Discover opportunities months before the RFP drops
Learn more →Building Inspector
Work Email
Direct Phone
Employing Organization
Board meetings and strategic plans from Sarah Moore's organization
The meeting included multiple public hearings concerning a marijuana business license renewal for Homegrown of Hallowell LLC, a proposed ordinance relating to General Assistance, and a second reading of a proposed ordinance to amend Chapter 9 to comply with LD 2003 Affordable Housing Requirements. Key business items involved the approval of the Marijuana Business License renewal, approval of the Hallowell Halloween Parade municipal application, and three readings and immediate enactment of amendments to the General Assistance Ordinance (Chapter 10). The Council also approved the second reading of the Chapter 9 amendment regarding affordable housing. Further actions included referring the discussion on the City Brush Dump operation to the Property Committee, approving the Renewal Contract for Gaslight Theatre, and referring traffic calming discussions to the Public Safety Committee. The City Manager reviewed his monthly report, which covered topics such as estimates for a new roof at City Hall and TIF workshops. Finally, the Mayor presented new appointments to various committees, and the topic of parking enforcement at Cotton Mill Apartments was referred to the Public Safety Committee.
The meeting included the approval of the November 19, 2025, Planning Board minutes, with one abstention. The Board heard an application from Karen Knox for an amendment to a Certificate of Appropriateness to add a dormer to an addition at 1 Middle Street, which was unanimously approved. The Board also reviewed a significant application from Andrew Hankermeyer and the McGraws for exterior changes, porch additions, and an attached greenhouse at 74 Middle Street. Discussions centered on compatibility with the existing modest Queen Anne style, the necessary removal of a deteriorating chimney, and the extension of the porch. The approval for the project was unanimously granted with the specification that the first-floor roof must remain metal. Other business included updates on board emails, reporting of email fraud to the FBI, a discussion on the Delegation of Authority letter revision, an update on eCode360 presentation to the City Council, discussion on revising the Historic Preservation Ordinance, and a review of updates on housing legislation (LD 427, LD 997, LD 1829). The Board acknowledged that this was a member's final meeting.
This document outlines the Hallowell Comprehensive Plan's implementation strategies across various categories including Arts & Culture, Climate, Economy, Facilities, Families & Youth, Fiscal, Future Land Use, Historical, Housing, Marine, Mobility, Natural/Agricultural, Recreation, and Water. It provides a roadmap for City actions, assigning lead organizations and timeframes (short, medium, long, or ongoing) for each strategy to guide municipal efforts in the 2020s and beyond.
This Comprehensive Plan for Hallowell outlines a vision for 2030, aiming to foster a welcoming, dynamic, destination, healthy, connected, and sustainable community. It identifies key recommendations across several areas, including land use, housing, infrastructure, economy, mobility, arts & culture, recreation, families & youth, and outdoors, to guide the city's actions over the next 10-20 years.
This Comprehensive Plan for the City of Hallowell, Maine, serves as a roadmap addressing various aspects of community development and resource management. It outlines detailed analyses, policies, and strategies across critical areas such as historic and archaeological resources, water resources, natural resources, agriculture and forestry, marine resources, population and demographics, economy, housing, recreation, transportation, public facilities and services, fiscal capacity, and land use. The plan also includes sections on public participation, regional coordination, implementation, and evaluation to guide the city's future trajectory.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
Decision makers at City of Hallowell
Enrich your entire CRM with verified emails, phone numbers, and buyer intelligence for every account in your TAM.
Keep data fresh automatically
What makes us different
Lisa J Gilliam
City Clerk
Key decision makers in the same organization