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$1.9 million in a grant and a loan to Oakland in Garrett County for water-distribution system improvements

ANNAPOLIS — The Maryland Board of Public Works on Wednesday approved a $19.2 million grant to Washington County to assist with an ongoing upgrade to the Conococheague Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Through the Bay Restoration Fund, the grant will provide funding toward planning, design and construction costs to complete an enhanced-nutrient removal, or ENR, upgrade at the plant near Williamsport, according to a state news release.

The county’s share was one of three grants and loans announced Wednesday, totaling $21 million, to help reduce pollution, improve water quality and provide safe drinking water.

Other payments included $1.9 million in a grant and a loan to Oakland in Garrett County for water-distribution system improvements, as well as $575,000 in two grants for a wastewater-facilities upgrade in Somerset County.”These are smart investments to protect public health and prevent water pollution in Maryland communities and the Chesapeake Bay,” state Secretary of the Environment Ben Grumbles said in the release.

“Upgrading sewage treatment systems in Somerset and Washington counties and improving the water system in the Town of Oakland will help us to green and grow the state’s economy and lead in the race to protect and restore Chesapeake Bay watersheds,” he said.

The public works panel is composed of Gov. Larry Hogan, Treasurer Nancy K. Kopp and Comptroller Peter Franchot.

After the county upgrade, nitrogen and phosphorus discharge from the plant off Elliott Parkway will be cut by 62.5 percent and 85 percent, respectively, significantly reducing the amount of nutrients discharged to the Upper Potomac River and ultimately the Chesapeake Bay.

Environmental officials say excessive amounts of nutrients, like nitrogen and phosphorus, lead to lowered levels of oxygen needed to support aquatic life in waterways.

The project also increases the plant’s capacity from 4.1 million gallons per day to 4.5 million gallons per day, the release said.

The Washington County Board of Commissioners earlier this year awarded a $23.7 million contract for the project to HRI Bridge Co., of State College, Pa., the same company that completed the state-mandated ENR upgrade at the Winebrenner Wastewater Treatment Plant in Cascade.

 

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Police Providing Presents Project Announced

Volunteers from Garrett County Law Enforcement agencies along with the Garrett County Department of Social Services and members of AmeriCorps have partnered to organize the inaugural “Police Providing Presents” event to benefit local, underprivileged children.

This nationwide event may be called different names, but the event’s meaning stays the same.  The event provides selected Garrett County children the opportunity to be paired with members from the Maryland State Police, Garrett County Sheriff’s Office, Oakland City Police, Maryland Natural Resource Police and the Maryland State Fire Marshal’s Office who will spend time together as partners for the day.

The event provides the opportunity for children to go shopping with a police officer in order to purchase presents for their family and themselves, attend a luncheon, and have the presents wrapped by volunteers.  The inaugural “Police Providing Presents” event is scheduled for Saturday, December 17th, with a make-up date on Sunday, December 18th.

We are graciously asking for donations in support of this program to provide each child the opportunity to make their holidays a little brighter.  Any donation would be greatly appreciated. Donations can be made in person or by mailing a check or money order to  Garrett County Department of Social Services, attention Alicia Streets, 12578 Garrett Highway, Oakland, Maryland  21550 and specify “Police  Providing Presents”.  Although, the preferred method is checks or money order, cash donations are acceptable and can be dropped off in person at GCDSS.   The deadline for donations is December 5, 2016.

If you have additional questions, please contact F/Sergeant Brad Williams at 301-387-1101.  Thank you for your interest and helping to make this program a success.

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Family’s dreams come true with opening of High Country Creamery, Market

Imagine a young couple, more than 60 years ago, traveling the roads of Grantsville talking about their future and the difference they could make in their communities.

Ruth and Olen Beitzel raised a family, welcomed grandchildren into the world and embarked on careers and business, yet they never lost that dream and desire to make a change.

“When we were just 16, I was riding with him in a milk truck to the creamery and while he was unloading the milk, Olen said to me, ‘Someone ought to make cheese in this area with all of the farmers we have.’ I must have heard him say that to me over a 100 of times since that day,” Ruth said. “Then a few years ago, just around the time he was turning 70 he mentioned it again and I asked, ‘Do you think the time is now?'”

To her surprise, he said yes and the couple, along with their family began to make plans to make that dream a reality — a reality that set to open on Saturday — High Country Creamery and Market in Grantsville.

