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Teachers struggling to implement changes, survey shows

By Liz Bowie, The Baltimore Sun7:34 p.m. EST, November 13, 2013

Schools from Ocean City to Garrett County are struggling to put in place two major shifts in education policy this year, with teachers working longer hours and sometimes feeling overwhelmed, according to a survey released Wednesday by the state teachers union.

In the teacher survey, 87 percent of the respondents said there are still challenges in their schools to understand and implement the more rigorous common core standards, and just one in three said they were adequately prepared to do the work.

“I think it confirms what we have been trying to say. There is a lot of education reform coming at teachers and principals at one time,” said Cheryl Bost, vice president of the Maryland State Education Association.

The teachers union supports the new common core as well as the new evaluation system, which judges teachers on student progress, but says the state needs more time to implement them well.

Read more: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/education/blog/bs-md-teacher-survey-20131113,0,4086253.story#ixzz2kj9uoN8y

Elementary school closure possible in Garrett

One study option recommends shuttering three facilities to close budget gap

Elaine Blaisdell

Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — The Garrett County Board of Education released information concerning the elementary school facility needs assessment and master plan study for its public schools as well as information on potential school consolidations done by Bushey Feight Morin Architects Inc. of Hagerstown during a meeting Tuesday.

The study was done by Facility Engineering Associates of Fairfax, Va., and the board paid $61,680 for it, according to Jim Morris, supervisor of research, evaluation and information for Garrett County public schools.

Even if the board of education chooses the most extreme option of the study, the savings wouldn’t be enough to close the $2.2 million budget gap, Paul Swanson, of Facility Engineering Associates, indicated during a presentation of the study in October.

The most extreme option proposes closing two schools in the northern end of the county as well as one school in the southern end and includes reconfiguration of all grades in northern schools and adjusting school boundary lines.

“If we were to take the most extreme option and still only realize an 83 percent gain towards the $2.2 million deficit that we anticipate, how would we come up with what’s left?” said Superintendent of Schools Janet Wilson during the presentation of the study.

If the schools were reconfigured, it would lead to reductions in teachers, according to Wilson.

“We have reduced our staff by 88 positions since 2009,” said Wilson. “We have lost 609 students; at a 1-to-20 ratio we probably should reduce the staff.”

If schools were to close, it would increase costs of transportation due to the distance traveled to get students to another facility, according to a letter to Wilson written by Michael Gehr of BFM Architects.

“The closed facilities will still require exterior maintenance and maintaining watertightness of buildings and possibly heating costs to prevent damage to the facility until repurposed, demolished, transferred or sold,” writes Gehr. “All options will have expenses for unknown durations though it could be mitigated if a closed facility is sold or transferred to another entity sooner than later.”

BFM Architects held a meeting in August to determine what could be done to absorb displaced students at remaining schools should some schools close.

“The current approach would be to realign the schools based on grade levels as all schools have the ability to handle additional students,” writes Gehr. “Consolidation of schools in Garrett County can be achieved based on the projected enrollments and the existing facilities as they currently exist. However some modifications will be necessary to achieve that goal.”

If the schools were to be consolidated, any savings wouldn’t be realized for at least a year because it would take more than a summer break to design and construct the modified layout for a fourth to seventh grade level school, according to Gehr. The timeframe for a complete renovation would take about two years.

To view Gehr’s letter as well as the study, visit the GCPS website at http://www. garrettcountyschools.org/public-information.

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

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Community Action receives grant

OAKLAND — Garrett County Community Action Committee will receive a $25,000 grant to improve housing conditions for limited-income residents from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development Housing Preservation Grant program.

The grants will be distributed to homeowners and owners of multifamily rental properties or cooperative dwellings who rent to low- and very-low-income residents.

Grants may be used to make general repairs, such as installing or improving plumbing or providing or enhancing access to people with disabilities.

More here.

Wildlands designation proposal elicits concerns

Elaine Blaisdell

Cumberland Times-News

SWANTON — Residents who attended last week’s public hearing on the Maryland Department of Natural Resources possible designation of additional wildlands voiced concerns about it affecting the 150-mile Eastern Continental Divide Loop Trail, according to Bob Hoffman, president of the Property Owners’ Association of Deep Creek Lake.

