Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label Journalists Volkmann-Kelsey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journalists Volkmann-Kelsey. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

20070101 Carroll County Year in Review by Kelsey Volkmann

Year in review 2006: Carroll County by Kelsey Volkmann

http://www.examiner.com/a-484475~Year_in_review_2006__Carroll_County.html

(Chris Ammann/Baltimore Examiner)
Alfredo Gonzalez and his wife, Stacy, relax in the shade as they watch the Ravens during training camp at McDaniel College in Westminster in August. The Ravens train annually at the college.


Kelsey Volkmann, The Examiner

Read more by Kelsey Volkmann

Jan 1, 2007 3:00 AM

Carroll County - Editor’s Note: Following are some of the major events in Carroll County starting with the first day’s publication of The Examiner through December. Each event is accompanied with its current status.

Read the rest of Ms. Volkmann’s Year in Review - - then and now… here.

Other Examiner “Year in review” and/or a snapshot of events to come in 2007 can be found:

Work force, affordable housing will take forefront in ’07

Leaders share their resolutions and wishes for 2007

GBMC welcomes first baby of 2007

Torrents, floods took Virginia by storm in 2006

Remembering the athletes, teams and stories of 2006

Water, sex education top Carroll’s 2007 priorities

Baltimore Co. to address impact of rapid growth, natural gas plant

New mayor Dixon will define ’07 for city

County gears up plans for addressing growth

Year in review 2006: Howard County

####

Saturday, December 02, 2006

20061201 Zimmer changes stance on personal assistants picks one

Commissioner-elect Zimmer changes stance on personal assistants, picks one

Kelsey Volkmann, The Examiner Read more by Kelsey Volkmann Dec 1, 2006

Carroll County - A Carroll commissioner-elect who criticized incumbents during his campaign for wasting taxpayers’ dollars on personal assistants has selected his own.

“If I were king of Carroll County, I’d design a different system, but I am starting in the middle of a process, so it’s not something I can wave my magic wand and change,” Michael Zimmer said Thursday. “Elected officials are entitled to select and craft a system, and I am willing ... to try it their way.”

Zimmer vowed in August at a Freedom Area Citizens’ Council forum to eliminate some positions, such as public relations and specials assistants. “We need conversations, not layers of government,” he said.

Zimmer tapped Amanda Boyd Miller, an assistant to Joseph Getty, policy director for Gov. Robert Ehrlich, for a 40-hour position with a yearly salary of $43,306.

[…]

Tim Feeser, Gouge’s assistant, works an additional 10 hours a week on the county government’s cable television station and makes $46,156 a year, while Dave Humbert, Minnich’s assistant, is paid $35,646, according to the human resources department.

[…]

This week, Chief of Staff Steven Powell appointed Cindy Parr, assistant to outgoing Commissioner Perry Jones Jr., to chief of administrative services, a new position. She will work on water resource management and environmental concerns in addition to retaining her cable television responsibilities.

She’ll make $53,000 a year, a salary made possible with the elimination of two other positions, said Vivian Laxton, county spokeswoman.

[…]

Read the entire article here: Commissioner-elect Zimmer changes stance on personal assistants, picks one

_____

In other news from the Baltimore Examiner:

O’Malley bringing CitiStat program to state operations

As leaders talk, no mention of canceled meeting

For the Fenty family, calm amid the storm

Montgomery County finance director gets top spot in Leggett administration

Freshman legislators get ethics primer

Senate president suggests O’Malley retain Republicans, Ehrlich appointees

Leaders’ meeting postponed hours after White House memo surfaces

U.S.: Baltic states show freedom can work in Iraq

O’Malley camp: Database mislabels contributions

####

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

20061127 Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose story by K Volkmann

Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose –
story by K Volkmann in the Baltimore Examiner

November 28th, 2006

Kelsey Volkmann, who writes for the Baltimore Examiner has a fun story in the November 27th, 2006 edition of the paper, “
Extra syllable a common addition in Westminster,” about the common mispronunciation of the City of Westminster.

