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Longtime NPR journalist Peter Breslow discusses his career and shares stories from his new memoir
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Several environmental groups have filed suit against the Maine Department of Environmental Protection for failing to slash carbon emissions as required by state law.
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U.S. District Judge Nancy Torresen says more review is needed to determine law's constitutionality while suggesting "substantial" portions of it are not.
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France, Italy and Indonesia have already dispatched floating hospitals to the area. King says it's not clear why the U.S. has not.
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Some Mainers from immigrant families say many preexisting categories don't fully represent their identities.
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At an event highlighting solidarity with Ukraine, some community members expressed worry and frustration with a congressional impasse over continued military aid for Kyiv.
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Best known as the leader of a national anti-vaccination campaign, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is still working to secure ballot access in Maine and other states for his independent bid for president.
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GOP lawmakers are increasingly critical of the tens of millions spent to house asylum seekers but have yet to offer concrete alternative solutions.
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Gov. Janet Mills said, based on input from port and offshore wind stakeholders, including the University of Maine and on technical and engineering analyses, the state has concluded that the Sears Island parcel is the most feasible port development site. It's expected to be 100 acres of development in total.
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After 30 years, the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery is being removed from the Superfund list.
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In a speech during debate over $95 billion aid bill, Republican U.S. Sen. Susan Collins pushes back against "misunderstandings" and "misrepresentations" by opponents.
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The FAFSA form is typically made available for students in October. But this year, it was delayed nearly three months, as the federal government is streamlining the form.