I may not be perfect, but at least I'm not fake.

I may not be perfect, but at least I'm not fake.
This page is copyrighted by Deborah Dorey Wilson, The Lebanon Truth Seekers. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Lebanon Resident Wins Maine Lottery's Monopoly Millionaire's Club Trip to Las Vegas, Nevada!!

06/30/2015 02:46 PM EDT


The Maine Lottery announced today the winners of the June 30, 2015 second chance drawing for the Monopoly Millionaires' Club instant game. The lucky winners receive a five day four night trip for two to Las Vegas. While in Las Vegas the winners will have a chance to win up to a $1,000,000 on the Monopoly Millionaires' Club TV Game Show. The next second chance drawing will take place on August 18th where more lucky winners will be selected.

The Winners are: William Fournier - Lebanon, ME ....... Daniel Warren - Gorham, ME....... Richard Aube - Auburn, ME.......... Mark Mccallum - Saco, ME
 

 

Maine Conservation Corp is Seeking Volunteers for Day Time and Overnight Projects

Volunteering with the Maine Conservation Corps

The Maine Conservation Corps welcomes volunteers who join our members and teams on projects throughout the state. Individuals and groups are invited to help out with projects like trail construction & maintenance, watershed surveys, invasive species removal, and other conservation efforts.
Volunteers under 16 years of age will need to be accompanied by an adult. Volunteers must be at least 14 years old to participate in MCC projects. For more details visit the MCC website on Volunteering.
Volunteers are asked to wear appropriate clothing, gloves, and footwear. 
 
 
 
Some local activities for you to consider volunteering:
 

Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge

On July 17th the Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge is having a volunteer day!
“Every third Friday of the month, we will host a volunteer day for anyone who is interested. Activities will run from 9am until noon and involve a variety of tasks from winter rabbit tracking to invasive plant removal to helping us get organized with some much needed “spring” cleaning. This is a great opportunity to learn about the Refuge, what we do to protect wildlife and their habitat, gain experience, meet new people, and have fun! ”
Check out our post on Volunteer Maine to learn more.
Contact: Liz Deletetsky, MCC Environmental Steward & AmeriCorps national service member elizabeth_deletetsky@fws.gov and (207) 646-9226 x 33
Where: Wells, Maine
 
 

Maine Forest Service Introduces You to York County (Lebanon's) NEW District Forester.

Summer is here, at least according to the calendar, and it’s a good time to ask: “Do you know who your District Forester is?” There are currently 10 District Foresters, covering the entire state. A new Forester has started in the York and Cumberland County area.

District Foresters are the Maine Forest Service’s point persons for contact with woodland owners, loggers and foresters, and the general public. District Foresters lead educational workshops and woods tours, talk to school children and community groups, and work with private foresters and loggers to implement good woodland management. Most important, they can meet with you in your woods, and help you take the next step to achieve your goals for your land. 

Oliver Markewicz, Lyman, York County's District Forester

Oliver received a Bachelor of Science degree in Forest Operations Science from the University of Maine, Orono.  After graduation, he worked as a Plant Protection Quarantine Technician for the United States Department of Agriculture Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service’s Asian Longhorned Beetle Eradication program in Worcester, Massachusetts.  While working in Worcester, Oliver received a letter of recognition from the Undersecretary of the USDA for his work coordinating federal, state, and private sector partners in the effort to eradicate the invasive ALB.  Most recently, Oliver and his wife Kaci moved to Hollis, where he has been working as a consulting intern forester in York County. 
Oliver's contact information and the towns he covers can be found here.

Salmon Falls River RV Resort & Family Campgrounds Gets a Surprise Honor from Boston's Channel 5 Television Station.

As I promised last night, I want to tell you the story of a local business, and family, who are making their dreams come true in Lebanon, Maine.
The story is of the family of Cheryl and Marty Flood, the owners of the Salmon Falls River RV Resort & Family Campground, located off Rt. 202 on Natural High Road, right here in Lebanon.
When the Flood family came to Lebanon, the campground functioned, although barely, as the Natural High Campground.
Open from Mid-May through Mid-October, the campground boasts 187 over-sized camping sites, Olympic sized Indoor Pool, Crystal Clear Outdoor Pool, access for Fishing to the Salmon Falls River, an Exercise Room, Craft Room, Nature Trails, a 17,000 sq ft Activity Center,  Horseshoe Pits, Volleyball and Basketball Courts, a Private Pond where guests can enjoy Paddle Boats and Row Boats, and new last year, "SHIPWRECKED", an 18 hole Miniature Golf Course.




Of course, the BEST part about camping at Salmon Falls is that it's quiet, family friendly, and if you'd just like to kick back and relax for the day, that's okay too!!
Salmon Falls is a pet friendly campground, encouraging people to come and stay with their pets. Although there are some dog breed restrictions and pets are required to be leashed, there are two dog parks on the grounds just for a little run time for your dogs.
For guests of the park (of whom over half are now seasonal campers), there are so many planned activities to enjoy, and a camp store and ice cream parlor too!! And all of this is planned for comfort on a 53 acre pine tree studded site right here in Lebanon.
When I heard from Mom, Cheryl Flood, late last night, she was more than excited!! One of her seasonal campers, had called her from Massachusetts having seen the Campground mentioned on Channel 5 News out of Boston. Salmon Falls has been given a wonderful honor by being named one of the TOP New England Campgrounds by that network. Number 15 out of the 32 mentioned by the news agency, in fact!! Although Cheryl is unsure of how that honor came her way, she is grateful that people are acknowledging the hard work done by her family in turning a dilapidated old camping venue into a quality family camping resort.
"If I would have known I'd been nominated", she stated, "I would have had all my seasonal campers calling in to vote!". Who nominated her, or who voted, she is not sure, but her easy laugh, I would assume, would be a delight to the person responsible. It's almost that much more of an honor that she didn't have a hand in it though. Knowing enough people enjoy her campgrounds enough to nominate Salmon Falls and vote in the camping resort's behalf has a sort of sweetness to it that making calls and asking people to vote for you just doesn't include.


