Maine Won't Wait logo

Maine Stories

Mainers confronting climate change threats

Mainers from every corner of the state are stepping up to the climate challenge. Practical, creative and trailblazing teachers, bus drivers, students, communities, recent graduates and professional athletes alike are taking action to get ahead of the climate curve. Read their stories.

Ainsley Morrison Youth Climate Council Representative

Youth Representative: Ainsley Morrison

Ainsley Morrison describes herself as a connector. “What I bring to the table is my ability to connect people in the climate movement and bridge the gaps between environmental science, policy, and the people affected by climate change.”  

Read more

Representing Youth in the Energy Working Group: Martin Carriere

Youth Representative: Martin Carriere

Martin Carriere first faced the reality of the climate crisis in 2014, when the farm that had been in his family for generations struggled with drought and a new uncertainty due to climate change. Then in 2021 there was not enough water to flood his grandfather’s rice fields in California, a phenomenon that had never occurred since the farm was founded in the 1800s.

Read more

Youth Representative: Alyssa Soucy

Youth Representative: Alyssa Soucy

From a young age, Alyssa Soucy was fascinated with graphs, maps, and data But it wasn’t until she attended college in Lowell, Massachusetts that she learned about climate change in an academic setting. As Soucy undertook a degree in geology, she learned about earth systems and earth history but recognized that her interests expanded beyond the physical aspects of the earth and into the human dimensions and interactions with these systems.  

Read more

Leela Marie Hidier White House Jill Biden Changes in the Weather

Putting Climate Advocacy into Words: Leela Marie Hidier

At age 17, Leela Marie Hidier of Yarmouth published her first book, Changes in the Weather, and her life began taking a whole new trajectory that has included a new love of social justice, climate action, and an honor by First Lady Jill Biden at the White House. Her novel follows four teenagers displaced by climate change in the U.S.

Read more

Climate and Maple Syrup's Microseasons Scott Dunn Family Farm

Climate and Maple Syrup's Microseasons: Scott Dunn

Many people mark Maine Maple Sunday on their calendars to focus on the sweetest product of spring, but for fifth-generation maple syrup producer Scott Dunn, the weeks leading up to the festivities are changing and challenging. 

Changes to the climate are shortening the sap season, bumping up production timelines, and tightening the bottom line at his 1,600-tap family-run operation in Buxton. He describes his approach now as adapting to Maine’s volatile “microseasons.” 

Read more