I’M JUST CURIOUS: Doggy information

by Debbie Walker

I don’t know how many columns I have written, and I just recently realized I have never written anything about our pets. So… here goes:

I came across the most recent Reader’s Digest, and it has a great article about dogs and cats titled “What Pets Want You to Know”.

A professor from British Columbia stated that our average dogs have the mind equivalent to our 2 – 2 ½ years old child. The average dog can understand about 165 words. They are better with words about things (ex: a favorite toy) as opposed to ’emotion’ words (good dog).

Before your pup is six months old, they should have met 150 people and they suggest 50 different places (I don’t go to that many!) They should try out different environments, be familiar with different sounds and sights. Dogs that don’t, can grow up fearful and aggressive.

We all know our dogs have different barks. Our dog, in the middle of the night, alerts us to her concerns with the bark. There is no question that she is alerting us. There are also barks that tell you the dog is lonely. The barks may be a single string of barks with pauses.

Dogs also have their own version of body language; they provide you with clues as to what they want. (Ex: pawing at bottom of sofa to alert you there is something under the sofa they want.)

Dogs are very aware of your stress or tension. Many dogs will feel that tension and can in fact react with aggression. Our energies affect the people around us, don’t think for a minute it doesn’t affect your pet.

Have you ever wondered why dogs chase their own tails? It can be itchy; they can be reverting to their predatory nature, or they are just bored. It can also be a compulsive disorder.

When you come home and find your dog has made a mess and she tucks her tail and looks ashamed. She’s just afraid of your anger, guilt is not part of her makeup.

Dogs don’t feel guilt, but they do get jealous. If you have a dog, you know this.

If your dog has light colored or white hair, they have a higher chance of being deaf in at least one ear. The gene that causes the white coat is associated with deafness, just as is blue eyes.

Little dogs have shorter, more frequent dreams than the bigger breeds. This is proven by brain scanning just like with us.

There are studies that have shown some dogs can detect cancer just as there are some who know when a diabetic is going to have a problem.

For those who don’t know there are some wonderful websites of dogs and their antics as well as other animals. They can be very entertaining on these cold snow and ice filled days and evenings.

We have a dog in our house. She is a Walker Hound and Boxer mix. She has been a wonderful friend. She talks. If she wants something, she will carry on quite the conversation. I love it.

I’m just curious about your pal. I would love to hear your stories. Contact me at DebbieWalker@yahoo.com with your questions or comments. Thank you for reading. Have a great, healthy, and happy week.

REVIEW POTPOURRI: Al Martino, Tribute to Jonathan Winters

Al Martino

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

Al Martino

Frank Sinatra

Al Martino (1927-2009) became Capitol records answer to Columbia’s Jerry Vale and RCA’s Sergio Franchi, not to mention the ascendancy during the early ‘30s of Russ Columbo and the ‘40s with Frank Sinatra and Perry Como. I would include here the nowadays very underrated Tony Martin.

Martino scored a major hit in 1953 with Here in my Heart and, when he heard that RCA was planning to get his friend Mario Lanza (1921-1959) to record it, he called the older singer and pleaded with him to hold off, which Lanza did.

Martino also had some connection with the Mafia, which bought out his contract with Capitol and then demanded he give them $75,000 to “protect their investment.”

Vic Damone

Martino was initially offered the role of singer Johnny Fontane in The Godfather by producer Albert Ruddy. When Francis Ford Coppola signed on as director, he offered the role to singer Vic Damone.

Martino again sought assistance from the Mob; Damone heard about it and quietly withdrew from the film (He balked at any unwanted attention from the Mob and also decided that he was being paid too little.).

A 1967 LP, Mary in the Morning (Capitol ST 2780), contains not only the title song which was a megahit for Ed Ames the same year but also beautifully recorded by Glen Campbell; and featured covers of ten other songs – Love Me Tender, Love Letters in the Sand, My Love Is Stronger than My Pride, Unchained Melody, Red Is Red, Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You, Release Me, I Dream of You, Now and Making Memories.

Jerry Vale

He sang with the kind of voice that wasn’t as effusively cloying as Jerry Vale or Jim Nabors and, within its own quieter realm, a very pleasant one – in small doses.

