Now is the time to donate to the BNA in 2025 December 2nd is Giving Tuesday — the season of giving begins in your neighborhood. Big news — we have a matching gift donor this year, which means your donation to the BNA will be matched by an anonymous benefactor up to $2500.00 even after Giving Tuesday. The Bayside Neighborhood Association is doing more programming than ever, and needs your help more than ever. Please help us continue to help each other. Go to https://givebutter.com/BNA25 or contact us for more information
The November BNA board meeting was moved to November 11th to make room for election day. Monthly meetings are held online on odd-numbered months, and as always the public is welcome to attend. Email info@baysideportland.org for a link to the zoom meeting. Below is the agenda, team reports, and minutes from the October meeting.
Several events are coming up that encourage public engagement in local policy making, and we want to make sure Bayside voices are being well represented at all levels of government. Please put the following on your calendars:
Bayside Neighborhood Association Board Meeting
Tuesday, October 7⋅6:00-7:30pm
Steve Hirshon Community Room at Unity Village, 24 Stone Street, Portland, ME
Coffee By Design 1 Diamond St, Portland, ME 04101, USA
Your elected representatives in the Maine Legislature want to make sure we stay connected to the needs and priorities of Portland’s neighborhoods. To that end, we are hosting a “Coffee with Constituents” gathering.
Think of this as a neighborhood coffee hour — an opportunity for us to sit down together in a casual setting, listen to what matters most to you and your neighbors, and hear directly how state government can better serve our community.
We are reaching out to you because neighborhood associations play a vital role in shaping the life of our city. We would appreciate you sharing this invitation with members of your association and encouraging them to join us.
We look forward to the conversation and to learning from you,
Rachel Talbot Ross State Senator, Senate District 28 (including Bayside)
Yusuf Yusuf Representative, House District 118 (including Bayside)
Matt Moonen House Majority Leader, District 117
Sam Zager Representative, House District 116
District One Meeting with Councilor Michniewicz
Thursday, October 16⋅6:00 – 7:30pm
Portland High School, 284 Cumberland Ave, Portland, ME 04101, USA
The City of Portland’s Annual District Meetings will begin Thursday, October 16, 2025 with the District 1 meeting hosted by Councilor Sarah Michniewicz. Mayor Dion, City Manager Danielle West, and City staff will also be available to discuss neighborhood issues and answer questions from the public. These meetings are the public’s opportunity to meet their district councilor, the Mayor, and representatives from the various departments within the city.
The City will once again offer free childcare during these meetings. Staff from the Parks, Recreation & Facilities (PRF) Before and After the Bell Program will provide childcare assistance for children ages 5-12. Families will need to sign a liability waiver and sign in/out of the program. Family members must be attending the meeting to utilize the service. The program will take place in adjacent spaces to the meeting from 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM only. No pre-registration is required.
The Bayside community is reeling from the loss of our longtime friend, mentor, guiding light, and superhero Deborah Van Hoewyk. Deb was a powerhouse member of the BNA board of directors for over a decade and was instrumental in creating programs like the Bayside World Market & Fair, Black Frame Art Sale, summer lunches at Unity Village, funding and operating the community garden, ESOL at the Immigrant Welcome center, and so much more. While nothing will replace her wisdom and power, she helped forge a community organization that fosters and empowers new leaders, and we’re committed to continuing the work she started.
“Deborah Van Hoewyk of Portland and West Bath, Maine, passed away on August 28, 2025, following a brief illness.
Deborah was born in Barrington, Rhode Island, the daughter of Schuyler S. Sampson and Alice Mansur Sampson. Deborah moved to Cumberland, Maine, with her parents and brother as a young child and attended the Cumberland School system and graduated from The Waynflete School in Portland. She attended Wellesley College and Columbia University for her undergraduate studies and earned a Masters in English from the City University of New York.
Deborah lived in New York City for several years working as a writer and educator. It was here that she undertook the first of what would become a lifelong passion: home renovation. For a time, she lived on a barge in the Hudson River and later a houseboat in the Bronx.
Deborah moved to Michigan and with her husband, John Van Hoewyk, purchased a farm, and raised sheep, pigs, goats and an assortment of cats and dogs. At the same time, she was a lecturer in the College of Engineering at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, teaching technical communications. She retired in 2010.
