Pay as You Throw? Commercial fees? Bar Harbor Workshop Begins Discussion

Pay as You Throw? Commercial fees?

Bar Harbor Workshop Begins Discussion Carrie Jones Mar 05, 2025 The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Swan Agency Real Estate. BAR HARBOR—In a Tuesday, March 4, workshop, the Bar Harbor Town Council continued to talk trash, hoping to “establish high-level public policy objectives for Bar Harbor’s waste management strategies.” That’s a long way of saying that the town was looking at how much it … Continue reading Pay as You Throw? Commercial fees?

Acadia National Park Workers Lose Jobs and Job Offers

Acadia National Park Workers Lose Jobs and Job Offers

Carrie Jones Feb 19, 2025 Share The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Acadia Shops. BAR HARBOR—An already understaffed Acadia National Park lost eight workers on Valentine’s Day, a result of decisions made by the White House. The loss of the probationary workers comes on top of a federal hiring freeze. Approximately 30 job offers had already been rescinded. Now, employees who have worked at … Continue reading Acadia National Park Workers Lose Jobs and Job Offers

Bar Harbor’s Future Takes Shape: Comprehensive Plan Moves Forward Next stop: Town Council

Bar Harbor’s Future Takes Shape: Comprehensive Plan Moves Forward

Next stop: Town Council Carrie Jones Feb 04, 2025 Share The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Window Panes Home and Garden. BAR HARBOR—“So, how do we feel?” Bar Harbor’s Comprehensive Plan Committee Vice Chair John Kelly asked the group of volunteers gathered around the tables in the town’s third floor conference room. He took his glasses off and addressed the group, after another 90 … Continue reading Bar Harbor’s Future Takes Shape: Comprehensive Plan Moves Forward

Cruise Ship Ballot Question Recount Moves Forward Portia Judson Honored, Reward for Illegal Deer Death on MDI, Comprehensive Plan Event, and other briefs

Briefs: Sidman Denied Intervenor Status in Golden Anchor L.C. Case Against Bar Harbor

Press releases: Alice McDermott Promoted, Lambing Workshop, Acadia Trad!, Tarot Card for the SPCA and much more Carrie Jones Jan 11, 2025 A Quick Note From Us: Each week, we compile briefs and press releases and event images and share them all in one (sometimes very long) story. Our briefs article is mostly just press releases that we don’t write, or claim to write, but just … Continue reading Briefs: Sidman Denied Intervenor Status in Golden Anchor L.C. Case Against Bar Harbor

Bar Harbor Public Will Have Its Say on Temporary Camping Vehicles and Individual Private Campsites Planning Board moves multiple proposed changes to public hearing.

Bar Harbor Public Will Have Its Say on Temporary Camping Vehicles and Individual Private Campsites

Planning Board moves multiple proposed changes to public hearing. Carrie Jones Jan 04, 2025 Share The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Acadia Shops. BAR HARBOR—After the Bar Harbor Planning Board advanced multiple potential land use amendments to public hearing January 2, the town’s rules involving temporary camping vehicles and individual private campsites might be changing. It would no longer allow temporary camping vehicles in … Continue reading Bar Harbor Public Will Have Its Say on Temporary Camping Vehicles and Individual Private Campsites

Trial Set for Former Bar Harbor Resident Accused of Gross Sexual Assault

Trial Set for Former Bar Harbor Resident Accused of Gross Sexual Assault

Shaun Farrar Jan 03, 2025 Share If you or someone you know needs support because of sexual violence, you can contact the Maine Coalition Against Sexual Assault’s 24/7 hotline at 800-871-7741. BAR HARBOR—On March 21, 2023, David C. Gordon, 51, previously a Bar Harbor resident, was arrested by Sgt. Jerrod Hardy of the Bar Harbor Police Department and charged with gross sexual assault, class B. … Continue reading Trial Set for Former Bar Harbor Resident Accused of Gross Sexual Assault

