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Adventure Sports Center Scheduled To Open Saturday

May. 10, 2012

The Adventure Sports Center International (ASCI) will open for the 2012 season on Saturday, May 12, with whitewater rafting offered to the “community of Garrett County” for $25 per person, the Garrett County commissioners announced on Monday. Private boaters who are residents of Garrett County can use the course for $10 on Saturday.

ASCI is beginning its sixth season and has averaged more than 1l,000 rafters per year, according to county officials.

The center will host the All American Whitewater Festival Memorial Day weekend, honoring veterans and benefiting Team River Runners, a Wounded Warrior program that teaches injured veterans how to “heal through whitewater boating.”


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“ASCI has built successful recreation and educational programs based at its state-of-the-art whitewater park and throughout the 550 acre Fork Run Recreational Area, a protected woodland habitat with miles of trails and some of Maryland’s most accessible bouldering and sport climbing,” the commissioners noted in a press release. “The Adventuresports Institute of Garrett College provides quality instruction and guidance for the various programs at ASCI, making it an ideal place to learn or improve skills in kayaking, climbing and rappelling, mountain biking, and orienteering with GPS units through geocaching.”

ASCI is a not-for-profit, 501(c)(3), charitable organization formed to promote adventure tourism and healthy outdoor lifestyles. ASCI operates the world’s only mountaintop river park and has taken over 55,000 people rafting since it opened in 2007. Programs are designed for groups and individuals of all skill levels and backgrounds.

For more information about ASCI programs and reservations, persons may call 301-387-3250, e-mail asci@adventuresportscenter.com or visit adventuresportscenter.com.

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Project Healing Waters Holds Tournament

May. 10, 2012

Placing third overall and second in the pro/vet category of the Project Healing Waters (PHW) 2-Fly Fishing Tournament at the Rose River in Syria, Va., recently was the team of Harold Harsh of Spring Creek Outfitters and U.S. Marine SSGT Travis Greene, who was severely wounded while serving in Afghanistan. The event raised over $230,000 for the PHW. It was a great weekend and PHW raised over $230,000.


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Project Healing Waters Fly Fishing Inc. is dedicated to the physical and emotional rehabilitation of disabled active military service personnel and veterans through fly fishing and fly tying education and outings. The project’s program provides basic fly fishing, fly casting, fly tying, and rod building classes, along with clinics for wounded and injured personnel, ranging from beginners to those with prior fly fishing and tying experience who are adapting their skills to their new abilities. For more information on PHW and/or to make a donation, persons are invited to go online to http://www.projecthealingwaters.org.

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Deadline Dates For "Grandfathering" Private Septic Systems Approaching

May. 10, 2012

The Board of Garrett County Commissioners has announced important deadline dates and explained some provisions of a new Maryland law, effective July 1, that will affect land development with on-site sewage disposal or septic systems throughout the state, including Garrett County.

“We want to make sure the public is aware of this Maryland legislation,” said board chairman James Raley during the commissioners’ public meeting last Tuesday with Health Officer Rodney Glotfelty and Dof the Garrett County Department of Planning and Land Development John Nelson.

The new statewide law, called the Sustainable Growth and Agricultural Preservation Act of 2012, was recently passed by the Maryland General Assembly and was based on recommendations from the governor’s Task Force on Sustainable Growth and Wastewater Disposal, which had been charged with finding ways to address the impact of development with septic systems. State officials maintain that septic systems leach harmful nitrogen loads into the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.


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To comply with the new law and take advantage of its “grandfathering” provisions, the commissioners recommend that county property owners take note of several important deadline dates specified in the law if they plan to develop major subdivisions with seven lots or more.

Those deadline dates are as follows:

• July 1, 2012, for persons to apply for percolation tests on properties planned for subdivisions. After that day, major subdivisions of greater than seven lots may not be approved for utilizing on-site sewage disposal systems,

• Oct. 1, 2012, to submit preliminary plans for subdivisions with greater than seven lots utilizing on-site sewage disposal systems to Garrett County Department of Planning and Land Development.

