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Garrett residents ask for wind ordinances, setbacks

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

FROSTBURG — A petition signed by 39 residents asks Garrett County commissioners to impose realistic setbacks or ordinances that would protect families and homes from a proposed wind farm on Four Mile Ridge and part of Big Savage Mountain.

The petition will be presented to the commissioners at a land management ordinance work session on Tuesday.

“In addition to aesthetic and environmental impacts, industrial-scale wind turbines built near people’s homes and properties have the potential to increase health and safety risks, lower property values and diminish quality of life,” said the petition.

Eleven agreements have been recorded and executed with property owners for wind turbines on St. John’s Rock Ridge, Jim Torrington, chief of the Garrett County Permits and Inspections Division, explained to the Times-News last month.

Big Savage Mountain is in the vicinity of St. John’s and has viewshed and watershed impacts on Frostburg, according to Rich Harris, Frostburg director of community development.

The city has a system of complex springs and wells in the vicinity of St. John’s Rock Road that provides water for the region to supplement the Piney Dam source.

In February, a meteorological tower permit was issued to Synergics Wind Energy LLC for a tower along St. John’s Rock Road. Synergics has proposed 24 wind turbines.

House Bill 747 would give county commissioners the authority to enact ordinances relating to setbacks and the decommissioning of wind turbines.

The companion measure, sponsored by Sen. George Edwards, has been unanimously approved by the Senate, according to a news release.

“Senator Edwards and I sought to put these protections in place prior to windmill development on Garrett County’s mountaintops,” said Delegate Wendell Beitzel. “With passage of this bill, the commissioners will have the authority to establish setback and decommissioning provisions for wind turbine projects.”

As of Friday, HB 747 still needed to be voted on by both the House and Senate.

The legislative session is scheduled to end by midnight Monday.

Contact Elaine Blaisdell at eblaisdell@times-news.com.

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Early Spring

The earliest spring most can remember has taken place in Garrett County this year, with trees and flowers in full bloom almost a month before their usual explosions of color.


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The Easter holiday in this area is not generally quite so vibrant. Best wishes to all Christians who will celebrate the most important festival of the church calendar this week. Photo by John McEwen.

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Waggoner To Give School Closure Recommendation

Apr. 5, 2012

The Garrett County Board of Education will hold its regular monthly meeting on Tuesday, April 10, beginning at 4 p.m. The meeting will be held in Southern Middle School cafeteria.

Following public comment at 4 p.m., the board will meet in closed session until 5:30 p.m. At that time, public agenda topics will involve recognition of Girl Scout Troop 55021 and FIRST Robotics Team 1629, as well as Maryland wrestling champ-ion Austin Shaffer.


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Action will be taken on the 2012-12 school calender and the 2012 retiree recognition dinner.

Information items will deal with special education procedures and Interim Superintendent Sue Waggoner’s recommendations concerning budgetary issues and school closings.

A second public comment will be held at 7:30 p.m. The public is invited to attend.

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Deep Creek study reaches Phase II

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

2012 — MCHENRY — The Department of Natural Resources is planning next week to begin Phase II of a Deep Creek Lake sediment study, according to the Property Owners’ Association of Deep Creek Lake.

Phase I was completed for selected coves during 2010-2011.

Phase II will target the entire lake to evaluate sediment distribution, character and chemistry of the sediment, and to determine alternatives to control and cope with sedimentation, Scott Johnson, association board member, said.

The cost estimate for Phase II is $180,000, with $65,000 to be funded by the DNR, according to Johnson. Working with the Garrett County commissioners, the association has agreed to help make up the $115,000 difference.

At a special meeting of the board of directors, called by president Troy Ellington, members voted unanimously to contribute $20,000.

The county has committed to about $95,000, according to planning director John Nelson. The funding will allow sampling to begin prior to subaquatic vegetation starting to grow as the lake water temperature begins to rise.

The study will provide a database to examine trends of sediment deposits and how to deal with their management. Members of the association and county staff have been providing input to the DNR to incorporate into the scope of the work.

Sedimentation is a natural process whereby soil is deposited through erosion into a body of water. The existing bathymetry map — the water depth of the lake — is inadequate for this study.

Phase II will include mapping the accumulated sediment in the lake, determining the physical and chemical properties of the sediment, addressing the removal and/or relocation of the sediment and identifying the sources of the sediment and strategies to minimize additional accumulations.

Results of the study will be released as they become available, with a final report is due in approximately one year.

The association has conducted two workshops over the past two years. Brainstorming sessions along with panel discussions have brought awareness to concerns about the long-term health of the lake.

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Deep Creek Lake POA Help Cover Sediment Study Funding Shortfall

Apr. 5, 2012

Deep Creek Lake Property Owners Association (POA) officials announced this week that they have joined with the Garrett County commissioners to make up a funding shortfall for Phase II of the Deep Creek Lake sediment study.

The Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) plans to begin Phase II next week. The first phase was completed for selected DCL coves during 2010–2011.

“Phase II will be a continuation of those studies, targeting the entire lake to evaluate sediment distribution, character and chemistry of the sediment, and to determine alternatives to control and cope with sedimentation,” said POA board member Scott Johnson.


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The cost estimate for Phase II is $180,000, of which $65,000 has been committed to by the DNR, leaving a $115,000 shortfall for funding. The POA has joined the county commissioners to cover that shortfall.

“At a special meeting of the board of directors called by President Troy Ellington on Saturday, there was a unanimous vote that the POA, as a stakeholder in the welfare of the lake, would contribute $20,000,” Johnson said. “In the meantime the county has committed to make up the difference of approximately $95,000.”

By so doing, the study can begin immediately, he stressed.

“The importance of starting Phase II immediately is to do much of the sampling prior to the sub-aquatic vegetation starting to grow as the lake water temperature begins to rise,” Johnson said.

Funded totally by the DNR, the POA, and the county, the effort will be a scientific study, giving a data base to go forward into the future to study trends of sediment deposits and knowing how to deal with its management, according to the POA.

“Members of the POA and the county commissioners have been providing input to the DNR that will greatly improve the validity of the study,” said Johnson. “The DNR has accepted much of that input and incorporated it into the scope of the work.”

He added that sedimentation is a natural process whereby soil is deposited through erosion into a body of water.

“The existing bathymetry map (water depth) of the lake is inadequate for this study, and hence, a new map of the entire lake represents a major effort of this study,” Johnson said.

According to the POA, Phase II study has four objectives:

1. To map the accumulated sediment in Deep Creek Lake.

2. To determine the physical and chemical properties of accumulated sediment.

3. To identify realistic, feasible, sustainable alternatives to address the removal and/or relocation of the sediment.

4. To identify the sources of the sediment inputs to the lake and develop strategies to minimize additional accumulations.

Results of the study will be released as they become available. A final report is due in approximately one year.

“The report will receive widespread dissemination to all stakeholders to allow for the maximum benefit of this investment,” said Johnson.

The POA has conducted two workshops over the past two years involving a wide range of Deep Creek Lake stakeholders.

“Brainstorming sessions, along with panel discussions, have proven to bring awareness to areas of concern, sediment being one of those concerns about the long-term health of the lake,” Johnson said. “The relationships among all the stakeholders have greatly improved through those workshops. The POA wishes to express its appreciation and thanks for the excellent working relationship that has been established between its membership, the county, and state offices. As stakeholders, we all want to maintain the wonderful recreational experience that Deep Creek Lake offers.”

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On A March


On a march to Arlington from his home in Columbus, Ohio, a distance of 400 miles, is 23-year-old U.S. Marine veteran Justin Kuhel, who passed through Garrett County on Monday and is pictured above along Fingerboard Road. Kuhel is making the journey to raise both awareness and money for the Wounded Warriors Project, a non-profit organization with a mission to assist and support injured military service members. He enlisted in the U.S. Marines one day after graduating from high school and subsequently served with the Second Battalion Eighth Marines Scout Sniper Platoon in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He was honorably discharged in the fall of 2010 and is now a member of the Inactive Marine Reserves.


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“I was one of the lucky ones who came back uninjured,” Kuhel said, “but a lot of my friends either did not come back or came back with significant injuries. I decided I needed to do something to support them.” Kuhel has a goal of raising $10,000, and on Monday noted that he had raised over $7,000 toward that goal. He plans to arrive at Arlington National Cemetery no later than next Monday. Kuhel is currently in a paramedic training course, with plans of possibly pursuing a nursing degree. Persons who wish to make a donation can do so online by going to the following web site and following the prompts: www.facebook.com/marchtoarlington.

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EGG-xtravaganza Planned By FIRST Robotics Team

Mar. 29, 2012

FIRST Robotics Team 1629 will hold a fundraising event on Saturday, April 7, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Garrett County Fairground parking lot, located off Mosser Road, McHenry.
The event will feature science and technology based activities that are all centered around eggs. Activities will include an egg chucking competition (for distance), egg painting using LEGO machines, LEGO egg jousting vehicles, a geocached egg hunt, and many more egg-based activities.


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Team 1629 will provide all materials needed, including GPS units, with the exception of the egg chucking contestants, who will need to bring their pre-built egg chucking machines. All egg chuckers must be within a 30x30x30 inch volume for the entire launch sequence and may not use combustibles or compressed air. Mechanical devices such as slingshots, catapults, and trebuchets are allowable as long as they conform to the sizing restrictions. Hard boiled eggs will be used for the competition and will be provided at the event.
Exact times and rules for all activities can be found online at www.team1629.com.