After retiring, she returned to Maine with her husband living in Portland. In the winter months they resided in Huatulco, Mexico. Later they spent summers in West Bath, Maine. As expected, all their homes just needed a “little” work, which Deborah happily took on.
Deborah had a remarkable ability to build community wherever she lived. In Mexico she volunteered for a local spay/neuter project, helped organize a major annual fund raiser supporting rural schools, and wrote and edited articles for The Eye, a local English language monthly. She loved Mexico and used her writing skills to bring the history and culture of Mexico to the English language community. Though a fluent speaker she never stopped taking Spanish lessons.
In Maine, she was a board member of the Western Maine Wellesley Club and The Bayside Neighborhood Association. She used her experience as a grant writer to support several local non-profits. At the time of her death, Deborah and several Bayside residents were developing plans for a community center that would serve, among others, the Portland immigrant community. She was also the unofficial organizer of her high school graduating classes’ monthly meet ups.
She was a strong supporter of Charlie’s Friends Dog Rescue in Woolwich, Maine. Deborah and John fostered many wonderful dogs awaiting their forever homes.
Deborah was preceded in death by her parents and brother-in-law, Jeffrey Armstrong.
She is survived by her husband of 39 years, John Van Hoewyk, her brother Schuyler S. Sampson, Jr., (Patricia), her sisters Patience Sampson (Robert) and Priscilla Armstrong and her many nieces for whom she had such fondness, Sharon, Samantha, Caroline, Juanita, Janetta, Katherine, Tabor and Schuyler as well as many great nieces and nephews.
Deborah’s family would like to thank the staff at Mid Coast Hospital in Brunswick for their compassionate care during her stay.
An outdoor celebration of her life will be held on Saturday October 18, 2025, from 2-4 PM at 359 Fosters Point Road, West Bath ME. Online condolence messages can be submitted at Funeral Alternatives, 46 Bath Road, Brunswick, ME 04011. (https://www.funeralalternatives.net/)
Please consider making a memorial donation to Rescue Charlie’s Friends Dog Rescue, 90 Road B, Woolwich, ME 04579 (https://rescuecharliesfriends.org/)“
Our neighborhood is going through some major changes, and so too is our neighborhood association. Two of our longest-serving board members—Alex Landry and Deborah Van Hoewyk—are stepping down for separate personal reasons, both leaving very big shoes to fill. The board is seeking to appoint immediate replacements for these seats. At least one of the seats must be held by a Bayside resident, and the board is encouraging renters and BIPOC members of the community to inquire. Please contact board@baysideportland.org for information.
Longtime BNA board members Alex Landry (left) and Deb Van Hoewyk (right) with neighborhood leaders at the then newly proposed Midtown Project site walk in 2013.
Other ways to help:
The BNA Teams need neighbors and friends to help us help each other. Join us!
Safe Streets Team Public Safety, Walkability, Infrastructure, Crime prevention — We need a new Team Lead for Safe Streets!
The bylaws allow up to two organizational seats. If you are part of or know of an organization in Bayside that may be interested in joining the BNA board, please contact board@baysideportland.org
Our New President, Tom Blackburn: “Following an absence of about 15 years from the BNA board, I am pleased to see the recent direction of the BNA, especially the revival of committees and subsequent broad support from the community. I’m particularly interested in the BNA as a partner to the proposed Bayside Opportunity Center, in hopes of establishing a community center for Bayside; potentially a game changer for the community and Bayside residents, especially the immigrant population.” -Tom has lived on Hanover Street in Bayside since 1998.