• Oct. 1, 2016, to have subdivision preliminary plan approval from Garrett County Planning Commission for major subdivisions utilizing on-site sewage disposal systems.

The new law amends both Maryland Health and Land Planning statutes.

“If property owners make application by July 1, 2012, we stand ready to do the necessary soil and percolation tests to meet the required plat approval deadlines,” Glotfelty said. “The important thing is to have the application to our office (Garrett County Health Department) for these large subdivisions prior to the July 1, 2012, deadline.”

For more information or to schedule percolation tests, persons can call the Health Department’s Environmental Health Division at 301-334-7760.

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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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Twitter Feed Created To Inform Residents Of Tree Spraying Dates

May. 3, 2012

The Maryland Department of Agriculture (MDA) has launched a Twitter feed to help keep the public apprised of its gypsy moth spraying activities. Garrett County is the only county in the state that MDA will spray for gypsy moths this spring.

The Twitter feed can be followed at @MDGypsyMoth while the main MDA Twitter feed can be followed @MdAgDept. The MDA web site www.mda.maryland.gov/go/gypsymoth has also been updated with more comprehensive information about spray activities.

“The gypsy moth is the most destructive pest of forest and shade trees in Maryland. We take great care every year to monitor and survey gypsy moth activities and develop appropriate plans with the resources available,” said Agriculture Secretary Buddy Hance. “When we do spray for gypsy moths, we often get calls from concerned citizens who don’t recognize the helicopters and/or what they’re doing. We are using new social media tools this season to help alleviate concerns before they arise. Follow us on Twitter and see where the aircraft will be.”


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Approximately 2,530 acres of forest land in Garrett County will be sprayed for gypsy moths beginning May 15, weather permitting. A map of where in Garrett County spraying will occur can be found at www.mda.state.md.us/plants-pests/forest_pest_mgmt/gypsy_moth/2012/gaco.html.

Large gypsy moth outbreaks have affected hundreds of thousands of acres statewide over the years. MDA conducts an Integrated Pest Management program to minimize unnecessary losses, through monitoring, assessment, information and education, and pest control actions. In high infestation areas where dieback or mortality cannot be tolerated, MDA will conduct aerial insecticide treatments to protect and preserve the forest and shade trees.

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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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State shale commission returning to Garrett for its next meeting

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

— FROSTBURG — The next meeting of Gov. Martin O’Malley’s Marcellus Shale Advisory Commission is returning to Garrett County after a hiatus when several meetings occurred in Annapolis and Hagerstown.

Allegany and Garrett counties are the only areas in the state with natural gas reserves in Marcellus Shale.

The meeting is planned for May 18 at the Eastern Garrett Volunteer Fire Department hall at 401 Finzel Road. The meeting will start at 10 a.m. and conclude around 1 p.m., said Brigid Kenney, a senior policy adviser at the Maryland Department of the Environment. An agenda is not yet available for the meeting.

Allegany County Commissioner Bill Valentine has repeatedly pointed out that “promises” were made early on to keep the meetings in Allegany and Garrett counties. Last week, Valentine said he and other Western Maryland members of the commission had expressed their concerns about several recent meetings outside the area, which made it difficult for local citizens to attend.

Valentine is generally favorable to the idea of drilling for natural gas in Marcellus Shale. His concerns were joined though, by those who are more cautious, including James R. “Smokey” Stanton of Oakland, who expressed his concerns in an April 17 letter to the editor, addressing commission chairman David Vanko.

“I write to you today to protest and challenge your decision to hold meetings of the Maryland Marcellus Advisory Commission in locations far from Garrett County, and specifically the meeting scheduled for this Friday, April 20 in Hagerstown. I note the last meeting held in February was also at Hagerstown, and there was no meeting in March,” Stanton wrote.

