Welcome to the newsletter for Androscoggin
Retired Educators (AREA) for February
2026
Next Meeting - March 11,
2026
Location - East Auburn Baptist
Church
Registration
Form
OR
-
Remember, you can pay the $14.00 by going to The Exchange.
Here is a new direct link to submit payments AREA MEAL for
March
You can skip the registraton form
by using The Exchange.
All
the Downloads
Location note:
This is a new location for us. This church is the new building that offers
the musical spectaculars at either Christmas or Easter.
As you travel
along Park Ave. watch for the signs for the church. The driveway into the
church is sort of long. You will see the sign and wide driveway before you
see the church. The parking area is huge! Enter the main
entrance.
Meal note:
The luncheon will still be offered by
our fabulous caterer, Mike Gagne!! He is planning on whole Italians for
this luncheon.

President's Message
Our
next meeting is not far away and I hope all of you who traveled south to
warm weather enjoyed every minute of it. It’s been consistently cold
here and I’m ready for winter to be over. For our March meeting we have
Jesse Hargrove, the president of MEA to speak to us– should be very
interesting.
I look forward to seeing all of you, please contact
colleagues that you know that don’t always come and get them used to
coming and joining in the fun – see you soon
Dave
Wing

Secretary and Treasurer's
Files
Minutes
from November 2025
November
Treasurer's Overview
November
Treasurer's Report
Treasurer Note:
Finally in December, accompanied by David Wing, we
opened 2 new CDs for our treasury. One for our regular general
account and one for our scholarship account. We now have $ 15,000
earning us more money monthly. These are in 6 month CDs and will be
renewed with the best deal offered in 6 months. There are 5 members
listed on these CDs. Several members approached me and asked me to
do this. It is now done and I will report the interest earned
during our March meeting.
A
note about Cookie:
A
request was sent out in January that a member needed help. This
member needed a new home for her cat, Cookie. We want you to know
that 3 people came forward offering to give Cookie a new home.
Cookie is now at her new home and from the pictures, she is doing fine.
The really special part of this new home is that the new owner was
a former student of the teacher that needed to find a home for Cookie.
This was
meaningful for both of these 2 members.
A former student helping her former teacher.
I will let them tell you who they are if they want
to ..... more in March.
A
note to all:
Remember we are here as a group. If you know of anyone
needing support or something exciting to share with friends... please let
us know
Leadership Committee
from Sue Conklin
We are looking for a few new members of AREA to be on
the Leadership Committee. This committee decides on who will be the
recipient of the Affiliate Leadership Award which is presented at the
Maine Education Association Retired Convention. We generally meet
twice a year in the fall to make recommendations and then vote on a final
choice. It is an easy committee and we are looking forward to some
new people. If you are interested in being on the committee, please
contact Susan Conklin, Leadership Chair, AREA. She can be reached
at 207-754-3873 (you can leave a message), or [
mailto:sconklin@megalink.net ]sconklin@megalink.net, or as she greets you
at the door of our regular meeting at East Auburn Baptist
Church.

From the State House
from Crystal
Ward
The second
session of the Maine Legislature began January 6, 2026. Many of the
bills we worked on last session were carried over to this session.
We are focusing on one bill to get funding this session. This bill
was passed and sent to the Appropriations Table last session.
The bill
is:
LD111 An Act to Increase the State's Share of
Retired Teacher Health Insurance
SUMMARY : This bill requires the State to pay 65% (this
would be a 5% increase) of a retired teacher's share of the premium
for group accident and sickness or health insurance from July 1, 2025 to
June 30, 2026 .
Presented
By:
Representative Janice S. Dodge, D – Belfast
Please
email or send a message to Appropriations Chairperson Rotundo and ask her
to support and fund LD111, tell them your Anthem Advantage Plan is going
up about $18/ month and your Medicare is also going up about $21/month for
a total increase per month $39.00. The top COLA amount 2025
was capped at $713 /year or $59/ month so the health insurance increase is
about 75% of you COLA !!! This 5% increase would help with these
increases. The cost is $3 million in on=going expenses. This was not
in the Governor's Supplemental Budget .
The
Appropriations and Financial Committee
Write to:
Senator
Peggy Rotundo
446
College St
Lewiston,
Me. 04240
In
Washington D.C. we are watching for bills that impact, Medicare, Medicaid,
Social Security and drug costs at this time. As info become
available I will send it to you.

