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Educated public can help officials make right choice

CitizenShale (www.citizenshale.org) is a recently formed, all-volunteer non-profit organization.
Our mission is simple: through research, policy review, and education, we seek to encourage dialog and support comprehensive efforts to protect individual citizens and communities from the wide-ranging potential impacts of shale gas development in our region.
In the spirit of fostering that dialog, we wish to respond to recent comments by Garrett County Commissioner Jim Raley about the public debate over shale gas drilling (“TGCC showcases capital talking points,” Jan. 6 Times-News).
We hope to expand our working relationships with the Garrett and Allegany County commissioners, and believe Commissioner Raley’s comments — referring to our organization’s work — deserve clarification.
During a public meeting about an unrelated topic, Commissioner Raley referred to “educational pieces” — such as the programs CitizenShale puts on — as the work of “opponents.”
CitizenShale and its members do not support banning shale gas development in Maryland; we do, however, oppose unsafe or predatory development that takes advantage of the counties’ residents. And, given that many neighboring states have initiated such industrial gas-drilling, we believe it prudent to learn from their experiences.
CitizenShale was founded on the belief that only through public education — and the industry accountability that such education will demand — will we empower ourselves and our elected officials to make the right policy decisions.
For those who have not heard of CitizenShale, or been able to attend our meetings at Garrett College in McHenry, here is a brief summary of those with “eyewitness” experience whom we brought to speak during the last year, and some of the other educational content presented:
• A former land-owner near Pittsburgh where one of the first horizontally fractured gas wells was drilled in Eastern America. That well contaminated water on his farm — something he has seen since on numerous properties around him — and forced him into a protracted legal dispute with the driller that almost bankrupted his family, and changed their lives forever.
• A university microbiologist who showed aerial photographs depicting the new wells, compressor stations, and processing plants south of Pittsburgh (where two explosions took place last year) that transformed a generally rural area into an industrial zone in five years.
• An executive from the Oil and Gas Accountability Project who presented her experience working with people from New York to West Virginia who sought help defending their interests against the activities of energy corporations and, in many cases, against compliant state and local government authorities.
• A first in-region film screening of the two most acclaimed, and admittedly controversial documentaries about the natural gas industry.
• A program with the Maryland Attorney General and the Garrett County Bar Association devoted to answering legal questions about the hundreds of gas leases that energy corporations purchased from landowners in Garrett and Allegany counties.
• A speaker from a Washington, D.C.-based organization whose year-long study refutes claims by business and local governments about the jobs bonanza predicted with industrial drilling.
The economic, political, and land-use impacts of shale gas development are certainly worth better understanding, but any benefits must be measured by an equally thorough understanding of their costs and the longer-term effects on our region.
Anyone interested in the full range of our activities is invited to visit our website at www.citizenshale.org.
Mike Koch
Paul Roberts
CitizenShale.org
Oakland

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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ASCI talks $3M default with Garrett commission

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — Garrett County commissioners announced that they met in executive session to discuss legal, financial and personnel implications of Adventure Sports Center International (ASCI) in regard to a default of $3 million in capital debt obligations.
During construction, ASCI incurred $3 million of loans from private lending institutions in order to address unanticipated costs.
During Tuesday’s commission meeting, Chairman James Raley read a public statement pertaining to ASCI, according to Monty Pagenhardt, county adminstration.
ASCI is a nonprofit entity and not under the authority of the board of county commissioners, according to Pagenhardt. The financial institutions involved with the debt collection are Susquehanna Bank and First United Bank & Trust.
An official and more detailed review will be made during the Feb. 7 public session, according to Pagenhardt.
“The board of county commissioners will be compiling their position and comments on this,” said Pagenhardt in an email to the Times-News. “I am going to coordinate something with ASCI board of directors.”
ASCI, located in McHenry, was incorporated in Maryland as a nonprofit in 1998.
ASCI manages the Fork Run Recreation Area, a 550-acre forest that hosts rock climbing, bouldering, mountain biking, hiking and geocaching, according to its website.
The first phase of construction for the man-made whitewater course, which consisted of a $3.4 million pump house and related machinery, was completed in 2005, according to a previous Times-News article.
The venture has received $4.1 million from the state, $2.9 million in federal funds, $1.3 million from Garrett County and $2 million from the sales of land donated by DC Development LLC, owner of the Wisp at Deep Creek Mountain Resort.
Attempts by the Times-News to contact Matthew Taylor, executive director of ASCI were unsuccessful.
Also during the meeting:
• Commissioners and Pagenhardt met with John Nelson, director for the Department of Planning and Land Development, to discuss a proposed Land Use Management Ordinance. Raley said Nelson began the review for the proposed plan by asking for the commission’s thoughts on a variety or sections of the ordinance.
• Commissioners ap-proved and executed a license agreement be-tween county commissioners and the University of Maryland and also approved a trail license agreement between the board and the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.
• James Stanto, representing the Youghiogheny River Watershed Association, provided an update on the Stream Waders Monitoring program.

