Deep Creek Lake Real Estate Blog - Jay Ferguson

Deep Creek Lake Real Estate Blog - Jay Ferguson
EVERYTHING under the sun about Deep Creek Lake, Maryland! Deep Creek Lake Real Estate Information, Local News & Happenings in Garrett County Maryland, Current Events, Local Business Profiles, Upcoming Attractions, Vacation Rentals, Resort Realty, Community Profiles, Homes for Sale, Restaurants & Dining, Entertainment Schedules, Festivals & Gatherings, Churches & Charities, Wisp Ski & Golf Resort, Swallow Falls State Park, Youghiogheny & Casselman River, Garrett County Fair & more!

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Kayaking In January?




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A flash of color caught the eye of John Bambacus, Friendsville, while he was hiking along the Youghiogheny River just south of Friendsville on Saturday, and to his surprise he observed three kayakers ignoring the frigid temperatures and enjoying the elevated water levels of the Yough. He captured one of them "on film" with his cellphone. The unusual weather conditions for January in Garrett County continue, with warmer than normal temperatures and far less than normal snowfall. Winter, which seemingly has hardly begun, will likely begin to wind down within the next six weeks or so. Of course, the proverbial ground hog of Punxsutawney, Pa., may present a different forecast next Thursday...

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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Brinkley: Western Maryland wants responsible spenders in Congress

Originally published January 31, 2012

By Bethany Rodgers
News-Post Staff

As congressional candidate in a district that ranges from the hills of Garrett County to the tech corridor along I-270,--Maryland Sen. David Brinkley said he has found something that ties everyone together: dismay over federal spending.

"The common denominator they all have is a concern about federal government spending sucking the economy dry," he said.

The same concern propelled him to run for the 6th District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. The Republican legislator from New Market said national debt and bloated government spending isn't a new problem, but it's one that keeps getting worse.

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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Monday, January 30, 2012

Proposed Doubling Of Flush Tax Worries Some Legislators

Jan. 26, 2012

by Ellen Stodola

Capital News Service

ANNAPOLIS – A number of legislators are concerned that Gov. Martin O'Malley's proposal to raise the flush tax from $2.50 to $5 a month to help clean up the Chesapeake Bay could be too much for constituents to handle, especially in a bad economy.


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The flush tax, which raises funds for updates of wastewater treatment plants, as well as septic systems and stormwater management, costs each household a total of $30 a year. But O'Malley's proposal for the Bay Restoration Fund ties the fee to consumption, with $5 being the average that most people will pay per month. Those who use less water could pay less, but high-volume users could pay upwards of $60 a year.

Though many legislators agree that the Chesapeake Bay is a priority, they also have to consider what this would mean for Maryland residents.

"Believe me, I'm on the side of cleaning the bay up," said Delegate Jay Jacobs, R-Kent. "But it's going to be a very difficult year for me to vote for any increase."

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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411 FAIRWAY DR - GOLF COURSE - GA7710842 - $249,000

411 FAIRWAY DR
OAKLAND, MD 21550



Lovely 5BR/3BA raised rancher on 16th Fairway at Oakland Golf Course. Beautiful in-ground pool with pool building. Hdwd flooring on both levels, two levels finished, 2 family rooms, 2 fireplaces, formal LR, formal DR, eat-in kitchen, pantry, 2 car garage. Jetted tub in shared bath, MBR with MBA, Gas h/w baseboard heat up and in-floor gas radiant heat lower level, huge utility room. Seller RE agent


Contact Jay Ferguson @ 301-501-0420 or DeepCreekLaker@Gmail.com for more information or to setup a private showing for this property.

Listing # GA7710842

$249,000

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, Md., officials consider aiding financially strapped whitewater course

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: January 30, 2012 - 1:16 am
Last Updated: January 30, 2012 - 1:16 am

OAKLAND, Md. — Elected officials in far western Maryland are considering whether Garrett County should take an active role in helping a financially strapped, man-made whitewater course.

The Garrett County Commissioners were set to meet in a closed session Monday to discuss the problems of the nonprofit Adventure Sports Center International near McHenry. They say they'll make a public announcement Feb. 7.

The center's operators acknowledged earlier this month that they have defaulted on bank loans, partly due to the financial problems of the group that owns the nearby Wisp ski resort.

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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Saturday, January 28, 2012

Board Of Ed. Holds Elementary School Closure Hearings

Jan. 26, 2012

The Garrett County Board of Education recently held its public hearings for the potential closings of Kitzmiller and Dennett Road elementary schools. The hearing for Kitzmiller Elementary was held last Thursday (Jan. 19) in that school's multipurpose room, while the hearing for Dennett Road Elementary took place on Tuesday in the gymnasium of Southern High School – a venue chosen to accommodate the large crowd expected by the board.


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Both events began with a presentation by Sue Waggoner, interim superintendent of schools. Those presentations showcased the fiscal problems faced by the county and the BOE, namely the trending loss of enrollment and Maryland's wealth formula, which ranks Garrett County as the state's fifth-wealthiest county despite its large number of students who qualify for free and reduced meals.

