Woodland FOAA Dispute Escalates as Town Demands Payment Before Providing Explanation

The Town of Woodland, Maine is facing scrutiny after requiring a $750 deposit before providing clarification on a FOAA request, raising concerns about transparency and access to public records.
Ignored at the Highest Level: A Notarized Complaint, Verified Evidence, and One Year of Silence from Maine Child Welfare Leadership

A notarized, evidence-backed complaint sent to Maine’s governor and child welfare leadership was delivered and signed for—then met with over a year of silence. This case raises urgent questions about accountability, transparency, and what happens when formal reports of misconduct go unanswered.
LD 127 Follow-Up: The Amendment, the Debate, and the Last-Minute Vote That Killed Maine Oversight Reform

LD 127 promised stronger government oversight and access to critical information tied to child deaths in Maine—but it collapsed in a late-night procedural failure. This investigation breaks down what the bill actually did, why it failed, and what lawmakers on both sides argued in one of the most consequential debates of the session.
When a Tie Vote Raises Bigger Questions: Maine’s $45 Million Agriculture Bond and the Conflict of Interest Debate

A 17–17 tie vote in the Maine Senate has ignited a growing debate over ethics and accountability in government. At issue: whether lawmakers should be allowed to benefit from bond-funded programs they help pass. As questions mount over a failed amendment, a key absence, and claims of “crony capitalism,” the vote raises deeper concerns about public trust, transparency, and conflicts of interest in Maine politics.
📰 Is This Happening Across Maine? FOAA Delays and Costs Raise Broader Questions

A review of FOAA requests in two Maine towns reveals mounting legal costs, delayed responses, and unanswered questions. As similar patterns emerge across municipalities, concerns are growing over whether public access to information is being quietly reshaped.
Maine Towns Spend Thousands on FOAA Legal Fees While Public Records Requests Stall

A northern Maine town spent over $18,000 in taxpayer funds on legal fees tied to public records requests—yet key documents remain unproduced. A similar pattern of delays and silence in southern Maine raises broader questions about transparency, access, and the growing cost of obtaining public records across the state.
When Justification Doesn’t Match the Record — A Father’s Case Raises Questions About Maine DHHS

A Maine father’s case raises urgent questions about DHHS accountability after two no-trespass orders were issued based on alleged social media threats—claims that may not align with the full record, including police findings and documented evidence.