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Real estate pros find hope, hot spots for 2012

(Reuters) – This new year might be the one in which the housing market starts to strengthen, according to the 2012 predictions of several housing industry observers and experts.

Jed Kolko, chief economist at Trulia.com, a real estate search and research website, says he sees rising rents, a humble recovery in housing prices and even some unexpected “hot” spots where he thinks price increases will exceed the average this year.

“Smart cities are hot,” he said in his annual forecast, highlighting Austin, Houston, San Jose, Boston and Rochester, New York, as cities where home prices can be expected to see modest to healthy increases.

Rochester might seem a surprising addition, since the city lost many jobs when the photography colossus Kodak thinned its ranks. Seems things are rebounding; “In Rochester, a center of high-skill manufacturing industries, education levels are well above the national average,” Kolko wrote. “As the recovery proceeds, smart cities are leading the way.”

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Mortgage applications surge on refinancing demand: MBA

(Reuters) – Applications for home mortgages surged more than 20 percent last week, fueled by a wave of refinancing demand as interest rates dropped, an industry group said on Wednesday.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, jumped 23.1 percent in the week ended January 13.

The MBA’s seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications climbed 26.4 percent, while the gauge of loan requests for home purchases rose 10.3 percent.

“With mortgage rates reaching new lows, refinance volume jumped,” Michael Fratantoni, MBA’s vice president of research and economics, said in a statement. “Purchase activity also increased as buyers returned to the market after the holiday season.”

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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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Cardin talks fracking, bay cleanup during tour through Western Md.

Senator backs drilling moratorium, calls for industry transparency

Matthew Bieniek Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — U.S Sen. Ben Cardin covered a lot of ground in a wide-ranging interview with the Times-News on Friday afternoon. He discussed matters ranging from natural gas drilling in Marcellus shale to the challenge posed by Iran.
The following are some of the highlights of the interview. Cardin is a member of the Senate Environment and Public Works, Foreign Relations, Finance, Budget, Small Business and Entrepreneurship, and Security and Cooperation in Europe committees.
Marcellus shale
“I think we can do fracking … we should do it the right way,” Cardin said. That being said, Cardin supports Gov. Martin O’Malley’s moratorium on drilling in Maryland. Fracking is a process by which chemicals are pumped into the ground to free the gas trapped in Marcellus shale.
“I’ve tried to convince the industry they’d be better off with national standards than fight state-by-state,” Cardin said. Each state is using different standards.
“My point is I think we can develop the right practices.” Cardin said the country needs the natural gas trapped in Marcellus shale. ”The process is well-known and the risk factors are well-known,” Cardin said. The senator generally scores high marks from environmental groups for his voting record.
He also called for industry transparency. “We should know what they are using” as fracking fluids, Cardin said. The best way to prevent pollution from the fluids is to require recycling of fracking fluids. Recycling would minimize the risk to clean water, the senator said.
Chesapeake cleanup and farmers
The problems in the Chesapeake Bay are not only the quality of the water, but the ecological system, Cardin said. Unfortunately, farming is the major source of bay pollution, he said, and the largest growing source of pollution is storm water runoff.
“Many, many farmers are doing extraordinary things to protect the bay,” Cardin said.
“Our program should be based on the best science.”
Farm groups have been particularly concerned with the possible effects of bay cleanup efforts. The Maryland Farm Bureau believes farmers are being targeted unfairly by environmentalists.
“We oppose regulations that put farmers who live in the Chesapeake Bay watershed at a competitive disadvantage,” the Maryland Farm Bureau’s 2012 policy statement states. The Farm Bureau believes the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is using a flawed model for setting pollution standards. Cardin said he’s relying on the scientists.
“The model that’s being used is the model they think is right,” Cardin said. The most serious challenge to the bay in the area of farming is the poultry industry, Cardin said. Cardin said he won’t be deterred from doing everything possible to clean up the bay.
“I think we need to do a more effective job. I don’t think we’re doing enough,” he said. Cardin thinks the Farm Bureau will work with legislators interested in a nutrient trading program, which would pay farmers to reduce their use of fertilizers and reducing runoff from their farms. It’s much cheaper to pay farmers at the source of the pollution than get nitrogen out of the water system, he said.
“Nutrient trading is a winner for farmers,” Cardin said.
The Occupy movement
“There’s a void and it was filled by Occupy Wall Street. It was sheer frustration,” Cardin said. He’s not sure whether the Occupy movement will have a long-term effect, because the movement’s political aims aren’t clear and there seems to be no interest in electing people to office.
“It’s not like the Tea Party. In many respects, it’s much broader than the Tea Party,” he said, since it includes libertarians and communitarians, he said. “The Tea Party is focused,” Cardin said, and therefore probably has more impact on policy than the Occupy movement.
The movement is a “comfort level for people to express anger and frustration,” Cardin said.
Iran
President Barack Obama is taking the right approach on Iran, Cardin said. “We need to isolate Iran as much as possible and support … enforcing sanctions,” Cardin said. Iran is widely believed to be trying to build a nuclear weapon and is under a variety of international sanctions for refusing to allow inspections of nuclear sites in the country.
“The question is, what are your options?”
The sanctions are having a major impact and there is at least a possibility the Iranian people will stand up and overthrow their government. Cardin said he had no confidential information, but that it seemed likely the U.S. and other allies had made cyber attacks on Iran. Those actions have slowed their nuclear program, Cardin said.
“We’re taking the steps we should be taking,” the senator said. And keeping the support of the international community is key to effective action against Iran’s government. There are only a few truly dangerous countries in the world, and Iran is one of them, along with North Korea and Pakistan, Cardin said.
“They can’t do it without us, but it’s gotta be international,” he said.
Politics
Changes need to be made to the presidential nominating process, Cardin said.
“The nominating process is so difficult. … It does not attract the people most qualified to be president,” he said. Cardin didn’t discuss details, but said the process is deeply flawed. On the state level, the senator said he thinks a Democrat will likely win the 6th Congressional District seat currently held by Republican Roscoe Bartlett.
“The numbers look like they give the Democrats the edge,” Cardin said. A redistricting map added large numbers of Democrat voters from the metro area late last year. Cardin is up for re-election himself. Eight Democrats and 10 Republicans have filed for the seat. Cardin will be seeking his second term. He spent 20 years in the U.S. House of Representatives and more than 20 years in the Maryland House of Delegates.
His wife, Myrna, said there’s a big difference between being a member of the House and being a U.S. senator. The transition from a small geographic area to the statewide office meant “you don’t get everywhere as often,” Myrna Cardin said. She said she prefers to stay in the background and was looking forward to a rare family weekend once her husband finished his Western Maryland tour.
Contact Matthew Bieniek at mbieniek@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’s fifth-graders are staying in elementary schools

