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Adventure Sports Center International To Host All-American Whitewater Fest.


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The Adventure Sports Center International will host the All-American Whitewater Festival to celebrate America’s veterans, and kick off the summer season of whitewater rafting and kayaking the weekend of May 28–30. Team River Runner athletes will be guests at the event. This is a wounded warrior organization that teaches injured veterans how to heal through whitewater boating.
The festival formally starts on Friday afternoon with Sunset Rafting beginning at 4 p.m. Team River Runner athletes will be on hand during whitewater time from 4 to 8 p.m. kayaking and getting ready for the Veteran’s Race to be held on Saturday. Visitors can meet the veterans and learn how they use whitewater paddling as part of their rehabilitation process, or just come to raft. The Community Day price is $25.

An opening ceremony will be held on Saturday at 10:30 a.m. featuring bag-pipes and the JROTC Color Guard. Veteran athletes will then lead the first ever Whitewater Parade at 11 a.m. The parade will also feature the Figurehead Contest, where homemade figureheads are attached to the bow of rafts and floated down the whitewater course during the parade.

Figureheads must be submitted no later than 9 a.m. that morning in order to allow time to affix them to a raft. Any person or group can build a figurehead to reflect any historic or famous person or creature, but it must be able to sit in the front of a raft or tied to the bow of the raft. Recommended materials are papier-mâché, fiberglass, wood, found materials, vinyl, or rubber. Prizes will be awarded to the most creative and patriotic figureheads.

The Veteran’s Race will be held at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday. Rafts will be captained by Team River Runner athletes, and the public is invited to join a raft team for only $10 per entrant. A guided rafting trip down the mountainside will also be offered Whitewater demonstrations will be held all day Saturday, including Olympic kayaking and Mattress Surfing.

Read the rest here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

BOE Policy Approved; Finzel Students May No Longer Attend Allegany Schools

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May. 13, 2010

After much deliberation, the Garrett County Board of Education voted 4–1 in favor of changing Board Policy 432.0, which allowed a percentage of Garrett County students to attend Allegany County schools. Besides board members and media representatives, approximately 60 people attended this month’s meeting held at Southern Middle School on Tuesday.
The new policy states that all Garrett County residents currently attending Allegany schools in grades 6 through 12 would be permitted to finish their school careers within their current schools; however, once those students were graduated, the GC board would no longer fund the tuition nor transport of any stu-dent(s) thereafter. Students would be permitted to attend Allegany schools if their parents so desired, but only at their own expense.

The meeting opened with public comment by four people: two for the proposal and two against it. After the board met in executive session, and the meeting was reopened to the public, guests were once against given an opportunity to speak on the issue. Four additional people opposed to the proposal spoke prior to superintendent Dr. Wendell Teets’ recommendation.

Among some of the concerns of many Finzel residents was that those forced to go to Garrett County schools would “miss out” on extracurricular opportunities because of the time and distance students would have to travel to and from Northern middle and high schools.

Another point made was that residents who did not agree with the new policy would simply move out of the Finzel area, creating issues such as reduced property value and a lower tax revenues for the county. Residents repeatedly commented that “their lives revolve around the Frostburg, LaVale, and Cumberland areas,” therefore creating an inconvenience in many ways for those who would have to adapt to the new policy.

Teets then took the podium to give his official recommendation to approve the policy. Among his comments were that over $150,000 was being paid in tuition for students to attend Allegany schools. He stated that while the board is currently forced to decrease Garrett County educational staff, support, and services to GC schools, this expense can no longer be justified.

An additional $36,000 is spent on the transport of Finzel students to Allegany schools, and $150,000 in state aid is lost on these students each year. With the approval of this policy change, funding for Garrett County schools would increase $336,000 at full phase out (once students currently in grades 6 through 12 graduate).

Read the rest here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Garrett changes course on Race to the Top

Teets says county has no choice but to comply

Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — In the nationwide Race to the Top, the Garrett County Board of Education pulled a 180-degree turn fast enough to cause whiplash.

Less than one month after its decision not to participate in the federal Race to the Top initiative, the school board voted 4-1 in favor of signing on to the program.

Superintendent Wendell Teets reintroduced the issue Tuesday, saying that Maryland state education standards are being moved in line with federal requirements, and Garrett County will have no choice but to comply.

“If we don’t sign on, we won’t get funding from the RTTT grant, yet we will still have to comply with its requirements in accordance with state law,” he said.

Teets also said he believes that federal Race to the Top criteria will become the guideline for other program funding, such as Title I.

“We need to think of the impact in jobs and services if we fail to approve RTTT and are not funded via the grant if Maryland wins, or if we lose federal funds for not adopting the criteria regardless of RTTT,” Teets told the board before its April vote.

