As a columnist and a public speaker, it is not easy to live a normal life. Anything I write to defend my community or speak the truth irritates some people. A column I wrote in January to celebrate the first-ever Muslim and Somali immigrant elected to lead as the mayor of a city in Maine […]
Forecaster Opinion
Mainewhile: Historic Black designers knew how to dress for success
I have a guilty secret. This isn’t something I admit too often – and it certainly isn’t something you’d guess by looking at me – but I have an absolute weakness for fashion. My one and only request at Christmas was the book “How to Read a Dress.” I had two copies under the tree. To […]
Portland Superintendent’s Notebook: Budget will keep the focus on teaching, learning
In just one month, I’ll present my new school budget proposal to the Portland Board of Public Education. While we don’t have all of our numbers yet, steep increases in the cost of living and reduced state funding will make for a challenging road ahead as we plan the fiscal year 2023 budget. Each year, […]
Forum: One new RSU 5 family’s journey of hope
(Editor’s note: This guest column by Bonnie Violette, director of instructional support in RSU 5, is running in place of Superintendent’s Notebook by Becky Foley this month.) This month, RSU 5 welcomed new students from Angola, Congo and Nigeria. Their families traveled long distances to make the journey to the United States. I had the […]
Mainewhile: Celebrating the shout of joy that was Ashley Bryan
If you, like me, have ever had the great good fortune to spend even so much as a single afternoon out on Cranberry Island, then the odds are very high that you, like me, had the great good fortune to be invited into the home of Ashley Bryan. Because that is what Ashley did. He […]
Here’s Something: COVID lockdown story points to media’s failings
A newly released study overseen by an economics professor at Johns Hopkins University comes to the same conclusion that many have been saying for the duration of the pandemic – lockdowns are unprecedented government overreach and next to useless. The study, released last week, found that government-imposed lockdowns and shelter-in-place emergency orders in the early […]
Life Unwound: Grounding brings peace in troubled times
“Peace is every step.” – Mindfulness teacher Thich Nhat Hanh (1926-2022) Valentine’s Day. We pass newspaper stands in pharmacies: COVID numbers up, climate temperatures up and down, stock market down. Messages of hate. We read sour headlines, then lift our gaze to the sweets. Candy hearts with messages of love. Chocolate. Sometimes I don’t know […]
Mainewhile: Inventor of airplane car deserves plenty of props this month
Hello, February. Welcome! February is a funny month. It is short and cold, and everyone starts yearning for spring even though it’s really still a good way off. Worse, we all have to suffer through Valentine’s Day smack dab in the middle of the month. Ugh. On the upside, thanks to February also being the […]
Sustainably Speaking: Small steps lead to big results in climate change fight
Editor’s note: Sustainably Speaking is a new monthly column written by members of the Freeport Sustainability Advisory Board that addresses ways to combat climate change and other environmental challenges. This time of year 15 years ago, my husband and I would have been suiting up in our snowshoes to walk out, across the bay, to […]
Through My Lens: Somalis have warm spot for cold American winters
Why are Somalis choosing to live in one of the coldest states in the U.S.? I had been asked this question many times. The answer lies in Somali music and poetry. The lyrics are full of a fictional world: A world of clouds and thunder, rainy, cold and snowy – yet green, full of rivers, […]