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — The Garrett County Board of Education Tuesday night decided against a proposed plan to move fifth-grade students into middle schools during a special meeting at Southern Middle School.
School officials are now considering an elementary alternative that will be based on next school year’s kindergarten enrollment. That plan won’t be finalized until enrollment figures become available later in the spring.
“I’m relieved to see another plan on the table. It gives me the confidence on what you, the school board, is doing for our school,” said resident Melissa Long, one of nearly 200 people in attendance.
“I’m against fifth-graders going to middle school. I counsel youth and the number one issue I see is insecurity. Sending them to middle school will only amplify this,” said Mike Robinson, pastor and member of Friendsville Advisory Committee.
The reconfiguration would have provided the maximum effective use of staff and space while providing students optimum educational programing, said Sue Waggoner, interim superintendent of schools. As part of the plan, fifth-graders would have been able to participate in foreign language and tech education classes.
The reconfiguration was part of a five-year plan developed by Waggoner. That plan also calls for the closing of Dennett Road, Kitzmiller and Friendsville elementary schools.
Hearings for those school closures begin today at 7 p.m. in the Friendsville school gymnasium.
Should Friendsville close, the 103 students who attend the school will be sent to Accident and Grantsville elementary schools, according to Waggoner. In addition, school position reductions are proposed as part of the plan.
Kitzmiller Elementary’s 50 students would be redistricted to Yough Glades and possibly Broadford elementary schools as part of the plan.
“We are $3 million short. There is no way around the closings,” said Waggoner.
Hearings are also set for Kitzmiller on Thursday at 7 p.m. in the school multipurpose room and for Dennett Road Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Southern High School gym.

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, Allegany County Commissioners Ask Governor To Authorize Gas Drilling


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Jan. 12, 2012

The Garrett County and Allegany County commissioners asked Gov. Martin O’Malley last week to authorize natural gas drilling in their two counties.