Scam
Alert
from Mona
Ervin
Ways to protect yourself from
fraud
Informed Delivery is a free service from the U.S. Postal
Service. The agency emails photos of letter-size mail expected to be
delivered to you that day or shortly after. This is a great way to be sure
that nothing is stolen from your mailbox by ID thieves. Sign up at
InformedDelivery.usps.com.
This is a great service and easy to load the app on your cell phone.
I and many of us have this and its a great tool.
Pick up mail as quickly as possible
after it’s delivered, and always take your outgoing mail directly to the
post office. A hot fraud now is scammers
stealing
checks from mailboxes, erasing the ink and using them to steal from
bank accounts.
Halt scammers at your front
door
Consider
installing a video camera; they are increasingly less expensive, and
they’re easy to install. If you don’t recognize a visitor, don’t
answer. If you find yourself being pressured to buy or donate, have a
refusal script ready (consider taping it near the door) that says, “I do
not do business at my door. Please leave me something to review. If I’m
interested, I’ll call you.”
Be wary of people
posing as
utility workers who show up unannounced. Don’t allow anyone
into your house without an appointment.
Prevent garbage theft
Shred any papers that contain private
information (financial statements, bills, shipping receipts) before
putting them out for pickup
to
avoid identity theft. Don’t want to invest in a good cross-cut
shredder? Many communities have shredding events or permanent drop-off
sites. Get in the habit of dropping off your accumulated documents once
every few months.
Monitor your credit report
Routinely check yours (many credit card
companies provide it for free; if not, go to AnnualCreditReport.com or
call 877-322-8228). Watch for unusual activity; if you see any, report it
immediately to the appropriate financial institution.
Then
freeze
your credit report. This prevents scammers from opening new credit
cards or making big purchases in your name. You can unfreeze it as needed
for legitimate transactions. Visit IdentityTheft.gov for more
information.
Don’t
pay for anything in gift cards, cryptocurrency or gold
It’s best to pay with a credit card,
which can protect you from all sorts of scams — including
gift
card scams. Criminals prefer untraceable methods of payment that are
hard to reverse, so will ask for gift cards,
cryptocurrency,
gold
bars, prepaid debit cards. If someone — especially a stranger
— asks for payment or debt settlement using one of these payment
methods, think twice.
If you are victim of fraud or know someone who is a
victim call
your local
police
the Beter
Business Bureau
Contact your
bank
Report to the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at
833-372-8311
Report the exploitation to the Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) Consumer Response Center at 877-382-4357
Report to the Department of Justice National Elder Fraud
Hotline at 833-382-8311 or the Victim Connect Hotline
at 855-484-2846
- Place a fraud
alert on your credit report.
The three major credit reporting
agencies are:

Who We
Are
from Mona Ervin
Who We Are - get to know our
colleagues
All of us are college graduates,
but what schools did we attend?
Most of us are graduates of the
University of Maine in Orono.
A close second are
the graduates of (take your pick) - Gorham State Teachers College, Gorhan
State College, University of Portland-Gorham, University of Southern
Maine. Other names for USM were Gorhan Normal School and Gorham State
College of the University of Maine.
Other well attended
schools are the University of Maine at Farmington, Bates College and
University of Maine at Presque Isle.
Several of us graduated from schools
outside of Maine. Among those schools are graduates of Saint Francis
Xavier University in Nova Scotia, Canada, the University of Pennsylvania,
Montclair State College, Boston University, University of Hartford,
Columbia, and Weslyan. We are quite a diverse group of college
graduates.
How many years have we
taught?
One of us taught for 4
years
Two taught for 25 years
Two taught for 28 years
Two taught for 33 years
Four taught for 34 years
Three taught for 35 years
Three taught for 37 years
One taught for 38
years
And the ones with 40 or more years
are:
One taught for 40 years ! Hugh
Keene
Two taught for 41 years ! Aaron
Burke and Angela Delorme
- One taught for 42 years! Roger
Fuller
One taught for 44 years ! Donna
Hurd
And the one with the most longevity
! 45 years is Gina Fuller

