Archive for the ‘Industry News’ Category

AGREEMENT REACHED TO ALLOW HEAVIEST TRUCKS ON ME’S INTERSTATE

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Senator Collins convinces House-Senate negotiators to approve plan to allow heavier trucks to use Maine’s federal interstates for at least 20 years

Senator Susan Collins (R-ME)

WASHINGTON, D.C.—U.S. Senator Susan Collins, the top Republican on the Senate Transportation Appropriations Subcommittee, has successfully negotiated an agreement that would allow the heaviest trucks to travel on federal interstates in Maine for at least 20 years instead of forcing them off the highways and onto Maine’s secondary roads and downtown streets.

While the Senate originally approved Senator Collins’ provision to make this change permanent, the House never approved a similar provision.  As a member of the committee charged with working out the differences between the two bills, Senator Collins successfully negotiated this 20-year compromise agreement. Final votes in the House and Senate are expected next week.  The bill would then be sent to the President for his signature.

Senator Collins has led the effort to allow trucks weighing up to 100,000 pounds to travel on Maine’s federal interstates –including I-95, 195, 295, and 395.  Senator Collins has worked closely with Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), also a member of the Transportation Subcommittee, and this agreement for Maine is paired with a similar change for Vermont.

“We faced significant opposition to our plan to permanently allow the heaviest trucks to drive on our federal interstates in Maine and Vermont,” said Senator Collins.  “But moving these trucks from our downtown streets and onto the federal interstates where they belong has always been one of my top transportation priorities.  The agreement that I negotiated to allow the heaviest trucks on the highway for at least the next 20 years is a major accomplishment that will help shippers, truckers, and Maine’s job creators.  More important, it will improve safety for Mainers who live, work, and go to school along the secondary roads, and busy downtowns where these trucks are currently forced to travel.”

Senator Collins’ effort is supported by the Association of Police, the Maine State Police, the State Troopers Association, the Maine Department of Public Safety, the Chiefs of Police, the Maine Motor Transport Association, the Parent Teacher Association, and the Bangor School Department, who have all expressed the importance of safety in getting these heaviest trucks off our local roadways and onto the interstates where they belong.

Currently, the heaviest trucks in Maine are diverted onto secondary roadways that cut through our downtowns on narrow streets, creating a major safety concern.  In most of the surrounding New England states and nearby Canadian provinces, the heaviest trucks are free to use the interstates, but not in Maine and Vermont.  This puts Maine businesses at a distinct competitive disadvantage.  Heavy trucks already operate on some 22,500 miles of non-interstate roads in Maine, in addition to the approximately 167 miles of the Maine Turnpike.  But the nearly 260 miles of non-Turnpike interstates that are major economic corridors are off limits.

In 2009, a pilot project that Senator Collins wrote, was included in the 2010 Omnibus Appropriations bill.  This one-year pilot project allowed trucks weighing up to 100,000 pounds to travel on Maine’s federal interstates.  According to the Maine Department of Transportation, during the one-year period covered by the pilot, the number of crashes involving trucks on Maine’s local roads was reduced by 72 compared to a five-year average.

As LePage visits, paper mill owners say they will hire 220 more workers

Monday, October 24th, 2011

By Nick Sambides Jr., BDN Staff

EAST MILLINOCKET, Maine — Gov. Paul LePage heralded the revival of the Main Street paper mill on Monday as its owners announced plans to hire another 220 workers when they start to make torrefied wood, a coal substitute, there and at the Millinocket mill as early as 2013.

Standing among huge rolls of finished newsprint destined for a Connecticut newspaper, LePage complimented Cate Street Capital of Portsmouth, N.H., for creating the new Great Northern Paper Co. as company officials discussed their ambitious plans to produce 500,000 tons of torrefied wood between the East Millinocket and Millinocket paper mill sites annually.

Source: Bangor Daily News

Last hurdle today to Katahdin mills purchase

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011
By Nick Sambides Jr., BDN Staff

EAST MILLINOCKET, Maine — One of the last hurdles to Cate Street Capital assuming full ownership of the two Katahdin region paper mills will be crossed Tuesday when the public comment period closes on the transfer of the mills’ environmental permits.

Read full story on BangorDailyNews.com

East Millinocket mill to open Oct. 10

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

By Nick Sambides Jr., BDN Staff

EAST MILLINOCKET, Maine — The new owners of the local paper mill toured the facility Wednesday for the first time since buying it last week and announced plans to have it fully operational by Oct. 10, with 215 workers starting to fill a full year of orders.

Full Article on BangorDailyNews.com

It’s official: NH investor buys 2 Katahdin region paper mills

Monday, September 19th, 2011

By Nick Sambides Jr., BDN Staff

EAST MILLINOCKET, Maine — Two days of intensive work culminated late Friday with a New Hampshire investor’s purchase of two paper mills that will employ as many as 250 workers by mid-October and ignite a rebirth of a Katahdin region suffering a 21 percent unemployment rate.

Gov. Paul LePage’s office announced the creation of the new Great Northern Paper Co. with parent company Cate Street Capital of Portsmouth, N.H.,

Gov. LePage announces buyer for Katahdin paper mills

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Governor Paul LePage

By Nick Sambides Jr., BDN Staff

AUGUSTA, Maine — A New Hampshire-based investor ended months of speculation Tuesday by agreeing to buy the two Katahdin region paper mills, Gov. Paul LePage’s office said.

Cate Street Capital, which describes itself as a national leader in developing green energy companies headquartered in Portsmouth, N.H., signed an asset purchase agreement for the Millinocket and East Millinocket mills.

Read Full Story on BangorDailyNews.com

Brookfield grants Katahdin paper mills another reprieve

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011
By Nick Sambides Jr., BDN Staff

EAST MILLINOCKET, Maine — The Toronto-based corporation that owns the two Katahdin region paper mills is giving Gov. Paul LePage more time to close a deal with a potential buyer of the mills, he said Tuesday.

“We are cautiously optimistic that a deal can be reached to re-establish the long history of papermaking in the Katahdin region to create economic prosperity,” LePage said in a brief statement.

Read full story on BangorDailyNews.com

Child Killed When Logging Truck Overturns into Jackman Home

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

By Erin Rhoda Staff Writer

JACKMAN — A 5-year-old boy was killed early Tuesday when a Canadian logging truck crashed into his home on Main Street in Jackman, according to police.

The boy was sleeping on the couch when the logs rolled inside, killing him, around 2:30 a.m.

Read full story in the Portland Press Herald

Read the story in the Bangor Daily News

US sawmill owners ask for quicker enforcement of U.S.-Canada lumber agreement

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

DOVER-FOXCROFT, Maine — It’s tough enough for American sawmills to compete when the lumber industry is depressed by the economy; it’s still tougher when foreign competition has the competitive edge because of government subsidies.

The United States and Canada signed a Softwood Lumber Agreement in 2006 that would level the playing field for sawmills in both countries, but that playing field is hardly level because the Canadian government continues to subsidize its forest industry.

Read entire story on BangorDailyNews.com

Katahdin businessman wants to buy region’s mills

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Via PLC on Twitter

By Nick Sambides Jr., BDN Staff

EAST MILLINOCKET, Maine — A local businessman who already owns a retail stove and alternative fuels store and is part owner of a scrap metal business wants to be the next owner of the two Katahdin region paper mills.

Galen Hale told the Bangor Daily News on Tuesday that he has been “tentatively assured” of enough start-up capital to get the East Millinocket paper mill operational and that he envisions no unions at either mill.

Read full story in the Bangor Daily News


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