"This is like a grieving process as we're dealing with the potential loss of our schools," Waggoner said. "We're looking at every aspect of this situation while trying to make tough decisions."

Waggoner also talked about trying to attract some of Garrett County's 294 homeschooled students into the system through the use of technology and offerings in advanced-placement courses. This addition of students would potentially increase state funding, though, as Waggoner explained, this would require some support from lawmakers in Annapolis, as Maryland currently does not permit funding for part-time students.

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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Friday, January 27, 2012

Edwards, Beitzel Seek Increased School Funding

Jan. 26, 2012

Sen. George C. Edwards (R-Dist. 1) and Del. Wendell R. Beitzel (R-Dist. 1A) announced yesterday that they will pursue a statewide legislative effort that would cap losses of state funding for K-12 education incurred by Garrett and Allegany counties.

Gov. Martin O'Malley's fiscal year 2013 budget includes a 5.5 percent cut in funding for Allegany County and an 11.8 percent cut in funding for Garrett County. This is on top of the approximately 6 percent cut that these two jurisdictions took in funding during the FY 2012 budget.


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"The state really needs to look at how the wealth formula is computed," Edwards said. "This bill would be a benefit to Garrett and Allegany counties and potentially others if we can get it passed. It would also give the state time to study how we compute wealth for K-12 education and look at appropriate various changes to the formula."

This is the second year in a row that Garrett and Allegany counties have received the largest cuts in K-12 education funding for the state, the senator noted. The state's portion of education funding is based on a formula commonly referred to as the "wealth formula" and student enrollment. These two factors are used to calculate the money that is distributed statewide for the educational needs of the counties.

"The futures of the children of Garrett and Allegany counties are being jeopardized due to massive losses in state funding for education," said Beitzel.

During the 2011 legislative session, Edwards and Beitzel led legislative efforts to cap the losses a local jurisdiction receives in education based on the wealth formula. That bill was met with opposition from the O'Malley administration.

The western Maryland legislators, however, convinced other lawmakers to include extra education funding for Garrett and Allegany counties in FY 2012. This funding was included the passage of the alcohol tax. That funding, however, was good for only one year.

More here.


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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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No smoking

Businesses finding Clean Indoor Air Act is helping

Cumberland Times-News

Employees from the Allegany and Garrett counties health department frequently inspect restaurants, taverns and other appropriate businesses to see if the non-smoking provisions of the state Clean Indoor Act are being violated.

A Garrett County establishment was fined $100 recently for having done so a second time. A third offense would draw a $500 fine and subsequent offenses would result in a $1,000 fine.

Garrett health officer Rodney Glotfelty said such violations aren’t often found.

That doesn’t surprise us, because businesses seem to be taking the law seriously.

One reason this is so is that patrons who do not smoke are appreciative of being in a non-smoking environment. Being in the presence of tobacco smoke can be offensive to non-smokers, and the dangers of inhaling secondary smoke are proven.
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The owners of one restaurant have told us that when the smoking ban was imposed, they thought their business would suffer.

What happened, they said, was that their business actually improved.

So, we believe, did their own health prospects and those of their employees and patrons. Whether smokers agree with it or not, the law is a good one, and it works.

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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Thursday, January 26, 2012

School officials make case for new Allegany

Kristin Harty Barkley Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — The Allegany County Board of Education won’t find out until this spring whether it will receive funding to begin designing a new Allegany High School.

But officials, who pitched the project to Gov. Martin O’Malley and other members of the state’s Board of Public Works on Wednesday, believe they’re making a good case.

“I feel like it went pretty well. They were very interested,” said Superintendent David Cox, who showed state officials poster-size photos of conditions at the 87-year-old building, including its antiquated boiler room and dilapidated auditorium.

“We just wanted to show the age of the building and to support what the architects have told us about it being beyond its useful life.”

Cox, who traveled to Annapolis on Wednesday with all five members of the local Board of Education, as well as several county officials, had about 10 minutes to tell state officials about the Allegany High School project.

The Board of Public Works — made up of O’Malley, Comptroller Peter Franchot and Treasurer Nancy Kopp — heard requests Wednesday for building projects from school systems across the state.

The typically long day of presentations has become known as the “beg-a-thon” because so many school officials plead for funds.

O’Malley announced earlier this month that he plans to ask the Maryland General Assembly to approve more than $370 million in school construction funding in the fiscal year 2013 budget — the second-highest single-year funding level in state history.

Last year, lawmakers approved $250 million for school construction. The General Assembly’s annual 90-day session started Jan. 11.

In December, local school officials pitched the AHS project to the state’s Interagency Committee on School Funding, describing how the BOE, Cumberland City Council and Western Maryland Health System signed off on a land swap deal to allow a new Allegany High School to be built on the site of the former Braddock campus of the hospital.

The cooperative effort has impressed state officials, Cox said.

“I feel positive about it,” said Cox, who planned to stay overnight in Annapolis to attend today’s PACE reception with local legislators. “I don’t take anything for granted though. I think we’ve done about everything we can.”

