Maineah

Sustainable Maine Business Report

Archive for February, 2008

TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES

Posted by Elliott Teel on February 29, 2008

This site is temporarily on hiatus as I try to resolve an issue on my server.   The site may remain here on the  WordPress servers.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

GrowSmart advocacy updates

Posted by Elliott Teel on February 20, 2008

We’ve updated our Legislative Advocacy web page with an overview of our top priorities for this winter’s short session in Augusta. Learn more about the bills we’re supporting, their status, and how you can help them on their way to becoming law at www.growsmartmaine.org/programs/advocacy.asp.

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Industrial Employment Down

Posted by Elliott Teel on February 12, 2008

Some unwelcome numbers on manufacturing.

Maine’s industrial employment shrank 2.6 percent over the past 12 months according to the 2008 Maine Manufacturers Register, a compilation of state industry published annually by Manufacturers’ News Inc. MNI reports Maine lost 2,120 industrial jobs and 24 manufacturers since December 2006, a greater loss compared to the slight employment drop MNI reported for the state a year ago.

The industrial directory’s last report cited a negligible industrial employment drop of 287 jobs between 2005 and 2006. Manufacturing employment had been declining in the state for several years prior, with MNI data showing a loss of 14,921 jobs or 15 percent between March 2001 and November 2005.

Sectors losing employment include furniture and textiles/apparel, with each sector down 14 percent. Paper and allied products are down 2.9 percent; printing and publishing, down 1.8 percent; and chemicals, down 7.1 percent. Sectors showing growth include industrial machinery and equipment, up 4.2 percent over the year. The instruments and related products sector, which includes search & navigation equipment, measuring devices and medical instruments, is up 459 jobs over the year (20 percent).

- ReliablePlant.com

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Saco puts up wind turbine

Posted by Elliott Teel on February 7, 2008

A new wind turbine was erected Tuesday on Saco Island. The 30-foot high wind turbine will help power the city’s largest energy consumer, the wastewater treatment plant.In addition, a geothermal heating system is being installed to heat the building, as well as solar heat panels on a new grit-handling building.The city expects to save over 7,000 gallons of fuel a year, thanks to the new technology.

- WCSH6

UPDATE:  Here is some more info and photos – The Vigorous North 

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More green building at UMaine

Posted by Elliott Teel on February 5, 2008

I was over at USM recently and they had an impressive poster pointing out the various ‘green’ efforts they have undertaken on campus. From geothermal heating to biofueled buses, they are clearly not just talking about being green. And now two UMaine Farmington buildings received LEED certification.

Two newly-constructed “green” buildings at University of Maine at Farmington have received official LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification from the United States Green Building Council.

The Education Center that houses the UMF College of Education, Health and Rehabilitation and Frances Allen Black Hall, a student residence building, offer financially viable alternatives to traditional building methods.

- MaineToday

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Who is LURC?

Posted by Elliott Teel on February 4, 2008

With mass development plans and wind power projects being decided on, the Maine Land Use Regulation Commission has been in the news a lot lately. Here is their “bio,” from the State’s website.

The Maine Land Use Regulation Commission (LURC or the Commission) was created by the Maine Legislature in 1971 to serve as the planning and zoning authority for the state’s townships, plantations and unorganized areas. The Commission has land use regulatory jurisdiction over these areas because they have no form of local government to administer land use controls, or they have chosen not to administer land use controls at the local level.

The Commission was established primarily in response to a recreational building and land development boom in these areas during the late 1960’s. Its purpose is to extend the principles of planning and zoning; to preserve public health, safety, and welfare; to encourage the well-planned, multiple use of natural resources; to promote orderly development; and to protect natural and ecological values.

The responsibility of guiding land use in these areas represents a unique challenge. The jurisdiction stretches over half the state, encompassing more than 10.4 million acres and the largest contiguous undeveloped area in the Northeast. This is a diverse area that includes several coastal islands and stretches from the downeast area across the western mountains and up to the Canadian border. While the area has an extensive private land management road network, it has few public roads and is sparsely populated. Most development is concentrated along the fringe of the jurisdiction, adjacent to more populous areas where services are more accessible.

Much of this area may seem like wilderness compared to most of the rest of the Northeast, but agricultural, forestry, and recreational activities clearly identify the region as a hardworking resource vital to the overall economy of the State. Residents and visitors alike place a premium on the unique natural values they find here.

- Maine.gov

Posted in Planning | Leave a Comment »

Seaweed Harvesting

Posted by Elliott Teel on February 4, 2008

Orion Magazine takes a look at how one Maine resident is getting by.

During his lifetime John has been an orchard pruner, fisherman, lobsterman, apple picker, log roller, sawyer, and logger, and for more than forty years he has harvested seaweed on the coast of Maine. He started by renting a dory and rake for a dollar a day, and since then has retired several skiffs of his own. While rockweed—his present quarry—is certainly plentiful, it is not in great demand; it is used almost exclusively for animal supplements, a growing but still small market.

In 2007, the mechanical harvesters, now redesigned, reappeared but were equally inefficient. That was good for John, who was offered work; that year the processor had to have weed. Because it had not been picked the previous year, the rockweed had proliferated. The price was up too, to three cents a pound.

The mechanical harvesters are being redesigned again for 2008, when John will be eighty years old. Whether the machines will work in the coming year, and whether John’s boat and fortitude will last one more season, will be determined in the spring.

- Orion Magazine

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