Quantcast
Channel: Silver Spring Patch News
Viewing all 4946 articles
Browse latest View live

Planning Board to Tour Long Branch Amid Backlash to Redevelopment

$
0
0
The Long Branch Sector Plan was presented to the Montgomery County Planning Board Dec. 13.

Members of the Montgomery County Planning Board will take part in a guided tour of the Long Branch neighborhood Thursday, ahead of a pair of a worksessions to study the Long Branch Sector Plan. 

The public tour begins at 10 a.m. and will stop at the following areas: Arliss Street and Garland Avenue; Piney Branch Road and University Boulevard; Flower Avenue and Piney Branch Road. 

The Long Branch Sector Plan offers a framework for land use in the neighborhood over the next 15 to 20 years. Officials have said they hope that two planned Purple Line light rail stations—at Arliss Street and at University Boulevard—will "catalyze redevelopment and reinvestment" in the area.

Residents and elected officials in the area have expressed concern that redevelopment will make affordable housing sparse

“We’re asking you not to displace our families with these new changes that are taking place,” said one Long Branch resident at a recent Planning Board public hearing on the plan, the Gazette reports

For more on the tour of the neighborhood, check out the brochure


Zoning Rewrite Would Help Residents Age in Place

$
0
0
The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission's headquarters is at 8787 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring.

The revisions in the works for Montgomery County's aging zoning code—which dates to 1977 and is more than 1,200 pages long—are meant, among other things, to help Montgomery County's residents age in place, architect and sustainability expert Carl Elefante said.

In the planning department's December 2012 cable show Montgomery Plans, Elefante—who served on the planning department's advisory panel when planning staff drafted the zoning code rewrite—explained how the county's ambitious Zoning Rewrite Project would make it possible for residents to stay in their communities as they grow older.

The zoning rewrite—which is entering into its final stages of revisions—is meant to allow for more variety in residence size and type within a neighborhood, so that smaller residences (good for younger and older people, for example) can exist alongside larger ones (good for growing families).

Takoma Park is an example of what the new zoning code could achieve, Elefante said.

In Takoma Park, he explained, there are 600- to 800-square-foot bungalows across the street from two-and-a-half-storied Victorian "painted ladies." Some of the houses have been converted into multi-family homes, he added.

"Side-by-side, little-lot houses, big-lot houses right next to each other," in a "tremendous diversity of housing stock that really makes it so that you're able to age in place," Elefante said.

The zoning rewrite "has a number of provisions" that would allow residential neighborhoods to change, gradually, to allow this sort of housing stock diversity.

"A sense of an assessment of the character of the existing community [and] ... neighborhood ... [will be] required [to] propose alterations to existing residential properties. It's not a one-size-fits-all proposition," Elefante added.

Other aspects of the zoning rewrite encourage more mixed-use planning and development, which also can assist residents to stay in their communities (rather than move into retirement communities) as they get older.

Do you think your neighborhood would benefit from the sorts of changes that Elefante describes? Why or why not? Tell us in the comments.

A Very Boozy Afternoon: State Senators Vote on Bevy of Wine and Beer Bills

$
0
0

It is unclear what the rules are regarding state legislators drinking on the job, but this afternoon's agenda for the Montgomery County Senate Delegation may be enough to make anyone reach for the nearest glass of vino. 

Here's what county senators will be discussing and possibly voting on today:

1) Winery Special Event Permits - Farmers' Markets, sponsored by Del. Eric Luedtke (D-Dist 14).

Essentially, farmers' markets need permits to host special wine tasting events. With all of the markets in Montgomery County, legislators want to amend the law to allow them to be able to get a permit.

Read more here. The House delegation already voted yes on this.

 

2) Montgomery County - Alcoholic Beverages - Refillable Beer Containers, sponsored by Del. Susan Lee (D-Dist 16) and Sen. Brian Frosh (D-Dist 16). 

Have you heard of a growler? It's a refillable, 1-gallon container of beer and they're all the rage amongst microbrewery enthusiasts. This amendment to local alcohol laws would allow certain beer and wine sellers to permit growlers. If passed, Montgomery County would be one a few counties to permit the practice, according to reporting from Anne Arundel County Patch.

"It’s an up and coming trend, by the end of the [2013] session we should have six or seven counties," Sen. Ed Reilly (R-Crofton) said. 

Read more here. The House delegation already voted yes on this.  

 

3) Montgomery County - Consumption of Wine Not Bought from License Holder - Class H Licenses, sponsored by the chair of the delegation on behalf of Montgomery County government.

This is an amendment to an amendment passed last year that allows local restaurants and hotels to allow patrons to bring their own wine to dinner but be charged a corkage fee. Last year's bill forgot to include businesses with Class H licenses. Del. Anne Kaiser (D-Dist 14), chair of the House delegation, said it's a small number of businesses that fall into this type of license that should not have been excluded last year.