“Scheduling meetings so far away from those of us who are most affected is a disservice to residents of Garrett and Allegany counties. Whether we local people are pro-drilling, opposed to drilling, or simply want drilling to be done safely, we have the right to have commission meetings held in our community to observe and participate in the commission’s deliberations… .”

Two different polls have resulted in conflicting results on public opinion on natural gas drilling in Maryland.

One recent poll shows a strong majority of Marylanders favor a cautious approach on the use of fracking to drill for natural gas in the Marcellus shale in the western portion of the state. That poll contrasts with previous industry-funded polls on natural gas drilling, and there’s a reason for that, said Mike Tidwell, director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network.

“The message Maryland voters are sending is that second chances are rare and expensive,” Tidwell said. Pennsylvania is now trying to do studies after permitting drilling.

One of the reasons his organization commissioned the poll by OpinionWorks was to combat the impression given by the industry polls. “We felt there was a gap,” he said.

The industry polls avoided questions about fracking or the chemicals used in fracking, he said. They showed a more favorable view of natural gas drilling. The Maryland Petroleum Council has paid for two polls in six months and funded a just-released study that proclaims the economic benefits of gas drilling.

“The utilization of Marcellus shale formation in Western Maryland in order to produce natural gas would have transformative economic and fiscal impacts,” the study by Sage Policy Group said.

Among those impacts would be jobs created by each well.

“Applied to the estimated amount of total extractible natural gas available within the play, the study team projects … approximately 365 wells would be operating over the period 2016-2045,” according to the study.

The January poll asked questions including language such as, “Should we wait for at least three years or begin safe development sooner?” The January poll found strong support for drilling now rather than in three years when the governor’s Marcellus Shale Advisory Committee issues a final report including environmental impacts of drilling.

The poll found 69 percent of the more than 800 respondents wanted to drill sooner, while 28 percent said to wait.

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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 County's Broadband Study Available Online

May. 3, 2012

The Garrett County Department of Economic Development released the “Broadband in Garrett County and Adoption” study on Tuesday and is now available online at garrettcounty.org.

The six-month long study is part of the county’s Economic Development Strategic Plan, which includes a goal to increase non-satellite broadband Internet availability to at least 90 percent of county residences by 2014.

“This study is an important tool for the county,” said Frank Shap, GC Department of Economic Development assistant director. “It gives us a roadmap for expanding broadband infrastructure, which we have long recognized as essential for economic development.”


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Led by Joanne Hovis, the study was conducted by CTC Communications Engineering & Analysis. She briefly reviewed the study for the commissioners during their public session on Tuesday morning.

“Broadband in Garrett County and Adoption” was based on a countywide survey of more than 1,600 residents, businesses, and farms, and cost $100,000, including $50,000 in Appalachian Regional Commission grant funding.

The study also determines the most productive methods for the county to leverage its portion of the $115 million federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act broadband grant that Maryland was awarded in September 2010. For Garrett County, the grant will fund approximately 50 miles of fiber backbone to connect major institutions such as schools, Garrett College, and government agencies.

Hovis suggested the county also invest $1.2 million to help 2,900 unserved residences connect to the “last mile” of the backbone through a wireless broadband system.

Hovis noted key findings of the study show that both broadband availability (supply) and use (demand) are high in Garrett County, compared with much of rural America, with broadband service available to about 65 percent of the county. However, broadband supply and demand still lag behind the nation’s metropolitan areas, Hovis noted.

The broadband study also found that:

• Garrett County faces many of the same broadband challenges as do other rural parts of the country, including large unserved remote areas, relatively little competition in population centers, and high pricing that prevents consumers from fully benefiting from the networks where they do exist.

“These challenges are of enormous importance in light of the county’s clear understanding of broadband availability to community and economic development,” the commissioners noted in press release.

