Bill Nemitz has worked as a journalist in Maine since 1977, when he became a reporter for the Morning Sentinel in Waterville after graduating from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He moved to Portland in 1983, working first as a reporter for the Evening Express and later as a city editor and assistant managing editor/sports for the Portland Press Herald and Maine Sunday Telegram. He began writing his column in 1995. While focusing on Maine people and issues, his work has taken him three times to Iraq and twice to Afghanistan, where he was embedded with members of the Maine Army National Guard and the Army Reserve; to Belfast, Northern Ireland, for the 1998 referendum on the Good Friday Peace Accord; to Manhattan for the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks; to the Gulf Coast for the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina; and to Haiti following the 2010 earthquake. Nemitz is a past president of the Maine Press Association and for many years taught journalism part-time at St. Joseph's College of Maine in Standish. He also served for eight years, including three as chairman, on the board of trustees for the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies in Portland. In 2004, the Maine Press Association named Nemitz Maine Journalist of the Year for his reporting on the Maine Army National Guard’s 133rd Engineer Battalion in Iraq. In 2007, he received the Distinguished Service Award from the New England Newspaper Association. In 2015, Nemitz was inducted into the Maine Press Association Hall of Fame. Nemitz lives in Buxton with his wife, Andrea. They have five children and four grandchildren.
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PublishedJanuary 30, 2012
BILL NEMITZ: A pre-emptive apology to Kathleen Sebelius
Dear Madame Secretary,
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PublishedJanuary 8, 2012
BILL NEMITZ: Bad timing for MaineHousing
The timing, at least for MaineHousing, couldn’t be worse.
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PublishedJanuary 8, 2012
Maine Housing self-audit ammo for its critics
The timing, at least for MaineHousing, couldn’t be worse.
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PublishedDecember 30, 2011
BILL NEMITZ: Blanket Project helping kids in jail stitch together lives
It’s hardly the kind of talk you would expect from a kid who’s spent the last nine months at the Long Creek Youth Development Center.
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PublishedDecember 26, 2011
A homecoming this rural Maine town may not soon forget
JACKMAN — It started with a Facebook message. When Karla Talpey, the longtime local Boy Scout leader, heard just over a week ago that U.S.
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PublishedNovember 20, 2011
Boss goes extra step for mother of three
We hear a lot about job creators these days. But Drew Graham, president and founder of Ship-Right Solutions in South Portland, has taken that one big step farther.
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PublishedNovember 11, 2011
BILL NEMITZ: Soldier-turned-philosopher reflects on service, Emerson
It’s the kind of stuff you’d expect from a University of Southern Maine philosophy major — a long, introspective research paper celebrating the natural wonders of Maine through the transcendental lens of Ralph Waldo Emerson.
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PublishedOctober 9, 2011
Maine flunks test when it comes to casinos
It’s a common nightmare: You’re about to take a test and, as you sit down and scan the first question, you get a sick feeling deep in the pit of your stomach. Why?
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PublishedAugust 12, 2011
BILL NEMITZ: Not just a ‘good old boy’
It was Oct. 16, 1978, and the entire world was abuzz with the news that Cardinal Karol Josef Wojtyla had just become the Roman Catholic Church’s first-ever Polish pope.
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PublishedAugust 12, 2011
‘True servant of the people’
It was Oct. 16, 1978, and the entire world was abuzz with the news that Cardinal Karol Josef Wojtyla had just become the Roman Catholic Church’s first-ever Polish pope.
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