Members of the Western Maryland Delegation, who are supporting the Allegany High School project, announced Wednesday that they are also taking steps to assure that school systems in rural counties aren’t crippled by state funding cuts this year.

Sen. George Edwards and Delegate Wendell Beitzel said they’re pursuing statewide legislation that would cap funding losses for Allegany and Garrett county school systems, which suffered the biggest state cuts last year.

O’Malley’s FY 2013 budget includes a 5.5 percent cut in funding for Allegany County and an 11.8 percent cut for Garrett County, which is considering closing up to three elementary schools to make ends meet.

“The citizens from these areas have made it clear that these schools are at the heart of the community and closing them would cause irreparable harm for the students and their families,” Beitzel said of Friendsville, Kitzmiller and Dennett Road elementary schools.

Last year, Edwards and Beitzel led legislative efforts to cap a jurisdiction’s funding losses due to the so-called “wealth formula.” But that funding was only good for one year.

“The state really needs to look at how the wealth formula is computed,” Edwards said. “This bill would be a benefit to Garrett and Allegany counties and potentially others if we can get it passed.”

Cox said that school officials appreciate the legislators’ efforts to minimize state funding cuts, which was on the Board of Education’s list of “legislative priorities” for 2012.

Contact Kristin Harty Barkley at kbarkley@times-news.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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Maryland Realtors plan to fight O’Malley proposal to cap mortgage tax deduction

By Associated Press, Published: January 25

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Maryland real estate agents expressed alarm Wednesday at Gov. Martin O’Malley’s proposal to cap state income tax deductions for people who make more than $100,000, a change that would have a big impact on mortgage interest deductions.

Patricia Terrill, president of the Maryland Association of Realtors, said the proposal was just about the only thing that members of the 22,000-strong group were talking about during their annual legislative day in Annapolis.
“Let’s face it, the homeowners have been beat up enough,” said Terrill, wearing a “Save Maryland’s Interest Deduction” sticker. “We need to protect our homeowners.”

Under O’Malley’s plan, a single Maryland taxpayer whose federal adjusted gross income is more than $100,000 would see a 10 percent reduction in the amount they could claim in state income tax deductions. A single earner making more than $200,000 would see a 20 percent reduction.

The governor says while he doesn’t like reducing the deductions, he has said changes in his budget plan would affect only about one in five Maryland taxpayers. O’Malley, a Democrat, says new revenue is badly needed after years of budget cuts due to the recession.

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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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Relying On An Agent

by Carla Hill

The latest NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers showed a growing trend among recent buyers.

The latest figures show that 89 percent of buyers purchased their home with the help of a real estate agent or broker. This is a sharp increase from a decade ago in 2001, when only 69 percent of buyers enlisted the help of an agent or broker.

Why do today's buyers buyers choose to work with an agent? Let's look at just a few of the many reasons an agent can be your biggest ally.

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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Investors buying with cash pressure home prices

by KERRI PANCHUK

Monday, January 23rd, 2012, 7:51 am

Investors are gobbling up residential real estate with cash, pushing national home prices lower, according to the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey.

The overall proportion of cash buyers in the housing market soared to a record 33.2%, compared to 29.6% a year earlier.

Meanwhile, the investor class relied heavily on cash to buy homes, with 74% of investors using cash to buy homes in December.

Investors represented 22.8% of home purchases in December alone, up slightly from 22.2% a month earlier.

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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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Dogs Saved After Falling Into Lake



Two dogs fell through the thin ice on Deep Creek Lake on Sunday, and a number of professional rescue personnel came to their rescue. A call came into 911 at about 6 p.m. reporting a dog having possibly fallen through the ice, and that the animal had been barking for some hours. The dog fell in around the Patterson Marina in the North Glade Cove, according to the report. Rescue personnel responded and found not one but two trapped canines barely keeping their heads above the frigid water.


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Ice water rescue technicians from both the Deep Creek and Deer Park volunteer fire companies were deployed onto the ice and into the water to save the dogs. The animals were retrieved and immediately taken to the Pineview Veterinary Hospital for treatment. One of the animals is pictured above being cared for. Also responding to the scene were the Southern and Northern Garrett rescue squads. Rescue personnel urge pet-owners to be alert when their animals are near the ice, as it can obviously lead to perilous situations. Photo courtesy of Matthew Krause, area firefighter/paramedic.

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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Governor Earmarks $150K For Local Trail Construction

Jan. 19, 2012

Gov. Martin O'Malley on Friday announced nearly $23 million in the proposed FY2013 capital budget for state park and other public land projects. Included in the budget is $150,000 for trail construction for state parks located in Garrett County, and another $150,000 for western Maryland recreational access and trail restoration.


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"Today, we're proposing to invest $22.7 million from our capital budget to make much-needed improvements to our state parks – an investment that will support nearly 300 jobs in our state, help us make our parks more sustainable, and support our thriving tourism industry," O'Malley said when he made the announcement at Sandy Point State Park. "Our state parks are tremendous economic engines in our state, with a $650 million annual impact on our local economies, a great resource for Maryland families, and a big part of why our tourism industry remains so strong even in tough times."