“We respectfully request your thoughtful considerations to encourage the Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Initiative Advisory Commission to expedite their review, and encourage you to direct the Maryland Department of the Environment to authorize the process of allowing for the safe extraction of natural gas in our respective counties,” the commissioners wrote to O’Malley in a letter dated Jan. 4. “Your leadership on this important matter will enable Garrett and Allegany counties, along with the state of Maryland to benefit financially both short and long term, and assist our region and nation in a meaningful step toward energy self-sufficiency.”

The commissioners added that they continue to watch with great concern the impact that the nation’s energy dependency has had in shaping domestic and foreign policies.

“As you are no doubt aware, our respective counties are uniquely positioned to provide to our state and country the prospect of contributing a substantial and viable energy source to meet our domestic needs now and into the future,” the commissioners’ letter read.

The MDE and Department of Natural Resources have prepared and released Part I of the Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Initiative Study. The 46-page document is available for public viewing online at garrettcounty.org and mde.state.md.us.

O’Malley signed an executive order on June 6, 2011, establishing the Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Initiative, which placed a moratorium on drilling/fracking in the state until at least August 2014. The order also called for a study to assist policy makers in determining whether and how gas production can be accomplished without unacceptable risks of adverse impacts to public health, safety, the environment, and natural resources.

The order required MDE and DNR – in consultation with an advisory commission made up of a broad array of stakeholders – to undertake the study of drilling for natural gas from the Marcellus shale in western Maryland.

The Advisory Commission members are chairman Dr. David Vanko, a geologist and current dean of the Jess and Mildred Fisher College of Science and Mathematics at Towson University; Sen. George Edwards (Allegany and Garrett counties and parts of Washington County); Del. Heather Mizeur (Montgomery County); GC Commissioner Jim Raley; Allegany County commissioner William Valentine; Oakland mayor Peggy Jamison; Shawn Bender, division manager at the Beitzel Corporation and president of the Garrett County Farm Bureau; Steven Bunker, director of conservation programs, Maryland office of the Nature Conservancy; John Fritts, president of the Savage River Watershed Association and director of development for the Federation of American Scientists; Jeffrey Kupfer, senior advisor, Chevron Government Affairs; Dominick Murray, deputy secretary of the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development; Paul Roberts, a Garrett County resident and co-owner of Deep Creek Cellars Winery; Nick Weber, chair of the Mid-Atlantic Council of Trout Unlimited; and Harry Weiss, esquire, partner at Ballard Spahr LLP.

The Advisory Commission’s next meetings are scheduled for Friday, Jan. 27, in Annapolis and Monday, Feb. 27, in Hagerstown.

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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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Railey Realty #1 in Garrett County, Deep Creek Lake 2011

Once again, Railey Realty is #1 in real estate sales in both Garrett County & at Deep Creek Lake. 2011 brought an increased number of residential transactions in both Garrett County (+7 over 2010) & Deep Creek Lake (+24 over 2010).

Railey Realty increased their already substantial market share in Garrett County residential sales to a whopping 47% of all county home sales – up 2% from 2010.

Our market share at Deep Creek Lake improved dramatically, as well – a dominant 63% of the Deep Creek Lake vacation home market, up from 59% in 2010.

The average sales price are down from 2010 and that is expected to remain in-line with national trends. There were fewer million dollar sales, as well, to bring down that average sales price in Garrett County ($340,484) and Deep Creek Lake ($472,163)

But, the transaction numbers are most exciting to me – more people are buying real estate in Garrett County & at Deep Creek Lake each year and we hope that the trend continues! Over time, economic factors will continue to adjust the average sales prices, but Garrett County & Deep Creek Lake are growing in popularity – and that will benefit ALL local businesses & full-time residents alike.

If you are in the market to buy or sell real estate, work with the #1 real estate sales company since 1995 – Railey Realty.

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!