The board’s change of heart was preceded by a visit Friday by state Superintendent of Schools Nancy Grasmick, who spoke with the board about the program.

Vice president Thomas Carr, who ultimately moved to reconsider the board’s decision, said he felt partly reassured by the meeting with Grasmick. But Carr still spoke of reluctance to sign on to the program.

“I still am bothered by the concept that we have to compete for funds,” Carr said. “It’s a little bit like telling my two children that they have to compete for dinner and one of them goes to bed hungry.”

Board member James Raley, the lone vote against signing on, objected to what he called “big government” intruding on local autonomy.

“I’m not sure, when this is all said and done, that it isn’t going to cost us more than we’re ever going to receive,” he said.

Race to the Top challenges school districts to change the way they evaluate student and educator performance in order to compete for federal grants.

The initiative requires states to submit proposals for revamping their assessment systems for students. Teachers and union representatives have objected to the program partly because it proposes a merit pay system, under which educators could be financially rewarded — or effectively, punished — based on their students’ assessment results.

Statewide, Maryland could receive $250 million from the program if it wins in the second round of funding awards, to be decided at the end of September. Half of that money would be divided among the school districts that sign on to the program, and the funds would be dispersed over a four-year period.

In the first phase, just two states, Delaware and Tennessee, were awarded Race to the Top money. Delaware received approximately $100 million and Tennessee $500 million. Maryland did not submit an application in the first round.

As of Tuesday, nearly all Maryland counties had signed on to the program, with only Frederick County taking a firm stand against it.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Garrett group hires lawyer to halt wind farm development

Megan Miller Cumberland Times-News

Deer Park — DEER PARK — Opponents of a Garrett County wind power project have hired the same attorney who helped another opposition group delay a West Virginia wind farm in federal court.

Morgantown attorney Brad Stephens represented the group Mountain Communities for Responsible Energy in opposing the Beech Ridge Energy wind farm during its permit process with the West Virginia Public Service Commission. The PSC approved the permit, but subsequent legal action delayed construction and caused the developer to scale back the number of turbines and change some turbine locations.

Now a Garrett County group, calling itself Save Western Maryland, has hired Stephens to fight the Constellation Energy wind farm currently in construction atop Backbone Mountain.

Stephens said he could not discuss the situation because no legal measures have yet been taken, but confirmed that he is representing the group and looking into possible legal action to halt the project.

According to a statement on the Save Western Maryland website, the group is looking at what course of action “will be most effective in bringing public attention to the devastating effects of the wind projects presently underway, and further forcing the companies and governmental bodies responsible to comply with all applicable laws and regulations.”

The project consists of an electrical substation and 28 415-foot wind turbines atop Backbone Mountain near Eagle Rock.

Constellation spokesman Larry McDonnell said the developer has nearly completed clearing all the turbine sites and is now focusing on constructing the foundations for the turbines.

“We remain on schedule and moving ahead,” McDonnell said.

Visible construction work on the site began in mid-March, but work was halted for a short period by the Maryland Department of the Environment, after complaints from neighboring residents that Constellation’s erosion and sediment controls did not comply with state environmental law.

Construction company owner Eric Robison, whose Eagle Rock Road home sits nearly adjacent to the substation site, said residents have since filed additional complaints with MDE, but have been told the agency found no further cause for shutting down the construction.

Robison said previously that he examined the site and project permits and believed the erosion controls “weren’t even remotely correct.”

But Constellation said it’s taking care to work in an environmentally responsible manner.

“We’re constructing this project and will operate this wind facility in a manner that is in full compliance with all applicable laws and regulations,” McDonnell said.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Nordex Awarded 50 MW Project for First Maryland Wind Farm

CHICAGO, May 11, 2010 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Construction of Maryland’s first wind farm has begun. Nordex USA, Inc. has been awarded an order for 20 N90 2.5 megawatt wind turbines to be installed at a 50-megawatt wind farm in Garrett County, Maryland. The contract with developer and future operator, Synergics, includes installation and a five-year maintenance agreement.

Nordex will begin delivering and installing turbines in August, with completion and commissioning of the project slated for December 2010. The “Roth Rock” wind farm will generate about 124,000 megawatt hours of electricity per year, which is enough to power nearly 11,300 homes at rates that are cost-competitive with existing fuel sources. The project will also provide a boon to local communities in the form of significant tax revenue.

“The Roth Rock project proves that wind can sustainably and affordably power our homes and businesses while benefiting local communities,” said Ralf Sigrist, President and CEO of Nordex USA. “Nordex’s advanced turbine technology has made wind power a competitive alternative to environmentally costly and finite fossil fuels, and we are proud to be the first to help bring that advantage to Maryland.”