The new Mini Golf Course is open for business, and the public is more than welcome!! At first only 9 holes were open, but now you can play the entire 18. "I got it on a barter," says Cheryl proudly, talking about how she traded a few items she had no further use for, to a businessman who wanted to do away with Mini Golf on his own property. It took 6 men to move all the pieces to Lebanon, and several days, with the larger stuff coming first, one or two pieces at a time, and then a final trip for all the smaller pieces. The final touches of adding plant life and flowers around the course are in the works now. Playing the course is only $5 for adults, and children under 5 play free with a playing adult. Children over 12 years old are only $3....."And it's not your typical plywood built course," said Cheryl. This is the real deal!
Don't forget, their best friend of over 40 years also owns and operates BITE ME Hot Dog Eatery, just down Rt. 202 a piece, where he's carved out a niche for himself with great comfort food at an affordable price, served in a friendly, small town atmosphere.
I could have sat with Cheryl all day in the shady sunlit front lawn of the Camp Store and Office. The day was breezy, and although hot in the sunshine, under the cover of the pines it was cool and comfortable. Hearing her story of how she and husband Marty, sons Jon and Bill and daughter Jen have carved and molded a beautiful property out of something almost too far gone to bring back to life is nothing short of amazing.
Ms. Flood credits her family's success to her children. Son Jon and younger brother Bill worked side by side for many years, always doing something to better the camp sites and the campground in general. "You can't mention one without the other," she stated, "they were always working together." and you could see a smile come across her face as she spoke of her two boys. Daughter Jen works at the campgrounds too, "Many here say she's one of the hardest workers," stated Ms. Flood. "But we know she works at her beauty sleep, that's why she's radiant!"
Coming to Lebanon has not been without times of trouble and loss for the family. In November of 2014, son Jon was struck and killed on Route 16 as he pedaled his adult tricycle on the busy nearby New Hampshire highway. For Cheryl, that evening, only 8 months ago, is still so fresh and painful that her emotion is easy to see when she speaks of her late son. 
According to Cheryl, the larger news papers and news organizations wanted to turn their attention to Jon's mental illness, as he suffered from Bi-Polar disorder. However, it is thought that the 34 year old may have been suffering a form of seizure that caused Jon to have frequent blackouts where he would seem, on first view, to be completely himself, until you tried to speak to him and realized he wasn't making sense.
In speaking, my own memories of complete loss were flooded back to me, and we had a long conversation about trauma, redemption, and forgiveness that was at once, refreshing as it was sad.
Honestly, very little is known about how Jon, on his first trip alone off the campground property, wound up traveling southbound on the northbound side of Route 16, on a pitch black, rainy evening. Cheryl says that sometimes the grief still takes over and she has viewed satellite views of the area and driven the area many times trying to figure out how he could have been so far off course.
Of course, no one will ever know exactly how Jon came to be on that highway in the evening hours of November 4, 2014, but all the hoopla and attention given to only the suggestion of mental illness has always bothered Cheryl.
Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers thought we would share Cheryl's story here, to help our local residents understand that sometimes there is more to a person than mental illness, or what you read in the larger news media. It could have only been a simple mistake in direction and nothing at all to do with Bi-Polar Disorder or Epilepsy. Jon was never just "Jon", to the news media. He quickly became known only as the "mentally ill man killed on Rt. 16". In hearing Cheryl's story, the fact that local news organizations chose to focus on Jon's mental illness rather than acknowledging the person that he was, or that any man could have made a mistake and taken a wrong turn, was heartbreaking .
Jon was more than they could have ever reported, he was her son. A hard worker, a good brother, an attentive groundskeeper, friendly and social, and completely committed to the betterment and upkeep of the family's chosen business venture, Salmon Falls Campground.
Sometimes things are just accidents, and the cause is never truly known. Accidents have no reason, and are sometimes the hardest tragedies for a family to overcome. However, despite such devastating personal tragedy, the family continues to maintain, build, and renovate the campgrounds and provide a happy, peaceful place for others to come and enjoy one another, or just to relax and enjoy the quietness of the winds in the pine trees and the rush of the river.
After a lengthy conversation, our talk returned back to the campgrounds that Cheryl and her family love so much, and once again back to the designation and honor given to them by Channel 5 Boston viewers.
As we spoke, a young man delivering firewood caught our attention. He spoke of the early days of the campground, when his Uncle was carving the campsites from the pine forest, and his "happy memories" of being a child and living in one of the apartments over the Camp Store. He spoke of his mother, who was the campground's cashier and of walking the long walk up Natural High Road to catch the school bus.
Campers drove past, in and out through the key card controlled security gates, all waving and smiling as they passed.
Cheryl stayed busy, our conversations interrupted by phone calls, making reservations, and helping groups of smiling, suntanned, bicycle riding children coming for candy or ice cream at the Camp Store. Marty left with the aforementioned young man delivering firewood, and Bill, now the campground's Maintenance Foreman bounced back and forth, passing us several times with trash barrels, and the like.
"Bill is responsible for all the maintenance now," Cheryl added, "He runs this entire campground with only one other employee."
It was hard for me to leave that idyllic little spot at the entrance to the campgrounds. It was comfortable and the conversation and company were good. But my grandson was waiting and I was already an hour late, so we finished our conversation, said our goodbyes, and promised to keep in touch, even though we're only right across Rt. 202 from one another.
If you have guests coming to visit the area, why not suggest they stay at the Salmon Falls River RV Resort & Family Campground during their stay. As one of Channel 5 Boston's TOP Campgrounds in New England, they're sure to have a good time and thank you for your suggestion.
Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers would like to Congratulate Cheryl and Marty Flood and their family on a job well done and for bringing family pride to their Lebanon Maine business!!

