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In 2003, the Legislature directed the State to acquire the Juniper Ridge Landfill in Old Town, Maine. [4] The landfill had been originally permitted for the disposal of pulp and paper-making wastes from Georgia-Pacific's West Old Town paper mill, as well as to burn pile ash from the City of Old Town transfer station. Following its acquisition ...
The crossing is open for limited hours every day; the nearby Fort Fairfield–Andover Border Crossing is open 24 hours a day. About 4,000 crossings use the station a year, or an average of fewer than 11 a day. [2] US Border station at Easton, Maine as seen in 1996. This building was replaced in 2012.
METRO is Maine's largest public transportation agency. The transit system's annual ridership was 1,850,686 in 2017. [2] As of 2016, METRO operated a fleet of eighteen compressed natural gas (CNG) buses and fourteen diesel buses. It operates and maintains the only CNG fuel station in the state of Maine.
The Port of Portland is a seaport located in Portland, Maine. It is the second-largest [3] tonnage seaport in New England as well as one of the largest oil ports on the East Coast (the second-largest prior to 2016 [4]). It is the primary American port of call for Icelandic shipping company Eimskip. [5]
The abandoned 1885-built station in 1975. Railroad service in Haywards (later Hayward) began with the San Francisco and Alameda Railroad in August 1865. The terminal station was located at Watkins Street and D Street in downtown Haywards. [1] It was destroyed in the 1868 Hayward earthquake, which bankrupted the railroad.
The Coburn Gore–Woburn Border Crossing connects the towns of Woburn, Quebec, and Coburn Gore, Maine, along the Canada–United States border. It is a land crossing, located where Quebec Route 161 and Maine State Route 27 meet. The U.S. border station, built in 1931, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The station is located next to the Pan Am Railways mainline, formerly the Western Route mainline of the Boston & Maine Railroad. The train platform was constructed in 2001, and the station building was constructed in 2008 and opened in 2009. The station, at 138 Main Street, is owned by the City of Saco. [3]
Crawford Depot, also known as Maine Central Passenger Railway Station, is a historic passenger railroad station at the top of Crawford Notch in the Bretton Woods area of the town of Carroll, New Hampshire. Built in 1891, it is a surviving emblem of the importance of the railroad in the area's history as a tourist destination, and is one of the ...