I have come to really like Ms. Volkmann’s brand of “community reporting” and it is little vignettes like this that make reading the Baltimore Examiner fun. What a welcome addition to the journalist pool in Carroll County.

After I talked with her on the phone, as usually happens, what I wished that I had also called to her attention is the piece written by Gertrude Stein, in 1913, “Sacred Emily.”

In that poem, Ms. Stein wrote, "Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose."

Heckfire, whatever ya call it, Westminster is Westminster is Westminster, no matter how ya pronounce it. It sure is a great place to call home.

A few excerpts from
Ms. Volkmann’s article:

Local: Extra syllable a common addition in Westminster

http://www.examiner.com/a-421605~Extra_syllable_a_common_addition_in_Westminster.html

Kelsey Volkmann, The Examiner, Read more by Kelsey Volkmann, Nov 27, 2006 3:00 AM

Westminster - Natives blame newcomers, but even longtime residents of Carroll County don’t notice they add an extra syllable to the county seat’s name, calling it “West-min-IS-ter.”

[…]

But how did this linguistic phenomenon start?

Language is constantly changing, said Jasna Meyer, an expert in language and discourse at McDaniel College in Westminster.

[…]
Kevin Dayhoff, a former Westminster mayor and well-known blogger, blamed newbies to the county.

“You don’t hear us crusty old locals saying it,” he said.

[…]

kvolkmann@baltimoreexaminer.com

Read the rest here. What fun.

####

Thursday, November 23, 2006

20061122 A new Finance Director for Westminster

A new Finance Director for Westminster

Kelsey Volkmann, writing for the Baltimore Examiner has an article on the new Westminster Finance Director.

Westminster’s new finance director eyes software, budget

Kelsey Volkmann, The Examiner

Read more by Kelsey Volkmann

Nov 22, 2006 3:00 AM

Westminster - Westminster’s new finance director said he would help implement the city’s new financial software and start the 2008 budget process almost immediately.

[…]

Unger, of Hunt Valley, will take the position after stepping down after seven years as finance director for the state’s Supplemental Retirement Plans department, which oversees $2.3 billion in assets and 60,000 state workers’ retirement plans, to start the city position Dec. 13.

Friday, November 03, 2006

20061102 Carroll County Republican Club charged with violating two state election laws




Carroll County Republican Club charged with violating two state election laws

November 2nd, 2006

All the local Carroll County newspapers have posted articles early Thursday evening, November 2nd, 2006, that report that the Maryland State Prosecutor has filed charges against the Carroll County Republican Club president Scott Hollenbeck and club secretary Suzanne Primoff for “alleging violations of two state election laws.”

The Westminster Eagle article can be found here: EAGLE ALERT: Republican club charged with election law violations.

The Eldersburg Eagle article can be found here: EAGLE ALERT: Republican club charged with election law violations.

The Baltimore Sun - Carroll Sun article by Laura McCandlish, Sun Reporter, filed at 5:45 PM EST can be found here: “Carroll Co. GOP club said to violate election laws - 2 officers charged for failing to register group as political action committee.”

And the Carroll County Times article by Justin Palk. Times Staff Writer, can be found here: “Charges filed against Republican club.” Mr. Palk’s article is short; hopefully he will write more on Friday, November 3rd, 2006. Update: To find his longer article, click here.

The Westminster Eagle article noted, The statement by the State Prosecutor’s Office notes that, ‘All of those who have been identified ... are merely charged and are presumed innocent until and unless convicted in a court.’ ”

For my previous posts about the matter of the negative campaigning in Carroll County please see:

20060925 Cartoon on Carroll County primary elections

20060908 Negative ads and fliers plague Carroll County primary election

20060907 Thoughts on the Carroll County primary election

In the September 6th, 2006 issue of the Westminster Eagle and the Eldersburg Eagle, both Editor Jim Joyner and I wrote columns addressing the negative campaigning dynamic in what many recall as one of the most unpleasant election years in 16 years.