"All we're doing is fixing it," Kaiser told Patch. 

Read more here. The House delegation already voted yes on this. 

(Psst...the House delegation meets Friday morning. See what they'll be discussing here.) 

Elderly Woman Suffers Serious Burns In Silver Spring House Fire

Wintry Weather in the Forecast for Montgomery County

$
0
0
Freezing rain forms into icicles on a railing outside.


While no major snow event is forecast for Montgomery County this week, there is some wintry weather in our future.

Rain, mixed with snow and sleet mainly after 1 a.m., is likely tonight, according to the National Weather Service. Accumulation of less than half an inch is expected. Lows of around 34 degrees are forecast.

Friday’s weather is predicted to be rainy and foggy, with a high of 44 degrees. The weather will turn cooler and breezy, with winds increasing to 20 to 25 mph after midnight. NWS gives a 30 percent chance of snow overnight, again with little to no accumulation.

Miller Gets His Bust

$
0
0
Sen. Kathy Klausmeier Thursday presented Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller with a bust of himself that was produced by a 3D printer.

It's not a statue in front of the office building that bares his name but Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller did receive a bust of himself this week courtesy of the Regional Manufacturing Institute.

Sen. Kathy Klausmeier, a Perry Hall Democrat, gave a sneak preview of the small, light-weight bust of Miller moments before presenting it to the Senate's top dog.

"You can't have too much Mike Miller," Klausmeier said.

The technology is similar to what was used in a scene of Jurassic Park 3 where a copy of a velociraptor's larynx was recreated. The institute offered legislators in Annapolis the opportunity to have themselves scanned into a computer and get busts of themselves.

Miller seemed impressed with the petite bust but joked that it looked "petrified."

Miller then placed the bust on the rostrum.

David Moon at Maryland Juice issued a $30 reward for anyone who could procure him a bust of the Senate president. No word on if he's landed one.

The rest of us are holding out for a bobblehead.

The Bird Man of Annapolis

Forget the debate over whether Joe Flacco is an elite quarterback or not. No, the Super Bowl champions have opened up a whole new debate—Does Maryland need a second state bird?

Sen. Bobby Zirkin, an Owings Mills Democrat, Thursday introduced a bill that would add the raven to roster of official state symbols.

Currently, the Baltimore Oriole is the official state bird. Zirkin's bill would not supplant the current title holder but make room in the nest for a co-state bird.

Zirkin previously introduced this bill at the request of school children several years ago. It was last introduced in 2007 by Baltimore City Del. Nathaniel Oaks.

The House and Senate are also taking up the hotbed issue of whether or not the softshell crab should be the official state sandwich.

Here is a list of other state symbols:

So Close and Yet So Far

President Barack Obama was in Annapolis this week but some were disappointed that he didn't drop by the State house.

Obama was a few blocks away meeting with Democratic U.S. Senators in advance of his State of the Union speech next week.

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller, a Democrat, called it "ridiculous" that POTUS could not find time in his schedule to visit the capital and the legislators.

"The President should have come from the Westin to here for a joint session," Miller said Thursday. "It's huge Democratic state. We've carried him in overwhelming majorities in...two elections. I mean the very least he should have done was come down here to say a collective 'thank you' to the people of the state of Maryland."

Here's hoping for a crab summit. The J. Millard Tawes Crab and Clam Bake is coming up in July.

There's An App For That?

Credit Don Curtis with what might have been the most entertaining testimony in the more than eight hours spent on proposed gun control legislation.

The La Plata resident and gun owner said he is moving out of Maryland because of the bills but he's apparently leaving behind a property with some impressive security features.

"We have an electrified gate. The sensors went of and they kept going off," Curtis said as he told the committee a story about a police SWAT team that showed up at his house after buying what he called "small quantities of ammunition" from a local gun store.

"My home is a technological fortress," Curtis said, adding that if an intruder urinates "on my property I'll know it and can record it and put it on YouTube."

He didn't say urinate.

That should be an interesting property listing.

Checkmate

Montgomery County Democratic Sen. Jamie Raskin is known in Annapolis for his chess accumen but he's probably wishing for a little anonymity just a day after a hearing on several gun control bills.

Someone snapped Raskin during the hearing in what appears to be a game of online chess. Raskin has previously won the legislative chess tournament.

The photo of Raskin surfaced online via Twitter and on Breitbart and other conservative websites and social media.

Raskin was not immediately available for comment.

Old What's His Name

Matthew Gallagher might want to consider wearing a more prominent name tag.

Gov. Martin O'Malley's chief of staff since 2009 is finding that people are having a hard time with his name lately.