Much of the content can be accessed on Youtube.

Tribute to Jonathan Winters

Jonathan Winters

An immensely fascinating documentary from 2000 and produced by PBS pays tribute to the life of comedian Jonathan Winters (1925-2013) and features interviews with Winters, his wife Eileen, daughter Lucinda and son Jan, singer Andy Williams and – no relation – comedian Robin Williams. It too can be seen on Youtube along with huge numbers of other Winters appearances.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ROTARY CLUB NEWS: Halloween is rooted in a Celtic pagan festival

Samhain

by Gary Kennedy

Halloween is rooted in a Celtic pagan festival called Samhain (SAH-WANE). This was earlier appropriated by the early Catholic Church approximately 1,500 years ago. After the Celtics were conquered by the Romans, pagan traditions were adopted into the holiday honoring Catholic saints, the ancient Celts consisted of tribes and small kingdoms that were strewn across western and central Europe. Even though the Romans conquered the Celts, they continued to survive and even thrive in places such as Brittany, Cornwall, Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

Samhain, is a Gaelic festival marking the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter or darker half of the year. This point in time is also referred to as “All Saints Day” or “All Souls Day”. Old Irish literature traces this holiday back to approximately the 9th century. Most of us have believed that this was a celebration of the harvest but for the Celts it was more for the rearing of cattle. The Celts were mostly involved in the cattle business. In the spring they would drive their cattle north for pasturing and at the beginning of winter they were driven south because of climatic change.

Irish mythology states Samhain (Halloween) was a time when the doorways to the other world were opened allowing for supernatural beings and souls of the dead to come into our world. Offerings and sacrifices were made during this holiday. Supposedly two-thirds of the people’s children were taken as well as a substantial amount of the corn crop. You can see why this holiday took on a ghoulish, scary atmosphere. Through time, the scarier the better. A foundation was thus laid for all things of the dark side, lanterns with teeth made from pumpkins, headless horsemen, black cats, witches, curses and magic brews, were imagined. The centuries have blown this holiday up big. This made it more exciting and laid a great evil canvas of which to invent more.

Even though we look at this as some kind of fairy tale, not all was imagined. As we know, through recorded time a lot of cruel and barbaric things did come from this or did this come from barbaric time? We know human beings were drawn and quartered; burnt at the stake, tortured in the most grotesque of ways, to name just a few.

As we all know this has led to one of the most profitable holidays of all time; for all things scary, cruel and evil. If you add 3-D to the mix you come up with some great special effects. Some of the movies derived from this holiday and time have netted great profits for those with the imagination for the culmination of all things scary and evil. Profits derived from these things range in the billions. (Our own Steven King comes to mind). Some of the old ways still survive today in a few countries. Cruelty has survived the test of time and Halloween is a remnant of this.

All this being said, the holiday can still be a lot of fun. Those that don’t have knowledge of the previously mentioned events look at Halloween through different eyes and with the lack of history’s depiction of how this holiday came about. We dress our children in costumes, some ghoulish but many are straight out of Disney. “Trick or Treat” has lost its meaning and we for the most part don’t trick people who don’t give us candy. Over time our families have taught us a more moral sense to the holiday. Some of the little ones don’t even knock on doors any more but instead join others at a private party of known friends. This has proven to be a much safer way to celebrate the holidays. There are still evil people out there that might want to harm you. Because we love our little ones we tend to find great ways to protect them without spoiling the fun. I have only shared a very small part of what this holiday’s history entails. There is much more if you would like to research the library.

I would like to wish everyone a safe and happy holiday. Stay safe and look after each other. It’s because we love you that we set rules of protection. Have a happy Halloween and God Bless.

SCORES & OUTDOORS – The “beloved” American eel: What about it?

