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Garrett County Commissioners Request Deferment Of PlanMaryland Adoption

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Oct. 6, 2011

The Board of Garrett County Commissioners during its public meeting on Tuesday unanimously executed a resolution requesting deferment of the adoption of PlanMaryland. The document will be forwarded to the governor and Maryland Department of Planning personnel.

State officials project Maryland’s population will increase by 1 million during the next 20 years. Proposed by Gov. Martin O’Malley, the initiative examines that issue and, according to plan opponents, gives the state more control over local land-use issues.

“The growth issues that Garrett County will face over the next few years are different than those that are faced in the urban and suburban areas of the state of Maryland and nation,” the commissioners stated in a press release. “The board believes that land management should be left to local jurisdictions, as it is local jurisdictions that best understand their local growth challenges and needs. The proposed plan, as it applies to Garrett County, has the potential to stifle and suppress growth opportunities instead of incentivizing them.”

The commissioners added they did not want the county to become an impoverished ward of the state.

“Garrett County has resources that will allow the county to contribute in our own unique way,” the officials stated. “Embracing and acknowledging diversity gives our state and ultimately county and municipal governments strength and resiliency.”

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BPW Approves Funds For Two Local Projects

Oct. 6, 2011

Gov. Martin O’Malley yesterday announced Board of Public Works (BPW) approval of recreational projects in Garrett County through the Maryland Department of Natural Resources’ Community Parks and Playgrounds Program.

Accident will receive $65,000 to renovate the existing tennis and basketball courts at Accident Town Park and to upgrade the existing playground area for compliance with national playground safety standards and Americans with Disabilities Act requirements.

In addition, Grantsville will receive $40,000 to construct a pavilion with a sound system and a parking area for Grantsville Community Park.

The three-member Board of Public Works is composed of O’Malley (chair), Treasurer Nancy Kopp and Comptroller Peter Franchot. The BPW is authorized by the General Assembly to approve major construction and consultant contracts, equipment purchases, property transactions, and other procurement actions.

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Garrett County's Most Beautiful Person chosen

Oct. 6, 2011

GC’s Most Beautiful Person for 2011 is Mary Frantz. The announcement was made on Tuesday during the county commissioners’ public meeting at the courthouse. The Friendsville resident was nominated by Mildred Wucik. Each year the pubic is invited to nominate individuals or groups that have made significant contributions to communities through their unpaid volunteer efforts. A local committee then chooses GC’s Most Beautiful Person. “Mary Frantz is one of our angels on Earth,” Wucik wrote in her nomination. “For many years she has participated in the Relay for Life and Hospice walks. For most years, she has been one of the top collectors.” In addition, Frantz has been a volunteer caregiver for the terminally ill for 27 years, helps numerous groups with their fundraising dinners, regularly donates to local food banks, visits nursing home residents and hospital patients to give encouragement, and transports individuals who can no longer drive. The commissioners presented Frantz with a proclamation and glassware from Simon Pearce. Sen. George Edwards also presented her with proclamations from the Maryland Senate and House of Delegates, congratulating her for being chosen the county’s Most Beautiful Person. Also nominated for the award were Tom Browning, Ann Smith, Don Sincell, Cindy Kutchman (posthumously) and Sandy Bell, Mary Jane Harvey, Mark Durst, Kathy Savage, Dick Schrock, and Brenda Brosnihan. Edwards congratulated all the nominees. “Thank you for all the outstanding work that you do to make Garrett County a much better place,” the senator said. Left to right are Commissioners Gregan Crawford, Jim Raley, and Bob Gatto; Frantz; and Edwards. Photo by John McEwen.

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Third-graders get fire safety training

Firesafe House provides students real-life scenarios

Jeffrey Alderton Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — Elementary school students in Allegany and Garrett counties are benefitting from fire safety instructions that are provided annually by Cumberland Fire Fighters Local 1715.

The firefighters, who are members of the Cumberland Fire Department, provide the potentially lifesaving training at no cost to city taxpayers or to Allegany and Garrett county schools.

In fact, a few years ago, a school principal in Allegany County told Local 1715 president Chuck Koelker of an experience that showed the value of the training.

“He said that within a few days of our training his students that a fire had occurred in a home of one of the students and that the student had awakened the whole family and they got out safely. He said the father of the child came to the school to thank him for whatever the school had done to help their child respond in that way to their fire incident,” said Koelker.

The instructional training for third-grade students is provided through the Firesafe House, a mobile training unit.

“The unit is a three-room trailer in which we can show the students various hazards that are in the average home. Most are fire-related, however, we do incorporate some just plain safety issues. The three rooms represent the kitchen, living room/family room and the bedroom.

“The students can actually see some of the hazards in a controlled atmosphere where there is no real danger. We have heated doors for them to check to see if they should open or find another means of egress from the room. The bedroom can be filled with artificial smoke, actually a fog machine, to demonstrate how smoke looks and acts,” said Koelker.

An estimated 800 students go through the Firesafe House annually.

“We distribute activity books, which Local 1715 purchases, to each student and teacher,” said Koelker.

Although several of the volunteer fire departments assist by bringing fire apparatus to the schools the days we are there, we try to schedule so as to be finished before Fire Prevention Week each year.

“That allows for those departments to do there own presentations at their schools, without our interference. Most do a broader program covering more grades. While doing the city schools, the Cumberland Fire Department details an engine crew and often an ambulance to assist,” said Koelker.

National Fire Prevention Week is being observed Oct. 9-15 with the theme “Protect Your Family from Fire.”

Contact Jeffrey Alderton at jlalderton@times-news.com.