If you'd like to see the Channel 5 Boston Report of the TOP area campgrounds, Look for Lebanon's Salmon Falls River RV Resort & Family Campgrounds at number 15~~~  SEE IT HERE:
http://www.wcvb.com/news/33769202?utm_campaign=WCVB%20Channel%205%20Boston&utm_medium=FBPAGE&utm_source=Social

LEBANON TRUTH SEEKERS announces CITIZEN of the MONTH! Guess who it is.

Lebanon Truth Seekers are delighted to announce our Citizen of the Month!

Hats off to Norm Sirois, a Lebanon resident since the age of 8.  Norm and his wife and four children reside in a home they built on the Sirois family Farm on Little River Road in 1997.  Norm has spent 6 years in the Army National Guard.

Norm is the epitome of a citizen Lebanon should be proud of. A father of four children, Norm has found time to be the leader of Troop 369. The casual observer might say, so ....not realizing the countless hours this involves.  Also, this year Norm chaired the Lebanon Clean-up Day, along with his scouts, participated in many local civic events,, attended a Camporee at West Point , which by the way was by invitation only. If you think Scouts meet weekly and that is the end of the story.  It is only the beginning.  VISIT Lebanon Boy Scout Troop 369 on Facebook and you be  astounded with the activities Norm and his boys are involved with.  This is a tribute to his great leadership. I might add, several parents of this troops members assist Norm with leadership.  Our thanks go out to them, too.

Norm has been a past volunteer in several local events including  coaching T-Ball, Minor Baseball, Minor Little League to mention a few.

The proud father of four, his oldest son is a life scout and working on his Eagle badge, second in line,  a son will be attending Maine School of Science and Mathematics this Fall, third in line, also a son,  will be a fifth grader and is a Weblos Scout and the youngest a daughter is a Frontier Girl and interested in dance.

I rather suspect behind this extraordinary man is a Mrs. Siros.  Our hats go off to you, too. 

Lebanon salutes you Norm Sirois.  You do our community proud!

                                            THANK YOU



Monday, June 29, 2015

Video Tape of Monday, June 29th Selectmen's Meeting Show Where the Money's Going.... Quickly!!



Monday evening, June 29, 2015 found the Lebanon Board of Selectmen with a full agenda.
The Board spent their time just prior to the 4 pm meeting start by signing appointment paperwork for Jeanette Lemay as the Town of Lebanon Treasurer and several other Deputy Officer appointments for Lemay to be able to function in assisting other Town Office workers in their positions as needed.
At 4 pm. Road Commissioner Tom Torno arrived in the office with a Purchase Order to spend a bulk of the $28,000 Roads Budget increase given to his Department in a last minute hasty motion and vote by Selectmen Heath and Nadeau at the end of Thursday, June 25, 2015's Selectmen's Meeting. At the time that the money was added to the Road budget, both Heath and Nadeau had stated there had been no prior discussion between themselves, or between either of them and the Road Commissioner that the two of them appointed in a surprise motion back on June 11th of this year.
At the beginning of the discussion, Select Board Chairman Ben Thompson presented Torno with a letter from a resident at 34 Jim Grant Road who has been having issues with water flow in and around his property stemming from a culvert situation. There is a lot of talk about this property as it's unsure if the landowner holds a subdivision allowance that may make the placement of an additional culvert to route the water around his property hard to place without knowing where a second driveway would be added. Tom agreed that he would go an speak to the homeowner.
Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers asked if Torno had given any thought to where he was going to use the $28,000 budget increase given to his Department by the Dynamic Duo of Selectmen, and he said that he had just presented Selectmen with a purchase order for materials asking for a total of $38,000 for paving the section of Center Road between Jim Grant Road and Holtby Lane. Torno stated that number included the money left in his former budget plus the $28,000 additional given on June 25. He said that the job will likely only spend roughly $21,000 of the additional money, with the remaining dollar amounts going back to the Town's General Fund, as mandated by law, on July 1, 2015. "Roughly $7,000 to $8,000" said Tom Torno when questioned as to how much money he thought would wind up not being spent.
***After the meeting, Lebanon Truth Seekers later did a Google Map search to find that $30,000 paving job would be for exactly .04 miles of Center Road.***
Selectman Thompson, still reeling from the surprise motion and pass dealt to him on Thursday by his fellow Board Members, asked when Torno expected to perform the work, to which Torno added that the work would be done, and completed, on Tuesday, June 30th, to remain in compliance with the requirement that the money must be spent prior to the close of business on June 30th in order for the job to fall into the 2014-15 Budget. If the job is not complete, it loses it's funding as the Town's new Fiscal year, 2015-16 will begin on Wednesday, July 1, 2015.
The Road Commissioner stated that this would be just a "quick paving job" with no plans for grinding the underlying existing pavement, only adding a coating of asphalt to the top.
Chairman of the Select Board, Thompson, was clearly agitated when he questioned Torno as to how this decision was made and Selectman Heath seemed to momentarily forget that there was no discussion allowed on this outside of the Board meeting, and indicated that perhaps there may have been some prior discussion, but Heath recovered quickly throwing some jabs of his own in Thompson's direction.
Lebanon Truth Seeker Sandy Adams had a few questions for the young Road Commissioner regarding several workers seen sipping coffee and having conversation across from her home at the intersection of Dixon Road and Shapleigh Road during a road paving operation there. Torno assured her that the asphalt was bid "by the ton" with all labor included in that price for the laying of the material on Dixon Road. "We only pay them for what they're putting down", added Tom.
Deborah Wilson brought up some local residents' questions regarding the use of Torno's family members for doing all of the road work in town, and being paid over 40% of the Road Budget money, to which he replied, "Nobody working for me right now is related to me, except for Bobby", and he explained that the Selectmen had put the work up for bid and had accepted Robert Torno's bid amount for road work in the Town of Lebanon. "I have nothing to do with that", he explained.
After a question from Sandy Adams regarding the drainage culvert from Dixon Road onto the Moulton property next door to her, that Mr. Torno has said he will look into, Selectman Heath stated that he and Nadeau had already signed the hefty Purchase Order and placed the paperwork in front of Thompson, who stated he "absolutely would not sign it".
After being questioned as to WHY his signature would be absent from the Purchase Order for the project, Thomson, still heated from the earlier volley with his peers, explained that the expenditure of the money on this project would "effect the Town's cash flow" and could result in the Town's needing to apply for a TAN (tax appropriated note).
When asked to explain what a TAN was, Selectman Heath tried to pass the question back into Thompson's lap, but when pressured, gives his understanding of how a TAN works, including the fact that compound interest is applied to the base amount each month until the Town returns the money borrowed, so each month the actual principal of the note grows by the generated interest, so the Town would wind up paying interest, on interest. "That's if we don't watch our spending", he added, saying that he didn't think that the Town's cash flow would be effected at all, or that it would be necessary to use the TAN line of credit.
**After this section of the meeting, Lebanon Truth Seekers questioned Town Tax Collector, Jeanette Lemay as to the rate of interest the Town would be expected to pay should they need to open a TAN line of credit with the bank. While the exact interest rate would not be known until the application was complete, Lemay did disclose that last year's loan of $350,000.00 was kept by the town from 9/16/2014 to 10/17/14 (one month) and the Town paid back $280.29 in interest payments***

