Maine Voices
-
PublishedJanuary 4, 2020
Maine Voices: City should take steps to make housing affordable
Portland needs to preserve the affordable rentals that exist and create incentives for new construction.
-
PublishedJanuary 3, 2020
Maine Voices: Looming doctor shortage demands action
More than half of Mainers live in areas where access to a physician is already scarce.
-
PublishedJanuary 2, 2020
Maine Voices: Don’t forget history on program aimed at curbing drug prices
The bill prevented the government from negotiating with drug companies and from importing cheaper drugs.
-
PublishedJanuary 1, 2020
Maine Voices: Open primaries a better reform than ranked-choice voting
California's system would be an improvement over Maine's experiment with ranked-choice voting.
-
PublishedDecember 31, 2019
Maine Voices: Post-Madrid hopes overshadowed by big polluters’ failure to make real progress
This month's COP 25 summit left much work for nations, organizations, churches and individuals to get the world to net zero by 2050.
-
PublishedDecember 29, 2019
Maine Voices: Social media opens door to my world
As a half-Japanese teen in a mostly white state, I'm glad that young people and their parents have this platform to learn about diversity and racism.
-
PublishedDecember 28, 2019
Maine Voices: Adding barriers to employment would hurt asylum seekers, Maine communities
Mainers who want to make it easier for newcomers to find work should comment on two proposed federal rule changes.
-
PublishedDecember 27, 2019
Maine Voices: As bicentennial approaches, let our state continue to be the Polar Star
Throughout its history, immigrants have always refreshed and reinvigorated the economy and culture of Maine.
-
PublishedDecember 23, 2019
Maine Voices: Once a wonderful city, Portland is becoming Potterville
As the city becomes richer, it's turning its back on what attracted us to it in the first place.
-
PublishedDecember 22, 2019
Maine Voices: I’m a Falmouth senior, and I’m not ‘limiting myself’ by considering USM
Just the opposite – being granted in-state tuition and not having to live on campus mean that I'd graduate debt-free.
- ← Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 122
- 123
- 124
- 125
- 126
- …
- 265
- Next Page →