The funding includes more than $14 million in enhancements from the governor's capital budget, in addition to $8.7 million derived from the Department of Natural Resources annual transfer tax allocation for a diverse set of projects to improve infrastructure, "green" the state's parks, and protect the Chesapeake Bay.

"I applaud Governor O’Malley for making this critical investment in our public lands during these difficult financial times," said DNR Secretary John Griffin. "This improvement effort recalls the days of the Civilian Conservation Corps, which built many of Maryland's state parks, creating jobs, 'greening' public lands as conservation models, and inspiring millions of visitors with better places to enjoy our state's natural beauty and unique heritage."

Under the leadership of O'Malley, the Maryland Park Service has embarked on a system-wide commitment to green its 66 state parks – which host more than 10 million visitors each year – as models of sustainability and conservation best practices. Strategic actions to date have focused on energy improvements, new state-of-the-art green building design and construction, sustainable trails, and recycling, as well as environmental restoration, including reforestation and stormwater management improvements to help the bay.

In addition to providing recreation opportunities for citizens and visitors, state parks provide summer employment and green jobs training for at-risk youth through the Governor's Conservation Jobs Corps, which has graduated 820 young people since 2008. In 2010 their work on maintenance, landscaping and construction jobs saved the state an estimated $2.7 million, according to the governor's office.

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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As Temperatures Drop, Stay Smart, Stay Safe

As temperatures drop to near-freezing, the Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) reminds everyone to stay smart and stay safe during the winter months. Cold weather safety hazards are hard to see, especially at night, and even a small mistake can lead to serious injury or worse.

“We encourage everyone to go out and enjoy all of the recreational opportunities this season brings,” said Colonel George F. Johnson IV, Superintendent of the Maryland Natural Resources Police. “However, be mindful that there are cold-weather dangers that require increased preparation and awareness.”

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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MARYLAND HOMEOWNER'S MORTGAGE INTEREST DEDUCTION IN JEOPARDY

“In his recently introduced budget, Governor Martin O’Malley has
proposed to reduce the mortgage interest deduction for many
Maryland homeowners,” according to Mary C. Antoun, Chief
Executive Officer of the Maryland Association of REALTORS®.
“Since 1913, the tax code has protected mortgage interest
deductibility. Maryland shouldn’t be the first state to scale back the
most important tax benefit homeowners receive,” stated Antoun.
"Everyone is well aware of the burdens Maryland homeowners are
facing. Many homeowners have watched the value of their homes
decrease. One-fifth of Maryland homeowners are currently
underwater, and now homeowners find the one constant reliable
tax benefit to owning a home under attack."
If tax deductions are capped, as proposed by the Governor’s
budget, many Maryland homeowners will lose some of the value of
their mortgage interest deduction and the deductibility of state
and local property taxes. “These two principal real-estate related
deductions accounted for almost 70% of total deductions claimed
by Maryland taxpayers in 2008,” noted Antoun.

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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Monday, January 23, 2012

Agreement Signed For Continental Divide Trail Proj.

Jan. 19, 2012

Garrett Trails is one step closer to completing its Eastern Continental Divide Loop Trail. The Garrett County commissioners signed a property-use agreement this week with the University of Maryland Extension, which will allow a nonmotorized trail to be constructed on Western Maryland 4-H Education Center property near Bittinger.


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An agreement is also pending with the Department of Natural Resources that will give the local group permission to construct a trail through the Savage River State Forest for the Meadow Mountain phase of the loop trail.

Garrett Trails members reviewed the agreements for the commissioners and gave an update on some of their many projects on Tuesday afternoon.

"We've made a lot of progress," said Mike Dreisbach, Garrett Trails president. "And I have to tell you, with out the help of the commissioners, this progress would have never been able to make it that far. You guys have been behind us 110 percent."

Since last January, he said, the group has made some "gigantic steps." One of those "steps" is Gov. Martin O'Malley's announcement last Friday that $150,000 is earmarked in the proposed fiscal year 2013 capital budget for state park trail construction in Garrett County. Another $150,000 has been allocated for "western Maryland recreational access and trail restoration."

Garrett Trails is a nonprofit, volunteer organization dedicated to the development of a network of trails that provide access to Garrett County's historic, municipal, and environmental "treasures" that link to trails outside the county.

One of the group's goals is to develop the Eastern Continental Divide Loop Trail, a 150 mile, multi-surface, multi-user pathway that will connect to state parks and forests; populations centers such as Bittinger, Grantsville, Mtn. Lake Park, Friendsville, and Deep Creek Lake; and the Great Allegheny Passage.

Rodney Glotfelty, Trail Maintenance Committee chair, reported on the project's mid-county connector loop at Deep Creek Lake. Garrett Trails plans to construct a pedestrian hard-packed gravel or paved pathway from the Glendale Bridge to Rt. 219, along the same route as a proposed water line.

