Four companies have used Community Development Block Grant workforce development grants to hire and train workers to push their enterprises forward.
Jessica Lowell
Jessica Lowell is the managing editor of the Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel. She previously covers business and economic development and general news in the Gardiner area.
After short but intense aspirations to be an opera singer (age 4) and a deep-sea diver (age 6) her most enduring passion has been telling stories.
A University of Maine graduate, she worked for newspapers in New Hampshire, upstate New York and Wyoming, where she has won awards for investigative and explanatory journalism. She’s a fellow of the Knight Center for Specialized Journalism and the Institute for Journalism and Natural Resources.
After several years out of journalism, she returned to Maine and to writing, where she spends her free time enjoying both trees and the ocean, two commodities that Wyoming lacks.
Gardiner councilor announces he will not run again after serving for three decades
Philip Hart, who represents District 4, will finish his term at the end of the year.
After 6 months, Gardiner officials continue city manager search
The City Council is considering extending its agreement with the interim city manager while deciding what steps are next in finding a permanent replacement.
Gardiner’s Johnson Hall reaches fundraising milestone
A grant from the Viles Foundation pushed fundraising to rehabilitate the historic theater past the halfway mark.
State to consider adopting regulations for tiny houses
A state panel will meet later this month to take public comment on proposed guidelines for trendy tiny homes.
Search continues for Gardiner woman
Megan Gregory, 28, was last seen in June in Augusta. Since then, no one has seen or heard from her.
Woman pulled from bottom of Augusta hotel pool in critical condition
Ann Scher, of New York, was taken to Maine Medical Center in Portland on Tuesday.
Southport Boats sale means growth and expansion for Augusta company
The company is expected to add jobs and production capacity in a new facility in the Augusta area.
Central Maine farmers say dry conditions may hold down production
Dry conditions, confined to coastal regions for much of the summer, are starting to move north and west as the growing season starts to wind down.
Whitefield and Jefferson residents list frustrations in petition to DEP
Those living around Clary Lake say the state’s inability to compel repairs at the Clary Lake dam threatens the lake’s health and their ability to use the lake.