On Wednesday, during ceremonies honoring a number of past and present state official and legislators, House Speaker Michael Busch was introducing him when he froze up.

"I also want to recognize the governor's chief of staff who's here today," Busch said, taking a longer than usual pause.

An aide could be heard prompting Busch with Gallagher's name.

Busch casually played off the gaff as an improvement over the last time Gallagher was introduced.

"He first was introduced as Mr. MacNamara at the State of The State so he's come along way since then," Busch said.

 

Maryland General Assembly Notebook 2013 is a round up of the notable and quotable from Annapolis.

Speak Out: Should Montgomery County Spend $500,000 On Athletic Trainers In Schools?

$
0
0
The Junior Bulldogs connected on offense, defense and special teams in 2012 to complete a perfect 8-0 season, the program's first since 2002. Shown here, freshman center Eli Promisel (66) snaps the ball to sophomore quarterback Nick Muscarella (5) during the Bulldog's 28-13 victory over Sherwood (previously undefeated) on Monday, November 5. A dozen of the JV Bulldogs will join the Churchill Varsity team for tonight's Maryland 4A West playoff away game vs. Northwest High School, including Muscarella.The No.3 Varsity Bulldogs head into playoffs with a strong 5-0 conference record and 7-3 overall record.

It’s budget season in Montgomery County, and at least one local parent wants to know what county leadership is doing to protect students—protection that can’t come from armed guards and locked doors. 

Football season is recently concluded, hockey season is underway and sporting concussions continue to pose health risks to high school, college and pro athletes across the country. While state and county lawmakers have made strides in requiring concussion-training for high school coaches, local advocate and Patch blogger Tom Hearn says it’s not enough.

Hearn, whose own son sustained a concussion playing JV football at Whitman High School in 2011, urges the county school board to include $500,000 in funding for high school athletic trainers in the fiscal 2014 operating budget request. County schools Superintendent Joshua Starr has already requested $75,000 in the new budget go to district-wide baseline concussion testing.

“The lack of certified athletic trainers at MCPS high schools represents a serious public safety issue,” Hearn said in testimony to the school board on Jan. 17. “Some concussion professionals say that if you can’t afford to have athletic trainers, maybe you can’t afford to have a sports program." 

Hearn argues that certified athletic trainers have four years of study at an accredited college and national certification, giving them a deeper knowledge about concussions and other sports injuries than coaches typically have. Having a certified trainer on staff to maintain detailed records of student injuries and health needs would also allow coaches to get back to what they do best – coaching, Hearn said.

Research found 60,000 high school and college athletes suffer concussions each year from contact sports, according to a WBAL-TV report. The injury isn’t just a simple bump on the head and can be fatal.

Kristen Sheely, of Germantown, lost her 22-year-old son Derek after he sustained a head injury during football practice at Frostburg State University in August 2011.

Nine Montgomery County high schools—Bethesda-Chevy Chase, Montgomery Blair, Winston Churchill, Damascus, Walter Johnson, Quince Orchard, Richard Montgomery, Walt Whitman and Thomas S. Wootton—offer baseline testing to at least some of their student athletes, MCPS spokesperson Dana Tofig told Patch in September.

The computerized tests measure things like memory and reaction times before and after an injury, and help determine whether it is safe for athletes to return to their sports.

Coaches are required to take a 20-minute online concussion training class each year, Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School athletic director Jim Tapley, told Patch in August.

Districts surrounding Montgomery County have certified trainers on staff for schools, while Montgomery County has none, Hearn said.

Should the Montgomery County budget include funding for athletic trainers in schools? Tell us in the comments.

WATCH: Cardin, Mikulski Cash In On Super Bowl Bet Against California Senators

$
0
0

By Leah Villanueva for Capital News Service

California Sens. Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein paid up their end of the bet at the U.S. Capitol with a spread of San Francisco delicacies, including Dungeness crabs and sourdough bread.


Hello Dolly, Sunday Fun-Day, Winterfest and More in Montgomery County this Weekend

$
0
0
This weekend.

 

Each week, Patch puts together a list of local activities and events going on in your area this weekend.  Check back weekly and tell us in the comments if you know of any additional activities coming up.

To submit an event in the Patch events calendar, click on “Events” at the top of the page and then click on the green "Add an event" button on the right side of the page.