The title of my column is: “Just so no to reality TV in Carroll County election campaigns.”

The title of Mr. Joyner’s column is: “Final daze Voters should be aware of wild political finish.”

I also have a Tentacle column addressing this issue of negative campaigning. “Why go negative?”

The best background on this story was written by Justin Palk back on September 7th and 8th, 2006. I just tried the links to the stories and the Carroll County Times does not use permalinks – and the links are dead behind a pay wall.

On September 7th, 2006, Mr. Palk wrote, “State probing election adverts” and on September 8th, 2006, he wrote, “Candidates deny contact with group.”

A portion of the story which Mr. Palk wrote on September 7th, reads:

Maryland's State Board of Elections is reviewing negative campaign ads from what appears to be a new Republican club in Carroll County for compliance with state law.

An organization calling itself the Carroll County Republican Club, which has sent out mailings to county residents, among other advertising, is not registered with the state as a political action committee, said Jared DeMarinis, director of the State Board of Elections' candidacy and campaign finance division.

DeMarinis said he could not comment further on the matter because the board is reviewing it.

In general, organizations that raise or spend money for a specific candidate in an election do have to register with the state, he said.

The ads and mailings, which list Scott Hollenbeck as the club's president, attack the sitting county commissioners and urge voters to back challengers in Tuesday's primary election.

Carroll County Commissioner Perry L. Jones Jr. rejected some of the claims made specifically about him in the ads, such as the accusations that he spends the night in Frederick County, rather than Carroll.

Other accusations are based on incomplete information, he said, such as statements criticizing him and Commissioner Julia Walsh Gouge for having county cars, but fail to mention that they both pay leases for their vehicles, he said.

"In a way, it's humiliating, in a way it's hilarious," Jones said. "If we did half of what they say we did, we'd be sitting in the Carroll County lockup, I believe."

The ads contain other inaccuracies as well, including a statement that the county allows multiple housing units to be built on a single building permit, when the county requires one permit per unit, said Vivian Laxton, the county's spokeswoman.

Similarly, the county commissioners are not, as one ad states, considering any legislation that would permit them to impose a personal property tax, Laxton said.

The Carroll County Republican Club does not appear on the list of Republican clubs in Carroll on the Carroll County Republican Central Committee's Web site, and Joe Burns Jr., the committee's secretary, said he had not heard of the organization.

Hollenbeck did not return phone calls or an e-mail requesting comment for this article Wednesday.

Going negative

Negative politics work because it's always easy to find an area of disagreement to focus voters' attention on, and then attack repeatedly on that issue, Thomas Schaller, a professor of political science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, wrote in an e-mail. Even if a voter agrees with a candidate on three out of every four issues, he or she can still be persuaded to dislike that candidate on the fourth issue.

People also have better memories for critical messages rather than positive ones, which makes negative politicking a powerful tool, he wrote.

In terms of outright dirty tricks, it's key for the trickster to keep his or her fingerprints off the deed, because tricks have the potential to backfire disastrously if the trickster is caught, Schaller wrote.

The Westminster Eagle article this evening reports that Ms. Primoff and Mr. Hollenbeck, “were charged in Carroll County District Court on Thursday with alleged violations of election laws, namely:

•Engaging in campaign finance activity other than through a campaign finance entity, an offense that is punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $25,000; and

•Causing the publication and distribution of campaign literature without a proper authority line, an offense is punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $1,000.”

Ms. McCandlish reported what many political pundits are saying, on and off the record: "People have gotten tired of all this negativity of the extremists," said Tony Roman, an adjunct political science professor at Carroll Community College. "The Democratic Party is getting a boost out of this. If Beard gets elected, it gives them sort of a basis to start from."

