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Citizens already have shown opposition to this proposal

To the Editor: Cumberland Times-News

Please accept this correspondence in formal opposition to the draft of Zoning Ordinance: Garrett County Land Management Ordinance that has been proposed and shared for public comment.

After last year’s in-depth discussions concerning amending the comprehensive plan and after the overwhelming majority of public commentary, at that time, being opposed to this measure, we are deeply concerned that this issue has resurfaced.

In our opinion, the proposed zoning draft will have a negative impact on Garrett County. County-wide zoning is an issue that has been discussed and defeated many times in the past.

Our residents’ relative freedom in land use is a virtue that should be embraced and expanded upon. Zoning laws dictate how owners may and may not use their property. Zoning seeks to virtually control every aspect of a property’s use.

It is justifiable that zoning be criticized. Restrictions of zoning impose infringement upon and violate property owners’ rights to develop, use and maintain their land in the way they see fit. It easily strips property owner’s rights to unencumbered use of their land.

Zoning in this form is counterproductive to economic benefit and hinders development in our free economy.

This zoning draft is not limited to construction and development. It controls the smallest details and nuances of an owner’s use of his or her property. Where zoning is imposed, a property owner’s neighbors can have a greater say over a property than the owner! Zoning has a direct impact on everyone.

In limiting development opportunities, property owners are denied the right to lease their land for economic benefit. Thus, if zoning restrictions are enacted, property owners should rightfully be provided the compensation lost.

Maryland encompasses strict environmental controls and promotes green energy. The draft zoning ordinance seeks to undermine our state’s policies. Garrett County must be realistic about the volume of fiscal challenges ahead.

Our county has already realized economic benefit from the wind farm projects. With that said, it would not be fiscally or environmentally responsible for Garrett County to limit or stifle future development prospects.

We appreciate the opportunity to submit written comments. The majority of your constituents are not receptive to any further governmental intrusion.

Robert Spangler

Frostburg Road

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Dockdogs regional championships at deep creek lake

On June 29 thru July 1, local residents can watch the 300 or more expected competitors in a variety of “off the dock” stunts, big air jumps and other aerial jumps at the first of four Highflying Dockdogs competitions.

Dockdogs Worldwide, Inc. can be found on their website at http://www.dockdogs.com.

The event is open to the public free of charge.

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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ASCI, Deep Creek Lake, Announces Lower Rates For Local Residents

Whitewater rafting on Garrett County’s – and the world’s – only mountaintop river park is open to local residents every Monday for only $25 per person, according to Suzanne Nicolas, event coordinator at the Adventure Sports Center International.

To take advantage of the special offer, residents need proof of residence with an ID or tax bill, Nicolas said.

By adjusting water flow from the pump house – and with the flip of a switch – ASCI course operators can move adjustable plates underneath the artificial river and generate waves up to four-feet tall. “But the course is also as much for beginners as advanced paddlers,” said Michael Logsdon, ASCI’s acting executive director. “So we have features to modify the channel and affect the water horizontally and vertically.”

ASCI’s 1700-ft long whitewater course and its 550-acre Fork Run Recreational Area, for climbing, hiking and biking, is now in its sixth season atop Marsh Mountain in McHenry.

So far this year, ASCI has welcomed a record crowd for its Memorial Day weekend All-American Whitewater Festival and “overwhelming support” from local restaurants and businesses for last weekend’s gathering of Wounded Warriors in conjunction with Team River Runner Rendezvous, Logsdon said.

ASCI will be the site Saturday, June 16, for the Mud Dog Run, a high intensity 5k obstacle run for competitors in two categories: a competitive pack departing at 10 a.m. and general packs leaving every 30 minutes after. For ticket and race information, visit http://www.clickitevents.com/mud-dog-run.html/. After the event, the whitewater course will be available for rafting, kayaking, duckies and riverboards. ASCI will also be the start and finish for the Gran Fondo bike ride on June 23.

The Adventures Sports Center International is a not-for-profit, 501 © charitable organization formed to promote adventure tourism and healthy outdoor lifestyles. The center has taken more than 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, please call 301-387-3250, email asci@adventuresportscenter.com or visit www.adventuresportscenter.com

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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White-water rafting is still a rush on man-made river

Published: Saturday, June 16, 2012, 7:07 AM Updated: Saturday, June 16, 2012, 8:46 AM
Susan Glaser, The Plain Dealer By Susan Glaser, The Plain Dealer

“Bump!” my husband screamed as our raft slammed into a rock. Never mind that the rock wasn’t real. The river wasn’t real, either.

This was, however, real white-water rafting. Very real.