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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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Grant to expand Garrett broadband

County to match $250,000 ARC funding for Internet connectivity

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

— OAKLAND — U.S. Sens. Ben Cardin and Barbara A. Mikulski announced that the Garrett County Board of Commissioners has received a $250,000 grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission to expand broadband Internet connectivity in the county.

The commissioners will use the funding to deploy 50 miles of fiber to help connect county facilities, schools, community colleges, health facilities and libraries, according to the news release.

The ARC grant will help provide the electronics necessary to light the fiber and make it operational. Approximately 2.5 miles of new fiber and electronics will also be deployed to provide connectivity for an additional 14 sites, including schools and town halls.

The ARC grant will work in conjunction with the Broadband Technology and Opportunities Program grant awarded to the state of Maryland, according to the news release.

The One Maryland Broadband Network will construct a fiber network across the state to connect 1,000 community anchor institutions. Garrett County’s 50-mile fiber is part of the statewide network.

In addition to ARC funding, Garrett County will provide $250,000, bringing total project funding to $500,000, according to the news release. This grant helps encourage and leverage investments in telecommunications related economic development, which is one of ARC’s priorities for the region. The ARC is a federal-state partnership that works with the people of Appalachia to create opportunities for self-sustaining economic development and improved quality of life.

A six-month study of broadband in the county was recently completed by CTC Technology and Energy.

Joanne Hovis, president of CTC, presented the study to the commissioners on Tuesday and recommended that the county consider investing in the last mile of the wireless broadband network to enable service to approximately 2,900 unserved residences.

The cost of the investment would be $1.2 million, with 30 percent of subscribers utilizing the service, according to Hovis.

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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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We Can Fly! We Can Fly!

In preparation for next week’s performances of Peter Pan, the Southern High School theatre students literally took to the air this week. Working under the guidance of D2 Flying Effects’ trainer and general manager Sam Fisher, the theatre students learned to tighten harnesses, lift and travel actors, and hook in and out of the flying gear. Shown above as she defies gravity is Corinne Weaver. She will play the title role of Peter Pan on Saturday, May 12, while Josh Nesselrodt, shown below(if not visible, click on photo above) assuming a classic superhero flight position, will play Peter on Thursday, May 10, and Friday, May 11. On stage with Nesselrodt are Trysta Weeks at left (Michael) and Lucas Muenchow (John).


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“Flying in James Barrie’s classic play is surely a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for our Garrett County theatre students,” said director and teacher Erin White, “and the excitement will soon be shared with many area elementary school students, whose teachers and principals have arranged for them to see the show during the school day next week.” Southern High School will present Peter Pan for the general public on May 10, 11, and 12 at 8 p.m. on the school stage. General admission for both children and adults is $5.

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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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‘Doomsday’ would eliminate crucial public safety grants, officials say

…“I just don’t think it’s that big a deal for us,” said Garrett County Administrator Monty Pagenhardt. Overall, Garrett was anticipating a $2.7 million decrease in funding, one that had already prompted the closing of two undercapacity elementary schools, one with about 300 students, one with about 50, Pagenhardt said.

“The board of education did the prudent thing [by closing the schools],” Pagenhardt said. A special session to raise revenues and restore some funding might be nice, but officials weren’t depending on it, he said.

A reduction in public safety funding was about equal to two full-time patrol positions, and the county had asked workers in its roads department to decline a scheduled raise agreed-to in collective bargaining to help compensate for the cuts, Pagenhardt said.

“We’re used to having money taken away by the state,” he said.

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Garrett County Proposes Wind Turbine Setback

OAKLAND, Md. (AP) — The Garrett County Commissioners are proposing rules to put distance between wind turbines and homes.

The formula proposed Tuesday would require turbines to be no closer to an occupied dwelling than five times the device’s height. For a 400-foot turbine, the setback would be 2,000 feet.

The formula is part of a proposed countywide land-use ordinance that is available for public comment through June 15.

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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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