WATCH Part 1 of the Selectmen's Meeting video of 6/29/15 HERE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yb7ib1Okeb0

After the discussion with Road Commissioner Torno, the Board of Selectmen went into a scheduled Executive Session with newly appointed Code Enforcement Officer, Mike Beaulieu.

Returning from Executive Session with Mr. Beaulieu, in which the Board had gone over some Assessment issues and questions that Mr. Beaulieu was having, they welcomed Mr. Herb Hamblen, Vice President of Direct Sales, from Mosaic Technology, a computer technology company based out of Salem, NH.
Hamblen, along with two of his Associates, was asked to appear before the Select Board by Town Treasurer, Jeanette Lemay, who acted as a go-between for the Selectmen. According to Lemay, the Town's technology is antiquated and outdated, running off a single tower computer rather than a server. There is no off site backup of any of the towns data, and it was questioned as to whether the payments being accepted by the Town for fees, fines and taxes via debit and credit cards were actually secure. Ms. Lemay was not even sure if debit and credit card information was "encrypted" by their payment processor or not.
Mr. Hamblen took time to speak about what his company does, and stated several times that they would be willing to do an "on site assessment" of the Town's technology needs, leaving the town with a generalized report, that they could then use to formulate a request for proposals on the work needed to upgrade the Town's system and bring it into compliance. Not one Selectman asked how much that assessment would cost, but Lebanon Truth Seeker, Sandy Adams did.........."About $1,250.00", stated the technology company VP.
But no speedy motion was made to snap up that offer, although in the greater scheme of things, it seemed like a better expenditure of Town dollars than some others we've been hearing lately.
**After the meeting, in a momentary discussion with Mr. Hamblen, Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers asked if the credit card and debit card information being used as payments by the town were "safe" to which he replied, "Well, maybe. And maybe not.......  All present agreed that we will be making any payments via cash or check until the issues are resolved!!***

WATCH the Selectmen's interview with Mr. Herb Hamblen of Mosaic Technology HERE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJUjik4BkKQ

The next section of video is very short. Only a few minutes. The Selectmen sit down with Mr. Mike Lonergan of Norton's Insurance Agency, the Agency that carries the Town's insurance policy to go over any policy changes and sign the renewal. The residents in attendance could not hear Mr. Lonergan, even after several attempts were made to have him speak up. Selectman Thompson halted the discussion for a few minutes so that Lebanon Truth Seekers could move to a closer point in order to capture the insurance discussion on the video tape.

WATCH the very short portion of the Selectmen's discussion with Mr. Mike Lonergan of Norton's Insurance Agency HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rQQQSEUczU

The fourth part of the Monday, June 29th Selectman's meeting continues the discussion with Town of Lebanon Insurance Agent, Mike Lonergan after Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers moved to a closer seat in order to hear what the discussion entailed. Selectmen Heath and Thompson seemed to be very interested in what was being said, but we weren't sure Selectman Nadeau was even hearing the very soft spoken agent. During the discussion, the Town's MOD rates were consistently brought up, so Selectman Thompson was kind enough to give us an explanation as to exactly what a MOD rate was. It seems that in adding the Fire and Rescue Department volunteers now onto the Town's payroll as employees, the Town's insurance rates will rise, coupling that with the fact that the Town went through 3 years of troubling times when there were several Workmen's Compensation claims, and the Town's insurance rates will be a little higher than usual. (although no actual dollar amounts were discussed with the public).
Fire and Rescue Chief Daniel Meehan arrived at the meeting after being summonsed by Thompson, and discussed with the agent the fact that he's implementing some better policies for Ambulance and Fire Truck Drivers, which would require them to be at least 21 years of age, even if they pass qualifications, in order to drive an apparatus without a more experienced driver along.  Mr. Lonagren discusses with Chief Meehan the insurance carrier's availability of many "Safety Workshops" that could help to bring the Town some credits, or at least help with the Town's underwriting.
All 3 Selectmen signed the policy documents to renew the Town's insurance policy.

