The early 1990s Chevrolet pickup may be green or teal, with a hood painted black or in a primer color, according to a state police press release.
Leslie Bridgers
Columnist
Leslie Bridgers is a columnist for the Portland Press Herald, writing about Maine culture, customs and the things we notice and wonder about in our everyday lives. Originally from Connecticut, Leslie came to Maine by way of Bowdoin College and never left. She joined the Portland Press Herald in 2011 as a reporter and spent seven years as the paper’s features editor, overseeing coverage of arts, entertainment and food.
Boy or girl? Either way, a happy surprise
A Westbrook couple longed for children, but this one came unexpectedly.
Maine churches criticize LePage for not welcoming Syrian refugees
‘Do we think we will change his mind? We are a people of hope,’ says the executive director of the Maine Council of Churches.
Former Brunswick bank teller pleads guilty to embezzlement
The Harpswell woman admitted to transferring $107,000 of a customer’s money into her account.
Mast Landing Brewing gets go-ahead to open Westbrook’s first brewery
The company, which started in Freeport, plans to open a brewery and tasting room in January.
Pain and joy of development: Renovation leaves tenant homeless, while couple builds dream condo on Munjoy Hill
Susan Morris and Chip Newell prepare to entertain on the deck of their Munjoy Hill condominium, with the Portland Observatory in the background at center. Newell, 68, and Morris, 55, are the developers behind 118 on Munjoy Hill, the luxury condominiums built on Congress Street at the crest of the Hill. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/ Staff […]
Super-tight apartment market torments renters, redefines parts of city
A deep look into the extreme conditions and soaring prices reveals the human and financial trauma and the confluence of social trends that caused it.
On Munjoy Hill, a lot of newcomers,
but still a sense of community
‘The Hill’ was once a low-income domain viewed as a place to avoid, but a change in perception has turned it into an in-demand – and costly – place to live.
History of a house tracks ups and downs of Munjoy Hill, now Portland’s hottest rental market
Story by Leslie Bridgers/ Staff Writer Date 2015, photo by Whitney Hayward/Staff Photographer; 1924 photo from the Collections of the City of Portland – Planning and Development, Courtesy of www.MaineMemory.net item #37770 F ifty-seven feet northeast of a stone monument on the corner of Congress and North streets is a certain lot of land on […]
Portland jumps aboard a hot affordable-housing trend – inclusionary zoning
Developers get incentives in exchange for building a percentage of middle-income units, a strategy that has had mixed results in other cities.
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