877-563-5350 – toll free

Fifth-graders move up a year early under proposal

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — In addition to calling for the closing of several elementary schools, the Garrett County Board of Education’s five-year plan outlines the reconfiguration of fifth-grade students into middle schools. The reconfiguration is being considered because of reduced space, staff and “related arts,” according to Sue Waggoner, interim superintendent of schools.
“The reconfiguration will provide the maximum effective use of staff and space while providing students optimum educational programing,” said Waggoner. “The reconfiguration will afford fifth-graders the opportunity to participate in foreign language, tech education classes and allow them to experience more than they have at the elementary school.”
A presentation on the reconfiguration will be held Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Southern Middle School. After the presentation, the board will take public comment followed by possible action on the recommendation.
Rebecca Gordon, a Finzel resident whose child is a fourth-grader at Route 40 Elementary, attended the Jan. 10 board meeting and questioned if the board had done any research on how the reconfiguration would impact the fifth graders academically and behaviorally. Gordon said that she wasn’t provided with an answer.
Fifth- and sixth-graders would be on a separate lunch schedule from the other grade levels, so there would be no interaction with the older students, explained Waggoner. They would also have pods to separate them from the rest of the grade levels.
Gordon noted that studies done by Harvard, Duke and Johns Hopkins universities indicate that students fare better if they are left in a kindergarten-through-eighth-grade setting.
In her research, Gordon did come across a study where the reconfiguration was completely successful, but she noted that at this school the fifth-graders were in a different building than the rest of the middle-schoolers.
“We just don’t have the resources to do that,” said Gordon, noting that it would be impossible to separate the students completely while they are in the same building.
Gordon suggests that elementary schools remain open as kindergarten through eighth grade.
Many parents who attended the January board meeting were concerned about bullying, according to Gordon.
“There is bullying going on now in the middle school. In fifth grade, kids still have SpongeBob lunch boxes and they are going to go to the middle school and get made fun of,” said Gordon.
Other concerns of Gordon’s include the lunch schedule and the fact that fifth-graders are going to be riding the bus with eighth-graders.
“I’m also concerned with the fact that there is no recess, especially with obesity rates climbing,” said Gordon.
The fifth-graders will be eating lunch at 10:50 a.m. with no snack, according to Gordon. In her child’s case, that means an extra hour wait to eat because of the hour-long bus ride from school to home.
“This will mean bigger class sizes, loss of jobs and a lot of disruption to our kids,” states a petition started by Elizabeth Hebden to stop the closing of Dennett Road Elementary.
“I feel it is unreasonable to send fifth-graders to the middle school, they will miss out on experiences of being the fifth-graders,” wrote Michelle Riggleman on the online petition.
Gordon also opposes the Dennett Road Elementary closing.
“I understand that Kitzmiller and Friendsville schools need to close because the numbers are just not there. But the numbers for the Dennett school are there,” said Gordon.
Hebden, an Oakland resident, started a petition on Change.Org to keep the school open and she opposes the reconfiguration. With 511 signatures so far, the petition appeals to the board, county commissioners, Gov. Martin O’Malley, the state Senate and House of Delegates, Delegate Wendell Beitzel and Sen. George Edwards to keep the school from closing.
Gordon is encouraging everyone to attend Tuesday’s meeting.
“I’m asking that every parent, grandparent, aunt and uncle please attend this meeting. It’s affecting our children’s future,” said Gordon, who plans on speaking at the meeting. “I want my children to have a voice.” 
For more information on the petition, visit the website http://www.change.org/petitions/the-governor-of-md-keep-dennett-road-elementary-school-open-and-pk-5.

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 commissioners to draft land-use policy

Shale gas, industrial wind will be addressed

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — The Garrett County commissioners have requested their staff to draft a land-use policy that can be shared with the planning commission, organizations and the general public.

During their weekly meeting Tuesday, commissioners read a statement on land-use management.

“The ongoing interest in the development of shale gas, industrial wind energy and even junkyards brings to light the concerns that exist for property owners,” said the statement. “The absence of any reasonable and prudent land management policy for Garrett County leaves the citizens, visitors, businesses and property owners of Garrett County vulnerable to what many view as an exploitation of our lands.”

John Nelson, director of the Department of Planning and Land Development, informed the commissioners on the process the board will undertake to review and develop a draft ordinance on countywide land use with legislative authority provided to county governmental jurisdictions under the Annotated Code of the State of Maryland, according to Monty Pagenhardt, county administrator.

The policy will take into consideration the ongoing changes to land use in the county and will discuss potential reasonable standards for what are viewed as potential harmful effects of said usages, according to the statement.

“The continuing absence of a comprehensive approach, and the insistence of the state that we have statutory authority to enact regulations to help address basic issues affecting the county, have led the county commission to share the concern of many citizens,” said the statement.

“Citizens, organizations and stakeholders have also expressed apprehension about the lack of a responsible ability to manage areas of concern regarding the potential for changing land uses on a large-scale basis throughout the county. Many feel the failure to act will only allow other institutions and entities to shape and control the future of Garrett County, which may not necessarily balance the interests of all of the stakeholders.”

Commissioners plan to have open dialogue about land use and allow for input from all citizens through open forums and public meetings. Once the draft proposal is complete, the document will be shared on the county website, at public libraries, and citizens who desire a print copy will have one made available.

During a December commission meeting, Commissioner Gregan Crawford voiced his concern about the effects of wind turbines on residents and noted that he would be willing to enter into a motion to develop zoning laws that would regulate the wind projects.

More here.

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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