The 20 high-speed turbines will stand atop Backbone Mountain along an undeveloped ridge stretching three miles (five kilometers). Located in the western corner of Maryland near the West Virginia and Pennsylvania borders, Roth Rock will displace about 107,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions in a region traditionally dependent on coal.

Read the rest here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Local landowners, company cited by state

For the Cumberland Times-News Cumberland Times-News

Cumberland — CUMBERLAND — Two Garrett County landowners and an Allegany County company were included in a recent Maryland Department of the Environment action seeking penalties for alleged violations of requirements for water and land management.

Robert G. Renfro and Annette Sante of Swanton are required to pay a $4,500 penalty as part of a settlement agreement to resolve alleged sediment control, sediment pollution, waterway construction and nontidal wetland violations that occurred Aug. 6.

The alleged violations involved unauthorized grading for an access road, excavation and breaching of a small pond, and excavation of an outlet channel through nontidal wetlands.

State laws require that property owners notify MDE before conducting any work in tidal and nontidal wetlands, their buffers and waterways of the state. MDE assesses the impact of any work on tidal and nontidal wetlands and, if appropriate, will issue a permit authorizing the work.

Cumberland Concrete Corp. of LaVale is required to pay a $10,000 penalty as part of a settlement agreement to resolve alleged discharge permit violations that occurred at the company’s redi-mix and concrete block manufacturing plant. The alleged violations involved discharges of pollutants to Braddock Run and failure to develop and implement a pollution prevention plan.

A pollution prevention plan has been developed and is being implemented.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Real estate's new problem: Not enough homes

By Les Christie, staff writer
May 11, 2010: 4:27 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Can it be possible? Despite the housing bust and high foreclosure rates, in some areas real estate agents are complaining that they don’t have enough homes to sell.

There is currently an eight-month supply of homes on the market — meaning that, at the current sales pace, it would take eight months to run through the backlog.

That’s still a lot compared to the six-month supply that is expected in a normal market, but it is much better than it was. In March, there were nearly 2% fewer homes on the market than there were a year ago, and 21.7% fewer than the record of 4.6 million in July 2008.

In some areas, supplies are even bidding-war tight. In Denver, for example, supply has fallen to 5.7 months from 6.2. In Phoenix it has declined to 4.5 from 5.2; and in San Francisco inventory has halved, to 3.2 months from 6.5 last March.

In California, almost all cities have a short supply of single-family homes. That’s especially true in the lower-priced categories, according to Leslie Appleton-Young, chief economist for the California Association of Realtors.

Read the rest here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

April 2010 – Lot & Land Market Update

The lot & land market remains flat. There were only 4 sales in all of Garrett County last month. The bright side of that is that sales were up 33% from last month (3 sales total), but the year to date total is 17 lot sales – incredibly low.

325 acres sold for $450,000 (67% of asking price)- that’s bad news for large tracts of land, as the price per acre is approx. $1,385.00.

There was a 2 acre building lot on Glendale Rd that sold for $55,000 – 91% of asking price.

Also, a Deep Creek Lake building lot with a decent lake view sold for $105,000 (62% of asking price).

Railey Realty had 3 of the lots listed, and also sold the same 3 lots – 75% of the lot/land business in April.

I warned you last month that there will be some shocking numbers coming – and I know that trend will continue through the summer.

There are 8 lot/listings currently under contract out of 637 available listings. Both of those numbers have increased since March 2010.

Financing on land remains a HUGE factor with this, as most banks are requiring 30-50% down payment to buy land. If you have the means, there are some incredible deals out there, as you can see. You never know until you make an offer!

Search for available real estate here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Real estate for sale – 159 Glotfelty Dr – GA6642444


A custom built 4 bedroom home with LOTS of built-ins and upgrades! Newer roof, windows, a 3 car garage, pavilion…

Click here for more info

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

7th Anniversary Of Memorial Wall


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Mother’s Day will mark the 7th anniversary of the memorial wall located on the property of Our Town Theatre’s Backstage building in Oakland. The wall was dedicated to all the citizens of Garrett County who “died too young.” The board of directors at Our Town Theatre opens up the list for additional names at this time every year. Persons who would like to add a young person’s name to the wall may do so by sending information to Jane Avery, artistic director. Each brick can contain three lines of print: the child’s first name forms the first line and his/her last name the second line, and the years of the person’s birth and death are the third line. Persons are asked to print this information neatly, or type it, and send it before May 31 to Jane B. Avery, c/o Our Town Theatre, 121 Center Street, Oakland, MD 21550.

Each brick costs $25. Persons are not asked to donate the money, but are welcome to do so if they wish. Avery said there is enough money in the memorial fund to carve two or three bricks. Those who would like to donate to the wall project may send a check made out to Our Town Theatre Special Projects to the address noted above. For more information, persons may call Avery at 301-334-5640, ext. #3.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350