Olen said he never forgot that dream. “I guess you could say I got busy doing other things. But after I retired from Beitzel Corp., I felt like I still had things to do.”

Encouraged by the show of support, the Beitzels began to put their plan into action and shared their plans with their daughter, Linda Kling. Olen and Ruth knew they needed to find a cheese-maker and they already had a candidate in mind — grandson, Brandon Kling.

“Brandon has always liked to create things and we asked if he would be interested,” Olen said.

“I had not thought of cheesemaking, but as we talked about what he had in mind, it got my gears turning. I had always liked to cook and I like to be creative,” Brandon said. “Cheese-making is both scientific and artistic.”

Seeing the unlimited potential in this plan, Brandon agreed and made contact with the cheese-makers at Firefly Farms in Accident. He worked closely with Mike Cooke at Firefly as an apprentice for two years to educate himself about the process. Once he completed the apprenticeship, the family opened up a pilot plant in neighboring West Virginia to get a jump-start on their business, while plans and work was completed on the Grantsville facility.

The West Virginia plant allowed Brandon to perfect his methods and soon the plant began soliciting businesses and restaurants to offer their cow’s milk cheese products.

“We do not put anything into our cheese that is not natural. Cheese is simple — milk, salt, cultures and natural flavorings, no preservatives,” Brandon said.

Their efforts were quickly rewarded and now High Country cheeses are offered at more than a dozen stores and restaurants. High Country products have also been offered at local Farmers Markets.

The new store, located at 97 Locker Lane, will feature a viewing area, where people can see first-hand how cheese is made. The store will be stocked with cheese accompaniments, local produce, including fresh meat and baked goods and a variety of gift items. An area will be se -up for tastings and a wide array of foods will be offered at the in-house eatery.

Ruth said the desire from the first day of planning has been to offer quality products made with quality ingredients, with a dedication to scratch-made foods.

“It’s all farm to table. That is how we ate growing up. It wasn’t called farm to table, but it was all natural, grown or raised locally and that is what we will have here,” she said.

“We like to say nothing will be served here that is frozen except ice cream,” Brandon said. “We also want to have a museum-like area, where kids can visit and see first hand where the food they try is made, with a understanding of its origin.”

Linda said the family plans to expand their product line to include preserves, canned items and pickles, all made with old family recipes.

High Country Creamery and Market will be open until 7 p.m. Saturday. Cheese-making days will be Monday and Wednesday. The business will be open Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. and from 7a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays.

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Obituary: Jim Delligatti / Pittsburgh-area McDonald’s franchisee who created Big Mac

Rest in Peace Jim Delligatti, a true Deep Creek Lake all-star. His family owns the Honi-Honi Bar, Uno’s, Arrowhead Market and the Garrett 8 movie theatre.

Before it became the single-greatest-selling sandwich in the history of the world; before it became an actual economic index scrutinized by professors and policy-makers; before it became a symbol of the American appetite; even before it became the subject of an unforgettable tongue-twisting advertising jingle, the Big Mac was the product of the ingenuity of a Western Pennsylvanian.

Michael James “Jim” Delligatti, 98, of Fox Chapel died Monday. He really was the local man who made it big — a big sandwich, a big American statement, and a big caloric load (550 calories — including the special sauce — roughly a quarter of the recommended daily allowance, in fact).

Mr. Delligatti also later came up with the concept of breakfast at McDonald’s.

“Jim was a legendary franchisee within McDonald’s system who made a lasting impression on our brand,” McDonald’s said in a statement. “We will remember Jim as an insightful franchisee, a knowledgeable businessman, and an honorable gentleman who left a legacy of four generations of family members running great restaurants in Pennsylvania and North Carolina.”

A native of Uniontown, he was an Army sergeant in the European Theater during World War II. When he returned home, he hitchhiked across the country, from Pittsburgh to California, where he worked at drive-ins and carhops. He eventually brought that experience back to Pittsburgh and, with business partner John Sweeney, in 1953 opened Delney’s — a drive-in on McKnight Road.

In 1955, he traveled to Chicago for a restaurant convention. Fatefully, it was the only year that Ray Kroc and McDonald’s had a booth at the show.

