Acadia National Park

Acadia National Park

The News from Acadia

“Eco-resort” Proponents to Make Their Case at Winter Harbor Meeting

Who are these guys?That’s among the questions swirling around a proposed “conservation community” that calls for development of 3,200 acres in Winter Harbor and Gouldsboro that abut Schoodic Point.

That and other questions may be answered at a public meeting to be held in Winter Harbor at the Peninsula School gymnasium at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, May 14.

For nearly two months, a team of consultants representing the property’s owners has been meeting privately with officials from both towns, nonprofit organizations and the representatives of the National Park Service, which oversees the 2,400-acre Schoodic Section of Acadia National Park.

House approves Acadia funds

The U.S. House of Representatives today approved a bill that would allow Acadia National Park to acquire more land and build a station on the mainland from which to bus visitors to Mount Desert Island.

The provisions are included in a larger natural resources bill, which the Senate approved earlier this month. The bill will be sent to President Bush, who is expected to sign it.

Acadia National Park is Maine’s only national park. A study by Michigan State University indicated that Acadia brings almost $130 million in visitor spending to the region and supports more than 2,600 jobs.

Hundreds of volunteers turn out for annual Acadia park cleanup

Every April, hundreds of volunteers take to the streets and roads of Mount Desert Island, sacrificing a few precious Saturday hours to preserve the beauty around Maine’s only national park.

About 400 volunteers split into small teams spent several hours canvassing nearly 150 miles on MDI and the Schoodic Point section of Acadia National Park, cleaning up several tons of trash from the roadsides.

What keeps most coming back to the event held the last Saturday of April each year to coincide with Earth Day is knowing that their efforts make a difference and things do improve.