WATCH as Selectmen and Fire and Rescue Chief speak with Mr. Lonagren from Norton's Insurance Agency HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ngs4y6FVisM

The final part of our video of the June 29th Selectmen's Meeting shows Lebanon Animal Control Officer Mary Kinney as she arrives requesting to speak with Selectmen regarding an issue she's having with a local resident who calls her constantly even though she has investigated the claims many times and found there to be no wrongdoing. Kinney claims the woman is not only calling her repeatedly, but also the Maine State Police, and the Animal Welfare Society in Augusta. "I'm done, the State Police are done, and the Animal Welfare Society are done", stated Kinney in obvious frustration.
The Selectmen, deciding not to enter into Executive Session to hear the complaint, heard Kinney's assertions that she had investigated, that Assistant Animal Control Officer Carol Harris had investigated, and that both the State Police and AWS had investigated the complaints. "The main problem she (the town resident who remained nameless throughout the discussion) was having, is in jail now", stated ACO Kinney. "There's nothing wrong there and it's just not right".
After answering a few questions from the Selectmen and the public, Kinney shook her head stating, "I have done everything in my power to stop this", adding that it's beyond her control and asking Selectmen to step in and write a letter to the resident.
Board of Selectmen asked Ms. Kinney to write a letter on her own, and if nothing changed, they would step in as the next level of buffer between the resident, their neighbor, and Animal Control agencies in town, and at State level.
Mary Kinney said that she would write the letter, but that she didn't think that it was going to stop the resident.

WATCH Animal Control Officer's conversation with the Board of Selectmen HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FY6WxT6bDcU

In final Selectmen's business, the Board tended to Accounts Payable and Payroll, and then had an Executive Session meeting with Martha Sawyer Community Library, Librarian Marcy Poletta. The Library has employed Ms. Poletta as an MSAD60 School Department employee for the past few years, with subsidies from the Town of Lebanon. However, as of July 1, 2015, Ms. Poletta is now a Town of Lebanon employee, being funded solely by Town Budget.

The Selectmen's meeting was adjourned and there were no other items discussed for the evening.

Once again, the Lebanon Truth Seekers would like to send a BIG Thank You to Chris Gilpatrick for allowing us the use of his video camera to record the Selectmen's Meetings.



Maine State Lottery Winning Numbers for Monday, 6/29/15

 
 
MAINE LOTTERY WINNING NUMBERS FOR
MONDAY JUNE 29, 2015
 
Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers accepts no responsibility for typographical errors.
We are not part of the Maine State Lottery Commission
and are only reporting the winning numbers as a service to our page readers.
 


WINNING PICK 3 NUMBERS 6/29/15
DAY: 090
EVENING: 443
 
WINNNG PICK 4 NUMBERS 6/29/15
DAY: 0247
EVENING: 4662
GIMME 5 WINNING NUMBERS 6/29/15
02 - 07 - 19 - 24 - 28
 
LUCKY FOR LIFE WINNING NUMBERS 6/29/15
05 - 14 - 32 - 45 - 48  Lucky Ball 08
 
 

Lebanon Babe Ruth Denied Championship Finish by Mother Nature. Game to Resume Tomorrow Evening.

Rear (L to R) Luke Carlock, Tim Ziadeh, Baley Coull, Matty Chambers,
Andrew McKee, Jackson Monroe, Bruce French II, and Ben Dewhurst.
Front (L to R) Ethan Ricard, Aiden Terrevechia, Owen Frost, Jaden Balcewicz,
Connor Baxter, Tyler Urrutia, and Justin Ahearn.
Missing from Photo: David Hamme and Jacob Desjardins
YOUR LEBANON 13-15 YEAR OLD
2015 BABE RUTH BASEBALL TEAM
 
We were all set for the celebration to begin, all set to hear whooping and cheering as the Lebanon Maine Babe Ruth Baseball Team played before a large crowd against South Berwick's team tonight. But Mother Nature had her own ideas, forcing the game to be called due to rain at the end of only the 3rd inning.
The team is ahead, at this time, 1-0 against the South Berwick group, but the game had to be postponed to be finished on Tuesday night, 6/30/15, due to a rain storm passing through the area.
During the game, Luke Carlock was able to score the only run, so far, on a throwing error from South Berwick's pitcher.
The Lebanon team hopes to finish their season tomorrow evening as the only undefeated team in the Southern York County League, which would make them the 2015 League Champions, and then they'll be concentrating on All-Star play.
We hope everyone will come back out tomorrow, or if you have some free time, come on down and cheer on your Lebanon 13-15 year olds as they finish up their 2015 season. The game will be beginning at 6 pm at the George Stuart Baseball Diamond on Center Road.
 
 
And the biggest disappointment?? Shortly after everyone left the field for the evening, the clouds cleared, the sun came out!! However we were gifted when a
beautiful rainbow was seen over Lebanon.
We think that's a good sign!!!
 
 
GOOD LUCK TOMORROW
LEBANON BABE RUTH!!
WE'LL BE CHEERING FOR YOU!!
 
 

Maine Historical Association Offers Many Interesting Tours, Lectures, Workshops and Readings, July Schedule.

Now through  Friday, July 31, 2015

Historic House Tour: Maine and the American Revolution

Tour Guide: Kathleen Neumann, MHS Manager of Education & Interpretation
Tour takes place on Wednesdays and Fridays at 3:30PM, and Thursday evenings at 6PM. Tickets can be purchased online or on-site at the museum store the day of the tour.

