The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Page 1

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2010

Judge in health care case known as tough See the story, page 2

My cat is not a socialist See Bob Higgins’ column on page 4

Political landscape: ‘As Maine goes’ is a Tea Party opportunity See Curtis Robinson’s column on page 5

Old Port Playhouse

773-0333 THIS WEEK!

VOL. 2 NO. 223

PORTLAND, ME

PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

BY CURTIS ROBINSON THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

If Peaks Island voters want to leave the city of Portland, says their state representative, then he will introduce legislation to make it happen. But, adds state District 114 Rep. Peter Stuckey, “there’s a lot of work to do” before options are known. In the wake of last weekend’s “straw poll” vote with about 58 percent of those voting supporting secession, Stuckey has agreed to investigate introducing secession into

Munjoy Otto’s to open by Friday

District 114 Rep. Peter Stuckey

“If the work gets done and the will of Peaks Island is that they want to secede, then I will submit the bill ... but I think there are people on both sides of this.”

the state legislature before a Jan. 7 deadline for new laws. According to the Peaks Island Council

members’ new Facebook page, where the straw poll was announced last week, the final tally stands at 133 votes in favor of secession and 96 against. Those figures are a bit different than widely reported preliminary tallies that indicated slightly stronger secession support. In an interview Monday, state Rep. Stuckey, D-Portland, said his current thinking is that another formal election would have to be held before the measure could be taken up since a previous effort see PEAKS page 3

Santa’s helpers’ helpers

BY MATT DODGE THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

Many business owners try to start small, gain a share in the market and steadily expand. But the owners of Portland pizza slice bar Otto might have taken the maxim a little too far with their claustrophobic space at 576 Congress in the summer of 2009. Initially offering only takeout pizza, the shop made such a splash among downtown diners that they soon expanded next door with the adjacent and equally cozy dining room facility Enzo’s. see OTTO’S page 6

Lindsey Schwarz of South Portland organizes donated toys for distribution at the Salvation Army Portland Citadel Corps Friday. The toy sorting was part of a community service project for Youth Building Alternatives, a program of Portland-based nonprofit LearningWorks. For a story on the project, see page 9. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

Historic renovation spurs closure of Congress St. lane BY DAVID CARKHUFF THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

AND...

Trench work closes part of Congress Street Monday. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

www.oldportplayhouse.com

FREE

Peaks rep says he would introduce secession bill

TUES, WED & SAT

THURS - SUN

699-5801

A sprinkler system for the highprofile historic renovation at Congress Street at High Street has forced the closure of one lane of Congress. Continuing through Wednesday between the hours of 7 a.m. and 7 p.m., inbound traffic on Con-

gress Street at High Street will be reduced to one lane, combining left turn and through traffic, city officials warned. A fire-safety sprinkler system is part of the renovation of the nearby Schwartz Building, also known as the Clocktower Building because of its signature clock see RENOVATION page 8

With Patriots on horizon, Packers evaluate Rodgers for concussion See story in Sports, page 16


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.