 

Bethesda Art Walk

  • Where:  7700 Old Georgetown Rd, Bethesda
  • When:  Friday, Feb. 8, 6-9 p.m.
  • Description:  Galleries stay open late to showcase new exhibits featuring original artwork along with opening receptions.
  • Cost:  Free

 

Toyland – Final Weekend

  • Where:   7300 MacArthur Blvd, Glen Echo
  • When:  Feb. 8-10, 10 a.m.; 11 a.m.; 1 p.m.
  • Description:  The Puppet Co. presents the final weekend of Toyland.  Recommended for ages Pre-K-Grade 4.
  • Cost: $10

 

Anime Momotaro

  • Where:  4908 Auburn Ave, Bethesda
  • When:  See website for show times.
  • Description:  The Imagination Stage presents Anime Momotaro.  Best for ages 5-10, Running time: 90 mins. with intermission.
  • Cost: $12+

 

Sunday Fun-Day

  • Where:  Imagination Stage4908 Auburn Ave, Bethesda
  • When:  Sunday, Feb. 10, 10 a.m.
  • Description:  Rotating lessons and multi-sensory play for children.  Each workshop is themed around a popular children's book.
  • Cost: $10

 

Hello, Dolly – Live at Har Shalom

  • Where:  11510 Falls Rd, Potomac
  • When:  Saturday, Feb. 9, 8 p.m.
  • Description:  Har Shalom Players presents Hello Dolly.
  • Cost: $20

 

Winterfest Children’s Carnival

  • Where:  10123 Connecticut Ave, Kensington
  • When:  Saturday, Feb. 9, 10 a.m.
  • Description:  The Learning Center for Young Children in Kensington presents a Winterfest Children’s Carnival with activities for families with children in preschool and elementary school.
  • Cost:  Free

 

Love Your Library Book/Bake Sale

 

John R. G. Roth: Polymorphic Conveyances

  • Where:  VisArts155 Gibbs St, Rockville
  • When:  Exhibition on view through Feb. 16, Friday: 12-8 p.m., Saturday & Sunday, 12 -4 p.m.
  • Description:  VisArts presents John R. G. Roth’s Polymorphic Conveyances.
  • Cost:  Free

 

Philharmonic of Many Colors

 

Laugh Riot at the Hyatt

Become a Blogger on Patch—It’s Quick and Fun

Updated: Silver Spring Man Dead After White Oak Pedestrian Crash

$
0
0
File photo

A 44-year-old man is dead after being hit by a Nissan Altima while he was walking across the southbound lanes of Route 29 in White Oak Thursday night, Montgomery County police said. 

Police said the driver, Kym Nwosu, 43, of Columbia, MD, was heading south on Route 29 and approaching Oak Leaf Drive. Witnesses told investigating officers that Charles Oppong Aboagye, of the 100 block of Finale Terrace in Silver Spring, had been on the median of the road before he started to cross the southbound lanes, police said. He tripped and was hit by the car, according to police. 

The driver stayed on the scene and by the time police arrived, around 10:30 p.m., the victim was dead, police said. 

Police are asking anyone who has information about this collision to contact the Collision Reconstruction Unit at 240-773-6620. Calls can be anonymous.

Red Line Single Tracks in 2 Work Zones

$
0
0
Metro news. File photo.

Red Line trains will single track this weekend through two work zones, Metro reported on its website:

  • Between the Shady Grove and Twinbrook Metro stations.
  • Between the Rhode Island Avenue and Takoma Metro stations.

The work will begin at 10 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 8, and continue through closing on Sunday. The single tracking will enable work crews to perform platform reconstruction, track maintenance and third-rail upgrades, Metro reported.

Throughout the weekend, Red Line trains traveling between Shady Grove and Glenmont will operate every 24 minutes. Between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, additional Red Line trains will operate between Grosvenor and NoMa-Gallaudet to provide service about every 10 minutes between those Metro stations, Metro added.

Metro advised passengers traveling through either of the work zones to add on about 15 minutes to the anticipated travel time.

Read more about scheduled track work this weekend on Metro's website.

Metro Chief Planner To Discuss Growth Plan With Transit Riders

$
0
0
The escalator from the mezzanine to the train platform at the Bethesda Metro station.

Transit riders will get a chance to review Metro’s 30-year growth plan with Metro’s chief planner next Tuesday at a meeting of advocacy group Action Committee for Transit, the group said in a press release.

The recently-released, $26 billion plan calls for running eight-car trains across the Metrorail system, upgrading bus service, adding new rail tunnels and pedestrian tunnels in downtown Washington, DC, and other changes.

Metro general manager Richard Sarles told The Washington Post that the infrastructure upgrades are necessary to keep up with the region's growth.

“Now is the time for the region — with Metro in the lead — to begin talking about projects that make the most sense for making long-term investments," Sarles told The Post.

Metro’s head of planning Shyam Kannan will take questions at the meeting. It's  set for 7:30 p.m Tuesday, Feb. 12, at the Silver Spring Civic Center.

Ervin to End Food Stamp Challenge Friday in Silver Spring

$
0
0
Councilmember Valerie Ervin.

"On 3rd day living off $5.00 a day. Woke up with small hunger pain at 4:30 this morning. Craving for food."

