LePage manages to unite state’s arts groups
Trip to Augusta: Musicians protest all-ages legislation
Opening day brings out Red Sox faithful
See Curtis Robinson’s column on page 4
See Mark Curdo’s column on page 6
See the story in Sports, page 11
SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 2011
VOL. 3 NO. 43
PORTLAND, ME
PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER
699-5801
FREE
Nateva Does bar scene fit music fest axed the bill? BY CASEY CONLEY THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN
The Nateva Music and Camping Festival, which in its first year attracted The Flaming Lips, Grizzly Bear, and a host of jam bands to Oxford County, won’t be coming back for an encore. Less than a month after releasing the 2011 lineup, organizers announced yesterday that the 2011 event, which was planned for early August, had been canceled. A news release said “slower than predicted ticket sales and the very crowded summer festival schedule” were to blame. “In the end, it’s all about being able to put forth a first rate event that everyone can see NATEVA page 3
BY MATT DODGE THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN
The Old Port can be an odd sector of Portland’s business community: A scenic high-traffic bazaar for grazing tourists during the day, but on weekend nights morphing into a neon-laced drinking district. Along Wharf, Fore and Commercial streets, one can witness “trickle down” economics first hand — the crowds, and their money, flow wherever cheap drinks are trickling, making rock-bottom drink specials an important part of some business models. see PRICE page 9 RIGHT: Legislative proposals are spurring debate about Old Port drink prices and policies. (MATT DODGE PHOTO ILLUSTRATION)
Signs of economic rebound seen in city’s budget plan BY CASEY CONLEY THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN
City officials on Friday unveiled a $200 million budget plan that raises property taxes by more than 2 percent
but for the first time in three years does not include layoffs or service reductions. Acting city manager Pat Finnigan’s spending proposal for fiscal year
2012, which starts July 1, shows nonproperty tax revenues for things like car registrations, blue trash bags and parking enforcement have bottomed see BUDGET page 3
Snowe’s primary challenger speaks out Andrew Ian Dodge talks tea party politics, Gov. LePage and life in England BY DAVID CARKHUFF THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN
Andrew Ian Dodge
Tea party activist and Harpswell-based writer Andrew Ian Dodge is challenging Maine’s U.S. Sen. Olympia Snowe in the 2012 Republican primaries. In November 2012, Snowe is running for a fourth term. In November 2006, she was re-elected to a third six-year term in the U.S. Senate with 74 percent of the vote. Before her election to the Senate, Olympia Snowe represented Maine’s Second Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives for 16 years. But tea party activists sense an opening. According to Dodge’s website (www. electthedodge.com), “Prior to his run for office, Andrew was a leader in Maine’s Tea Party movement. He organized the
“There are people who say, ‘Great, we got LePage in, we got the House and Senate (to go) Republican,’ and that’s it, they’re gone. A lot of groups went from being 30, 35 people to five now. There are personalities, and there are people who are working for him who used to be tea party leaders.’” first registered tea party event in Maine, which took place in Augusta on April 15, 2009. Andrew has also represented Maine at national conventions of Tea Party supporters, and has had a major hand in deciding strategy for the movement.” The Portland Daily Sun sat down with Dodge this week to discuss his candidacy, the tea party movement and Maine Republican Gov. Paul LePage, who has
endorsed Snowe. Dodge started by confirming he is no longer coordinating the Tea Party Patriots (www.teapartypatriots.org/state/Maine) as he seeks to shake up the Republican primary: AID: I’ve handed over my Maine coordinatorship to Kathy Johnson, who’s from up north. But I keep track of it. I was involved for two years, if you’re involved in a cause for two see DODGE page 18