The space is already broadcast-ready and will require few changes.
J. Craig Anderson
J. Craig Anderson is a seasoned business reporter who covers a wide range of topics including banking, finance, real estate, technology and entrepreneurism. Originally from Arizona, Craig graduated Summa Cum Laude from the University of Arizona journalism school and has gone on to report for a variety of business and consumer publications such as the Business Journal of Phoenix, the Las Vegas Sun and the Arizona Republic. His work has earned him national recognition including Sigma Delta Chi and APA Journalism awards. Craig also served in the Army for four years, working as an intelligence analyst and Arabic linguist for the National Security Agency in Maryland. He currently lives in Freeport.
Star treatment as new Nova Scotia ferry arrives in Portland
The ship is escorted with fanfare into the harbor, where it will put the ‘port’ back in Portland when service to-and-from Canada begins, the mayor says.
Goodbye, corner office; hello, workspace cluster
Workspace once reflected your status. In cutting-edge offices today, it reflects what you do.
Maine report urges steps to prevent shortage of health-care professionals
A Department of Labor’s Center for Workforce Research and Information report suggests boosting state health-care education enrollment and recruiting more workers from outside Maine.
Investment firm buys Maine resort The Cliff House
The Ohio buyer, who joined with two Maine-based hoteliers, plans to renovate the historic resort after the 2015 season.
Family Dollar closures might not hit Maine
A commercial real estate broker says the company has expansion plans and might not close locations.
Probe finds Maine railway failed to reveal 24 incidents before deadly Quebec derailment
Twenty previous derailments, two runaway trains and two unspecified incidents were not reported before a July derailment that killed 47 people, a Canadian agency says.
Change your passwords ASAP, Internet experts advise
The ‘Heartbleed’ bug could have allowed hackers to steal data from major online retailers.
Access improves, but use of broadband still lags in Maine
A survey says 20 percent of Maine households with access to broadband do not opt to subscribe to it.
New IT program approved for University of Southern Maine
Officials say the state workforce needs people with a bachelor of science degree in information technology.