The BNA Annual Meeting and Potluck was held on Saturday, May 31st, along with the annual election of half the board. All five nominated candidates were approved by a wide majority of the assembled members of the larger Bayside community. 18 ballots were cast. Congratulations to the following BNA board members:
Tom Blackburn, 14 Hanover Street — 15 votes
Colette Bouchard, 8 Hanover Street — 13 votes
Jim Hall, 47 Cedar Street — 13 votes
Peter Markoe, 47 Hanover Street — 15 votes
Robert Sylvain, 167 Falmouth Street — 17 votes
The remaining board members seated for a two-year term in 2024 are as follows:
Alex Landry, 15 Boynton Street
Deborah Van Hoewyk, 21 Chestnut Street
Susan McCloskey, 25 Parris Street
Also elected in 2024 for one-year terms were one organizational seat, and the office of president, as follows:
Portland Downtown, represented by Betsy Boyd
Sarah Michniewicz, President
This year the board made changes to the bylaws affecting the method of election of board president and organizational seats. The office of president will be chosen by and from the full board— along with the other board offices of vice-president, treasurer and secretary—at the next board meeting this Tuesday June 3rd. Sarah Michniewicz stepped down as BNA president last November when she was elected to Portland city council, making VP Robert Sylvain (who is one of two allowable board members not residing in Bayside) the president pro tempore until a “resident president” is elected. In addition, up to a total of two organizational seats may be selected by the new board.
Each year the BNA board takes submissions to nominate members of the community to seat half the board to two-year terms by general election at the annual meeting. Following the election the board will choose the officers for president, vice-president, treasurer, and secretary from the board at large. Sitting board members who were elected to a two-year term in 2024 are: • Alex Landry, 15 Boynton Street • Susan McCloskey, 25 Parris Street • Deb VanHoewyk, 21 Chestnut Street In 2025 the board voted to expand the board to a total of eight members, plus up to two organizational seats to be selected by the board after the general election. The BNA nominating committee solicited submissions for candidates at the beginning of the year, and has vetted 5 nominees, including three incumbent board members, to fill the vacant seats. Write-in candidates are allowed provided seven days’ notice is given to the board in advance of the annual meeting. Individuals requesting write-in status may email info@baysideportland.org before May 24, 2025.
Meet the 2025 nominees for BNA board:
• Tom Blackburn, 14 Hanover Street
I moved to Bayside on Hanover Street in 1998. In 2000, I joined the Bayside Neighborhood Association (BNA) as treasurer. During my time on the board I was event chair for five Black Frame Art Sales and three Bayside World Market and Fairs,. In 2006, I served as a project manager to move an 1857 house, slated for demolition from Mechanic Street to Myrtle Street. The BNA received a $200,000 loan from the city of Portland to move, renovate and buy the land on Myrtle Street. I also helped form the Bayside Community Development Corporation, a BNA-sponsored non profit organization formed to participate in the development of the Bayside as a center for working artists and other cultural activities.After resigning from the BNA, I formed Maine Construction Consultants, a general contractor and project management firm, and managed over $2 million in projects. I served as a board member of Creative Portland for five years, and formed Creative Space, an organization designed to provide creative workspace for individuals and organizations. I was contracted by the city of Portland to identify all creative spaces in Portland, discovering 650 by the end of his search. During this time, I met Justin Curtsinger and together we formed Grime Studios, currently a 39-room musician and artist workspace facility in Portland renting to over 300 musicians who play in 80 bands. In 2014, I became a board member of Mechanics Hall on Congress Street, serving as vice president, and finally building supervisor for over 10 years. In this role I supervised over $1 million in restoration projects, and with the assistance of Deborah Van Hoewyk, raised several hundred thousand dollars in grant funding. This work was instrumental in elevating Mechanics Hall’s historic registry designation from local significance to national significance, allowing for the raising of much larger sums of money.Following an absence of about 15 years from the BNA board, I am pleased to see the recent direction of the BNA, especially the revival of committees and subsequent broad support from the community. Currently I’ve stepped into the role of team lead for the Bayside Business Breakfast Club, which is bringing new energy and focus to our neighborhood’s business community. I’m particularly interested in the BNA as a partner to the proposed Bayside Opportunity Center, in hopes of establishing 72 Parris Street as a community center for Bayside; potentially a game changer for the community and Bayside residents, especially the immigrant population.
• Colette Bouchard, 18 Hanover Street
Originally from Rhode Island, I came to Portland in 1983 to experience the beautiful state of Maine and live in a small city that had lots to offer, including places where I could earn a living. In 1991, my partner and I decided to take the opportunity to buy a house in Bayside that was under foreclosure and affordable for us. Maine was in the depths of a recession at the time, and properties all around us sat vacant. Over time, people who I came to know as neighbors also decided to buy property in Bayside.The BNA has been a great way to meet people from the neighborhood, learn about what is going on, and get involved in projects that impact the community. A group of new BNA teams has now emerged, and their members want to create public art, revive “The Baysider” newspaper, increase safety on the streets, reduce litter, have Bayside business gatherings, follow plans for developments, plant more trees, do outreach in the community, and create fun events and activities. I want to be part of all this and invite others along too!