He said Garrett Trails has been working with the Garrett County Department of Public Utilities and the GC Roads Department to "take advantage" of the waterline extension. After DPU installs the underground line, the pathway could be constructed on top of the finished project.

"You wouldn't have to come in twice, disturb the area twice," Glotfelty said about constructing the trail. "It seemed like a win-win proposal for us."

Garrett Trails sent a letter to 27 Glendale Road property owners last summer, inquiring if they would approve a pathway on their land. The group received 12 responses, with 11 of them favoring the project, according to Glotfelty.

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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Beitzel bill requires state constitution change

Local delegate’s proposal would keep Chesapeake Bay cleanup funds intact

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — Delegate Wendell Beitzel has filed a bill to amend the state constitution to ban the transfer of funds designated for Chesapeake Bay cleanup to other purposes.

“Each year, Maryland’s citizens are required to pay for cleanup of the Chesapeake Bay. This bill simply provides that if citizens are told that the fees they are paying is dedicated for bay restoration, then government should be required to use the funds only for this purpose,” Beitzel said Thursday.

There are proposals on the table to increase the state’s so-called flush tax, an annual fee toward bay cleanup.

The Chesapeake Bay Restoration Fund was established in 2004 for the purpose of providing funds for Chesapeake Bay cleanup, wastewater treatment plant upgrades, cover crop funds and septic system upgrades, Beitzel said.

“The stated needs for Bay restoration far exceed available funding and to raid the dedicated funding programs for other purposes is deplorable. These actions are a fundamental cause for the recommendation to double, triple or even quadruple the ‘flush tax.’ Now, the citizens of Maryland are now expected to pay more to remedy the situation,” Beitzel said in a press release.

During the 2011 session, Gov. O’Malley’s budget transferred $290 million from the Bay Restoration Fund and the Chesapeake & Atlantic Coastal Bays 2010 Trust Fund into the general fund, Beitzel said. Beitzel represents all of Garrett County and a portion of Allegany County.

A companion piece of legislation has also been filed by Sen. John Astle, D-Anne Arundel. Beitzel and Astle are also co-chairs of the Maryland Legislative Sportsmen’s Foundation.

Delegate Kevin Kelly is a co-sponsor to a similar bill, HB 23, which would ban transfers from dedicated state funds to the General Fund except in limited circumstances. Both bills would need to pass a referendum to amend the state constitution. Kelly represents Allegany County and portions of Cumberland and other municipalities in the county.

At the same time, counties are working to comply with bay cleanup efforts. The Phase II Watershed Implementation Plans submitted to the EPA set details on how each jurisdiction will achieve necessary nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment reductions by 2025, the target date set by the EPA.

Late last week, Maryland filed a plan to clean up the state’s water and the Chesapeake Bay with the federal Environmental Protection Agency. Allegany County submitted its plan in November.

Angie Patterson, a land use and planning engineer in the Department of Community Services, is in charge of coordinating Allegany County’s response to and implementation of the total daily maximum load (TMDL) requirements issued by the EPA and Maryland Department of the Environment. She works on a 20-member committee, including county and municipal officials along with other members.

TMDLs are “an estimate of the maximum amount of an impairing substance or stressor (pollutant) that a water body can assimilate without violating water quality standards,” according to the Maryland Department of the Environment.

Those numbers are being used to calculate the amount each county contributes to the pollutants entering the bay and provide a target number of how much the county must reduce its pollutant output.

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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Wapiti survey begins

Michael A. Sawyers Cumberland Times-News

What’s up with this elk stuff anyway?

I’m speaking, of course, about the news announced this past August that some folks are going to look around Garrett and Allegany counties to see if it would be feasible to reintroduce Rocky Mountain elk. Elk used to live here, you know. Maybe you don’t remember because it was a couple hundred or so years ago.

How else do you think we got a town name such as Elk Garden just across the river in what we like to refer to here at the Times-News as “nearby West Virginia.”

The good news is that Responsive Management is getting involved. That company is based in Harrisonburg, Va., and has built a solid reputation as a surveyor of the public when it comes to natural resources issues.

Paul Peditto, the director of the Maryland Wildlife & Heritage Service, calls Responsive Management the “best in the business.”

RM is near the completion of a couple West Virginia surveys, including one checking into the attitudes of hunters when it comes to chronic wasting disease in deer. I can’t wait to see those results.

But back to elk and back to Almost Maryland.

The players are the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (paying for the feasibility study), the Maryland Legislative Sportsmen’s Foundation (doing the legwork) and the Maryland Department of Natural Resources (providing wildlife expertise).

Mark Damian Duda, the executive director of Responsive Management, told us on Tuesday that the elk attitude survey will begin in February with results available in April.

“We will get complete responses from 800 Maryland residents,” Duda said. “It will take 10 to 12 minutes to complete the telephone survey.”

Duda said, too, that more residents of Garrett, Allegany and Washington counties will be called compared to any other one county in Maryland.

The calls are selected at random and will go to both landline and cell phones. The caller ID will read “Responsive Management.”

Duda said unanswered calls will be repeated to that number, up to five times, at different hours and days.

