Waterville council to consider outdoor dining extension for next year
City councilors Tuesday will also discuss referring to the Planning Board for public hearing and recommendation a request to rezone city-owned property on North Street where a community ice rink would be built.
Michael G. Seamans/Morning Sentinel file photo
WATERVILLE Councilors on Tuesday will consider authorizing closing parts of Silver Street and Merchant’s Way downtown to through traffic from April 1, 2021 to Nov. 1, 2021 to provide additional opportunities for outdoor dining.
The Waterville City Council meeting will be held at 7 p.m. in Mid-Day Cafe at the Mid-Maine Technical Center at Waterville Senior High School and will be preceded by an executive session at 6:30 p.m. to discuss a real estate matter.
Waterville council approves more than $140,000 in contracts for library work
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Waterville Council to consider library restoration work contracts
The council also is expected to consider forming a committee to explore temporary and permanent locations for City Council meetings.
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Waterville Public Library director Tammy Rabideau by birch archways that were restored with other historic woodwork at the 1905 library building in Waterville. Rabideau said Monday she is looking forward to making improvements to flooring and exterior windows at the library. Rich Abrahamson/Morning Sentinel
WATERVILLE The City Council on Tuesday night will consider awarding contracts to companies for more than $100,000 worth of work to help restore Waterville Public Library.
The meeting will be held virtually at 7 p.m. and the public may access the meeting link via the city’s website, www.waterville-me.gov. Those wanting to take part in the meeting must contact the city clerk’s office by 5 p.m. Tuesday to receive credentials to sign in.
Waterville Board of Education updated on COVID-19 relief fund projects, hybrid instruction
Superintendent Eric Haley said $1.9 million from the second round of federal COVID-19 relief funding must be spent before Dec. 31, or the schools will lose it.
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WATERVILLE Learning and facilities look different at Waterville schools than they did a year ago, with projects being launched to create safer spaces, students learning in-person and remotely, and teachers and administrators constantly making improvements to how things are done.
Waterville Superintendent Eric Haley
Morning Sentinel file photo by Michael Seamans
Schools Superintendent Eric Haley updated the Waterville Board of Education on Monday on how city schools plan to spend $1.9 million from the second round of federal COVID-19 relief funds, following a previous notification they were eligible for $1.7 million in the first round.
Mid-Maine Technical Center in Waterville reports case of COVID-19
Close contacts to the person who tested positive include three Waterville Senior High School students.
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WATERVILLE A person associated with the Mid-Maine Technical Center at Waterville Senior High School has tested positive for COVID-19, according to Superintendent Eric Haley.
Haley said Thursday the school nurse, Jean Cote, has been working with the Maine Center for Disease Control & Prevention since learning of the positive case.
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“(Cote) has been in contact with the Maine (CDC), as well as the individual who tested positive,” Haley wrote in a letter posted to the district’s website. “All close contacts to the person who tested positive, which includes three Waterville Senior High School students, have been notified.”
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