Eric Russell has been a general assignment reporter at the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram since 2012 and has been a journalist in Maine for 13 years. Because he doesn’t have a specific geographic or topical area to cover, Eric often is free to roam the state in pursuit of the most interesting stories, whether it’s tackling the big topic of the day or chasing ideas that fall just outside the boundaries of everyday news. His favorite assignments are ones where he can leave the office and meet with people in their homes or their workplaces to talk about their struggles and challenges – and sometimes their triumphs. Or to try and answer complicated questions: How does a woman die alone in a Wells mobile home without anyone knowing for 2.5 years? How does a convicted rapist from Massachusetts disappear before his sentencing and then live quietly in Gorham for 34 years before being caught? How does a husband in Bath respond when his wife develops early-onset Alzheimer’s disease? Eric grew up in Southern Maine, went to college at the University of Maine and worked in Bangor for eight years before joining the Press Herald. He lives in Brunswick with his wife, a school teacher, and two daughters.
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PublishedSeptember 18, 2012
LePage cartoon confounds Maine high school principals
Administrators receive a message from the governor’s office, but they aren’t sure what he was trying to say.
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PublishedSeptember 17, 2012
UMaine’s party school reputation surprises many in Orono
ORONO — At 10 o’clock on a Friday night, Josh Gastonguay, Chris Burns and Nicholas Murphy are sitting on the deck of the Bear Brew, a popular bar, drinking Grateful Deads, cocktails made with five types of alcohol.
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PublishedSeptember 17, 2012
Rockland nonprofit nets $1M anonymous donation
The money will allow the Hurricane Island Foundation to “further develop its research, teaching and leadership programs.”
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PublishedSeptember 14, 2012
Turnpike’s E-ZPass users upset with looming changes
About 23,000 E-ZPass holders who use the commuter program will see it replaced by a volume discount system on Nov. 1, and many are reacting with outrage.
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PublishedSeptember 14, 2012
Winners, losers seen from new Maine health insurance law
Lisa Burton, who owns Reel Pizza Cinerama in Bar Harbor with her husband, saw her health insurance rate jump 67 percent this year. That’s on top of a 35 percent increase last year. In two years, premiums to cover her three full-time employees have doubled.
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PublishedSeptember 13, 2012
Federal court rejects Maine’s Medicaid complaint
Gov. LePage would like to remove 24,000 low-income parents, as well as some elderly and 19- and 20-year-olds in order to balance the budget.
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PublishedSeptember 9, 2012
More Mainers choosing to cremate loved ones
The cremation rate here is the sixth-highest in the country and the highest in the eastern half of the United States. The Cremation Association of North America projects that more than half of Americans — and three quarters of Mainers — will choose cremation within 10 years.
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PublishedSeptember 4, 2012
Labor Day weekend deadly on Maine roads
Six people died in crashes over the holiday weekend, making this the deadliest Labor Day weekend since 1986.
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PublishedSeptember 2, 2012
Dames doing good: Women offer free hugs in Portland
Looking for a free, no-strings-attached hug from a middle-aged woman? Deering Oaks is the place to be Saturday. Carol Hasbrouck and Joyce Claflin of St. Petersburg, Fla., will be there from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., arms open. Why did they come all this way to give hugs? Well, that’s not the only reason they […]
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PublishedSeptember 2, 2012
Well-respected community member at center of prostitution scandal
THOMASTON — Mark Strong Sr. lives in an 1800s-era sea captain’s home on Knox Street, halfway between Thomaston’s small downtown and the St. George River. He grew up in the house, which has been in his family for years. His wife, Julie, sells antiques from an attached barn.
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