The proposed properties in Garrett County total 8,514 acres, 1,600 of which are in the Garrett State Forest, according to John Nelson, county director of Planning and Land Development. The largest wildlands proposed is 3,993 acres of the Youghiogheny River Corridor, Maryland’s only “wild” river.

Garrett Trails and Garrett County Planning have voiced concerns about the wildlands proposal for the Yough. Mike Dreisbach, president of Garrett Trails, told The Baltimore Sun that planners hope to extend a trail along the river or at least improve a short trail near Friendsville that follows an old rail bed.

“We’re not pushing to make it into an interstate highway or anything,” Dreisbach said. “The more people that get to see it (river), the more people will want to protect it.”

The Garrett County Planning Commission doesn’t agree with the wildlands proposal for the Yough corridor because it will prohibit new trail development in that area, according to Nelson.

“The planning commission felt that is was important to continue to allow the Eastern Continental Divide Loop trail to progress,” said Nelson during a Nov. 5 county commission meeting. “It sounds as though the department is digging their heels in and will not be willing to allow or negotiate further advancement of trails in the Youghiogheny corridor. They are going to place that trail somewhere out of the viewshed (on the ridgeline) of the corridor.”

In response to Garrett Trails concerns, DNR noted that bicycles are currently used on the trail from Friendsville to Kendall Camp, an old logging community, according to County Commissioner Jim Raley.

“The department will consider recommending the continuation of the existing use. Those are words I don’t like. I kind of call those weasel words because they are the kid words that we can always get out of,” said Raley during the commission meeting.

Jess Whittemore, Friendsville councilman, noted on the Garrett Trails Facebook page that the wildlands designation would stop bicycling on the Kendall trail from Friendsville south along the river. Under state law, motor vehicles and “mechanical transport,” which includes bicycles, are not permitted on wildlands.

The department uses the county’s master plan, which states that the county will work with the state to address concerns about the integrity of a section of the Yough River from Friendsville to Oakland, to make its case regarding the wildlands designation.

“I don’t know if our intent means that is a hands off, foots off, total off but that’s what they are doing using our words out of our plan to, in essence, try to make their case,” said Raley. “On any given whim they (the state) can change the rules. I’m deeply concerned at this land graph.”

Residents have also voiced concerns about trees being destroyed by gypsy moths in the state forest, where treatments are not applied, and are also concerned about the moths destroying trees located on their property, according to Raley.

“We have worked well with the departments but if they are going to dig their feet in maybe it’s time we dig our feet in a little bit, too,” said Raley. “This could be very detrimental to overall economics of the county and the utilization of these lands that we, the citizens of Maryland, own.”

The Property Owners’ Association isn’t planning on stating a position regarding the wildlands proposal, according to Hoffman.

“While protecting this land already owned by the state sounds like the right thing to do, and for many it is, there are restrictions on use of the land that come with the designation as wildlands,” wrote Hoffman in an email. “For the most part, this designation means most people will only be able to access the land on foot — no bicycle or motorized traffic.”

Wildlands are state-owned natural areas preserved for their wilderness character or sensitive natural resources.

The DNR is accepting public comments on the wildlands proposal until Dec. 9. Comments can be made via email to Wildlands@dnr.state.md.us, or by mail to: Wildlands Comments; Attention Rich Norling; Maryland Department of Natural Resources; 580 Taylor Ave., C4; Annapolis, MD 21401.

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

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Emergency operations center now fully operational

Facility at Garrett County Airport has geographic mapping system, stations for 22 staffers

Elaine BlaisdellCumberland Times-News

MCHENRY — The state-of-the-art emergency operations center at the Garrett County Airport became fully operational two weeks ago after snags with fiber optics were fixed.

The 700-square-foot facility includes a GIS mapping system, a double touch SMART Board, 22 stations for staff, four primary computer stations for specific functions like tracking weather and a ham radio station, according to John Frank III, director of emergency management. “We still have a few things that we need to tweak a little bit,” he said.

A test on the fiber op-tics system still needs to be completed, according to Frank.

The EOC has a computer plug for the Maryland Emergency Management Agency representative to access the WebEOC, which can be used to request more personnel in the event of an emergency situation, according to Frank.

The EOC will have two operators who will be available to transfer calls to the appropriate location, such as the roads department.

In the wake of Superstorm Sandy, the county begin working on the EOC to become better prepared for emergency situations.

