Maine,
a favorite summer and autumn vacation spot for US tourist wanting to
escape their own hot and humid summers elsewhere in the country, is
also becoming more and more of a tourist and business location for
Europeans
The new 'Nova Star' ferry service, recently starting its operations between
Yarmouth Harbour in
Nova Scotia,
Canada and Portland, Main, now makes it far easier for European
tourists who fly into Halifax and rent a car, to also in include Maine
into their itinerary.
Nova Star Cruises said they expect to reach a goal of 100,000 passengers this season.
Another
potential tourist booster is the fact that among a dozen or so airports
in the US, the state of Maine is sharing more than $4 million in
grants from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to carry out
various modernization projects, according to reports.
Bangor International Airport
reportedly will be getting the biggest share of this grant amounting
to $1.4 million mainly to install runway sensors, replace the public
address system, improve the taxiway and repave the apron.
This
airport modernization project has the potential to eventually turn
Bangor airport into a so-called "hub" airport for passengers and
freight, providing European and other aircraft a quicker turn-around
time and passengers the possibility to connect with local flights to
any US destination,
"Freight handling, warehousing and transportation logistics from Bangor
could become a very profitable proposition to foreign freight
companies, who presently are faced with high costs and major congestion
in the heavily populated, more southern located East Coast areas", say
Earl and Carolyn Hamm, Galt Block Warehouse Owners in Bangor,
But there is also
good news coming out of
Eastport -
the closest US Eastern Seaboard port to Europe, This historic Maine
coastal town will host a U.S. Navy vessel during the Fourth of July and
"Old Home Week".
In the wake of an earlier decision
by the Navy to deny the Fourth of July Committee's request for a ship,
U.S. Senators Susan Collins and Angus King of Maine announced that
the USS
Anzio (CG-68) will visit Eastport during the city's Independence Day festivities.
"The
Fourth of July, Old Home Week celebration is an iconic destination
for Mainers and visitors alike," they said in a joint release. "We are
pleased that the Navy will honor our state with a port visit,
allowing those who serve in the U.S. Navy and the citizens they
protect an opportunity to come together."
The ship is
scheduled to arrive on Thursday, July 3, and depart on Monday, July 7.
Two cruise ships are also expected to visit Eastport during the same
time period, but the schedule should work so that they can all be
accommodated. The 210-passenger
Pearl Mist is stopping by on July 2, and the 88-passenger
Grande Caribe will visit on July 6 but can dock at the fish pier. The
USS Anzio will be at the breakwater.
"It looks like we've pulled off all three," says
Eastport Port Director Chris Gardner of the ability to juggle facilities and host three large vessels during the first week of July.
Almere-Digest