“Paddle left,” guide Casey Beall yelled from the back of our raft. “Hard left.”

The four of us paddled left — though not hard enough, apparently. Our raft slammed into the concrete rock in the middle of the man-made river, then bounced off.

Undeterred, we continued our way around the one-third-mile loop, a circular channel filled with well-placed obstacles and swirling, frothy water. Then we paddled over to the conveyor belt, rode it up to the top of the hill, slid back into the water — and did it all over again….

About four hours from Cleveland, in the mountains of western Maryland, is a white-water rafting course that draws Olympic athletes in training — as well as families like mine, with young and inexperienced rafters who feel safer trying the sport in a more controlled environment.

The course, owned by the nonprofit Adventure Sports Center International, is one of just a handful in the United States, but the number is growing, says Mike Logsdon, acting executive director of the facility. It opened in 2007.

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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"Beltway UFO" has DC Talking

Reports: It’s a drone headed to NAS Patuxent
By Thomas Tobin and Carissa DiMargo
| Thursday, Jun 14, 2012 | Updated 9:27 AM EDT

…On Wednesday night, Facebook and Twitter users went wild over sightings of a saucer-shaped vessel being towed on local highways. The buzz called to mind the frenzy in 1947 Roswell, albeit in a much more modern way….

But we can take the “unidentified” out of “unidentified flying object.” (And yes, we realize that it wasn’t actually flying, either.) The military has confirmed to News4 that the 82-foot-long craft is an unmanned military aircraft, known as an X-47B drone.

Maryland State Police towed it on a flatbed trailer from Garrett County, Md., to Naval Air Station Patuxent River — but even they didn’t know what it was at the time, police said….


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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3rd annual Garrett County Gran Fondo

http://www.GarrettCountyNews.com

The 3rd annual Garrett County Gran Fondo in scenic and mountainous western Maryland will be held on June 23, 2012. Garrett County and the Deep Creek Lake area boast some of the finest and most challenging cycling in North America, and in just two years of sold-out rides the Garrett County Gran Fondo has established itself as a premier North American coast Gran Fondo.

Registration for the 2012 event is open. The Garrett County Gran Fondo is limited to 1200 participants total across all five of the rides. As of May 31, only 100 registrations remain, so do not delay in registering as a 3rd consecutive sell-out is imminent.

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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Janet S. Wilson Selected as Garrett Public School Superintendent

GarrettCountyNews.com

Janet S. Wilson Selected as Garrett Public School Superintendent

Janet S.Wilson, Ph.D. was offered the position as public school superintendent. She accepted the position during a phone conversation earlier today.

Wilson, a 2011 graduate of Notre Dame of Maryland University, currently serves as the chief academic officer of Allegany County Public Schools and was formerly the assistant superintendent. She is a ‘master’ in the public education arena beginning her career in 1984.

Interim superintendent, Sue Waggoner graciously accepted the temporary post last school year upon the unexpected retirement of Dr. Wendell Teets.

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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Garrett to discuss transportation projects

Commissioners, roads department and Maryland Coal Association will meet to talk damage done by heavy truck traffic

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — A meeting to discuss the status of Westernport and Lower New Germany roads will be held between the Maryland Coal Association, Garrett County commissioners and administration from the county roads department toward the end of the month, according to General Roads Superintendent Jay Moyer.

At a commission meeting in February, Moyer said it would be costly to fix the two roads and that the coal companies that regularly use the roads weren’t willing to foot the bill for repairs.

A majority of road damage in the county is caused by heavy truck traffic, said Moyer, especially in areas where there are coal or wind turbines.

All major road projects are on hold until the issue with Westernport and Lower New Germany roads gets resolved, said Moyer.

Moyer said if the issue was to be resolved, it would take up a major portion of the budget. He estimated road paving costs to be between $1.5 million and $2 million.

For fiscal 2013, which begins July 1, the county approved $2.3 million for overlay and $500,000 for asphalt, according to the budget.

Commissioners discussed the possibility of placing a weight restriction on the road during their February meeting.

“If we put weight-limit restrictions on the road, the trucks are going to travel another road,” said Moyer. He said restrictions could put the coal companies, as well as those hauling timber, out of business.

The commissioners have limited authority without zoning in place, said Garrett County Commission Chairman James Raley during the February meeting.

Currently, a draft land management ordinance is being considered by commissioners. The draft ordinance is available for public viewing and comment on the county’s website.

Current road projects taking place in this budget year include standard paving of Lakeshore Drive at Deep Creek Lake and Swanton Hill Road between Swanton Road and state Route 135, said Moyer.