"I was already in touch with the devastation of hunger but to actually experience the dizziness, lethargy, inability to focus and concentrate that our clients experience was a rude awakening."

Two of the experiences participants in the "SNAP the Silence" challenge have shared on Montgomery County Councilmember Valerie Ervin (D-Silver Spring)'s Facebook page promoting the program

Ervin's initiative challenged people in Montgomery County to try and feed themselves on just $5 a day for five days, or the average food allotment for people on food stamps, now called the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), in hopes of bringing attention to a growing number of hungry people in the county.

As of last October, 65,200 people in Montgomery County participated in the SNAP program, according to a release from the County Council. 

SNAP challenge participants, including Councilmember Ervin, will share their experiences and discuss new ways to fight hunger Friday in Silver Spring at the Civic Building from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. 

"I am looking forward to sharing my experience and hearing everyone’s personal stories on Friday evening, but this is just the beginning," said Ervin. 

“The goal is to turn this heightened awareness about poverty in Montgomery County into action for our neediest residents...This challenge has demonstrated to all of us that we have more work to do."

County leaders, including Council President Nancy Navarro, Council Vice-President Craig Rice, Councilmember Nancy Floreen, Schools Superintendent Joshua Starr and Board of Education President Christopher Barclay, gathered at a Giant grocery store in Rockville to shop for the week on Monday, WTOP reports, where some were especially challenged.

Barclay, who has diabetes, and Floreen, who is a breast cancer survivor, said they had trouble affording the fruits and vegetables needed for their health on the budget.

According to the Washington Post, some in Montgomery County who receive SNAP benefits were offended by the challenge. A 60-year-old woman standing in a food line in the Long Branch neighborhood of Silver Spring said the program was "cavalier."

"It demonstrates a lack of understanding of what this about...I don’t know what they expected to come out of it. To prove that it’s possible?" she told the Post.

Still, leaders said it could bring much-needed attention to an issue that people may not know exists.

"Yes, we're the economic engine of the state, but we also have needs and we need to come together and address them," said Navarro. 

What do you think of the SNAP Challenge? Tell us in the comments.

Opponents Appear to Have Votes to Repeal Death Penalty

$
0
0
Maryland State House.

By Julia Maldonado, Capital News Service

A bill that would repeal the death penalty in Maryland appears to have the votes needed to clear the Senate, adding momentum to Gov. Martin O’Malley and proponents’ push for repeal.

But some prosecutors and other death penalty supporters say a repeal would only make official what is already true—capital punishment doesn’t really exist in Maryland. The state has one of the most restrictive death penalty laws in the country.

Combine that with bureaucratic opposition from the governor and judges’ reluctance to impose the ultimate penalty, and even the most violent criminals are not likely to ever be executed, some say.

“I don’t want them to ever have the opportunity to do it again,” said Sen. Kathleen Klausmeier, a Perry Hall Democrat who has been a supporter of the death penalty. “But as far as I’m concerned,” she said, “the death penalty doesn’t happen here in Maryland anyway.”

State’s Attorney John McCarthy of Montgomery County said he’s reluctant to even file a death penalty notice because he sees the existing statute as a form of deception.

“If you are a prosecutor and think it’s nice to have it as an option, you don’t really have it as an option,” said McCarthy, adding that he and his predecessor, Attorney General Doug Gansler, never pursued the death penalty in Montgomery County.

“The reality is that it will never be carried out (in Maryland),” McCarthy said. “I will not talk to victims’ families about the death penalty because it’s not fair to a victim’s family. It’s not achievable.”

Currently there are five people on death row in Maryland. Another five have been executed since 1976.

Baltimore County State’s Attorney Scott Shellenberger is a vocal supporter of the death penalty and said that despite being written into law, “the death sentence has not been imposed as it should have been over the past years.”

He referenced a 2011 case in Baltimore County involving an Essex man, Walter P. Bishop Jr., who was hired as a contract murderer by Karla Porter to kill her husband, William Porter at his Hess gas station in Towson. Bishop fatally shot Porter for a sum of $9,000.

Contract murders fall under the umbrella of aggravating factors—which also include killing a police officer or killing two or more people in the same event—needed for the death penalty. Police also obtained a video of Bishop confessing to the crime, which made him eligible for the death sentence under the statute revised in 2009.

That legislation requires DNA evidence, a videotaped confession or video evidence of the crime.

Bishop was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole. The jury believed his lack of prior criminal convictions outweighed the state’s request to impose the death sentence.

Washington County State’s Attorney Charles Strong—also a longtime supporter of the death penalty—believes that prison sentences come down to judges’ discretion, but that an additional limitation of the current death penalty law is the hole in the lethal injection methods used during execution.

“The governor has refused to do the stage that is necessary to implement the drug protocol,” Strong said. “The current method for execution involves the use of three drugs in the lethal injection, however, one of the three is not available for use.”

