Meet the Candidate: Brandon Morris Seeks Bangor City Council Seat

Brandon Morris is seeking a seat on the Bangor City Council with a campaign focused on unity, transparency, and putting Bangor residents first. In this edition of The Maine Mirror’s Local Candidate Spotlight series, Morris shares what inspired him to run, the values guiding his campaign, and the priorities he says he would pursue if elected.

The Price of Transparency: How Maine DHHS Turned Public Records into a Paywall

A Maine citizen’s Freedom of Access Act requests began with a promise of $0 and a four-week turnaround, only to grow into invoices totaling $450 and $50,875, months of delays, and ultimately no records produced. This investigative report examines the timeline, escalating costs, procedural hurdles, and broader questions surrounding transparency, public records, and accountability within the Maine Department of Health and Human Services.

Paper Trail Deep Dive: The Cost of Accountability

Before Episode 002 of Paper Trail Deep Dive premieres, review the email correspondence at the center of the investigation. This documented chain involving Senator Trey Stewart, Peter Schleck of OPEGA, and Maine’s oversight process raises important questions about transparency, accountability, public records, and what it actually takes for an ordinary citizen to seek review of government conduct.

Sanford’s Latest Agenda Packet Tops 900 Pages: A Reminder of How Much Happens Behind the Scenes

While reviewing Sanford’s June 16, 2026 City Council meeting materials, one detail immediately stood out: the agenda packet exceeded 900 pages. That discovery sparked a closer look at what agenda packets are, why they matter, and what this mountain of documentation reveals about transparency, public engagement, and the often-unseen work taking place behind local government decisions.

PUBLIC PULSE | PRESQUE ISLE CITY COUNCIL

As part of The Maine Mirror’s Public Pulse series, we reviewed public records and agenda materials from the June 3, 2026 Presque Isle City Council meeting. Key topics included potential future property valuation adjustments, homelessness funding, code enforcement actions, recreation facility policies, and tourism updates. Here’s what residents may want to know—and what questions may be worth watching moving forward.

The Budget Discussion That Ended Before the Answer Arrived

A Berwick resident asked about virtual participation before a public budget discussion. The answer didn’t arrive until after the discussion had ended and residents had already voted, raising broader questions about accessibility, civic engagement, and government responsiveness.

Matt Dunlap’s Warning: “Often, You Only Know What You Are Told”

In his February 12, 2025 testimony supporting LD 127, Maine State Auditor Matt Dunlap used a powerful historical example to demonstrate why independent oversight matters. By contrasting an 1881 report praising the State Reform School with an investigation uncovering troubling conditions experienced by children, Dunlap reminded lawmakers that transparency and accountability are essential because, as he stated, “Often, you only know what you are told.”