General Peleg Wadsworth, who built the Wadsworth-Longfellow House, served under George Washington during the Revolutionary War. The house was built shortly after the war, in 1785-86. Eighty-five years after the Revolution, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow helped define the national narrative of independence through his poem "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere." The family remained committed to preserving the memory of the founding generation. This tour delves deeply into the Revolutionary era in Portland, and features a mini-exhibit of Revolutionary-era items in MHS collections.

Tour Guide: Kathleen Neumann, MHS Manager of Education and Interpretation. Cost: $20 general admission; $15 MHS members, seniors, and students; $10 for children under the age of 17; children under 6 are free.
 

Wednesday, July 1, 5:00 – 7:00 pm

Members Exhibition Opening: Magna Carta: Enduring Legacy, 1215-2015

Members Exhibition Opening: Magna Carta: Enduring Legacy, 1215-2015
Speaker: Danielle Conway, Dean, University of Maine Law School
In commemoration of the 800th anniversary of the granting of Magna Carta, this traveling exhibition, produced by the American Bar Association and Library of Congress, shares images of objects from Library of Congress collections that illustrate Magna Carta’s influence throughout the centuries and explain the document’s storied history.

At 6:00pm, don’t miss the chance to meet Danielle Conway on her first day as Dean, and hear one of Maine’s most formidable legal experts discuss the roots of American Democracy. Ms. Conway is an authority in public procurement law and entrepreneurship, a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army, and the first African American Dean of University of Maine School of Law.

Magna Carta is presented in collaboration with the Maine Secretary of State’s Office and Maine State Archives. Registration is required for the opening reception; please email lwebb@mainehistory.org or call 207-774-1822 ext. 216 to register.

Exhibition is open to the public June 30-July 12 during regular museum hours, and is included in regular museum admission.
 

Saturday, July 4, 12:00 pm

Celebrate the 4th of July!
A Public Reading--and DISPLAY--of the Declaration of Independence

A Public Reading--and DISPLAY--of the Declaration of Independence
With Former State Representative Herb Adams
Join MHS to celebrate the Fourth of July with a public reading, by former State Representative Herb Adams, of the Declaration of Independence in front of the Longfellow House at 489 Congress Street. Lemonade and cookies will be served following the reading, which is free.

This great annual tradition features two extra special additions this year:

First is the Shettleworth Lecture Hall exhibition "Pursuit of Liberty: The Search for Compromise in the Declaration of Independence," featuring MHS's copy of the 1776 Dunlap Broadside of the Declaration and items from MHS's Fogg Collection relating to various signers of the Declaration. The Dunlap is one of only 26 surviving copies. See and zoom into Maine Historical's copy online.

Second is the "Magna Carta: Enduring Legacy, 1215-2015" traveling exhibition, sponsored by the American Bar Association and curated by the Library of Congress, in the Brown Library's second floor reading room. The Magna Carta exhibition shares the historical and contemporary relevance of this foundational document.

Viewing of the "Pursuit of Liberty" and "Magna Carta" exhibitions is included in our regular museum gallery admission. Exhibitions are on display from 10AM - 2PM on July 4. For more information about both exhibitions and the full list of hours for each, see our Exhibitions page.
 

Saturday, July 11

Maine Genealogical Society Fair

The Maine Genealogical Society and the Maine State Library are teaming up to host the Maine Genealogical Society Fair at the Cultural Building in Augusta, ME on Saturday July 11, 2015. Admission is free and open to the public. Visitors will have an opportunity to meet with genealogical repositories from around the state. "A panel of professional genealogists will be on-hand for a Brickwall Busters workshop where attendees can get expert advice on tracking down elusive ancestors.  Staff from the Maine State Library and Maine State Archives will provide information on genealogy collections held by the State of Maine and the Maine State Museum will have free admission all day." The Maine Historical Society will be represented by members of the Brown Library staff. For more information, please visit the Maine Genealogical Society website.
 

Saturday, July 18 – Monday, July 20, 2015

Tall Ships Portland 2015: Non-profit Tent

Tall Ships Portland 2015: Non-profit Tent
Location: Maine State Pier (Compass Park), Commercial Street
Booth Times: July 18-19, 10AM-9PM; July 20, 10AM-6PM


Visit Maine Historical Society’s booth at one of the premier events of the summer—the Iberdrola USA Tall Ships are coming back to Portland! The MHS booth will feature a fun knot-tying activity, new merchandise related ships and the sea, and special give-aways. We hope to see you there! For more information, visit tallshipsportland.com.
 

Wednesday, July 22, 5:30 pm

Lost Skills Workshop: Knot-Tying

Lost Skills Workshop: Knot-Tying
Facilitators: Members of the Maine Coast Guard Auxiliary
Location: Longfellow Garden

Come try your hand at tying several simple and common, but highly useful, knots with instructors from the local Coast Guard Auxiliary. This is the first of four “lost skills” workshops this summer highlighting traditional skills and crafts in a fun, laid back how-to session. Bring a friend and learn something new that’s old. Beer, wine, alternative beverages, and snacks will be served. Supplies provided.

Cost: $10 MHS members; $15 non-members. Limited to 25. Advance registration required. Reserve tickets online.
 
 

Monday, July 27 – Friday, July 31, 2015

Junior Historian Camp

Junior Historian Camp
WHO: For students entering 6th-8th grades
WHEN: Monday, July 27 - Friday, July 31: 9 AM-1 PM
COST: $100 per student from MHS member families/$125 per student from non-member families

Ever wonder what it would be like to hang out in a museum and center of history? Would you like to search for and uncover clues in old photos, letters, maps, objects, and other items from the past? Want to see and learn about amazing things that few people get to see?

