Representative Donna Bailey helped me file legislation to make state Veterans benefits consistent throughout Maine law. Clearing this up, will ensure Veterans get the full range of benefits they are owed without worrying that state law doesn’t align with Federal law.
As someone who served two tours of duty in Iraq, this effort means a lot to me and Veterans in our community. In addition, Donna voted for successful legislation that allocated funding for transitional housing to homeless Veterans. She also supported efforts to ensure Veterans can access VA medical care by mandating leave for employees for doctor’s appointments. Donna Bailey has my full support in her bid for State Senate and I know she will continue to champion our Vets. Marshall Archer
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BUXTON (WGME) -- A pastor is pushing for change after a methamphetamine lab was discovered inside a Methodist church.
The I-Team got an exclusive look inside at the damage. The Buxton United Methodist Church is unusually quiet these days because its congregation is displaced by a disturbing discovery. "Very shocking," Pastor Lynn Briggs said. Briggs said a local man turned their sacred space into a meth lab. "Certainly nothing you would expect to happen in a house of worship in a little, country town," Briggs said. Matthew Anderson is charged with unlawful operation of a methamphetamine laboratory, a class B felony. Police say they found meth-making materials in a children's playroom. "Everything had to go," Briggs said. Four rooms in all had to be gutted, right down to the studs, because of the contamination left behind. According to the National Drug Intelligence Center, exposure can cause nausea, headaches, confusion and breathing problems. "This is very, very dangerous stuff," Briggs said. "I never knew the extent." Briggs said the church hired professional cleaners, who found the HVAC system was contaminated, spreading it throughout most of the building. "All of our hymnals, all of our Bibles, choir music, robes, anything like that. That all had to go," Briggs said. She said they went above and beyond in the name of safety, but didn't have to do any of it. "None of this was required. None of it. No," Briggs said. The Maine Drug Enforcement Agency removes the manufacturing materials, then posts a notice, warning there could still be hazardous waste left behind. From there, it's up to the property owner. "Just because the law says you don't have to do it, doesn't mean that it's right," Briggs said. An I-Team investigation in 2017 revealed that while some states require testing and decontamination, Maine does not. At the time, a meth contaminated property could also be sold without telling the buyer. About half of states have clean-up standards, including New Hampshire. Most set a legal limit for meth, so a property will be declared "decontaminated" when it's cleaned, and tests come back below that level. Lawmakers expressed concern in 2017, but didn't take any action until recently. "It scares the devil out of me," Rep. Donna Bailey, D-Saco, said. Bailey chairs the Judiciary Committee, which approved a bill last spring to require disclosure in a real estate sale. A Sanford lawmaker sponsored the legislation because of a meth lab in her own neighborhood. That bill was signed into law. "Perhaps they wiped down the counter, but how do you know those chemicals aren't left behind?" Bailey said. "And they're so toxic, especially to children." Briggs wants lawmakers to go even further. "After seeing this and going through this process, I realize the standard we currently have for clean-up ... we don't have one," Briggs said. "It's nonexistent and this is a hazardous material." I-Team Reporter Marissa Bodnar asked Bailey if Maine should require some form of clean-up. "Yes," Bailey said. Lawmakers are currently considering a bill, carried over from last session, that would require owners of rental properties to not only tell their tenants if a meth lab is discovered, but also perform testing and decontamination. Bailey said it's a complicated issue. "Not every lab uses the same chemicals, so how do you come up with standards for something that's far from standard?" Bailey said. Briggs would like to see their hardship lead to change for the better. In the meantime, the congregation continues to worship somewhere else. "Folks are missing their home," Briggs said. "There's no place like home." Bailey said her committee has asked the Maine Department of Environmental Protection to look into establishing clean up standards. Bailey said they expect to hear back soon, but will then have to grapple with some of the policy decisions, like who would be required to foot the bill for, what can be, a very expensive process. AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine’s Native American tribes say they lost control over their own lands 40 years ago, and are hoping the Legislature will return at least some of the control they once had.
