Maine municipalities vary, but three cities in New England inspect rental units regularly, and have the means to fund it.
Randy Billings
Staff Writer
Randy Billings is a government watchdog and political reporter who has been the State House bureau chief since 2021. He was named the Maine Press Association’s Journalist of the Year in 2020. He joined the Press Herald in 2012 as the Portland City Hall reporter, where his beat touched on a wide range of topics, including municipal government, immigration, homelessness, housing and social services. Prior to that, he worked at various weeklies as well as business and arts publications. He holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Maine, Orono. He lives in North Yarmouth with his wife and two children and enjoys the outdoors and playing his upright bass.
Is your building safe? What Portland won’t tell you
Even though Portland keeps an ongoing list of troubled properties where officials refuse to house recipients of General Assistance, other renters aren’t warned. We asked: Why the double standard, and what’s being done to correct it?
Portland task force wants to step up oversight, but resources limit recommendations
The City Council’s Public Safety, Health and Human Services Committee on Tuesday will take up a task force’s recommendations for improving the city’s housing inspection program. The panel could vote to recommend changes to the full council. Here are some of the top recommendations: • Create a new housing safety office to coordinate inspections between different city […]
Portland Greens to push for $15 ‘livable wage’ in the city
The group announces it will launch a petition and referendum effort to set the minimum wage at twice the current state minimum wage.
A hot button 30 years in the making: Aid to Portland’s homeless
Since the 1980s, state support for the city’s social safety net has been challenged repeatedly. Now, in the heated political clash over welfare reform, it’s become a flash point all over again.
City knew some shelter users had thousands in the bank, state says
But advocates say mental illness is often the reason the money isn’t tapped by the homeless, and Portland officials say they don’t check financial eligibility under a practice approved long ago by the state.
Portland council agrees to sell land in Bayside to state Sen. Alfond
Alfond, who owns Bayside Bowl, plans an expansion on adjoining land on Hanover Street that the city now uses to store road sand and salt.
Some long-term users of Portland shelters had at least $20,000 in bank, audit finds
The state sampling of homeless facilities questions city practices in determining financial eligibility, as the two sides continue to battle over General Assistance levels.
Portland council backs resolution urging Congress to strengthen clean-air rules
Six other Maine communities had already approved the ‘Healthy Air Resolution.’
Sides ironing out issues on plan for developing Portland Co. site
Neighbors pursue building height and other tweaks as city planners prepare for a rezoning recommendation.