Caitlin Andrews
News ReporterReporter Caitlin Andrews came to Maine Public in 2023 after nearly eight years in print journalism. She hails from New Hampshire originally.
She began her career there covering city government and right-to-know issues for Foster's Daily Democrat and then the Concord Monitor. She moved to Maine in 2019 to cover politics and health care for the Bangor Daily News, where she stayed for three years. She most recently wrote for the nonprofit Maine Monitor before making the switch to radio.
Caitlin has covered everything from car crashes to policy debates and has been recognized by the New England Newspaper & Press Association for her work around government accountability. She is interested in almost any subject, as long as the story is good.
Caitlin currently resides in Kennebec County.
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Funding for two western Maine conservation projects remains uncertain due to lingering concerns about public access.
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The Kennebec County Sheriff's Office has identified the two pilots killed in a fatal plane crash in Litchfield.
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The National Transportation Safety Board says it could take more than a year to understand why a plane crashed in Litchfield Tuesday night.
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After years of fundraising, the Rufus Porter Museum of Art and Ingenuity in Bridgton is now expanding to show off dozens of murals from one of Porter's most prominent students.
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The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program got a boost from state and federal lawmakers last winter. That may not be the case this year.
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The environmental agency says in a Wednesday press release that clean up work has been completed.
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The Maine State Housing Authority Director Daniel Brennan told the authority's commissioners during a Tuesday meeting that the loss in investment could total over $10 million dollars.
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The Maine Monitor reports that the council has collected $17 million so far, but has been focused on administrative work since it first began meeting eight months ago.
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At least 14 cars were involved in a series of crashes on Sunday afternoon in the Freeport area of Interstate 295. Maine State Police say heavy rain was partially to blame.
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New data from the Department of Health and Human Services show that only about 4,000 Mainers have unenrolled from Medicaid since the coronavirus public emergency ended this spring. Advocates say that figure is a good sign that people aren't going without coverage.