RM has been doing this kind of thing for 22 years now and, in fact, surveyed Marylanders a decade or so ago about their opinions concerning bear hunting.

“We have a great response rate,” Duda said. “Most people enjoy answering our questions.”

One question that will be asked: “Would you support or oppose the reintroduction of free-roaming elk into Western Maryland?”

That question would be followed by another: “Why?”

“People should know that the sponsors of the feasibility study are serious about determining the attitudes of residents about a possible elk reintroduction before making a decision,” Duda said.

We already know what the elected Garrett County commissioners think. They oppose a reintroduction.

There is a huntable population of elk in northern Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania Game Commission reports that since 2001 there have been 99 elk struck and killed by automobiles. During that same time period, eight elk stepped in front of railroad trains twice; the first time and the last time.

Pa.’s elk population currently numbers about 700 animals descended from those restocked from Yellowstone Park.

During the 2011 Keystone State elk hunt, 50-plus animals were killed.

Contact Outdoor Editor Mike Sawyers at msawyers@times-news.com or 301-784-2523.

More here.


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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Local lawmakers send bills onward

Panhandlers, Caylee’s Law on agenda in Annapolis

Matthew Bieniek Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — Local legislators are filing proposed laws either as sponsors or co-sponsors in the opening weeks of the General Assembly.

A bill to control panhandling in Allegany County is one of the bills filed by Delegate Kevin Kelly.

Kelly introduced the legislation at the behest of Allegany County Sheriff Craig Robertson, who has been concerned about a spike in panhandling in the area. Robertson was responding to complaints from the public. The existing law makes it tough for the sheriff and his deputies to do anything about the problem of people asking for money.

Kelly said he filed the panhandling legislation Friday.

The main concentration of the panhandlers has been in the LaVale area between Country Club Mall and Braddock Square. The panhandlers also seem to be active on nearby National Highway. The sheriff and his deputies have heard concerns from a large number of citizens, he said.

“It’s a safety issue when it comes to the roadway,” the sheriff said.

Kelly’s bill would amend a state law already on the books, to apply to Allegany County. That law bans solicitation along public roadways.

Delegate Leroy Myers said Washington County has faced a similar problem in the past.

Sen. George Edwards has filed a bill that applies to correctional officers in Garrett County entitled the “Correctional Officers Bill of Rights.” The text of the bill, Senate Bill 205, isn’t yet available.

Edwards is also co-sponsoring a “Caylee’s Law” bill in the Senate. Senate Bill 139 would make it a crime for failure to report the disappearance of a minor. Kelly is sponsoring a similar, independent bill in the House.

The proposed laws developed after Casey Anthony’s acquittal in Florida earlier this year, regarding charges that she murdered her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee.

Anthony did not report her daughter missing to police, who were finally alerted to the missing child by Casey Anthony’s mother 30 days after the child was last seen.

The laws are designed to allow prosecutors to bring felony charges against parents who do not quickly report missing children, with most of the proposals requiring law enforcement notification by 24 or 48 hours after a child goes missing, or a shorter time frame to report the death of a child.

Among other bills Edwards is co-sponsoring is one allowing veteran’s organizations a license for no more than five instant ticket lottery machines under specified circumstances.

Myers is co-sponsoring House Bill 82, which would make it the policy of the state to “restrict and deter the use of unauthorized alien workers in the performance of public contracts and grants in the State; specifying criteria for mandatory registration in a federal E-verify program for specified contractors and grantees; prohibiting noncompliant persons or entities from performing specified contracts,” a summary of the law indicates.

Myers is also co-sponsoring HB 113, which would require specific proof of identification by voters. If they did not have proof of identification, they would be required to submit a provisional ballot.

Delegate Wendell Beitzel is also co-sponsoring HB 82 on the E-verify program. He’s also supporting HB 91, a right-to-work law and HB 102 to proclaim a German-American Heritage month. Beitzel has also filed a bill for a Constitutional Amendment that will be the subject of an upcoming Times-News story.

Contact Matthew Bieniek at mbieniek@times-news.com

More here.


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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Survey To Assess Public Opinion On Elk Reintroduction

Jan. 19, 2012

The Maryland Legislative Sportsmen's Foundation (MLSF), the Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR), and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF) last week announced plans to conduct an extensive public opinion survey to determine the viability of elk reintroduction to western Maryland. Elk once roamed Maryland, but have been absent since the 1700s.


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Social, cultural, and economic questions will dominate the survey, which is scheduled to begin in February and conclude with a final report and analysis in April. The survey will reach a sample of residents across Maryland, with a focus on residents of western Maryland. Consensus from DNR's experts and impacted stakeholders will be necessary for the final decision.

"We are pleased to announce this important step toward evaluating elk reintroduction in western Maryland," said MLSF chairman David Sutherland.

The MLSF signed a contract with Responsive Management, a professional survey firm that specializes in public opinion and attitude surveys on wildlife management issues. The RMEF will underwrite the survey through an MLSF grant. DNR will assist with the technical review of the survey instrument and the final report.