Participants in the Junior Historian Camp will have the chance to go behind the scenes in the third oldest historical society in the country--consisting of a historic house, a museum, a research library, and many work and storage spaces few members of the public get to see. They'll sharpen their detective skills by doing hands-on investigation in the collections, and using primary sources to conduct original research on a topic of Maine history of their choice.

Participants will meet and work with a variety of staff including curators, librarians, educators, and facilities staff. At the end of the week, all participants will share their newfound investigative and research skills in a presentation for family members and guests. After the presentation, families and campers are encouraged to join us in the Longfellow Garden for a brown bag lunch and celebration!

Slots are limited. Deadline for registering: July 20. To register or request more information, contact Kathleen Neumann, Manager of Student and Interpretative Programs, at kneumann@mainehistory.org or (207) 774-1822 ext. 214.
 
 

Tuesday, July 28, 12:00 pm

Poetry in the Garden: Portland's Poets Laureate

Longfellow Garden, Portland, ca. 1937
Longfellow Garden, Portland, ca. 1937
In the spirit of the original Portland poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, three of Portland's Poets Laureate share their work in the Longfellow Garden in front of the fountain. Readers include Steve Lutrell, who served from 2009-2011, outgoing laureate Marcia Brown (2013-2015), and the newest laureate, Gibson Fay-LeBlanc, whose tenure is 2015-2017. Lutrell's latest book is Plumb Line; Brown’s is When We Invented Water; Fay-LeBlanc's is Death of a Ventriloquist. Books will be on sale at the event. Bring your lunch and we'll provide beverages and cookies.

Free and open to the public.
 

Wednesday, July 29, 5:30 pm

Lost Skills Workshop: Basket Making

Lost Skills Workshop: Basket Making
Facilitator: Towanda Brown
Location: Longfellow Garden

Local basket maker and teacher Towanda Brown leads us in making a charming garlic basket in this beginner basket weaving session. This is the second of four “lost skills” workshops this summer highlighting traditional skills and crafts in a fun, laid back how-to session. Bring a friend and learn something new that’s old. Beer, wine, alternative beverages, and snacks will be served. Supplies provided.

Cost: $10 MHS members; $15 non-members. Limited to 20. Advance registration required. Reserve tickets online.
 
 
 
For more information on any of these historical lectures or events, please contact the Maine Historical Society HERE:
 
Maine Historical Society
489 Congress Street
Portland, ME 04101
phone (207) 774–1822
fax (207) 775–4301
info@mainehistory.org

DEE's Rt 202 Diner Announces Daily Specials for 6/29/15.

Dee's Rte. 202 Diner-Lebanon
Carl Broggi Highway (Rt 202), Lebanon

(207) 457-1700
 
 
 
Monday June 29 --- On the Menu at Dee's

Bacon Mushroom Cheddar Burger
On A Homemade Bulkie Roll
With French Fries & A Soda
 $6.99

Fried Haddock BLT
 Your Choice Of: Mayo Or Tartar Sauce
On Canadian White Bread
With Chips & A Pickle
$6.99

Chicken Salad Wrap Lettuce
With Chips & A Pickle
$5.49

Mini Chef's Salad
Small Salad
With Ham, Turkey, Swiss Cheese &Roast Beef
$5.69

Tuesday Night Dinner
Chicken Leg Quarters
With Rice, Green Beans, Cranberry Sauce,
Hot Coffee Or Tea
& Dessert
$6.99

Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife Announce Antlerless (Any) Deer Permit Lottery.



Applications for 2015 any-deer (antlerless) permit lottery are now available online from the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife.
Online applications are due by 11:59 P.M. on August 17, 2015. Paper applications may be submitted in person or by mail no later than 5 P.M. on July 27, 2015. To apply online, visit www.mefishwildlife.com. The Department no longer mails paper applications.
It is free to apply for the any-deer permit lottery. The drawing will be held on September 9, 2015 and results will be posted on the Department’s website.
The department uses the any-deer permit system to manage the white-tailed deer population in the state. By controlling the harvest of female deer in the 29 regional wildlife management districts throughout the state, biologists can manage population trends.
A total of 28,770 any-deer permits will be issued in 15 of the state’s 29 wildlife management districts. This is a decrease from last year when there were 37,185 permits available to hunters.  The permit allocation is: 13,980 for residents; 7,196 for landowners; 7,196 for juniors; and 398 for Superpack holders.
This past winter was of above-average severity in some parts of the state, which may have resulted in increased winter mortality rates for our over-wintering deer.  Therefore, IFW wildlife biologists have recommended decreasing the number of any-deer permits in much of the state.
The 15 wildlife management districts where any-deer (antlerless) permits will be issued are 3, 6, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26 and 29. This year, permits have been allocated to districts 3, 6, 14, and 18 as biological data collected and field observations by staff suggest that these WMD’s have experienced population growth.
Deer hunting season (firearms) begins with Youth Deer Hunting Day on Saturday, Oct. 24, 2015. Youth may take a buck statewide or an antlerless deer only in the wildlife management districts where any-deer permits will be issued this fall.
This year, Maine Residents Only Day is on Saturday, October 31, 2015, and regular firearms season for deer runs November 2 through November 28, 2015.
For more information, visit www.mefishwildlife.com

Social Security Administration Celebrates 80th Year in Service.

Social Security is turning 80 years old in 2015, beginning it's services in 1935.  While we all hear that Social Security is failing, Program Deputy Commissioner Doug Walker, posts this positive and reassuring message for the 80th year in service.....

 

Social Security is Turning 80 and Has Never Been Better!


