listenlive2a

The encampment has dwindled also because of the ban on fires, a condition asked by the state in an order November 28 by Judge Torresen allowing protesters to remain until she makes a final decision. Recently only a half-dozen occupiers have been sleeping in the tents.

Ed Bonenfant, an occupier, said he has doubts the camp can continue without the warmth of a campfire. He and others are mulling over other ways of protesting. (See "'Occupy the Capitol!'," by Lance Tapley, December 2.)

The occupiers have been warmed, however, by expressions of support, including a multi-faith march to the park and candlelight vigil on Sunday, December 4, by 50 people. Bonenfant jokingly told the gathering that, because fires are not allowed in the park, by lighting candles, "You're participating in an act of civil disobedience."

"Camp or no camp, this movement will not be quieted," said the Reverend Carie Johnsen, of the Augusta Unitarian Universalists, in a press release.

(In the latest on the fire front, an unoccupied Occupy Augusta wooden-framed tent was "intentionally" set on fire on December 5, according to the State Fire Marshall's office, which was investigating the arson. Hay used for insulation was ignited and burned through the tent. The state had argued that the camp should be shut down because, in part, of fire risks.)

< prev  1  |  2  | 
  Topics: This Just In , Politics, State House, banned,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   OCCUPY TAKES THE LEAD TO ENERGIZE LAWMAKERS  |  January 16, 2013
    "If they keep grinding the common man into the ground, they'll be nothing left of us," said Bob Guethlen, from the wilds of Tomhegan Township on Moosehead Lake.
  •   BROWN, AILING, TO RETURN SOON  |  January 09, 2013
    Prisoner Deane Brown should be back in Maine within two to three weeks, the Maine Department of Corrections notified his attorney on January 4.
  •   A SHOT AT PROGRESSIVE REFORM  |  December 31, 2012
    With their sizeable majorities, the Democrats' reconquest of the Maine House and Senate could lead to a rebirth of progressive politics in the state — to reforms in health care, taxes, social services, and other issues.
  •   PRISON WHISTLEBLOWER TO RETURN TO MAINE  |  December 26, 2012
    Maine corrections commissioner Joseph Ponte has notified Deane Brown, the inmate whistleblower who in 2005 was the original source for the Phoenix 's lengthy series on prison abuse, that he will be allowed to return to Maine.
  •   WOODWARD: ‘TRANSPARENCY’ BEST IN ‘COLBYGATE’ SCANDAL  |  November 14, 2012
    Referring mischievously to "Colbygate," legendary Washington Post investigative reporter Bob Woodward told Colby College officials at a November 11 speech at the liberal-arts institution to adopt "transparency" in handling the Bob Diamond scandal. In the 1970s, Woodward and Carl Bernstein broke the Watergate story that brought down President Richard Nixon.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY