Ayers to receive MPA Principal’s Award
Waterville Senior High School senior recognized.
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Emme Ayers Contributed photo
Emme Ayers, a senior at Waterville Senior High School, has been selected to receive the 2021 Principal’s Award, according to a news release from Principal Brian Laramee.
The award, sponsored by the Maine Principals’ Association, is given in recognition of a high school senior’s academic excellence, outstanding school citizenship, and leadership.
The Principal’s Award is presented in most Maine public and private high schools by member principals of the MPA, the professional association which represents Maine’s school administrators.
“Emme is a wonderful student and even better school citizen. She has an unweighted GPA of 98.617. Emme has excelled in the classroom, in sports, and in extra-curricular activities. She has led our school as the National Honor Society president, Green Team co-president, and as a soccer captain. Emme has been inte
Fairfield man sentenced in Waterville drive-by shooting
No one was injured by shots Tyler H. Greenlaw allegedly fired from a passing car into a woman s parked car on Oak Street in September 2020.
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AUGUSTA A Fairfield man who shot up a woman’s parked car in a drive-by shooting in Waterville is expected to spend a year behind bars after pleading guilty Monday to being a felon in possession of a gun, criminal mischief and reckless conduct.
Tyler H. Greenlaw
Police say Tyler H. Greenlaw, 26, admitted to them he fired a gun Sept. 4, 2020, multiple times from a passenger seat of a car in Waterville. A woman’s unoccupied car parked on Oak Street was shot in the incident.
In her frustration, Lilly Bohner pulled together the march that went though Fort Halifax Park to Waterville City Hall. She participated in three demonstrations over the summer, including the one she organized, as well as Augusta and Rockland.
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.”