Wiscasset, Maine episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 16, 2026 · 11 MIN

Wiscasset, Maine

from Drive-Thru Towns · host Andrew Wilcox

Wiscasset: The Nuclear Piggy Bank at the Prettiest Village in MaineWiscasset’s nuclear power plant didn’t explode. It just stopped paying the town. From 1972 to 1996, the Maine Yankee nuclear power plant on Bailey Peninsula generated roughly 119 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity—and in the process, it funded some of the lowest property taxes in the United States. Thanks to this reactor-fueled piggy bank, a tiny coastal village was able to spend decades living like a small town with a Silicon Valley address, punching far above its weight in school systems, public services, and grand civic infrastructure.In this episode of Drive-Thru Towns, host Andrew Wilcox looks past the glossy, postcard-perfect windshield view of "The Prettiest Village in Maine." Route 1 drivers know Wiscasset for its stunning early 19th-century historic district and the legendary, standing-room-only tourist pilgrimage to Red’s Eats for lobster rolls. But beneath the scenic facade lies a complex, permanent conversation about what happens when an infrastructure giant leaves.When safety issues forced Maine Yankee to shut down permanently in 1996, the town was left to face the brutal math of maintaining an oversized civic blueprint on a regular small-town tax base. We explore the geographic logic that brought the reactor to the tidal waters of the Sheepscot River, the hangover of a disappearing municipal patron, and the ongoing legal battles surrounding the 550 metric tons of radioactive spent nuclear waste that Uncle Sam legally promised to move—but left behind in concrete-capped steel canisters.The Postcard and the Post-Nuclear: Balancing the title of "The Prettiest Village in Maine" with a massive, multi-decade legacy of nuclear power and fiscal imagination.The Nuclear Golden Age: How a 900-megawatt pressurized water reactor became the town's ultimate financial savior, funding top-tier schools and a multimillion-dollar community center.Oversized and Decoupled: The harsh reality of a town struggling to preserve an infrastructure built during a 25-year boom after the benefactor suddenly dies.The 550-Ton Hangover: Inside the legal gridlock over the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation, and how a nuclear waste repository is ironically utilizing pollution-control laws to sue the town for tax exemptions.The American Thread: A cautionary tale of municipal infrastructure and imagination, echoing small towns nationwide that expand their expectations during an industrial boom only to inherit a landscape of compromise.If you want to pull back the curtain on the unexpected industries and hidden economics that fund America's most picturesque destinations, follow the show on Spotify.Instagram: @50statefamilyLinkedIn: Andrew WilcoxEmail: [email protected] the EpisodeConnect & Follow

Wiscasset: The Nuclear Piggy Bank at the Prettiest Village in MaineWiscasset’s nuclear power plant didn’t explode. It just stopped paying the town. From 1972 to 1996, the Maine Yankee nuclear power plant on Bailey Peninsula generated roughly 119 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity—and in the process, it funded some of the lowest property taxes in the United States. Thanks to this reactor-fueled piggy bank, a tiny coastal village was able to spend decades living like a small town with a Silicon Valley address, punching far above its weight in school systems, public services, and grand civic infrastructure.In this episode of Drive-Thru Towns, host Andrew Wilcox looks past the glossy, postcard-perfect windshield view of "The Prettiest Village in Maine." Route 1 drivers know Wiscasset for its stunning early 19th-century historic district and the legendary, standing-room-only tourist pilgrimage to Red’s Eats for lobster rolls. But beneath the scenic facade lies a complex, permanent conversation about what happens when an infrastructure giant leaves.When safety issues forced Maine Yankee to shut down permanently in 1996, the town was left to face the brutal math of maintaining an oversized civic blueprint on a regular small-town tax base. We explore the geographic logic that brought the reactor to the tidal waters of the Sheepscot River, the hangover of a disappearing municipal patron, and the ongoing legal battles surrounding the 550 metric tons of radioactive spent nuclear waste that Uncle Sam legally promised to move—but left behind in concrete-capped steel canisters.The Postcard and the Post-Nuclear: Balancing the title of "The Prettiest Village in Maine" with a massive, multi-decade legacy of nuclear power and fiscal imagination.The Nuclear Golden Age: How a 900-megawatt pressurized water reactor became the town's ultimate financial savior, funding top-tier schools and a multimillion-dollar community center.Oversized and Decoupled: The harsh reality of a town struggling to preserve an infrastructure built during a 25-year boom after the benefactor suddenly dies.The 550-Ton Hangover: Inside the legal gridlock over the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation, and how a nuclear waste repository is ironically utilizing pollution-control laws to sue the town for tax exemptions.The American Thread: A cautionary tale of municipal infrastructure and imagination, echoing small towns nationwide that expand their expectations during an industrial boom only to inherit a landscape of compromise.If you want to pull back the curtain on the unexpected industries and hidden economics that fund America's most picturesque destinations, follow the show on Spotify.Instagram: @50statefamilyLinkedIn: Andrew WilcoxEmail: [email protected] the EpisodeConnect & Follow

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Wiscasset, Maine

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This episode was published on June 16, 2026.

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Wiscasset: The Nuclear Piggy Bank at the Prettiest Village in MaineWiscasset’s nuclear power plant didn’t explode. It just stopped paying the town. From 1972 to 1996, the Maine Yankee nuclear power plant on Bailey Peninsula generated roughly 119...

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