American eel

Roland D. Halleeby Roland D. Hallee

Eels are a little scary. I know for a fact that eels exist in Webber Pond, in Vassalboro, because my wife and I have caught them. They also can be found in China Lake. This one goes back a while. I was a young lad in the 1950s, when I was probably about nine years old, and I remember being in an old wooden boat, with no motor, but oars, with my dad and an uncle. I don’t remember which one, but someone in the boat caught an eel, because my only recollection of that adventure was when they took out a cleaver-like knife and cut off its head on the gunwale of the boat. It was a white boat with red trim. By the way, that was the only time I can ever remember being on China Lake.

Another instance I have had with eels was catching one through the ice on Three Mile Pond one year back in the 1990s. We left it on the ice to die, and then scaled, gutted it, and cut it into chunks for dinner. I can remember the muscled fish “dancing” in the frying pan, and had the consistency of a scallop. We kind of altered the taste with a little garlic.

OK, so what about eels. They are slimy, and most people don’t want to be bothered with them.

Eels are elongated fish, ranging in length from two inches to 13 feet. I remember one time when my wife caught one that measured about 22 inches. They possess no pelvic fins, and many species also lack pectoral fins. The dorsal and anal fins are fused with the caudal fin, forming a single ribbon running along much of the length of the animal. Eels swim by generating waves which travel the length of their bodies. They can swim backwards by reversing the direction of the wave.

Freshwater eels have a slender, snake-like body that is covered with a mucus layer, which makes the eel appear to be naked and slimy despite the presence of minute scales. A long dorsal fin runs from the middle of the back and is continuous with a similar ventral fin. Pelvic fins are absent, and relatively small pectoral fins can be found near the midline, followed by the head and gill covers. Variations exist in coloration, from olive green, brown shading to greenish-yellow and light gray or white on the belly. Eels from clear water are often lighter than those from dark, tannic acid streams.

The eel lives in fresh water and estuaries and only leaves these habitats to enter the Atlantic Ocean to make its spawning migration to the Sargasso Sea. Spawning takes place far offshore, where the eggs hatch. The female can lay up to 4 million buoyant eggs and dies after egg-laying. After the eggs hatch and the early-stage larvae develop, the young eels move toward North America, where they metamorphose into glass eels and enter freshwater systems where they grow as yellow eels until they begin to mature.

American eels hunt predominantly at night, and during the day they hide in mud, sand, or gravel very close to shore, at depths of roughly five to six feet. They feed on crustaceans, aquatic insects, small insects, and probably any aquatic organisms that they can find and eat.

American eels are economically important in various areas along the East Coast as bait for fishing for sport fishes such as the striped bass, or as a food fish in some areas. Their recruitment stages, the glass eels, are also caught and sold for use in aquaculture, although this is now restricted in most areas.

Eels were once an abundant species in rivers, and were an important fishery for aboriginal people. The construction of hydroelectric dams has blocked their migrations and locally extirpated eels in many watersheds. For example, in Canada, the vast numbers of eels in the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers have dwindled.

The American eel Anguilla rostrata was first described in 1817 by Lesueur. Anguilla is Latin for eel, and rostrata is a Latin word that can mean either “beaked or curved” or “long nose”. French: Anguille d’Amérique, Spanish: Anguila americana.

Their natural range includes the eastern North Atlantic Ocean coastline from Venezuela to Greenland and including Iceland. Inland, this species extends into the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River and its tributaries as far upstream as Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Eels are bottom dwellers. They hide in burrows, tubes, snags, masses of plants, other types of shelters. They are found in a variety of habitats including streams, rivers, and muddy or silt-bottomed lakes during their freshwater stage, as well as oceanic waters, coastal bays and estuaries. During winter, eels burrow under the mud and enter a state of torpor (or complete inactivity) at temperatures below 5°C, although they may occasionally be active during this period.

Little information about predation on eels has been published. It was reported that elvers and small yellow eels are prey of largemouth bass and striped bass, although they were not a major part of these predators’ diet.

In the 1970s, the annual North Atlantic harvest had an averaged value of $84,000. In 1977, the eel landings from Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts were about $263,000 (US Department of Commerce 1984).

Substantial decline in numbers and fishery landings of American eels over their range in eastern Canada and the U.S. was noted, raising concerns over the status of this species. The number of juvenile eels in the Lake Ontario area decreased from 935,000 in 1985 to about 8,000 in 1993 and was approaching zero levels in 2001. Rapid declines were also recorded in Virginia, as well as in New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, in Canada.