• Jim Hall, 47 Cedar Street
I grew up in Wiscasset under the warm glow of Maine Yankee, took merit scholarships to Bates in Lewiston, found between-semester work in Portland in the late 80s and made it home. I landed in Bayside proper mid-90s with Sarah, first renting on Cedar as close as we could to her atelier in the Time & Temp building, then buying the home next door from one of the last remaining families of the former Armenian enclave. I initially cobbled together various gigs adjacent to arts & education, not quite making a living. As digital production tools became available, I gradually morphed into a tech worker, and now I run complex software development projects.I’ve served as BNA treasurer since 2019, I co-chaired the task force that crafted the City of Portland’s priorities for the current 5-year funding plan with HUD, and I currently represent the BNA on the 72 Parris steering committee working to develop a community ownership model for that donated parcel. Plenty of my additional public comment is on record, should anyone wish to learn more about my views from letters to the editor or the city’s agenda portal. With the neighborhood finally starting to unclench after years of successful advocacy by the BNA, my near-term intention is to focus my energies on the 3 prerequisites I see before we can really serve our community with more extensive programming: governance, fundraising & engagement. I’d like to see the BNA build on the community visioning we recently accomplished by drafting our first five year plan in 2025.
• Peter Markoe, 47 Hanover Street
Hello neighbors of Bayside and beyond, Thank you for considering me for a board member position on the BNA! I have been a proud Bayside resident for almost 4 years. I was born and raised in Central Maine and stayed close to attend college at Colby. Setting off to Los Angeles, I cofounded an urban farm focused on raising edible insects as an alternative protein source. Eventually, I found my compass pointed from southwest to northeast, and the rest is history. In my free time, you can find me at Bayside Bowl, sampling Portland’s top-notch food scene, taking in the beauty of Maine’s mountains, waters, and coast, or just hanging at home with my wife, Sophie, and our one-year-old son. I’m looking to join the board of the BNA in order to help, in whatever ways I can, the inclusivity, vitality, and vibrancy of our community. There are a lot of moving parts in Bayside these days, but I think that we, as the constituents of Forest–Franklin–Congress–295, can shape a space that is as diverse, exciting, and unique as we are for decades to come. I have previously been involved in the BNA Development Committee and have attended neighborhood cleanups, but I am also looking to become involved in the evolution of 72 Parris, and other BNA committees and initiatives where my skills can be useful. My mission for joining the board is to learn more about others in my community and find ways in which we can come together and lift each other – and Bayside – up.
• Rob Sylvain, 167 Falmouth Street
Soon after Sue and I moved to Bayside in 1998, we went to the very first meeting of what would become the Bayside Neighborhood Association. Since then we’ve seen many changes in the neighborhood, and in ourselves. We brought our kids up in Bayside, and made lifetime friends of our neighbors. When we made the decision to move just “off penninsula” to accomodate our growing family, we left our hearts in Bayside. For me, serving the BNA would be a long term commitment; part of a lifetime journey.Looking at the old issues of the Baysider which the Portland Public Library recently posted to the digital commons it’s clear that the BNA has moved the neighborhood forward in significant ways. What’s more clear, and perhaps more important, is the sense of community, the sense of place, and the sense of goodwill evidenced by those pages. That spirit is what keeps my heart in Bayside, and it’s that spirit that will continue to move us forward in the coming decades, together.
Bayside Neighborhood Association Annual Meeting Board Elections & Community Potluck Bring a dish to share – or just bring yourself! Saturday, May 31, 5:00 pm – 7 pm 409 Cumberland Avenue — Avesta community space Click here to rsvp & sign up for the potluck (encouraged but not required!) email info@baysideportland.org with any questions
Lots going on in Bayside, and the BNA teams are rising to meet the moment. If you want to join a team, just send an email to any of the groups below, and a team lead will get back to you asap. If you have an idea for a team and want to get it started, we want to hear from you. Let’s do it!
