Noel Gallagher covers K-12 and higher education issues statewide. Her stories are a mix of breaking news and trend stories. In recent years, they’ve ranged from why college costs so much, the launch of the state’s first charter schools, how a school welcomed a transgender student and why Maine schools have a hard time finding teachers. She’s enough of a news nerd to enjoy sitting through legislative education committee meetings and hours-long school board meetings so you don’t have to. The Maine Press Association has honored Noel’s work, but she says she writes for the readers, in the firm belief that an informed citizenry is key to a healthy democracy. Noel is a California native who has worked at wire services, online websites and newspapers across the country. She was in Washington D.C. during the early Clinton years, covering AIDS activism in 1990s San Francisco, documenting the business of wine in Sonoma County and riding out the boom and bust cycle of the early Internet era in early 2000s Silicon Valley. She arrived in Maine at the beginning of the recession and wrote quite a bit about the downturn here. In her free time, Noel writes the occasional cookbook review, spends an inordinate amount of time at the Portland Public Library and hangs out with her three fabulous kids and wonderful husband. She is not a former member of the band Oasis.
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PublishedMay 4, 2016
Cookbook review: “Comfort and Joy: Cooking for Two”
Making a meal for just two seems like a lot of work with not a lot of payoff, at least if you follow the recipes in this cookbook.
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PublishedMay 2, 2016
More graduates push pause, see benefits of pre-college ‘gap year’
Some sign up for programs and others design their own to travel, focus their studies and grow personally, and schools encourage the time off.
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PublishedApril 27, 2016
Maine education chief quizzed about closed-door meeting
At a luncheon hosted by the Maine Heritage Policy Center, Deputy Education Commissioner Bill Beardsley is asked why he participated in a private commission meeting hosted by the governor that violated the state’s open-meeting law.
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PublishedApril 26, 2016
Eves wants sanctions for LePage’s illegal closed-door meeting
The governor convened the first meeting of a special commission on education funding Monday, but violated the law by making the meeting private.
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PublishedApril 25, 2016
Attorney general says LePage broke law by holding education task force meeting in private
Several would-be attendees of the first meeting of the Blue Ribbon Commission on Education Funding were turned away in violation of Maine’s public meetings law.
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PublishedApril 21, 2016
Crash victim from Harrison known for zeal as teacher, environmentalist
Adam Perron, 29, loved his family, students and the lakes region where he grew up, say acquaintances. ‘It’s a tragic loss,’ a friend says.
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PublishedApril 19, 2016
Maine ranks 7th nationwide in high school achievement
Madison’s Madison Area Memorial High School makes the best-of-Maine list for the first time.
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PublishedApril 18, 2016
Maine-based arson dog program isn’t moving to New Hampshire after all
The founder says he is using a New Hampshire location temporarily and will base the program in Brunswick starting in July.
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PublishedApril 7, 2016
Worry, mystery after LePage says 900 layoffs coming in southern Maine
The governor’s spokesman declines to elaborate, and local and state officials say they are unaware of pending job losses.
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PublishedApril 6, 2016
Windham student suspended after threatening tweet refers to ‘Columbine’
Police say the two messages referencing the 1999 mass shooting in Colorado may not rise to the level of a crime.
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