Because of its complex life cycle, the species face a broad range of threats, some of which are specific to certain growth stage. Being catadromous, the eels’ reproductivity success depends heavily on free downstream passage for spawning migration. It also depends on the availability of diverse habitats for growth and maturation.

Sex ratio in the population can also be affected because males and females tend to utilize different habitats. Impacts on certain regions may greatly impact the number of either sex.

Despite being able to live in a wide range of temperatures and different levels of salinity, American eels are very sensitive to low dissolved oxygen level, which is typically found below dams. Contaminations of heavy metals, dioxins, chlordane, and polychlorinated biphenyls as well as pollutants from nonpoint source can bioaccumulate within the fat tissues of the eels, causing dangerous toxicity and reduced productivity. This problem is exacerbated due to the high fat content of eels.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reviewed the status of the American eel both in 2007 and in 2015, finding both times that Endangered Species Act protection for the American eel is not warranted. The Canadian province of Ontario has canceled the commercial fishing quota since 2004. Eel sport fishery has been closed.

Sustainable consumption

In 2010, Greenpeace International has added the American eel to its seafood red list. “The Greenpeace International seafood red list is a list of fish that are commonly sold in supermarkets around the world, and which have a very high risk of being sourced from unsustainable fisheries.” OK, this is running a little longer than usual, but the eel is an interesting fish that has a bad reputation, but most people know very little about.

Roland’s trivia question of the week:

In what year was game 3 of the World Series postponed due to an earthquake?

Answer can be found here.

OPINIONS: A “yes” vote urged on broadband ARPA warrant article

COMMUNITY COMMENTARY

by Bob O’Connor
China Broadband Committee

The China Broadband Committee was formed in 2017 to find a way to bring the best Broadband internet solution to China. Last year we chose Axiom Fiber to build that system. The selectboard and townspeople voted down our proposal last November because of the risk that it could potentially adversely affect property taxes due to repayment of the $6 million bond if not enough townspeople signed up for this service.

As a committee, we went back to the drawing board to look at all possible solutions again. We reviewed proposals from our incumbent providers, Spectrum Charter, and Consolidated Communications. We found the Spectrum bulk proposal too financially risky for the town. Consolidated was not interested in expanding into China because we are in “Classic” China Telephone territory. The company might consider expansion in the distant future, seven or more years from now.

Unitel, of Unity, Maine, has been in the telephone business since 1904, about the same time that the China Telephone Company got its start. Unitel first offered fiber internet to the home in a limited area starting in 2015. Late last year, Unitel was acquired by Direct Communications, a larger family-owned company that offers fiber to the home in a few rural areas in a few US states.

Our broadband committee started working with Direct Communications (DC) shortly after they acquired Unitel last year. Unitel/DC are looking to expand to towns around Unity with the help of the current grants and funds. These grant funds can be spent to cover areas of our town that the Maine Connectivity Authority (MCA) defines as “Least Served” and “Unserved”. This includes about 25 percent of homes in China that typically have DSL or no service.

MCA now classifies the rest of town as “Underserved”, meaning that their service does not meet the minimum speed of 100/100 Mbps. This includes those with cable service from Spectrum. All new internet projects funded by MCA must be built to the minimum 100/100Mbps standard.

Our currently proposed project with Unitel/DC is to build a fiber backbone in town that is strong enough, that is, has enough fibers, to serve the whole town while initially serving the Least Served and Unserved areas. After this project is complete, Unitel/DC will continue to expand to the rest of the town, the underserved folks.

Town funding from this project is from the TIF fund of $30,000/year for 10 years for a total of $300,000. This expenditure was previously approved by the voters in 2021. Also, we are requesting $70,000. from a part of the federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds that China has received.

Unitel/DC will match our $370,000 contribution to the project.

We are also applying for an MCA “Connect the Ready” grant for about $460,000. The total project is approximately $1.2 million dollars with the Town contributing 31 percent, Unitel/DC contributing 31 percent and the MCA grant covering the remaining 38 percent of the project.