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Victims Recovering After Freak Crash At Derby Fundraiser

Mar. 29, 2012

Several individuals who were hurt in a freak accident on Saturday, March 17, at the Bear Claw Tubing Park of Wisp Resort are reportedly all recovering from their injuries. The accident happened during the annual Cardboard Box Derby, a fundraiser hosted by the Deep Creek Lake Lions Club that benefits that group’s Blind Skier Program.

The event, this year with the theme of “Beachin’ Weekend,” involved 31 entries, and had proceeded with no problems until near the end of the contest.


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According to a spokesperson for Wisp, one of the last entries in the field, registered as the “Dragon Wagon,” started down the designated lane of the tubing park. It was carrying 14 individuals, a mix of adults and minors.

It descended approximately halfway down the lane, and then veered out of lane #2 and crossed into lane #1. It traveled approximately 30 yards in tubing lane #1 before leaving the snow surface. The Dragon Wagon then collided with metal pipes that support a snow-making machine. The pipes were protected by four 55-gallon plastic barriers.

The spokesperson said the impact caused the occupants to forcefully collide with each other, and some were ejected out of the vessel. Two children were taken by helicopter to Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown, W.Va., and five others left the premises by ambulance.

“All injured individuals were attended to and were en route to area hospitals within 45 minutes after the incident occurred,” the spokesperson said.

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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! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

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Lawmakers poised to give officials wind farm regulatory power

House advances Garrett legislation

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

2012 — OAKLAND — The Maryland House of Delegates Economic Matters Committee has advanced a bill that would give the Garrett County commissioners the authority to enact ordinances relating to setbacks and the decommissioning of wind turbines, according to a news release.

“This is a very large step towards providing some safeguards for the citizens of Garrett County,” Delegate Wendell Beitzel said.

The companion measure to H.B. 747, sponsored by Sen. George Edwards, has been unanimously approved by the Senate. The two legislators have sponsored measures to give local governments authority to regulate wind turbines during the past several sessions. However, this is the first time that the House Economic Matters Committee and the Senate Finance Committee have approved the measures relating to Garrett County.

“Senator Edwards and I sought to put these protections in place prior to windmill development on Garrett County’s mountaintops. With passage of this bill, the commissioners will have authority to establish setback and decommissioning provisions for wind turbine projects. I applaud my colleagues for recognizing the need for this very important legislation,” said Beitzel.

Both measures must now be approved by the House and Senate by midnight April 9, when the 2012 legislative session ends.

During the Draft Land Management Ordinance work session in March, the county commissioners discussed an ordinance that would call for wind turbine setbacks of 2,000 feet from a residence, church, school or other occupied structure and 1,000 feet from a property line. The draft ordinance also addressed a decommissioning agreement requirement.

A third Draft Land Management Ordinance work session will be held April 10 at 10 a.m.

The two proposed wind turbine projects at St. John’s Rock and Four Mile Ridge are progressing. Eleven agreements have been recorded and executed with property owners for wind turbines on the St. John’s Rock ridge, according to Jim Torrington, chief of the Garrett County Permits and Inspections Division. In February, a metrological tower permit was issued to Synergics Wind Energy LLC for a tower along St. John’s Rock Road. Synergics has proposed 24 wind turbines.

The next step in the county permitting process would be a grading permit, according to Torrington, who noted that for the first wind project (Roth Rock) it took Synergics 18 months to get a grading permit. However, since Synergics has already been through the process, Torrington thinks that the process will be smoother and take less time. Gestamp Wind North America of Houston now owns the Roth Rock project.

Contact Elaine Blaisdell at eblaisdell@times-news.com

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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! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

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Garrett robotics team gets top honors at Ohio event

Students win Chairman’s Award; invited to world championship in St. Louis

For the Cumberland Times-News Cumberland Times-News

2012 — OAKLAND — Garrett County’s High School FIRST Robotics Competition GaCo Team 1629 received top honors at the FIRST Buckeye Regional Robotics Competition in Cleveland.

The event was held last weekend at Cleveland State University’s Wolstein Center. Garrett County was the only Maryland team competing at the Ohio competition.

During the three-day event, team members competed with 58 other teams from surrounding states.

Teams were judged in many areas in addition to how well their robot placed during the competition, including robot control and design awards, team imagery, spirit and community impact.

Of the awards, Team 1629 received the Chairman’s Award, the most prestigious award that FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) offers in their regional competitions.

In addition to winning the Chairman’s Award, the team’s robot was the eighth-seeded robot after competing in 10 qualification matches that earned the team the right to compete in elimination rounds and survived to the semi-final matches before being eliminated at the Buckeye Regional.

The team receiving the Chairman’s Award, in view of the judges, is the team that best exemplifies the mission of FIRST. The FIRST mission is to change the way young people regard science and technology and to inspire an appreciation

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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! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

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