An anesthetic used in executions—sodium thiopental, or Pentothal—is no longer available in the United States, and O’Malley has not put forth a new protocol.

“Even if you get (the death penalty), you can’t kill him,” Strong said.

Regardless of the methods used, no one has been executed in Maryland in roughly seven years, despite the state’s potential to have legally done so.

In 2006, a man killed a correctional officer in Hagerstown while attempting to escape from prison.

The Howard County Circuit Court judge in the case cited mitigating factors—the convicted murderer, Brandon T. Morris’ troubled childhood—and in 2008, spared him the death penalty, opting to instead sentence him to life without parole.

Also in 2006, an inmate, Lee Edward Stephens, brutally stabbed and murdered a correctional officer in Jessup. Last year, he was sentenced to life without parole.

Several state’s attorneys feel Maryland simply does not have the stomach for the death penalty, and are convinced that the days for the death penalty in Maryland have been numbered for quite some time.

McCarthy likened the repeal to a glacier that has been moving over the years.

“It’s where the leadership—the governor, House and Senate—are taking us,” McCarthy said.

Proponents of the repeal of the death penalty often cite the expensive price of execution as a major flaw of the current statute.

"The death penalty is expensive, and it does not work and we should stop doing it,” O’Malley said, during his State of the State Address.

Earlier this week, Sen. John C. Astle and Sen. Ronald N. Young, Democrats from Anne Arundel and Frederick Counties respectively, joined the governor, 21 co-sponsors of the bill and two other senators who are pushing to pass the repeal legislation this session. That’s enough votes to get the legislation passed in the Senate, where it has failed in the past.

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. agreed to allow the bill to come out of committee and be debated on the floor if the governor could show he had enough affirmative votes in the Senate.

However, defenders of capital punishment believe the costs of incarceration are much more severe.

Robert Di Stefano, who served in the Baltimore Police Department for 33 years and has been retired for 16, said if death penalty cases were handled as “one appeal, one shot,” they would no longer be excessively costly.

“We have people dying of old age on death row,” Di Stefano said, about the lengthy appeals process that can span over decades. “And the public has to pay to maintain them for 30 or 40 years.”

The appeals process can take decades, as evidenced by the cases of two men currently on Maryland’s death row—Anthony Grandison and Vernon Lee Evans—who were convicted in 1984 for a murder-for-hire case in Baltimore County.

Di Stefano believes the real costs come from the appeals, not the means.

“You can kill someone with a 35-cent bullet,” Di Stefano said.


Top Headlines: False Drug Records, Burglary Ring Uncovered, Cows Run Wild and More

$
0
0
A herd of cows runs down the road near Brink Road and Wightman Road in Montgomery Village at 11:05 a.m.

With more than a dozen websites across Montgomery County, Patch brings you news from every corner of our community. Catch up on headlines you might have missed this week, including a burglary ring uncovered, national signing day, life sentence for a stabbing death and more.

Rockville Woman Pleads Guilty to Falsifying Drug Test Results in Bribery Scheme

ROCKVILLE—A Rockville woman pleaded guilty in federal court to conspiring to falsify results of court-ordered drug tests in exchange for bribes and then lying about it to a federal grand jury. Read more on Rockville Patch.

6 Charged in North Potomac Burglary Heists

NORTH POTOMAC—Six males were charged in a North Potomac burglary ring that netted more than $100,000 worth of goods from 30 homes, Montgomery County Police said Thursday. Police said three men and three teenagers were arrested. Read the full story at North Potomac Patch.

Costco Presses Its Case for Gas Station at New Wheaton Store

WHEATON—Costco sent out fliers this week inviting community members to attend an open house later this month where it will make its case for a controversial 16-pump gas station in Wheaton. Costco plans to open a warehouse store at the Wheaton mall on April 12. Read more at Wheaton Patch.

Quince Orchard, Watkins Mill Football Players Commit On National Signing Day

GAITHERSBURG—Players from Quince Orchard and Watkins Mill high schools signed letters of intent Tuesday to continue their football careers in college.Read more on Gaithersburg Patch.

Speak Out: Should Montgomery County Spend $500,000 On Athletic Trainers In Schools?

POTOMAC—It’s budget season in Montgomery County, and at least one local parent wants to know what county leadership is doing to protect students—protection that can’t come from armed guards and locked doors. Read more on Potomac Patch.