Mount Desert Man Arrested for Burglary and Criminal Mischief

Snowy Christmas Eve Day Leads To Accidents

POLICE LOGS Shaun Farrar Dec 30, 2024 Share The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Window Panes Home and Garden. MOUNT DESERT ISLAND—Christmas Eve snowstorms saw multiple cars off the road and was the setting for a couple of accidents on Mount Desert Island. Those accidents and other police incidents are listed below. BAR HARBOR AND MOUNT DESERT POLICE LOGS The following incidents occurred in … Continue reading Snowy Christmas Eve Day Leads To Accidents

Town Hill Housing Project Inching Forward Two-thirds of Acadia's workforce can't afford to buy a home within hour of park

Town Hill Housing Project Inching Forward

Two-thirds of Acadia’s workforce can’t afford to buy a home within hour of park Shaun Farrar Dec 18, 2024 Share The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Window Panes Home and Garden. TOWN HILL—Within the last six months, Acadia National Park (ANP) conducted a survey that showed that two-thirds of its year-round workforce can’t afford to buy a home within an hour’s drive of the … Continue reading Town Hill Housing Project Inching Forward

The Broad Vision for Bar Harbor's Future Comprehensive Plan Presented

The Broad Vision for Bar Harbor’s Future

Comprehensive Plan Presented Carrie Jones Nov 24, 2024 Share The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Side Street Cafe’s New Year’s Eve Party. BAR HARBOR—The Bar Harbor Comprehensive Plan is over 100 pages long and years in the making. If you include the data and the other reports that helped to create it? The page count tops over 700 pages. It’s been state approved, found … Continue reading The Broad Vision for Bar Harbor’s Future