The tribes and the Legislature’s Judiciary Committee have been talking for more than a year about changes to the 40-year-old Maine Indian Land Claims Act. That law, passed by Congress and signed by President Jimmy Carter, ended the legal claim by the tribes to two-thirds of the land in Maine. The tribes were given money and allowed to buy hundreds of thousands of acres of land. But that same agreement restricted the amount of control the tribes could have over what happened on their land, which has been a source of resentment against state government ever since. The four tribes—Penobscot, Passamaquoddies, Malisetts and Mic Macs—are now counting on lawmakers and the Governor to return much of the lost sovereignty, and Sen. Mike Carpenter, co-chair of the Judiciary Committee, says the time has come to do it. “They need to regain their sovereignty, and I can’t put it more succinctly than that,” Carpenter said Wednesday. “The claims act of 1980 severely restricted-they would say stripped them, I disagree,-severely restricted their ability to govern their own affairs and we’re trying to rework that if you will.” For most of the past year, a task force and members of the Judiciary Committee have worked on a bill to make those changes. It's complex because it involves identifying laws and practices that have existed for 40 years, and determining how those can and should be changed. The committee was closing in on an agreement in March when the Legislature abruptly adjourned because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now the committee is trying to finish the bill and get it to the full Legislature within a week, in the hope there will be a special session and a vote. The discussions cover everything from enforcement of hunting and fishing rules to some criminal matters to property taxes among many issues. They also involve decisions about what laws should be handled only by tribal enforcement and courts, what ones should remain solely in state jurisdiction, and what might be shared. “A tricky balance,” said Carpenter, who had to enforce the Land Claims Act when he was Maine Attorney General in the 1980s. And while the changes would be significant, committee co-chair Rep. Donna Bailey (D-Saco) said Maine should be able to make them. “I would look to the other 49 states, which have federally recognized Indian tribes and they operate under that system and have been able to do just fine. It does require more consultation and cooperation between the states and the tribes, but they all make it work and we can make it work in Maine as well.” Tribal leaders say the issue is immensely important and gets to the foundation of who they are, and the ability to control their own destiny. “As resources have grown the needs of the tribe have grown,” said Chief Kirk Francis of the Penobscot Nation, “and yet we’ve been handcuffed by this document four decades old and (we are) nowhere near the place we were then.” Chief Francis said everything from expanding tribal land to economic development is held back by lack of sovereignty. Darrell Newell, Vice-Chief of the Passamaqoddies at Indian Township, said he and many others feel it personally. “We’re just striving to restore our sacred, inherent sovereign rights to make decisions for ourselves, to better our people for future generations.” AUGUSTA (WGME) -- A bill that gives victims of animal abuse a voice had a public hearing Wednesday morning at the State House in Augusta.
LD 1442 is called "An Act to Provide for Court Appointed Advocates for Justice in Animal Cruelty Cases." The bill is also known as "Franky's Law." It was named after a pug mix from Winter Harbor who was kidnapped from his home last year. He was tortured, killed, wrapped in garbage bags and dumped into the bay. The dog’s body later washed up on a beach in front of the Hancock County District Attorney's home. Two men were arrested and charged. Franky's Law would allow courts to appoint law students or volunteer lawyers to work for free for animal abuse victims. The bill's sponsor, Representative Donna Bailey, of Saco, says the bill has received a positive response from the public. "The advocates will be able to help the court and help the prosecutors to speak for the animals, if you will,” Bailey said. Those against it say the wording of the bill is too vague. “There are already things that are in process that we don't feel like this is going to be a benefit to animal cruelty cases. We understand the good intentions behind it, but we just don't feel the language is appropriate,” Director of Animal Welfare for the Department of Agriculture Conservation of Forestry Liam Hughes said. Franky's Law is modeled after Desmond's Law, a similar bill that passed in Connecticut in 2016. A work session followed Wednesday’s public hearing. |
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