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180 épisodes
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Keep Up Cynthia Dill
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"A punchy political podcast."
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Ed MacColl on why Sawyer Road is worth saving.
You might think removing a portion of Sawyer Road that connects Cape Elizabeth with Scarborough, Maine is a good idea. You would be wrong. Find out why.
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Privacy, Freedom and Campaigns in Cape Elizabeth.
Host Cynthia Dill talks about Tuesday's primary in which she is a candidate in a tight 3-way primary using ranked choice voting, the importance of the new Cape Elizabeth Ad Hoc Privacy Advisory Committee, and how the liberal media fuels the culture wars.
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Why Michael Hussey has hope Cape Elizabeth voters will pass a school bond in November.
After last night's workshop of the Cape Elizabeth Town Council on the new school proposal concepts voted on by the School Building Advisory Committee (SBAC) to the tune of between $80 - 114 million dollars, Michael Hussey thinks a deal is in the air. Find out why.
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Larry Benoit, national political heavyweight, on the small town politics of Cape Elizabeth schools.
It almost seems like the Cape Elizabeth School Board is holding students at the high school and elementary school hostage. Okay, maybe that's melodramatic but compared to what? Unless it gets a brand new middle school, much needed repairs impacting the safety, comfort and security of students, staff and visitors are being delayed. And the fight is personal! These new parents who fled the big city during COVID want new schools NOW! So what's a small community to do? A coup, merci beaucoup.
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Michael Hussey on Cape Elizabeth Schools, SBAC and Civility
Michael Hussey is a successful businessman, husband, father and member of Cape Elizabeth's SBAC - the ad hoc School Building Advisory Committee charged with putting a new school project out to the voters in November. He joins the show to talk about the 5/4 vote at the SBAC for "Option B," a $80 million dollar project, revelations from last night's school board workshop, and his letter to the editor in today's Cape Courier.
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Saturday Night Talk From My Home Town
Saturday Night Talk From My Home Town by Cynthia Dill