She added: “Both Primoff and Hollenbeck have been outspoken critics of the current board of commissioners, all GOP moderates. Ed Primoff, a club member married to Suzanne Primoff, defended the club's actions today. If the club had agreed to register as a PAC, the state prosecutor would have dropped charges last week, Ed Primoff said.

He said the club rejected that offer. "Everything we did was reviewed by competent legal counsel, and they assured us that we were in compliance with all the Maryland election laws," Primoff said. "This club is fighting corruption and fighting for ideologies that we believe in."

Indeed, The Westminster Eagle article reveals, “In ads published this week, the CCRC contended that it acted in the primary as a political “club,” and not a political action committee.”

I found the ad on page two at this address: http://carrollstandard.com/standard_12p_11-1-06.pdf

In a Baltimore Sun article on October 28, 2006 entitled, Republicans split in Carroll County - Democrat Beard gains GOP backing,” Sun writers Laura McCandlish and Mary Gail Hare wrote: “ ‘If the primary purpose is campaign finance, then clearly you have to register,’ said Mark J. Davis, the assistant attorney general for the board of elections. "But if the club only occasionally engages in campaign finance, then no registration is required. The laws on political clubs tend to be vague and should be clarified by the General Assembly, Davis added.”

However, in a broad-sweeping conversation earlier this evening with several political scientists, it was called to my attention that the state takes a dim view of folks participating in electioneering without registering and has been relatively consistent in taking the approach that whenever in doubt – register…

I was reminded of a series of instances in the 1986 campaigns in Baltimore County by our current governor, in which the question over registering political action committees was alleged and in that instance, the state pursued the matter, although, it was not clear to me as to the outcome of that example…

On September 8th, 2006, Westminster Eagle Editor penned an article which examined the claims made in the ads and a response by Carroll County government on behalf of Commissioners, Dean Minnich, Perry Jones and Julia Gouge. County government responded because the ads made claims which some would consider a cause for action on the part of county government…

The piece, “County refutes ads, mailers attacking commissioners” 09/08/06
By Jim Joyner, begins:

“Carroll County officials this week refuted several claims made in political ads this past week by a group called the Carroll County Republican Club, saying the bulk of the organization’s accusations are false or misleading.

The group has distributed mailers, placed paid advertising in county newspapers — including The Eagle — and is reportedly also operating an automated messaging campaign, phoning homes in the county.

The bulk of the campaign is aimed at unseating the incumbent Board of County Commissioners, and suggests that voters opt for challengers.

Various aspects of the ad campaign claim… […] Read the rest here.

The fallout?

In a straight-down-the-middle news article written by Kelsey Volkmann in the Baltimore Examiner on October 31st, 2006, entitled, “Zimmer, Beard face off in race for county commissioner seat,” she reported:

“For the first time in more than a decade, a Democrat has garnered support from Republicans for a Carroll County commissioners’ seat.

Dennis Beard, a Democrat with GOP support will face-off against Republican Michael Zimmer in next week’s election.”

Read the rest of the article here.


In conversation after conversation, the feedback that I continue to get from “folks in the grocery store check out line,” is enough already, we can’t wait for this election to over.

Amen.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Thursday, October 19, 2006

20061018 Workforce Housing in Carroll County

20061018 Workforce Housing in Carroll County

Workforce Housing Issues in Carroll County
October 18th, 2006

Kelsey Volkmann of the Baltimore Examiner wrote a piece the other day on the challenges of a dwindling inventory of workforce housing in Carroll County.

This issue has been much discussed in the last number of years.

I’ve always felt that one of the major impediments to developing additional workforce housing in Carroll County was government red-tape and zoning. I still feel that way. Often workforce housing requires a higher density in a given development and zoning laws and, to get real about it, much of the Carroll County public is in no mood for higher densities.

The key issue not covered by the article is that Carrollinians have no interest in any housing in Carroll County these days. To be certain, I have no doubt that there is a bias in Carroll County against workforce housing. But to be candid, many of the folks that are moving into many of these half-million dollar mansions in Carroll County are presenting as quite “elitist.”