Moyer also said foremen from the Oakland, Accident and Grantsville roads department sites are responsible for compiling and prioritizing road needs, putting those in dire need of repair at the top of the list and those that can wait a few years at the bottom of the list.

“With the loss of highway user funds three years ago to the tune of $5 million, we have a limited number of roads we can pave every year,” said Moyer.

The county has a five-year paving plan that is listed each spring and revisited each winter. The plan is fluid and things can be moved around as needed, according to Moyer.

Contact Elaine Blaisdell at eblaisdell@times-news.com

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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Department of Natural Resources increases use of radar, cameras to take on poaching

SALISBURY — To better monitor the Chesapeake Bay and reduce poaching, the Maryland Department of Natural Resources is moving toward enhanced and increased surveillance.

Later this year, the Maritime Law Enforcement Information Network is scheduled to go online. The network, which will consist of camera and radar units, is part of an initiative to upgrade the Maryland Natural Resources Police’s fleets.

“This will give us 24/7 surveillance of areas in the Chesapeake and it provides us with information about what’s going on out in maritime waters,” said Lt. Art Windemuth, NRP spokesman. “It allows us to better protect our maritime structure that is so vital to the state’s economic success.”

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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Cardin, others dedicate National Road Monument

Edwards, Grim and Bartlett speak

Matthew Bieniek Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — The National Road tells the story of families who risked everything — braving the cold and carrying what they owned on their backs or in wagons — in search of a better life. And the story of the road holds a message for the future too, speakers said, on a hot Sunday afternoon at the National Road Monument Dedication Ceremony at Riverside Park.

For some of the speakers, that meant the history of their own families.

“I grew up beside the National Highway. My family’s business was because of the National Highway,” said Sen. George Edwards. The story of the four “Beitzel boys,” who emigrated from Germany, was a similar story of a move to the then-pioneer land of Western Maryland.

One of Delegate Wendell Beitzel’s ancestors came over without fare for the long trip across the seas. To pay his fare, he became an indentured servant.

Eventually, he and his youngest brother, Beitzel’s great grandfather, made their way across the westward path and later the National Road to settle in Garrett County.

The National Road is “a symbol of … what our nation could become,” said Cumberland Mayor Brian Grim, by paying attention to rural communities and linking them together.

Speakers urged the crowd of about 175 to think about the future as well as the past.

“We need more connector roads,” Edwards said, referring to the North-South highway.

U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin agreed.

Completion of the North-South Highway would be “the greatest tribute to the National Road,” Cardin said.

The proposed road would run from Interstate 68 near Cumberland to Corridor H in Grant County, W.Va., and north into Pennsylvania, providing links to more rural areas of all three states.

“The National Road was the first federally financed road and it helped to shape our nation’s economic growth and development. By connecting East to West, it helped our young nation unite a diverse country and facilitate the flow of commerce and federal authority to more western areas of our country,” said Cardin. “As we celebrate this bicentennial, it should remind us of the importance of public investment in our nation’s infrastructure and how it can be a catalyst for economic growth and future prosperity.”

“We face some huge problems in Congress,” U.S. Rep. Roscoe Bartlett said. But the story of building the road means “we can do this.”

“It was the fiber optic network of its day,” said Julianna Albowicz, who represented U.S. Sen. Barbara Mikulski at the ceremony.

The monument was largely the work of Cumberland City Planner David Umling. Umling designed the monument, Grim said. The memorial plaza surrounding the monument contains more than 200 engraved bricks purchased by area donors, according to city officials.

A replica of a 1811 U.S flag, with 15 stars, was raised after Grim and other officials cut the ribbon leading into the monument area.

Flags representing each state that the National Road passes through will soon be raised, encircling the American flag.

A time capsule including information about the ceremony will be placed in the ground to be opened in 2211.

Members of the Vietnam Veterans of America, Chapter 172, provided the color guard for the dedication ceremony.

The National Anthem was sung by Stevee Royce, Miss Francis Scott Key outstanding teen, and a student at Southern Garrett High School. Al Feldstein was the master of ceremonies. Wesley Mason, a Fort Hill graduate, performed a violin prelude. The ceremony concluded with a release of doves by Mike Reinhardt.

A unique moment was added when local musician Joe Spangler sang and played on his guitar the world premiere of a song written about the legacy of the road by composer Eric Kitchen.

The chorus is as follows:

“Though the path may change, there is but one. And a man must choose which way to go. Great hopes and dreams were lost and won, along the road to the Ohio.”

Contact Matthew Bieniek at mbieniek@times-news.com.

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!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
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