Hospital Hopes to Discontinue Stanwood Place Sanctuary community thoughts, potential changes to land use ordinance, and other Bar Harbor Town Council discussions Carrie Jones Nov 21, 2024 The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Swan Agency Real Estate. BAR HARBOR—Mount Desert Island Hospital is asking that Stanwood Place, a small road in the hospital’s downtown campus be discontinued as a town road. The ask is part of the hospital’s expansion plans. The road extends from Main Street toward the building. Mount Desert Island Hospital hopes to expand and modernize its main Bar Harbor campus, including its emergency department, planning to begin work in 2025 on a 42,600-square-foot expansion. The plans would triple the emergency department’s current footprint to 10,524 square feet along with other improvements. That expansion would allow for 16 care spaces, numerous triage areas, better airflow (to reduce potential for infectious airborne disease spread), and more patient rooms. via Zillow via hospital application earlier this year On Tuesday, November 19, the Bar Harbor Town Council took the first step in that road discontinuance process, which will include a public hearing. How roads are discontinued is ruled by state statue, and, in this case, also town rules. A road in Trenton similarly just underwent the same process. When a town discontinues a road, it returns to the abutting property owners. For Stanwood Place, the only abutting property owner is the hospital, said Town Manager James Smith. Councilor Matthew Hochman asked about potential payment from the hospital for the swap, since the hospital is gaining land from the town. The town felt that the swap was in the greater interest of the site and the hospital agreed to close a curb cut on Main Street, which means that the town gained an additional parking space. This, Smith said, made it seem an even swap. The council voted 6-1 in favor of the process. Hochman voted against. GRANTS, STUDIES, AND APPOINTMENTS Smith said that the town has started a transfer station facility study, which will likely have findings back in December or January. The target signs on some buildings on Cottage Street are part of comprehensive detailed survey work and data collection. Those findings will be presented in spring. The Harbormaster is working toward a state grant for the ferry terminal project, which then might open federal funds for the demo work at the Route 3 site, which is a step toward a boat launch and potential marina. The town has applied for an EPA Brownfield grant for the YMCA property on Park Street, and should know in April if that has been approved. Kathy St. Germain was appointed to the planning board. Larry Sweet was appointed to the high school board of trustees to fill a vacancy. The councilors approved an order that memorializes the language that had been discussed and was funded in the last budget for police officers’ and dispatchers’ retirement plans. They also approved the reimbursement payout plans for health reimbursements, following the IRS guidelines on that benefit. SUSTAINABLE TOURISM DATA WORK Public Works Director Bethany Leavitt said the town is collecting data about the town’s carrying capacity, focusing on areas served by existing utility structure. “We’re really looking at the maximum capacity available” for future growth and capacity, Leavitt said. To do so, the town will look at capacity indicators to determine what that maximum capacity is, Leavitt said. When that is complete, they’ll also be able to look at the change over time. “It’s basically to define the carrying capacity so that we can assess the sustainability of growth and expansion,” in the town and then use that information to make data-driven decisions, Leavitt said. It will also help prioritize the infrastructure projects. Christian Gilbert, the water division’s office manager, has said it was about looking at the past and how to entertain changes in the future. Smith said the work is an outgrowth of prior council workshops and the recent League of Town meeting about the island’s carrying capacity and sustainability. “We’re trying to be proactive at this point to go and get this data to establish a baseline,” Smith said. PUBLIC COMMENT ABOUT SANCTUARY CITIES During public comment, Anna Durand worried about the potential deportation of immigrants under the upcoming Trump presidency and how will Bar Harbor will react. “I hope you will think ahead to the coming executive orders that will try to ban sanctuary communities like ours,” Durand said. Durand addressed Smith about preparations for the town to mitigate the potential loss of funding for line items in its budget. She also addressed Police Chief David Kerns, saying, “You may well worry about morale on the force when your officers are required to participate in separating family members from each other and their homes and employment.” Her comments came as many immigration rights groups in Maine have publicly expressed concern for potential changes to immigration law and policy. Maine Public writes that President-Elect Donald Trump has said on social media that “he would declare a national emergency and seek to mobilize the military to carry out that plan.” In 2017, after a citizens’ petition, Mount Desert voters declared 101-59 that the town would be a “sanctuary community.” The non-binding resolution hoped to “protect the independence of our local law enforcement by refusing to require police or town employees to serve as enforcers of federal immigration law.” It was the first town in Maine to do so. That same year, Bar Harbor residents voted 351-62 to support declaring the town a sanctuary community. Also in public comment, Enoch Albert spoke positively about the map created for the town’s safety plan, Safe Streets for All. The map allows people to input worries and safety concerns on Bar Harbor’s streets. Though the online plan has closed for input, the map at the main level of the town’s municipal building on Cottage Street will be available for input through early or mid December, according to Hailey Bondy, staff planner, Wednesday night. FINANCIAL REPORT The town is four months into the town budget for the fiscal year and revenues are at 41%, which Finance Director Sarah Gilbert said was favorable. The Conners-Emerson permits and the harbor revenues were higher than