-
A federal judge approved the extradition request for Marianne Smyth, a Bangor woman charged with fraud in the UK.
-
Senator King and a group of bipartisan lawmakers are asking the VA for an explanation and where the cuts will be.
-
Once a fixture in nearly every community, the blacksmith shop is now mostly a relic of the past, but for a few hobbyists and shops scattered across the state. But the Maine Academy of Natural Sciences is trying to re-invigorate interest in the craft.
-
Lee Ann Daigle's defense believes the sentencing was mishandled.
-
Several staff and administrators outlined their plans during a virtual community meeting this week, noting that recent assessments have shown that the city's current high schools need millions of dollars in capital improvements.
-
A recent survey found that 50 Maine harvesters and haulers lost at least $2.6 million in income from the Dec. 18 storm alone.
-
The House and Senate will likely take up the additional initiatives on Friday as lawmakers gather for potentially one final time to vote on several vetoes from Gov. Janet Mills.
-
Maine's clean energy sector has grown three times faster than the state's overall economy in recent years, according to a new study.
-
New maps show that seven neighborhoods will be particularly vulnerable to flooding during three broad scenarios — daily high tides, the occasional astronomical, or "king" tide, and major storms — within the next 25 to 75 years.
-
Sagadahoc Sheriff deputy Sgt. Aaron Skolfield says the commission made errors in its timeline and failed to evaluate evidence before "rushing" to blame him for not taking Robert Card into custody about six weeks before the shooting.
-
Bishop Ruggieri will take over as leader of the Diocese of Portland from Robert Deeley, who served for a decade before stepping down earlier this year.
-
Bowdoin College students overwhelmingly voted last week to support a referendum calling for the College to divest and condemn violence in Gaza committed by the Israeli government.