“We admit in our after-action report that we were ill-prepared, we really didn’t have an active emergency operations center,” said County Commissioner Jim Raley. “Certainly, that doesn’t mean before Hurricane Sandy we didn’t talk about some problems.”

Prior to the EOC, a 525-square-foot makeshift command center at the courthouse was used. In the beginning, the command center didn’t have phones or laptops for the EOC staff.

One of the issues during Superstorm Sandy was that the National Weather Service was forecasting that the storm wasn’t going to affect the county, according to Raley.

“We know in the future that we should have been at a mid-level early on watching the storm, then should have had staff ready,” said Raley. “Now the nice thing is we have all that in place.”

The county adopted an EOC essential employee list that is made up of 40 people. The policy consists of three levels in which essential staff responds. The county is always operating at a level three, which is the lowest level, according to Frank. Level three is a monitoring phase in which the EOC is staffed by public safety and emergency management personnel.

“I feel really good about what we have in place. We have the facility and we are going to have the personnel,” said Raley. “Those are two of the key things that need to be in place, we have the resources of other agencies now as well.”

All the essential staff are required to attend two training sessions a year and to participate in a tabletop exercise.

“Another key piece is identifying those people that need to be here,” said county commission chairman Robert Gatto. “That was another problem getting staff in; some of the agencies couldn’t get to their staff, communication was lost or the ability to get them in was lost. That was one thing that really came out in the after-action.”

Local Emergency Planning Committee staff and essential staff will be notified of an emergency situation via email and text through the computer-aided dispatch system at the 911 center, according to Frank. The LEPC put together the after-action report following Superstorm Sandy.

“We really did have hard conversations about the things that didn’t go right,” said Raley. “Some things did go right; we tweaked those a little bit and they became part of the after-action report.”

There were also some issues with wellness checks of the vulnerable population, according to Raley.

A committee specific to the vulnerable population has been established and meets periodically at the health department to finalize standard operation procedures for wellness checks performed by various agencies/departments.

The Department of Public Safety was awarded approximately $79,000 through MEMA for a generator terminal and Frank is working on procurement of the generator. The airport has its own generator.

Frank has been working with delegates from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and MEMA to find funding sources, according to Gatto.

“We had great support during Sandy and it carried us through to this point,” said Gatto.

The airport location centralizes the EOC but still places it away from other areas that could become potential problem areas in case of an emergency, like Interstate 68 and downtown Oakland, said Raley. The airport also makes it easier for emergency reponders to fly in and is centrally located to Garrett College and the fairgrounds.

“When you look at how everything is staged, this corridor is the actual perfect corridor,” said Raley.

Frank hopes to expand the EOC or have a stand-alone facility so that the room where the EOC is located can be turned back over to the airport.

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

Program Open Space Awards Funds

…Garrett County will receive $8,000 to install fencing, a gravel walking path and parking area, and a 12- by 16-foot storage shed at the Casselman Valley soccer field complex. The project also includes park road improvements and athletic field drainage upgrades. Funds totaling $45,023 were previously approved by the Board of Public Works for this project….

More here.

Partnerships propel Affordable Care Act in Garrett County

Columbia-based nonprofit works with hospital, health department

Elaine Blaisdell

Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — Providing information to the uninsured who are required to be insured under the 2010 Affordable Care Act, has fared better in Garrett County than it has nationally because of the way the county has been able to quickly provide information, said Donald Battista, president and CEO of Garrett County Memorial Hospital.

Healthy Howard Inc., a nonprofit organization based in Columbia, has formed local partnerships with the hospital, the county health department, Community Action Council and Mountain Laurel Medical Center to help get the word out about implementing the Affordable Care Act, according to Heather Glass, field operations manager of the agency.

“The local partners are critical to the success of the connector program. These partners know the local community, the unique qualities of the community; what may be the best approach for outreach and education; how to find the hard to reach population and understanding the challenges and unique opportunities,” said Glass.

Maryland Health Connection, a one-stop health insurance marketplace to enroll in health insurance, is working to fix glitches with the Maryland Health Exchange program by mid-November, according to Glass.

“As everyone knows, the Maryland Health Exchange is facing technical challenges and turnout was low in October throughout Maryland,” said Glass.

Resident James “Smokey” Stanton was glad to hear that Healthy Howard had formed local partnerships and stressed the importance of the commissioners working with the partners and reinforcing the importance of implementation.