expected. Parking is just under $3.3 million net of fees. “There are no anomalies at this point,” Gilbert said. For expenditures, the town is at 30%. Legal is trending higher, seasonal ground maintenance and cleaning services, YMCA and Jesup payments have all contributed. The town is currently at 103% of its budgeted town attorney fees. PLANNING DEPARTMENT Planning Director Michele Gagnon gave a quick summary of the six potential land use amendments that her department is working on. Those include striking the term “grandfathering” from the town’s land use ordinance and tweaking the Salisbury Cove setback along Route 3 from 150 feet to 75, to conform with a neighboring district. Other potential changes involve registry of deed notification, phasing approvals, adding language about capacity for projects, and language involving campgrounds, multi-family units as well as registration requirements for owner-occupied short-term rentals (VR-1). “The amendment would modify the definitions of campground and individual private campsite and add a definition of temporary camping vehicles,” Gagnon wrote in a November 14 memo to the council. “It would also add and/or amend the standards for the three uses. It would allow individual private campsites in the resource protection, shoreland limited residential, and stream protection districts, and would allow the new use, temporary camping vehicles, in 24 of the 40 districts.” The changes to short-term rentals were also explained in the memo. “The amendment would remove the transition clause that was needed when we placed a cap on VR-2s. It takes the ‘length of stay’ out of the definitions and gives it its own section. It redefines the definition of ‘primary residence.’ It places the ‘determination of residency’ in Chapter 174, short-term rental registrations,” Gagnon wrote. COUNCIL COMMENTS Councilors Earl Brechlin, Hochman, and Joe Minutolo, as well as Chair Valerie Peacock thanked the election staff. Brechlin also thanked the planning staff for the work on the residency requirements for VR1s. Councilor Kyle Shank said that the way we speak to each others matters. In the past couple of months, he said, the way people speak to each other, doesn’t make people feel deeply positive about the community. Hochman mentioned the Conners Emerson Schools’ groundbreaking. He invited people to the production of Chicago! at the high school and Vice Chair Gary Friedmann thanked the people who voted for him to legislature. Friedmann will be sworn in on December 4 and he may have to zoom in to council meetings. Minutolo congratulated departing Code Enforcement Officer Angela Chamberlain on her new position in Tremont and said she’d be missed. Peacock said she went to the Conners Emerson tree planting. She thanked all the town staff for their continuous care and work. LINKS TO LEARN MORE Read the packet Watch the discussion A NOTE FROM US This is Carrie and Shaun, and as you’ve probably noticed, we’ve been working hard at the Bar Harbor Story, providing local news in a way that keeps you informed, but also embraces and promotes community and the good that is within it. We take so much time—just the two of us, with a special needs kid that has to be homeschooled—to cover our island community’s (plus, Trenton) local news in a way that’s timely, daily, and remembers that underneath the news . . . there are people who are our neighbors. We are working hard to get the news out there—for free—for everyone. But it’s taking its toll on our family financially and honestly, sometimes, emotionally, because frontline local news in a small community? It’s hard. Most media isn’t local (even when it claims it is). Most media has paywalls and advertisers. We don’t. That’s not a smart financial decision for us. It’s a moral one. And we’re going to try to do it for as long as we can because we’re local, we’re passionate, and we’re all about getting the news to everyone—no paywalls. Richard Stengel, writing in The Atlantic, said, "Paywalls create a two-tiered system: credible, fact-based information for people who are willing to pay for it, and murkier, less-reliable information for everyone else. Simply put, paywalls get in the way of informing the public, which is the mission of journalism.” As a paper that is owned and staffed by locals, we make every attempt to gather all of the facts for our readers, information that might not be part of the main story and/or information that may not be known even to our towns’ officials, but is still just as important, if not more important, to the story. We currently have over 3,000 subscribers, the vast majority of them free, with over 230,000 article reads every month. Every one of our stories is opened at least 2,000 times. Most are opened well over that amount. To continue to provide you with fact based, non-editorialized news, we really need your support! If you’d like to support us or subscribe? It would mean the world to us, and to the Bar Harbor Story! There are a few ways to do that: You can send us a one-time support via this link here. It will say “Carrie Jones Books” because that’s what our PayPal account is through. You can become a paid subscriber here or here. Your business or nonprofit can sponsor the Bar Harbor Story with a banner ad. More information on that is here. THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING OUR COMMITMENT TO ALL OF OUR COMMUNITY Bar Harbor Story is mostly a self-supported publication. To receive new posts and support our work, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Thank you for being here with us and caring about our community, too! Subscribed Thanks for reading Bar Harbor Story ! This post is public so feel free to share it. Share If you’d like to donate to help support us, you can, but no pressure! 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Hospital Hopes to Discontinue Stanwood Place

Sanctuary community thoughts, potential changes to land use ordinance, and other Bar Harbor Town Council discussions Carrie Jones Nov 21, 2024 Share The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by Swan Agency Real Estate. BAR HARBOR—Mount Desert Island Hospital is asking that Stanwood Place, a small road in the hospital’s downtown campus be discontinued as a town road. The ask is part of the hospital’s expansion plans. … Continue reading Hospital Hopes to Discontinue Stanwood Place