brown trout. Eagles are already flocking to the newly opened waterway, which is a good sign.

And, of course, there are the alewives. Since the Department of Marine Resources have been stocking alewives in China Lake for years, they are already imprinted with the location of the lake and will return for spawning. This spring will see thousands of the fish fighting their way up the fishways in their efforts to start a new generation. (The best places to watch the alewife runs will be at either Ladd or Box Mill dams, as the fishway just finished at the head of Outlet Stream is not set up for public viewing.)

Executive director of Maine Rivers, Landis Hudson, says the expertise they have built in the team over the years of working on the project is their greatest asset. And their work is not done. “There are lots of opportunities in Maine for improving fish passage,” she says.

“There are thousands of dams around the state that are doing nothing useful,” confirms project manager Streeter.

So, let’s pause and appreciate the simple alewife. After more than 200 years, this is the moment they’ve been waiting for.