“This is not health reform, it’s health insurance reform,” said Stanton. “With the way that the mass media is portraying this, combined with the glitches of the national system, that may be undermining the confidence in this particular medical social policy.”

If a person has insurance they are more likely to obtain preventive health care and early detection and without it they are likely to evolve into an unhappy health situation that cost a lot of money, affects the work force and quality of life, according to Stanton.

Battista estimates that there are 3,000 to 4,000 residents who would qualify to potentially purchase insurance. The Garrett County Community Action Committee has sent more than 1,000 letters to residents in its database who are listed as uninsured, according to Pam Nelson, vice president for community services with GCCAC.

At the hospital, 786 people have been identified as being uninsured, but of those, only three have attempted to make application for a health plan, according to Battista.

“It seems like to me a small number that have so far gone through the process to purchase insurance but it starts with information,” said Battista.

“I’m thrilled that we have probably made contact with 50 percent. I would just hope the numbers start to reflect those who are eligible to benefit from this whole effort,” said Commissioner James Raley.

Paper applications, especially for those who qualify for Medicaid, have been taken and can be taken by GCCAC, according to Nelson. GCCAC has one navigator on staff, who can help an individual select a private plan through the Maryland Health Exchange, and nine assisters on staff, who take the preliminary applications for insurance. GCMH has five assisters on staff and so does the health department. Mountain Laurel Medical Center has three assisters.

The “no wrong door approach” has been em-braced by the partners in the county, according to Glass. Staff members are trained and certified to help the uninsured obtain quality, affordable health care through the Maryland Health Connection.

“This approach recognizes that the great organizations in Garrett County are already working with the uninsured population. They know where they are and are already engaging them in various services,” said Glass.

Healthy Howard has held health fairs in the county to get information out about the Maryland Health Exchange program  because they have been more successful than the forums, which have been held in other counties to get the word out, according to Glass.

The county’s Department of Social Services has been gearing up for a year to provide assistance and information on Affordable Care Act and the Maryland Health Connection, according to Linda Ashby, with the department.

For more information on Maryland Health Connection visit http://www.marylandhealthconnection.gov/about-us

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

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Garrett County tourism revenue up 4 percent from last year

Chamber website visits also jump from 2012

For the Cumberland Times-NewsCumberland Times-News

MCHENRY — Garrett County had the highest accommodations sales collections ever recorded during fiscal 2013, which ended June 30, according to the Garrett County Chamber of Commerce. Revenue was up 4 percent compared to the previous year.

The July and August figures for this fiscal year have increased 3 percent over last year. The 2013 Heads on Beds tallies are up 15 percent over 2012. Through September 2013, the Comptroller’s Office of Maryland reports a 10.9 percent increase in Garrett County sales tax collections.

Visits to the chamber of commerce website, visitdeepcreek.com, have increased 30 percent over 2012.

According to the Maryland Office of Tourism, Garrett County saw a 6.3 percent increase in fiscal 2013 tourism sales tax revenues, the highest increase in the state by a county not operating a casino. Overall, Maryland saw a less than 1 percent increase in tourism sales tax revenues.

“Due to our aggressive marketing strategies, we have seen record accommodations sales in fiscal years 2010 to 2013,” said Nicole Christian, president/CEO of the chamber. “We’ve taken advantage of some new advertising opportunities and really concentrated our marketing and advertising efforts in our target markets. We are pleased our new ad buys have really paid off.”

More here.

Count Maryland old-growth trees among Sandy's tragic toll

Dan Rodricks2:26 p.m. EDT, November 2, 2013

Donnie Oates, manager of two great parks in Western Maryland, will never forget Hurricane Sandy‘s ferocious arrival there. On the last two days of October 2012, the storm brought two feet of heavy snow, high winds, thunder and lightning through Garrett County. Epic stuff. Oates had never seen anything like it.

From his house on Maple Glade Road, which leads to Swallow Falls State Park, Oates heard a forest in collapse — trees cracking and popping, trees being uprooted under the weight of the snow, trees hitting the ground and shaking the earth. It went on all night, explosions and thuds and flashes of light.

Swallow Falls, one of the two parks Oates manages — the other is nearby Herrington Manor — is famous for its waterfalls and its trees. Before Sandy hit last year, the park had Maryland’s oldest grove of eastern hemlock and white pine. Some of the hemlocks were believed to be at least 360 years old — nearly as old as the Maryland colony — a fact that Oates was able to confirm after the big storm.