One of the latest cutting edge models is a mixed use overlay that allows for housing to be included in a commercial development. The idea, which, to the best of my knowledge, has not been discussed, is to put housing above the stores in retail and commercial developments, read: shopping centers.

The beauty of it is that facilitates home ownership, albeit a condo-type housing, but it is nevertheless, home ownership, where the jobs are and the commercial portion of the development helps bring down the construction costs and makes the housing more affordable.

Of course, the challenge in Carroll County is the knee-jerk reaction to ANY development in Carroll County, residential, commercial, employment-base or whatever.

And actually, unless a developer brings overwhelming return for the community, in terms of additional water, open space and recreation, school pad sites or some such infrastructure improvement, I guess I’m not interested in the houses either.

Now commercial tax base and employment opportunities, that’s a different story…

Anyway, Ms. Volkmann’s story can be found here.

It begins: “Both the waiting list for housing vouchers and the demand for affordable housing continues to grow in Carroll County, but stereotypes about work force housing will have to be shattered before it is embraced, housing advocates say.

People “visualize ... 70-year-old black women who are going to come in from Baltimore and shoot up the neighborhood with AK-47s,” said James Upchurch, president of Interfaith Housing Alliance Inc., a nonprofit that has built affordable housing in Westminster, Hampstead, Union Bridge and Taneytown. “But the typical person is more likely to be their Aunt Milly.””

One of the key paragraphs, for me, was: “The key to work force housing is making zoning “inclusionary” — where developers are encouraged to build a certain percentage of affordable housing in each development — a model first adopted in Montgomery County 30 years ago, [James Upchurch, president of Interfaith Housing Alliance Inc.,] said.”

Read the rest of “Affordable housing faces hurdle of bias;” it is well worth the time.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

20060926 Kelsey Volkmann on the Hoff Barn


Kelsey Volkmann on the Hoff Barn

Posted by Kevin Dayhoff September 26th, 2006

Last Friday I missed a nice piece by Kelsey Volkmann in the Baltimore Examiner on the Hoff Barn.

If you missed it: “Historic barn to be rebuilt at museum,” is yet another in a series community newspaper work by Kelsey Volkmann that is worth going out of your way to check out. I periodically do a search on “Volkmann” in the Examiner web site to be sure that I have not missed any of her work.

She begins her article: “Westminster - For more than two centuries, the Hoff barn withstood thunderstorms, blizzards and even a fad in the late 1800s to demolish structures like it because they were considered old-fashioned.

Now, the barn on a New Windsor dairy farm has survived long enough to become one of the oldest log barns in Maryland and earn a spot at the Carroll County Farm Museum, an architectural historian said.

“It’s a large part of what the county was and who the people were who came here. It’s like looking back in time,” said Ken Short, a former historian with the county who is writing a report for the museum on the barn.”

Be sure to read the rest of her piece here.

For past posts by me on the Hoff Barn go:

20060913 KDDC Hoff Memorial Barn ceremonial groundbreaking on ...

13 Sep 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

In the earlier KDDC piece on May 6th, 2006, titled “Historic Hoff Barn Relocation and ... Contributions can be mailed to “The Hoff Barn Project,” PO Box 124 ... Put the words, “The Hoff Barn Project” in the subject line. ...

20060506 Historic Hoff Barn Relocation and Restoration Solicitors ...

7 May 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

Contributions can be mailed to “The Hoff Barn Project,” PO Box 124, Westminster, MD 21158. ... Put the words, “The Hoff Barn Project” in the subject line. ... Marlin K. Hoff ran Coldsprings Farms, the largest dairy operation in the ...

####

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

20060913 Hoff Memorial Barn ceremonial groundbreaking on October 8, 2006


"The Hoff Barn"
(c) Kevin Dayhoff May 6, 2006

Hoff Memorial Barn ceremonial groundbreaking on October 8, 2006

Posted September 13th, 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

Invitations have recently been mailed for the ceremonial groundbreaking of the “Marlin K. Hoff Memorial Log Barn.”