Safe Streets Team Public Safety, Walkability, Infrastructure, Crime prevention
Student Group liason to Baxter Academy and Portland High School
Tech Team Website, Workspace, Social Media, Calendar, Newsletter, etc.
Tenants’ Team Renters’ perspectives are at the forefront of this team’s activity.
Tree Team overseeing planting and maintenance, trails and green spaces
The Tech Team is working on better communication pathways for the general membership, including mailchimp, which will allow us to send targeted email news and allow subscribers to tailor how they receive updates from various teams. We’re also now using google workspace to organize teams into google groups that can share files, calendar events, to-do lists, plus follow and archive conversations by topic within each team and between teams. Setting up the groups in a way that is simple to use but powerful enough to keep track of team tasks and communications, calendar events, shared files and important links has proven to be a challenge, but worthwhile. If you have experience and/or interest in admin tools please consider joining the tech team and helping us out.
Recent News
December’s Safe Streets Meeting was met with a strong response from the community and from the media. Troy Bennett from Bangor Daily News was in attendance and wrote this article about the effort and subsequently WCSH6 Newscenter Maine picked up the story as did WGME CBS13 shown below. The next Safe Streets Team meeting will be Tuesday, February 25th, 6:00pm in the Steve Hirshon Community Room at Unity Village, 24 Stone Street, Portland.
If you missed last month’s BNA Board meeting on zoom, you can view a recording of it here: BNA Board Meeting January 7 2025 See below for details on the next board meeting.
Upcoming Events
Saturday January 25, 11am BNA Citizens’ Trash Brigade Parris Street Block Walk
UPDATE: With the recent snowfall we’re pivoting to salt & sand for sidewalks on Parris Street, which has several spots that need attention. We’ll provide buckets of sand & salt from the city lot, shovels and a few ice choppers. If you have an ice chopper please bring it! We’ll warm up afterward at Wilson BBQ.
OP: We’re coming together for a short pickup party targeting Preble Street in particular, focusing on bits and butts that get overlooked during the Spring & Fall cleanup, and also to get eyes on the street to take stock of the pedestrian experience, flag infrastructure concerns, and to get to know each other. Afterward we’re planning to gather at Wilson BBQ to warm up, wind down, and plan for next month’s block walk. We’ll meet at 72 Parris Street and walk together. Trash bags and gloves provided.
Monday January 27, 6:00pm Portland Music Hall Presentation Composing Room @ Press Hotel 119 Exchange St, Portland, ME
The BNA Development Developments Team invites Baysiders to attend a public presentation by Portland Performance Ventures, LLC on their proposal for a 3,300-seat Live Nation music venue at the site of the old Press Herald printing press building across Myrtle Street from the Merrill Auditorium in Bayside. More information on the project is available on the city of portland website here: https://selfservice.portlandmaine.gov/
Wednesday January 29, 8:30am Bayside Business Breakfast Club Isa Bistro, 79 Portland St. Portland, ME
The Bayside Neighborhood Association is starting 2025 with a renewed commitment to connecting with diverse stakeholders and providing opportunities for community members to come together in pursuit of shared goals. To that end, we’re excited to present the first of what will be monthly events specifically for Bayside business owners to meet in an informal setting to meet, chat, and plan a better future for all Baysiders.
Mission Statement: “The Bayside Neighborhood Association (BNA) empowers the Bayside community by building meaningful partnerships that promote health, safety, green spaces, diversity, housing, and sustainable development for all who live, work, and play in this unique urban neighborhood.”
We need your help! Please consider a tax-deductible donation to the BNA, a 501c(3) non-profit organization. Contact Jim Hall, treasurer for more information at jim@baysideportland.org
Monthly Board meetings are held the first Tuesday of the month at 6 p.m. As of April 2020 meetings have been held remotely via Zoom. This will continue until CDC guidelines, Portland mandates, and vaccination levels make it safe to meet once agin in our traditional location, the community room at 24 Stone Street in Unity Village.
Meetings are always open to the public and we encourage new friends to attend. All are welcome! This is a great way to find out what’s going on in Bayside, and learn how you can contribute to a safe, vibrant community.
Check the BNA Facebook page for month-to-month changes of time or location and latest news and events.