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FireFly Farms Creamery and Market Now Open to Visitors in Accident, MD, in Garrett County

FireFly Farms, producer of artisanal goat cheeses from Maryland’s Allegheny Plateau, celebrated the opening of the FireFly Farms Creamery & Market to visitors at 107 South Main Street in Accident, Md., in Garrett County, at 10:00 am, Friday October 7th.

October 10, 2011

FireFly Farms, producer of artisanal goat cheeses from Maryland’s Allegheny Plateau, celebrated the opening of the FireFly Farms Creamery & Market to visitors at 107 South Main Street in Accident, Md., in Garrett County, at 10:00 am, Friday October 7th.

The Market features FireFly Farms’ award-winning goat cheeses as well as other specialty, hand-selected items from the region and around the world.

All of FireFly Farms cheeses are crafted on site in the Accident creamery using fresh goat’s milk purchased from four local family farms. Visitors can view the specially constructed production and aging facilities and cheese making process through observation windows. FireFly Farms moved their cheese production facilities to the Accident creamery from a smaller facility in Bittinger, Md., this summer.

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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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400-acre habitat to honor Howard birder

Scrubby Garrett terrain will preserve woodcock, Aelred Geis’ legacy of determination

By Candus Thomson, The Baltimore Sun

6:16 p.m. EDT, October 9, 2011
Aelred Geis tried to make the world better for birds and people, in that order.

He studied ways to coax birds back into urban areas, helped persuade Jim Rouse to set aside 1,000 acres of prime Howard County real estate for a nature preserve, turned his Clarksville farm into a wildlife sanctuary and not only built a better bird feeder, but also filled it with superior seed that he developed.

Geis could be loud and confrontational with a touch of arrogance when the circumstances warranted it, his friends fondly remember.

Before his death in 2007 at age 78, he put all those traits to work pestering state officials into helping restore the woodcock, a shy woodland bird that once filled Maryland’s fields and skies and delighted springtime birders with its bubbling call and dizzying courtship flight.

On Oct. 14, the state will dedicate a 400-acre woodcock habitat project in Garrett County in Geis’ honor to continue his work.

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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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Autumn Colors Abounding

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Summer said farewell a few weeks ago, and with its exit are born the vibrant colors of autumn, the morphing tree leaves from green to orange and red, complemented by the late-blooming flowers like these marigolds and salvia. The Mountaintop is most surely beginning to clothe itself in the hues of the season, seeming to be readying for next week’s Autumn Glory Festival. See the special supplement all about the festival in today’s issue of The Republican. While temperatures dropped low even for Garrett County last weekend, and reportedly brought a few flakes of the white stuff, the mercury has climbed back up in the past few days, and the next week looks far more pleasant with 70-degree days and 40-degree nights. Photo by John McEwen.

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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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Politics play role in districts

Maryland’s congressional districts are about to be redrawn, based on results of the 2010 census. This process takes place every 10 years following the census. It is always political. The dominant political party tries to draw the districts to protect their incumbents and if possible, to take seats away from the opposition. This year is no exception. In much of the country, based on a Republican sweep in 2010, it’s the GOP playing the game. In Maryland, however, it’s Democrats in the majority.

Maryland has eight congressional districts; of those, six are currently held by Democrats and two by Republicans; our 1st District is one of the two. Both Republican-held districts could have been targeted for tweaking to make them more Democrat-friendly. But with a proposed map released by the redistricting committee last week, it’s clear the primary target was the 6th District, held by Republican Rep. Roscoe Bartlett. The 1st District remains Republican-friendly.

Important to Shore residents is the fact that our nine Eastern Shore counties remain united in one district. The change involves moving Anne Arundel County out of our district and replacing it with Harford County and portions of rural, northern Baltimore and Carroll counties, thus skirting the more densely populated urban areas around Baltimore City and Annapolis. The district is also now contiguous, no longer divided by the Chesapeake Bay.

Districts 2, 3, 4, 7 and 8, however, are a mess, connected by pipestems that reflect both population density and, more likely, political machinations. District 6, the other Republican stronghold, is contiguous and does not contain pipestem connections. It stretches from Garrett County, the westernmost county, to Washington County, then southward into Montgomery County, with a relatively wealthy, suburban population that has little in common, politically speaking, with more rural western counties.

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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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Md. briefings on Irene disaster aid begin

Posted: Oct 06, 2011 7:12 PM EDT Updated: Oct 07, 2011 3:00 PM EDT

WILLIAMSPORT, Md. (AP) – Maryland and federal emergency management officials have begun a series of briefings for Hurricane Irene disaster aid applicants.

The first such meeting was held Friday morning in Williamsport. Others are scheduled Wednesday in Reisterstown and Oct. 17 in Marriottsville.

The meetings are for state and local governments and certain nonprofit groups, but not for households and individuals.

State and federal emergency management officials will help participants apply for federal disaster assistance to supplement state and local recovery efforts in areas affected by the storm from Aug. 24 to Sept. 5. The emergency declaration covers all of Maryland except Garrett County.

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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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Barry Rascovar: Lawmakers lax on code of conduct

Friday, October 07, 2011

Barry Rascovar: Lawmakers lax on code of conduct

Maryland’s loophole-filled ethics laws are on display once again. What stands out is the lack of firm accountability and punishment for legislators who stray over the line.

An influential senator is on trial for allegedly leveraging his office to reap $245,000 in consulting fees. He might have avoided this nightmare with a public disclosure.

A delegate-lawyer is accused of paying for her wedding with campaign funds. She apparently mistook her campaign account for an ATM.

Another delegate received $427,000 from the state for agreeing not to develop land in isolated Garrett County. He complied with every aspect of the ethics law — and still received a rash of bad publicity.

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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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