Blair High's Rapping Teacher Hits National Spotlight

SILVER SPRING—The story of a high school math teacher in Silver Spring who makes rap videos to help students learn complicated algebra principles, using the alter ego "2 Pi," has spread far past Montgomery County's borders and well into international waters. Read more on Silver Spring Patch

Silver Spring Man Sentenced to Life for Stabbing Wife to Death

SILVER SPRING—A 45-year-old Silver Spring man was sentenced to life in prison Tuesday for the stabbing death of his estranged wife. Family members who testified during the sentencing said that Hector Granados had a 20-year drinking problem, which, defense attorneys argued, caused him to become depressed and violent. Read more on Silver Spring Patch

Photo of the Day: Herd Of Cows Runs Wild In Montgomery Village

MONTGOMERY VILLAGE—A large group of cows were reported running in the area of Wightman Road and Brink Road at 11:05 a.m. Tuesday. Check out the photo on Montgomery Village Patch.

Second District Police Now Cover Potomac

POTOMAC—Montgomery County’s police have begun operating under new, realigned district boundaries. Second District police now cover most of Potomac, while the 1st District continues to focus on Rockville and areas closer to the new district station at the Public Safety Headquarters. Read more on Potomac Patch.

Las Vegas Man Accused Of Molesting Boys In Gaithersburg During 1980s

GAITHERSBURG—Nathaniel Morales is accused of molesting boys during in Gaithersburg in the 1980s and 90s. Read more on Gaithersburg Patch.

Zoning Rewrite Would Help Residents Age in Place

CHEVY CHASE—The revisions in the works for Montgomery County's aging zoning code—which dates to 1977 and is more than 1,200 pages long—are meant, among other things, to help Montgomery County's residents age in place. Read more on Chevy Chase Patch.

Montgomery County Superintendent Sinks Battleships With Potomac Students

POTOMAC—After a two-hour delay last week canceled visits to several Potomac schools by Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Joshua Starr, we thought he’d never get the chance to hang out with our adorable elementary students. Read more on Potomac Patch.

Libraries Expand Borrowing Privileges

WHEATON—Starting Feb. 17, patrons of Montgomery County Public Libraries will be able to check out 100 books at a time--twice as many as the current limit. Other policy changes will increase the number of holds and renewals permitted. Read more at Wheaton Patch.

Virtual Tour: Homes for Sale in Montgomery County This Week

$
0
0
11225 River View Dr Potomac

These videos of Montgomery County homes for sale were recently uploaded to YouTube.

Each listing links to the YouTube video (also attached to this article). Each home is also shown on the map attached to this article:

Homes for sale this week:

11225 River View Dr Potomac

4515 Willard Ave 701s Chevy Chase

7528 Hampden Ln, Bethesda

4423 Independence St Rockville

3108 Drumm Court, Kensington

322 Whitestone Rd Silver Spring

20508 Shadyside Way #44-3, Germantown

9737 Winery Ct, Gaithersburg

 

Check back next week for more virtual tours. 

Celebrate Chinese New Year of the Snake, Feb. 10

$
0
0
VIDEO: Chinese Lion Dance

 

A lot of people cringe at the thought of snakes, but if you're born in the Year of the Snake, as described by the Lunar New Year calendar, you are a quick learner, lead by wisdom and intuition.

As Americans celebrate 2013, it can be interesting to take a look at what it means on the Chinese calendar. 

Followers of the Chinese zodiac believe each person has personality traits similar to the animal character for the year he or she was born. For 2013, the year of the snake, snakes are said to like the best things in life and are mysterious, quiet and deep thinkers.

Famous people born in the year of the snake include Oprah Winfrey, Sara Jessica Parker, Picasso, Martha Stewart and Jackie Kennedy Onassis.

Want more from Patch? Sign up for a newsletter in community and get the latest in your inbox at your convenience!

 

Since the Chinese New Year begins according to the Chinese calendar, which also uses lunar and solar calendar systems, the new year can begin anytime between late January and mid-February, explains Apples for the Teacher, an educational website. Due to the track of the new moon, the 2013 Chinese New Year begins on Feb. 10.

The Chinese New Year, or Spring Festival, is the most important social and economic holiday in China, history.com says. It was a time to honor household and heavenly deities and ancestors, and to bring family together for feasting.

Chinese have joined the Western world in celebrating Jan. 1 as New Year’s Day, but China continues to celebrate Chinese New Year, as the Spring Festival. On the fifth day of the New Year, businesses often light firecrackers in the belief it will bring prosperity and good fortune. The 15th day of the 15-day holiday includes The Festival of Lanterns and marks the end of the celebrations.

Symbols for Chinese New Year include red envelopes filled with money, given to children and unmarried adults with no job. The red color is for good luck and abundance. And the dragon, which is present in many Chinese celebrations, often is present in dancing performances on the 15th day of the new year. The dragon represents prosperity and good luck and good fortune, with many traditional Chinese thinking of themselves as descendants of the mythical creature.

Whats your birth year?