On Sunday, October 8 at 2 p.m., during the annual “Fall Harvest Days” at the Carroll County Farm Museum, our agricultural history and our modern-day celebration of that history will come together for a symbolic groundbreaking ceremony for an important addition to the museum, the “Marlin K. Hoff Memorial Log Barn.”

According to the Carroll County Farm Museum web site: “Fall Harvest Days, the Farm Museum's oldest and second largest event, is held each October to celebrate the arrival of autumn. A fun day for the whole family, the two-day event features traditional autumn happenings which include apple butter making, scarecrow making workshops, threshing and shelling demonstrations, tractor and mule-pulled wagon rides, and much more.”

For more information on Fall Harvest Days, click here.

I have two pieces on the importance of this exciting project. One on KDDC and one in my regular column with the Westminster Eagle: “Hoff Log Barn is on the move to a future role recalling Carroll County's history.”

In the earlier KDDC piece on May 6th, 2006, titled “Historic Hoff Barn Relocation and Restoration Solicitors Breakfast,” I tried to make as many folks as possible aware of this significant addition to the Carroll County Farm Museum.

“Bright and early Saturday morning, Caroline and I attended a fund raising “Solicitor’s Breakfast” for an important project to relocate and restore an historic circa 1795 old German log bank barn. Perhaps one of only two or three left in the country, the barn is to be relocated to the Carroll County Farm Museum, in Westminster, Carroll County, Maryland and restored.

“The Hoff Barn Project” is a 501(c)(3) corporation and all contributions are tax deductible. Contributions can be mailed to “The Hoff Barn Project,” P. O. Box 124, Westminster, MD 21158. For more information, e-mail me. Put the words, “The Hoff Barn Project” in the subject line.

One of the better articles about the project was written by Mary Gail Hare, a staff writer for the Baltimore Sun, on March 27, 2005.”

You can see Ms. Hare’s article in my May 6th, 2006 KDDC post here.

In my regular column with the Westminster Eagle: “Hoff Log Barn is on the move to a future role recalling Carroll County's history,” I introduced the August 30th, 2006 story of the Hoff Barn:

By 1798, the area of western Carroll County - between Big Pipe Creek and Westminster, had 10 brick, 13 stone and 248 log homes, according to Carol Lee's 1982 "Legacy of the Land."


It also had 218 log barns.


One of those log barns was probably what we now know as the "Hoff Log Barn," built between 1785 and 1795 in nearby New Windsor.


The Maryland Historical Trust boasts that Hoff Barn is "One of the most significant farm buildings in Carroll County."


Fast forward more than 200 years, and there are very few log barns left in Carroll County - or the nation, for that matter. Some published accounts report that there are, maybe, three log barns left in Carroll County today.



The present location of the Hoff barn is a farm that has been owned by the Hoff family since 1869.

For the past 40 years, Kathy and the late Marlin K. Hoff have operated one of the largest and most prestigious dairy operations in Maryland on this property.



Before Mr. Hoff passed away Nov. 28, 2004, he had gotten the idea from talking with fellow farmer and community leader, Melvin Baile Sr., that the barn needed to be donated and saved for future generations to appreciate.


What better place to showcase the barn, than re-locating the log structure to the Carroll County Farm Museum?”

Read the rest of my column here.

Even if you have never set foot on a farm in your life, the enjoyment of our Carroll County way of life has it roots in the Hoff Log Barn and this effort is important to you. Please make a financial contribution to help pay for this significant historical investment in our community.

For more information, contact Bob Jones at 410-848-7687 or Melvin Baile Sr. at 410-848-9589. Checks can mailed to: “Marlin K. Hoff Memorial Log Barn,” PO Box 124, Westminster, MD 21158.

Meanwhile, I’ll look forward to seeing you at the Farm Museum on October 8.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com