We will only apply for this grant if the townspeople vote in favor of the $70,000 ARPA fund distribution on the Warrant Article on November 8, 2022.

The town selectboard unanimously (5/0) recommended a “yes” vote on this $70,000 Broadband ARPA Warrant article. The Budget committee also recommended a “yes” vote (5/1).

Neither the TIF nor the ARPA funds will raise property taxes, and Unitel/DC would fully own and operate this service with no requirement for involvement from town staff.

Fiber internet service by Unitel / Direct Communications will improve internet speeds and reliability, increase value of your home, encourage economic development in town, allow for online learning, education, work, telehealth, and entertainment at an affordable and competitive price.

We appreciate your support. Thank you.

Read more about China’s broadband initiatives here.

FOR YOUR HEALTH: Fall back into healthy habits

(NAPSI)—Whether your family has been on its A-game when it comes to dental health or you were subject to the summer slide, the start of the school year is a great chance to reset. While your kids get used to the earlier wakeup call, incorporating oral health techniques along the way will help them beyond their first day.

Summer break doesn’t usually include the same strict schedule as the school year and dental health can sometimes fall by the wayside. It’s important to implement positive brushing and flossing habits with your kids as they start the school year off, for happy smiles in those class photos.  

“The routine gets disrupted when summer happens,” says Kim Trieu, DDS, a Delta Dental of Washington member dentist, who also teaches at the University of Washington School of Dentistry. “And when we get out of routines, we get out of habits.”

Helpful Hints

Daily reminders of brushing for two minutes twice a day and flossing at least once are a great place to start. This reduces the risk of cavities by removing food and plaque which build up with the increase in summertime snacks and treats. Before you leave the house in the morning and prior to bedtime, a quick “Did you brush yet?” can get the job done.  

In addition to verbal reminders, try posting a visual reminder on the bathroom mirror such as a brushing and flossing chart or setting a daily phone alarm. Brushing and flossing charts are available at www.toothfairy.deltadentalwa.com/blog/tooth-fairy-approved-brushing-and-flossing-chart. 

As well as getting your family to brush and floss consistently, check to make sure they’re doing it thoroughly. Check for food or plaque on your kids’ gum line. They can be evidence of missing a spot while brushing and flossing and lead to unnecessary dental treatments due to lack of oral hygiene.

Turn To The Tooth Fairy

If your kids need some extra encouragement, the Tooth Fairy is on the case. Parents can request a letter from the Tooth Fairy to motivate kids to be active participants in their dental health. Delta Dental of Washington has also partnered with the Tooth Fairy to offer helpful tips for parents too, including the downloadable “Caring for your Smile” home curriculum, the quarterly Grin & Grow e-newsletter, articles, activity sheets, videos and storybooks.  

Launched in 2019 as part of Delta Dental’s vision for a cavity-free Washington, The Tooth Fairy Experience (www.TheToothFairyExperience.com) program aims to improve dental health habits at an early age, reduce the incidence of tooth decay, and increase the number of kids who regularly visit the dentist.  

Learn More

For further information on how to access the Tooth Fairy’s materials, visit the parent resources page. For information about oral health in general, visit Delta Dental of Washington’s blog at www.DeltaDentalWA.com/blog.

I’M JUST CURIOUS: Pom-pom history

by Debbie Walker

Did you realize the Pom-poms on our winter hats have a long history? I didn’t either until I read about it in my Farmer’s Almanac newsletter today. I really enjoyed the history. There have been several purposes besides a fashion statement.

There are, of course, theories about the pom-pom history. First let me tell you the name pom-pom comes from a French word, ponpon. That translates to “bobble” which means “a small ball of fabric”. It is believed they were on hats as far back as 790 AD to the Viking Era.

A small statue of a mythological Norse God was found on a small farm in 1904. It suggests a religious or cultural connection.

The pom-pom has historical origins:

• Napoleon’s infantry’s bobbles told which regiment they belonged to.
• Hungarian Calvary regiments and Scottish Highland regiments to help distinguish rank.

By the 18th Century the floppy beret with pom-poms was really an essential Scottish piece of clothing.