Horse — Energetic, independent, impatient, enjoys travel

  • 2002, 1990, 1978, 1966, 1954, 1942, 1930, 1918, 1906

Ram — Mild-mannered, shy, kind, peace-loving

  • 2003, 1991, 1979, 1967, 1955, 1943, 1931, 1919, 1907

Monkey — Fun, energetic, active

  • 2004, 1992, 1980, 1968, 1956, 1944, 1932, 1920, 1908

Rooster — Independent, practical, hard-working, observant

  • 2005, 1993, 1981, 1969, 1957, 1945, 1933, 1921, 1909

Dog — Patient, diligent, generous, faithful, kind

  • 2006, 1994, 1982, 1970, 1958, 1946, 1934, 1922, 1910

Pig — Loving, tolerant, honest, appreciates luxury

  • 2007, 1995, 1983, 1971, 1959, 1947, 1935, 1923, 1911

Rat — Quick-witted, smart, charming, persuasive

  • 2008, 1996, 1984, 1972, 1960, 1948, 1936, 1924, 1912, 1900

Ox — Patient, kind, stubborn, conservative

  • 2009, 1997, 1985, 1973, 1961, 1949, 1937, 1925, 1913, 1901

Tiger — Authoritative, emotional, courageous, intense

  • 2010, 1998, 1986, 1974, 1962, 1950, 1938, 1926, 1914, 1902

Rabbit — Popular, compassionate, sincere

  • 2011, 1999, 1987, 1975, 1963, 1951, 1939, 1927, 1915, 1903

Dragon — Energetic, fearless, warm-hearted, charismatic

  • 2012, 2000, 1988, 1976, 1964, 1952, 1940, 1928, 1916, 1904

Snake — Charming, gregarious, introverted, generous, smart

  • 2013, 2001, 1989, 1977, 1965, 1953, 1941, 1929, 1917, 1905

Montgomery County School Menus, Feb. 11 to 15

$
0
0
School lunches are a topic of discussion on West Des Moines Community Schools' Idea Share site.

What's for lunch?

This week's menu for Montgomery County Public Schools' elementary school cafeterias is listed below.

Visit the full menu for calorie information.

The menu for Head Start and pre-kindergarten students varies slightly from the elementary school menu.

Visit the MCPS website for middle school lunchhigh school lunch and middle and high school breakfast offerings.

Day Breakfast Lunch
Daily assorted fresh fruit, milk (1 percent or fat-free)
assorted fresh fruit, milk (1 percent or fat-free); the following may be available: whole-grain peanut-butter-and-jelly pocket, whole-grain grilled-cheese sandwich, hummus with pita chips (cheese optional), fruit and yogurt parfait with whole-grain crackers
Monday, Feb. 11 whole-grain pancakes, orange juice cheese dippers with marinara sauce or whole-grain French toast sticks with sausage; baby carrots, hummus
Tuesday, Feb. 12 whole-grain French toast sticks cheese or pepperoni whole-grain personal pizza or hot dog with green beans; celery sticks, grape tomatoes
Wednesday, Feb. 13 egg-and-cheese wrap and orange juice chicken patty sandwich with tater tots or whole-grain pancakes with yogurt; vegetable soup
Thursday, Feb. 14 whole-grain turkey ham-and-cheese breakfast sandwich chicken nuggets with mixed vegetables or fresh garden salad with chicken; baby carrots, cucumber slices, 100-percent fruit juice sorbet
Friday, Feb. 15 whole-grain waffle and orange juice cheese or pepperoni whole-grain pizza or spicy chicken patty sandwich with seasoned potatoes; romaine salad, zucchini coins

14-Year-Old White Oak Boy Charged in Infant Sister's Death

$
0
0
FILE PHOTO

A 14-year-old male has been arrested and charged in the death of his 7-month-old sister.

The 14-year-old, of the White Oak neighborhood of Silver Spring, has been jailed and charged as an adult with first-degree murder, according to a Montgomery County Police report. Police said the teen was babysitting his sister when he beat and suffocated the child.

Police and fire rescue personnel responded to calls of a pediatric injury just before 6:30 a.m. Friday. As officers arrived on the scene, the 7-month-old girl of Lockwood Drive in White Oak, was being transported to Holy Cross Hospital, where she died of her injuries at 6:54 a.m., police said.

According to the police report, the baby's mother had left the home to go to work around 10:30 p.m. Thursday, leaving the teen to watch his sister. Police said the teen admitted to beating his sister while his mother was gone, causing her to cry.

Police said the teen admitted to holding his hands over her mouth and nose until the infant stopped crying. He then put the baby in her car seat inside of the apartment, where the mother discovered the baby when she returned home at 5:30 a.m. Friday, police said. Police say the mother believed the baby was sleeping but at 6 a.m. was unable to wake her to feed.

The teen is being held without bond until his bond review hearing, scheduled for Monday in Rockville.

Viewing all 4946 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images