“He thought he could do better with some costs, so he signed up with them to open a franchise in Western Pennsylvania,” his son, Michael Delligatti, said. That first location also opened on McKnight Road, in 1957. In the same kitchen, at age 49, Mr. Delligatti created the signature sandwich that’s left an indelible grease stain on American pop culture and sated billions of hungry bellies the world over.

“He’d opened some restaurants at that point, and he was looking to improve and gain more sales,” his son said. “He wanted to create a larger sandwich that people would really like. He asked McDonald’s and they turned him down several times. Finally, they said OK.

“He was fooling around and came up with the Big Mac. But the buns he had wouldn’t work because the meat would slide around. So he went to a local bakery and got a double cut bun with sesame seeds, which was more visually appealing.”

He spent a few weeks developing the special sauce. “We’re all sworn to secrecy on that,” Michael Delligatti said with a chuckle.

Mr. Delligatti sold the first Big Macs (originally called “The Aristocrat” and the “Blue Ribbon Burger”) for 45 cents in 1967 in his McDonald’s in Uniontown. McDonald’s corporate officials liked it and did a test market in all Pittsburgh-area stores. The product went national a year later and since has reached sales in the tens of billions.

The famous advertising jingle — “twoallbeefpatties …” — was created in 1974 by Keith Reinhard, chairman of the New York ad agency DDB Worldwide.

In 1986, The Economist magazine created “the Big Mac Index” as an informal way to compare foreign currency values against the U.S. dollar. Based on the theory of purchasing-power parity, which says that exchange rates should equalize the price of a purchased item in any two countries, the index uses just one item — a Big Mac — because it is available in more than 100 countries.

Mr. Delligatti would go on to own 48 franchises, and although he sold most of them back to the company in 1982, his family still runs 21 in Western Pennsylvania. Though fast food has been maligned for its association with an unhealthy lifestyle, in 2007, on the 40th anniversary of the Big Mac, Mr. Delligatti told the Post-Gazette that he still ate at least one a week — at age 89.

That year the McDonald’s Big Mac Museum Restaurant opened on Route 30 in North Huntingdon; it features a 14-by-12-foot replica of the burger.

“He was an awesome dad. He liked to do a lot of different things. He was a great pingpong player. He liked to water ski and did some snow skiing. He was a real go-getter,” Mr. Delligatti said of his father, who continued to work regularly well into his 90s.

He was also a philanthropist. In 1979, he, along with Pittsburgh oncologist Vincent Albo and the Pittsburgh Steelers, helped co-found the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Pittsburgh, which provides lodging to the families of seriously ill children undergoing treatment at area hospitals. Today, the house is attached to Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC in Lawrenceville.

He is survived by his wife, Ellie Delligatti; sons James and Michael; and five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Visitation is from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. today and Friday at the Devlin Funeral Home in West View.

The funeral Mass is at 11 a.m. Saturday at St. Joseph’s Parish in O’ Hara. Memorial contributions may be made to the Pittsburgh Ronald McDonald House or to Providence Connections, a North Side social services agency.

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Southern Garrett students to be featured on Outdoor Channel show

DECATUR, Ala. — Two Garrett County high school students will star on the Outdoor Channel’s “Fishing University.”

Joe McClosky and Trent Lohr, students at Southern Garrett High School, competed with 781 other high school two-student teams from across the U.S. and Canada by posting fishing stories on social media.

Their 1,421 posts put them in the top two to actually film an entire episode with co-hosts and angling legends Charlie Ingram and Ray Brazier. 

The show will be filmed in Ellijay, Georgia, on Carter’s Lake in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains, Dec. 12-15. The pair will compete against a team from Kentucky for a $10,000 cash college scholarship as well as a $28,000 full four-year tuition scholarship to Bethel University in Tennessee that includes automatic placement on the Bethel University Wildcat bass fishing team. 

McClosky and Lohr, teammates on the Southern Garrett Bass Slayers Team, have loved fishing since they were toddlers. “This is a chance of a lifetime,” said McClosky, “and I think we are ready.”

“Our parents are equally excited,” said Lohr, “and our coach, Bret Winegardner, will be going with us as well. Just to get to fish alongside these two great legends is exciting in itself, but knowing we could win our college tuition fully paid for is unbelievable,” he concluded. 

The show will be seen on the Outdoor Channel three times during the first six months of 2017 and on WFN-World Fishing Network 12 times from July through December.

The show airs in all 50 states and 52 countries. More than 63 million viewers will watch the show during 2017.

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