Quiz
from Mona
Ervin
“A house divided
against itself cannot stand.”
"The buck stops here."
"I'm the President of the United Stares
and I don't have to eat broccoli if I don't want to".
"I will not make age an issue of this
campaign. I am not going to exploit, for political purposes, my opponent's
youth and inexperience"
"There is nothing more corrupting,
nothing more destructive of the noblest and finest feelings of our nature,
than the exercise of unlimited power.”
"Ask not what your country can do for
you... ask what you can do for your country."
"Our toil, resources, and livelihood are
all involved. So is the very structure of our society. In the councils of
government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted
influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial
complex."
"It is our true
policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the
foreign world. "
“Only Thing We Have
to Fear Is Fear Itself”
"We must support our rights or lose our
character, and with it, perhaps, our liberties."
"The United States must be neutral in
fact, as well as in name, during these days that are to try men's
souls."
"I pledge you, I
pledge myself, to a New Deal for the American People." "In these days of
difficulty, we Americans everywhere must and shall choose the path of
social justice...the path of faith, the path of hope, and the path of love
toward our fellow man."
“We all do better when we work
together. Our differences do matter, but our common humanity matters
more.”
“While the
crash only took place six months ago, I am convinced we have passed the
worst and with continued unity of effort we shall rapidly
recover.”
"I was not lying. I
said things that later on seemed to be untrue"
"Speak softly and carry a big
stick."
"My fellow Americans,
our long national nightmare is over."
"To perpetuate the Union and to abolish
slavery were the work of war. To educate the uneducated is the appropriate
work of peace."
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear
down this wall!"
"I did not have
sexual relations with that woman."
Options to select from: Some may be used more than
once.
Franklin Roosevelt - spoken in 1932 accepting
the Democratic nomination for the presidency.
John F. Kennedy - from his inaugural address in
1961.
Richard Nixon - spoken when reflecting
on the Watergate scandal in 1978.
George Herber
Walker Bush - spoken at a 1990 press
conference.
Franklin Roosevelt - from his first
inaugural address in 1933.
Abraham Lincoln
-from an address given by senatorial candidate and future
president of the United States Lincoln,
on June 16, 1858.
James Monroe - first inaugural address in
March 1817.
William Henry Harrison - letter to
Simón
Bolívar 27 September 1829.
Gerald
Ford - a speech spoken after taking the oath of office in
1974.
Bill
Clinton - spoken on April 19, in a keynote address at Queens
University Belfast, Ireland.
Theodore Roosevelt
-a political approach used by Roosevelt. First spoken by Vice
President Roosevelt, at the Minnesota State
Fair, Minneapolis, Sept. 2nd, 1901.
George
Washington - from his Farewell Address in 1796.
Rutherford B. Hayes - speech in
1890.
Dwight David Eisenhower - from the Farewell
Address in 1961.
Harry
S Truman - the statement indicates that the president
was one who had to make decisions that landed on his
desk – he couldn't pass them on to anyone else.
Woodrow Wilson - message on neutrality from a
speech on August 19, 1914.
Herbert
Hoover - from an address to the United States Chamber of
Commerce, May 1, 1930.
Ronald Reagan - excerpt from a speech given on June 12,
1987, at the Brandenburg Gate in Germany. The speech is
commonly known by a
key line from the middle part.
Bill
Clinton - televised remarks on January 26, 1998, ending with
a presidential bombshell.
And the answers are:
Lincoln
Truman
Bush
Reagan
Harrison
Kennedy
Eisenhower
Washington
Franklin
Roosevelt
James
Monroe
Wilson
Franklin
Roosevelt
Clinton
Hoover
Nixon
Theodore
Roosevelt
Ford
Hayes
Reagan
Clinton

AH, something
new
A book
review
So, Mona had this idea that anyone who
wished could write a book review and we could share it all
here.
What a great idea. After all, we are teachers and we
read!
So, I took the first jab, and here is a link to a
book review.
Book Review - Ministry
of the Future
Send your book
reviews to me and I'll post them on PithnGrit and share them
here.