In Rome, Roman Catholic clergy have worn pom-pom hats for ages, varying in colors to show their rank and job.

In South America traditional garments of men and women. Different colors signals meant marital statis.

French sailors added them to their head gear to keep from hitting their heads on the low ceilings of the ship when waters were rough.

During The Depression the pom-pom became a popular accessory. It was an inexpensive way to embellish clothing.

In the 1960s favorite band, the Monkee’s was Michael Nesmith who helped make the pom-pom famous with his hat.

Now they rarely signify anything more than a sense of fashion.

Did you have any idea those little pom-poms would have such a history?

This column may be a little short. I have an excuse. I was in a car accident two days ago. A young man has since learned that if you can’t see because the sun is in your eyes you should slow down at least if not possible to stop. However, that night he chose to make a left turn at a speed higher than he should have been going anyway and the result was him hitting my car, the front left panel, wheel and destroyed it. Knocked the front bumper and other necessary stuff off.

Oh yeah, and he also gave me my experience of my first ambulance ride. I did not like the trip. At the hospital they x-rayed and CT’ed me and sent my aching body home. Oh, and instructions to see my doctor immediately. I spent the weekend pretty much in bed. My first accident appears to be another educational experience. I wish that young man had at least said he was sorry.

I am just curious if maybe we couldn’t all be sure to be a little more careful. Any questions or comments send to DebbieWalker@townline.org . Thanks for reading and have a great week.

REVIEW POTPOURRI: Millard Fillmore

Millard Fillmore

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

Millard Fillmore

The 13th President Millard Fillmore (1800-1874) was born into grueling poverty, in the Finger Lakes region of Western New York State, to Nathaniel (1771-1863) and Phoebe Millard Fillmore.

Fillmore was truly a self-made man in his endeavors to improve himself. He studied law and clerked for a judge who just happened to be his father’s landlord, one of the wealthiest men in the County and a cheapskate who paid young Millard very little. When Fillmore, on his own initiative, took on a paying client as her attorney to earn some badly needed money, the judge fired him.

Fillmore also subscribed to a local library and read almost all of the books on the shelves. At the age of 18, he enrolled in the class of a 20-year-old schoolteacher, Abigail Powers (1798-1853), whom he would fall in love with and marry seven years later.

By a combination of his wife encouraging him and his own endeavors, he arose in the ranks of New York state politics to serve in its legislature, as a representative from Buffalo, which would be his home base for most of his adult life, and to become State Comptroller, just before being picked by the Whigs as Zachary Taylor’s running mate.

Fillmore served two separate terms in Congress from 1833 to 1841 and appointed as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Taylor ignored his vice-president most of his 16 months in office. After Taylor’s death, his cabinet, per tradition, offered their resignations, expecting to be kept on, but Fillmore accepted those resignations.

During his years in office, he sent Commodore Matthew Perry on an 1853 trip to Japan, which up to then had been a closed society, and was successful in opening it up for trade.

Fillmore also stopped France’s attempt to annex Hawaii, eased sectional tensions between Texas and New Mexico and appointed Mormon leader Brigham Young as the first governor of the Utah territory.

To his discredit, Fillmore supported the Compromise of 1850, which stopped the extension of slavery in the western states and territories and enforced the Fugitive Slave Act. While being personally opposed to slavery, he didn’t believe the federal government had any right to interfere in the South.

Abigail Fillmore

Fillmore’s wife Abigail established the first White House library and held literary salons, entertaining such writers as Charles Dickens, William Makepeace Thackeray and Washington Irving, but had frail health due to a broken ankle and couldn’t stand for very long periods of time; daughter Mary (1832-1854) assumed most other duties as a very charming hostess and talented musician on the harp, piano and guitar.

Fillmore was defeated in his re-election bid so he and his wife planned a tour of the South, but Abigail came down with a cold after being outdoors too long at Franklin Pierce’s inauguration, and died on March 30, at D.C.’s Willard Hotel. Daughter Mary died a year later of cholera.