The Social Security program is turning 80 years old this year, but age has only made us stronger, wiser, and more agile! We are pleased that, through the years, we continue to provide our best customer service to you, the American public, by innovating with the latest technology.
In August of 1935, our mission started by offering retirement programs to assist the most vulnerable members of the public. Everything was done by hand — paper forms were filed and calculated for every person in the United States. Other agencies donated employees to help with our new mission. Today, we have about 60,000 dedicated and compassionate employees, and our services are digital, mobile, and secure through our many online applications. In fact, July 19-25 is National my Social Security week. We will host numerous events and activities across the country to raise awareness about the benefits of opening a secure my Social Security account.
With a secure my Social Security account, you can verify your earnings history, see your future benefit estimates, and much more from the comfort of your home or office. The convenience and safety of doing business online is another way we’re meeting the changing needs and lifestyles of our customers. As we said, turning 80 has only made us quicker on our feet.
As we work to expand online services for those who prefer that flexibility, we continue our commitment to providing you with top-notch, face-to-face assistance in field offices across the nation or through our nationwide toll-free telephone service. Our frontline employees offer world-class service to millions each day.
We’ve come a long way and are proud of our strong history of service to you. We look forward to making the next 80 years just as great with continued professionalism and innovation!

Maine's First Agricultural of the Season Kicks Off in Houlton for July 4th Weekend.

 
 The first of Maine's Agricultural Fairs kicks off this coming weekend in Houlton, Maine.

Featuring truck and tractor pulls, livestock competitions, and a well attended Motor Madness day, Houlton's weekend long fair is the place to be if you like to start the fair season off with a bang!!

In Houlton, Maine the entire town is involved in the Fair Excitement and Independence Day fun!!

Thursday, July 2nd is FREE ADMISSION DAY into the Fair for folks who are interested in seeing the animals, checking out the exhibits or enjoying some Fair food!! Rides are paid for separately with the purchase of a bracelet, should you be so inclined.



On Friday, July 3, the Houlton town center comes alive, with a Midnight Madness event from 5 pm to midnight, featuring shopping, many local competitive games, and a volley of fireworks at midnight!! The Fair is open all day with a Pay One Price admission that includes all events, and unlimited rides on the midway!! It's Kids Day at the Fair with a lot of old fashioned games to participate in, including a Pig Scramble, Bubble Gum, Hot Dog and Ice Cream Eating Contests, 4H Horse Show and more!!

Saturday, July 4th, the Fair is in for a BIG bang!! Lots of stage productions, Lawn Mower Races, Maximum Velocity BMX/Skateboard Show appearing 3 times during the day, Agricultural Judging and the FIREWORKS at dusk!!



Sunday, July 5, is Motor Madness Day on the Fair's Final day...... Mud Runs, North Country Cruiser Car Show, Truck Pulls, Regular Demo Derby, Compact Car Demo Derby, Fireman's Demo Derby, Mini Van Demo Derby, Tractor Pulls and more!!

Smokey's Greater Shows of Maine is on the Midway all weekend long with rides and games of skill!!



Fair Season in Maine is ready to GO!!
SEE YOU AT THE FAIR!!









Sunday, June 28, 2015

Winning Maine State Lottery Numbers for Sunday, June 28, 2015

 
WINNING MAINE STATE LOTTERY NUMBERS
FOR
SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 2015
 
Please note that the Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers is not responsible for any errors in reporting these numbers, or typographical errors. Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers is not connected in any way with the Maine State Lottery Commission and only provide these reports as a service to our readers.
 
 
 




DAY: 896
EVENING: 167




DAY: 5437
                            EVENING: 6926

Family Friendly Summer Movies Offered at Bug Light Park in South Portland!!!

 
Some awesome movies are being offered at Bug Light Park for family enjoyment and entertainment.
What a NICE night out with the kids in tow, maybe a cold picnic supper, a blanket and pillows for the little ones!!
GREAT idea for a multi-family fun time too!!!
Movies are FREE for all!!!
 

REMINDER: Downed Power Lines Are NEVER Safe!!

We've been listening to the scanners all morning.
It seems that there are a lot of calls coming in all over Lebanon, Southern York County, Maine and Strafford County NH (Rochester area) regarding trees on power lines and downed power lines.
We'd like to take a minute to remind all our local families that downed power lines are NEVER safe!!
Dial 911 if you see a power line down or any tree or branch resting against a power line.
If you are in your vehicle, stay put, and wait for help to arrive.
NEVER exit your vehicle or allow a passenger to do so!!

Simple and Easy.
Let the professionals deal with the Electricity.

York County Sheriff's Office Announces Auction of Deommissioned Cruisers July 6.


Saturday, June 27, 2015

Maine State Lottery Winning Numbers for June 27, 2015

 
WINNING MAINE LOTTERY NUMBERS
FOR SATURDAY 6/27/15
 
Lebanon Maine Truth Seekers is not responsible for any typographical errors that appear on this page. Take your ticket to your nearest lottery agent to confirm. We do not represent Maine Lottery Commission or any of it's vendors. This service is offered as a courtesy to our readers.
 




WINNING PICK 3 NUMBERS FOR 6/27/15
Day: 996
Evening: 769





WINNING PICK 4 NUMBERS FOR 6/27/15
Day: 2310
Evening: 3775









WINNING HOT LOTTO NUMBERS FOR 6/27/15
4 - 6 - 13- 42 - 47   Hotball 13





WINNING POWERBALL NUMBERS FOR 6/27/15
18 - 28 - 35 - 46 - 49   Powerball 27   Powerplay X5








WINNING MEGABUCKS PLUS NUMBERS FOR 6/27/15
7 - 12 - 21 - 23 - 37   Megaball 6