"We recognize the need to ensure a scientific review of public opinion on this extraordinary and important question," said David Allen, president and CEO of the RMEF. "Restoring elk requires a supportive community. We are pleased to be a key partner to that end."

More here.


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Garrett bear hunting violations bring fines

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — Seven of 13 people charged on Oct. 24 by Maryland Natural Resources Police with bear hunting violations in Garrett County have paid fines. The remaining defendants are scheduled for trials during the next 60 days.

For each fine paid, the guilty also paid a $22.50 court cost.

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Friday, January 20, 2012

BOE Nixes Vote On Grade Level Change; Looking At Alternatives

Jan. 19, 2012

Upon leaving the executive session of a specially called meeting on Tuesday, the Garrett County Board of Education informed those in attendance that it would remove the vote on grade level reconfiguration from its current agenda.


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The decision came as a relief to many of the parents and concerned citizens who turned up to voice their opinions on the proposal. Many used the public comment portion of the meeting to express their thanks to the board for postponing a decision on reconfiguration and also to request more time to come up with solutions on solving Garrett County's school budget losses. Solutions, they hoped, would not involve reconfiguration, school closings, and long bus rides for young children.

The event was held in the cafetorium of Southern Middle School and was called for after the BOE decided against a vote on the reconfiguration proposal at its previous meeting the week before (Jan. 10).

Having twice removed the vote on the proposal to move fifth graders from elementary to middle schools, the board will now look into the viability of leaving the grade levels as they are, or perhaps adopting alternative solutions.

In a presentation before the public comment portion of the meeting, Sue Waggoner, interim superintendent of schools, stated that the board plans to use the coming months to look into kindergarten enrollment rates, as well as staffing needs "at all levels."

She has expressed the importance of parents taking advantage of kindergarten enrollment, as the board is currently working with birth rate statistics. "We need to know where these children are going to attend elementary school," she said. Though effectively halted, the possibility of grade reconfiguration remains on the table.

Waggoner's presentation also contained information on the school system's efforts to reduce bullying in schools, topic brought up in public comment at the previous meeting. Parents who wish to access the form on bullying, harassment, or intimidation may do so by visiting the BOE web site: www.ga.k12.md.us.

More here.


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Annual Snowflake Chase Held



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Chasing snowflakes in the annual Snowflake Chase in beautiful Deep Creek Lake State Park on Saturday were over 130 hearty souls who braved the wintry conditions to participate in either the 5-mile run or the 2-mile fun run/walk. Proceeds from the annual event this year will go to the Garrett College Student Veterans Organization (SVO). The event was coordinated by the Queen City Striders Running Club, and a number of volunteers from the SVO assisted in various ways. Dan DeWitt of Frostburg was by far the fastest runner in the 5-mile race, as he blazed a path to the finish line in 29:42, nearly 1½ minutes faster than second-place finisher Chris Behre of Hurricane, W.Va. See full details in a story on the sports link. Photo by Kathy Fauber.

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On eliminating ASCI’s $3M debt: Exec. speaks out

Elaine Blaisdell Cumberland Times-News

MCHENRY — Despite dealing with multiple challenges like construction cost overruns, a faltering economy and the Wisp Resort filing for bankruptcy in October, the Adventure Sports Center International remains a focal point in promoting tourism, according to Matt Taylor, executive director of ASCI.

Garrett County commissioners made a public statement Tuesday that they met in executive session to discuss legal, financial and personnel implications of the $3 million debt obligations ASCI incurred because of unanticipated construction costs.

“ASCI has become the nexus it was intended to be, despite the aforementioned challenges,” said Taylor in an email to the Times-News. “The bottom line is that the facility was never intended to operate with debt, and Tuesday’s statements by the commissioners mark an important step in a long process to restructure and eliminate that debt so that ASCI can continue its core missions of promoting adventure tourism and healthy, active outdoor lifestyles.”

The debt was incurred during cost overruns in construction of the actual whitewater course and pond, according to Taylor. ASCI broke ground on the whitewater facility in 2004 and opened in the spring of 2007.

“The ASCI whitewater course is a one-of-a-kind facility and a combination of unique building challenges and high cost of materials. Most of the facility was built in the years following Hurricane Katrina, which greatly inflated certain material and transportation costs (that) led to the overruns,” said Taylor.

ASCI is a nonprofit entity and not under the authority of the board of county commissioners, according to Monty Pagenhardt, county administrator. The financial institutions involved with the debt collection are Susquehanna Bank and First United Bank & Trust.

Adventure Sports Chairman Duane Yoder said the group may consider transferring ownership to Garrett County or Garrett College.

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.

“ASCI has carried this debt from its opening in 2007 and we have operated for five successful seasons and intend to open in 2012 for our best season yet,” said Taylor.

The debt will not affect operations or the 2014 World Championship Canoe and Kayak Slalom Races, according to Taylor.

“The world championship is a real successful event for us. All along it has been part of our business plan to get corporate sponsors for this event, and this debt makes it hard to have corporate sponsors,” said Taylor.