Half of the trees in Swallow Falls are believed to have been damaged or destroyed during Sandy’s onslaught, Oates says.

In the cleanup that followed, he and others counted rings on the old trees, and, indeed, the estimates were accurate. Some of those hemlocks had stood in place during the entire history of the United States. They were spared the ax during the great sweep of timbering in Garrett County, then were made a gift to the state by the Garrett brothers who owned the land.

The hemlocks were there in the summer of 1921, when Henry Ford, Thomas Edison and Harvey Firestone famously camped by 53-foot Muddy Creek Falls and put the park on the map.

Read more: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/bs-md-rodricks-1103-20131102,0,7895272.column#ixzz2kj0ycgiF

Fair Wind project looks to build 15 new turbines

Elaine BlaisdellCumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — The Maryland Public Service Commission will hold a public hearing in November on an application for the Fair Wind project to construct up to 15 wind turbines on Backbone Mountain six miles south of Oakland.

Fair Wind Power Partners LLC filed the application Aug. 19 and is exempted from the requirement to obtain a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity, according to PSC documents.

The project will consist of up to 30 megawatts of wind turbine generation and plans to use 2.0 to 2.5 MW wind turbines, which would require 12 to 15 wind turbines to achieve the output.

A meteorological tower permit was issued to Exelon Wind LLC in July, according to Jim Torrington, chief of the Garrett County Permits and Inspections Division. A temporary met tower was built in August, according to PSC documents. Torrington noted that last year, Fair Wind submitted a concept plan for review but hasn’t come back for a grading permit yet, which it will probably obtain after the hearing. A concept plan is the first of three required plan approvals that includes the necessary information to allow for an initial evaluation of a proposed project, according to the county’s stormwater ordinance. All plans for the project are expected this winter, according to Torrington.

Before wind turbines can be fully operational, the permits division has to issue a variety of additional permits, such as a grading permit, which can take up to a year, a building permit and certificate of use for each wind turbine.

The project is slated to start significant construction activities in early 2014 and the company hopes to begin commercial operation by the end of the year, according to PSC documents. Fair Wind must start construction within one year of PSC approval and must have at least one functioning wind turbine within two years.

Fair Wind is exempt from the state legislation that requires wind turbines in the county to comply with certain setbacks and decommissioning, because the project was already in the PJM queue, according to Torrington.

After consultation with the county and the Power Plant Research Program of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Fair Wind has agreed to adhere to commitments regarding project construction and requirements that go beyond what the state code requires. Each wind park easement negotiated with a landowner will contain a provision for removal of the wind turbine and all concrete foundations to minimum depth of three feet upon termination of the easement, according to PSC documents.

Each easement also requires that Fair Wind post a removal bond during the first 10 years of commercial operation. The project will also be constructed and operated in compliance with all applicable state and local noise regulations.

Based on consultation with the PPRP and DNR, the project layout will remain 50 feet from state listed and uncommon plants, 50 feet from archaeological features, 25 feet from wetland areas and 50 feet from potential rock vole habitat, according to PSC documents.

Exelon Wind, a wholly owned subsidiary of Exelon, purchased Fair Wind and the development rights to the facility from Clipper Windpower Development Co., LLC in February. The Fair Wind project was originally proposed by Clipper to be part of the 101 MW Allegheny Heights wind project.

The public hearing on the application will be held Nov. 14 at 7 p.m. in the Garrett College auditorium.

Public comments must be submitted by Nov. 21. Written comments referencing Case No. 9334 must be sent to David J. Collins, executive secretary to the PSC, William Donald Schaefer Tower, 6 St. Paul St., Baltimore, MD 21202-6806.

The county is also getting closer to approving permits for the Synergics Fourmile Ridge project in the eastern part of the county. Synergics has submitted its grading plan for the third time but no building permits have been issued yet, according to Torrington.

The project has gone beyond the 60-day appeal process for the Federal Aviation Administration’s interim decision in February that all 24 proposed wind turbines are presumed to be a hazard to air navigation. Synergics has not resubmitted the project to the FAA, according to Torrington.

The PSC approved the project in April and granted a CPCN waiver with conditions that include construction within a year of its approval and at least one functioning wind turbine within two years.

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

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