The couple had a son Millard Powers Fillmore (1828-1889) who became a lawyer and who never married. After he died , his will directed that all of his correspondence, including that of his father, be burned and this act has aroused much curiosity.

After leaving office, the former president traveled to England where he was received by Queen Victoria who described him as the most attractive man she ever met.

In 1858, he married a wealthy widow, Caroline McIntosh (1813-1881), with whom he also had a very happy marriage, but she demanded he sign a prenuptial agreement.

Fillmore experienced very good health until he suffered a stroke and died shortly after, at 74, in 1874. Three U.S. Senators attended his funeral including Maine’s Hannibal Hamlin.

Millard Fillmore was heavily criticized for his weak stand against slavery, in particular by Harry Truman who called him “a weak, trivial thumb-twaddler who would do nothing to offend anyone.” But later historians have rightfully credited him for his tact and moderation during an era of grueling tensions and violence leading up to the Civil War.

LIFE ON THE PLAINS: Pictorial stroll along the east side of Water St., Part 5

by Roland D. Hallee
Photos courtesy of E. Roger Hallee

Part of a row of tenement buildings (top and below) between 30 – 44 Water St., which sat on the east side of Water St., overlooking the Kennebec River.

All of these apartment buildings, and many others, were torn down in the 1960s. These (below) were located on the side where a guardrail now exists, and the lots overgrown with vegetation. You can see parts of the buildings that extended down to the river.

OPINIONS: Protecting a high quality and fully-funded public education system is vital

COMMUNITY COMMENTARY

by Tom Waddell

The Supreme Court’s Casey vs. Makin decision all but forces Maine to fund private religious education. Now every state’s public school funding is under attack.

Bleeding public school budgets to fund alternative schools, such as private secular, religious, or for-profit charter schools, is often done through voucher programs that claim public taxes do not fund public school systems; they fund students, and the money follows the student to whichever school they choose.

Maine passed a bill last year requiring private schools that accept public funds to follow Maine’s Human Rights Act, the same human rights protocols that apply to Maine’s public schools. Those protocols ban harassment based on race, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, ethnicity, or disability. Students with physical or learning disabilities must also be accorded the same learning environment as public schools. The bill initially included financial oversight of the annual $56 M taxpayer support Maine gives to private schools but was subsequently removed. Why?

Maine used to have financial oversight of the taxes it uses to fund private schools. However, requiring state-funded private schools to report how those funds were spent was removed from the Government Oversight Committee in 2011. Why would Maine not want to know how the $56 M it gives to private schools, or over half a billion in ten years, gets spent?

The Supreme Court ruled Maine, and every state must fund private religious instruction if they fund private non-religious education but that ruling only applies to states that exclude religious schools. Legislation is moving through Congress that will allow all for-profit charter schools nationwide to bleed every state’s public school budget through a voucher system and receive federal grants without reporting their finances.

When the federal Charter Schools Program proposed new rules that would prevent private, for-profit charter schools from receiving public grant money and require them to report their finances if they receive any public funds, the lobbyists for the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools opposed those regulations.

The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools wants for-profit charter schools to get public grants and state taxpayer funds and not have to report how those funds get spent. This will leave each state with zero financial oversight of what state-funded charter schools do with public tax dollars.

This is the same as Maine having no financial oversight of private school funding extended to every state and every public school system in America. As a result, public school budgets everywhere will be cut, and the quality of public education across the nation will suffer.

Two congressional candidates and one gubernatorial candidate in the November election support a fully funded public education system. The other congressional and gubernatorial candidates support an unregulated private education system funded by taxpayer school vouchers.

Two congressional candidates and one gubernatorial candidate support financial oversight of private schools and the other candidates do not see the necessity for the Maine Government Oversight Committee to oversee the $56 million Maine currently gives away to private schools every year or over half a billion over ten years.

Your vote will help determine if Maine continues to fund private schools, thereby requiring Maine to fund private religious schools. Your vote will also determine if Maine controls how the half a billion it gives away to private schools over ten years gets spent.

I urge you to make your vote count to protect a high-quality and fully funded public education system that all of Maine’s parents and students expect and deserve. Parents, students, and school faculty are counting on you.