“We have been in negotiation with the banks for years, and ASCI’s default is part of a structured process to eliminate the debt and allow us to focus on preparation and promotion for Deep Creek 2014. ASCI continues to work with state, local and banking leaders to find a long-term solution.”

In addition to successfully guiding more than 55,000 people down the whitewater course, welcoming more than 200,000 visitors, and hosting eight national and international competitions, ASCI has also developed widely recognized environmental education programs with Garrett County public schools, according to Taylor.

The commissioners will compile their positions and comments on this situation and plan to provide a more detailed review during their Feb. 7 public session, according to Pagenhardt.

Contact Elaine Blaisdell at eblaisdell@times-news.com.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

More here.


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Broadband advocate calls for a leap of faith from region

Matthew Bieniek Cumberland Times-News

CUMBERLAND — Broadband can create jobs and allow small businesses based anywhere to compete nationally and worldwide, said Joanne Hovis, president of Columbia Telecommunications Corp.

Broadband is “essential to our future prosperity,” Hovis said. Thin glass tubes, referred to as “fiber,” can carry an immense amount of digital data and have “theoretically unlimited capacity” constrained only by the speed of light, Hovis said.

“As a region, you represent astonishing buying power,” Hovis said. And better broadband access can bring new investment to Allegany and Garrett counties, she said. Hovis is heading up a comparable project in Garrett County.

Hovis spoke to the Allegany County Chamber of Commerce Economic Development Committee on Wednesday morning in the chamber’s board room.

Hovis is the consultant for Allegany County’s Broadband Feasibility Study funded by a grant agreement between the Appalachian Regional Commission and the Allegany County Board of Education, said Rebecca Rupert, the co-chair of the chamber committee.

Hovis’ company has been headquartered in Maryland since 1983 and works exclusively for local, state and federal governments and nonprofits.

While the study will focus first on the needs of the educational system, the study and obtaining increased broadband access in the area will benefit the business community as well, Hovis said.

There is a great deal of unused potential in broadband because of lack of information.

“I work for the board, but I am really working for all of you,” Hovis said. Education and economic development are like this, Hovis said, holding up two fingers tightly together.

Broadband is a new way of thinking about infrastructure, but needs to be thought of as just as important to the local economy as highway access.

“It’s a foundational utility of our economy,” she said.

The feasibility study should help facilitate coordination between the private and the public sectors, Hovis said. Allconet was “15 years ahead of everybody else,” Hovis said, and while times have changed, the idea was a visionary one, she said.

Broadband networks are hard to build and expensive, so public/private partnerships can be important in broadband development, Hovis said.

“There’s too little investment in broadband because there is too little return,” in rural areas, Hovis said. She was explaining the difficulty in getting providers to build broadband networks in rural communities. Broadband is the most important selling point in commercial real estate, Hovis said.

Just like rural electrification in the 1930s and the national highway system, it will take a leap of faith to spur investment, with the belief that it will make a major difference, Hovis said.

“The more stakeholders the better,” said Stu Czapski, the chamber’s executive director.

The study will include a survey of residents and businesses.

“I will ask about telecommuting, recovery services, downloading of manuals,” Hovis said. The survey had a 46 percent response rate in Garrett County, and she’s hoping for a similar response in Allegany County, Hovis said.

Hovis said she’s in the information-gathering stage of the study and is seeking input from anyone about the region’s broadband service and needs for the future. Her commission is to do an analysis of the gaps and opportunities in broadband access. The study will help to leverage grant money for better broadband in Allegany County, Hovis said.

Maryland received more than $115 million last fall through the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act to extend broadband access across the state, particularly in rural areas. The project is called One Maryland Broadband Network.

Hovis said her study will help Allegany County benefit from the state’s program. The 20 or so business leaders who packed the chamber boardroom all stressed the important of broadband access to their businesses in a discussion after the main portion of Hovis’ presentation. An ATK officer said his company is looking at projects like virtual engineering, so broadband is essential.

The target completion date for the study is June 1.

Contact Matthew Bieniek at mbieniek@times-news.com

More here.


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Staying put

Garrett’s fifth-graders won’t to go middle school

Cumberland Times-News

Wisdom and some common sense must have contributed to the Garrett County Board of Education’s decision not to place fifth-grade students in middle schools.

A proposed move to do so was part of a five-year reconfiguration plan designed to address staff and space problems and offer fifth-graders a chance to take foreign language and technical education classes.

Parents were concerned about the consequences of fifth-graders associating with other students who were older, chiefly the potential for bullying of the younger students. Fifth-graders have SpongeBob lunch boxes and could be “made fun of” by eighth-graders who do not, said one parent.

The fifth graders also would have had to do without recess and the opportunity for exercise it provides.

Those who are familiar with grade schools know there is a marked difference in the maturity level of students from year to year, and the younger the student, the greater the difference — and the difference can be traumatic.

We commend the Garrett County school board for listening to parents and recognizing this fact. Parents seemed to be relieved by the decision.

Another plan is now being considered that may act to both solve the logistical problems and address parents’ legitimate concerns, but the details won’t be known until later this year.

More here.


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