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 Westminster Clock Tower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Westminster Clock Tower. Show all posts

Friday, September 03, 2010

Repairs are part of an ongoing effort to preserve Westminster MD timepiece.

Repairs are part of an ongoing effort to preserve the city timepiece.

August 4, 2010  By Kevin Dayhoff







There are three versions of my story on the Westminster clock tower.

One, a long and comprehensive story, was published only on the Explore Carroll website at: http://www.explorecarroll.com/opinion/4596/clock-docs-make-timely-house-call-citys-historic-timepiece/  It mentions councilwoman Albert’s work and where folks may contribute to the clock tower fund.

An excerpt may also be found on my Westminster community website: http://kevindayhoffwestgov-net.blogspot.com/2010/08/dayhoff-clock-docs-make-house-call-to_10.html

There was a short version published in my Sunday history column, “Archives,” that appears in the Baltimore Sunday Sun.  It only appeared in the print version of the newspaper.

Then, there is a much longer version of the piece that was submitted, but edited a good bit for length.  I will eventually put that on my website… here:

A YouTube of the event may be found at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvICD3mOouw


~~~~~~~~~

In the early morning hours of Tuesday morning, Main Street of Westminster was relatively quiet, with the exception of Westminster street department superintendent Larry Bloom, and Jeff Glass, the city public works director standing on the sidewalk across the street from the old firehouse at 66 E. Main Street in Westminster and looking up into the sky.

Was it a bird, a plane – superman?  Well no, they were staring at the old clock which sits atop the old fire hall - which served our community from 1896 to 1998.

After the fire company moved to its new location on John Street in 1998 and the building was sold, the city retained ownership of just the clock and the clock tower which sits on top of the three-story building that once housed the Westminster city offices until the late 1930s, in addition to the fire company.

A plaque at the base of the clock tower reads: “Henry Baile; Born January 9, 1809; Died October 26, 1891.  The above clock erected to his memory by his wife Margaret Cassell Baile Sept. 1, 1896.”

A newspaper article from January 1896 reports that the clock tower was the source of a great deal of excitement in the community:

“It is pleasant to record the fact that the clock … (built by the) Seth Thomas Clock Company, of Stamford, Conn., for a tower clock which the company lists at $1010, and which will be a contribution to the department...”

Meanwhile, 114 years later, last Tuesday, on the sidewalk below the clock, the assistant city street department superintendent Wayne Reifsnider, and David Booth of Precision Repair, a timepiece restoration company, were busy sorting through brand new clock hands and safety belts.

According to Booth, Tuesday morning’s task was to replace “the cedar hands, which require painting every two years, with powder coated aluminum ones, and stainless steel counterweights.”

It’s neat to be here and be a part of history, said Glass as he and Bloom kept looking up.  It’s exciting to see the clock being preserved, said Bloom.

Moments later, a Thomas Bennett and Hunter crane arrived and city workers Shawn Lockard and Alan Miller joined Reifsnider as they set-up the crane and attached a steel cage on the end of a cable.

Keeping the old timepiece working has been challenging for the city workers in the last number of years.

Miller said it was good to get it worked on, as he looked briefly up at the old clock.  Lockard added, “I’m glad that we’re finally getting it fixed.”

Booth and Reifsnider subsequently jumped into the steel cage and away they were whisked into the air four stories to replace the clock hands on the old historic clock that has been a fixture in the center of town since it was dedicated at 3:30 in the afternoon on Thanksgiving Day, November 26, 1896.

Replacing the clock hands on the old timepiece is part of an ongoing effort to save and restore the clock that has been in need of repair for a number of years. 

Booth said that it was exciting to see the refurbishing come along…

Booth shared that on November 17, 2008 a group of clock historians from Chapter 11 of the National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors visited the old clock and did an assessment of the clock’s condition.

“After inspecting the clock, this group found the clock to be in surprisingly good condition,” although, “prior to (that) visit, vandals did extensive damage to the mechanism…

“The clock is a Seth Thomas (number 16.)  The nameplate is dated May 16, 1896, and it is clock #897, and marked ‘A. S. Hotchkiss.’” 

Just then, as traffic on Main Street began to increase, Ben Rogers walked up the street as he made his way to his office at Edward Jones, at the corner of Main Street and Longwell Avenue.

“It rings the time…  It will great to see the time on the face,” said Rogers just – as if on cue – the clock bell chimed.

Booth later e-mailed, “The bell was cast by J. Resister & Sons, Baltimore, MD, and measures 37” in diameter at the mouth…  It is inscribed ‘Westminster Fire Engine & Hose #1, Incorporated 1879’...  The other side has several names of officials on an 1881 executive committee.”

Nancy Hernandez of the Community Media Center was also there to film the repairs.  This is fun.  It’s exciting to be a witness… to record this.

Although Booth is donating his time, other expenses incurred in the clock repair are being covered by private donations collected by a fund spearheaded by Westminster councilwoman Suzanne Albert. 

Albert, the granddaughter of David E. Walsh, the city's mayor from 1912 to 1916, told Explore Carroll in 2008 that she has fond memories of the clock from the days when she grew up on Main Street in Westminster.

If you would like to contribute, send a donation to the Westminster Clock Tower Fund at the Community Foundation of Carroll County, 255 Clifton Boulevard, Westminster, Md. 21158.
####

[20100804 SCE Wster clock tower gets new clock hands sceked]
LABELS: 
*****
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://www.kevindayhoffart.com/
My http://www.explorecarroll.com/ columns appear in the copy of the Baltimore Sunday Sun that is distributed in Carroll County: https://subscribe.baltsun.com/Circulation/

*****

Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://kevindayhoffart.blogspot.com/ or http://kevindayhoffart.com/ = http://www.kevindayhoff.com/ Kevin Dayhoff Westminster: http://kevindayhoffwestgov-net.blogspot.com/ or http://www.westgov.net/ = www.kevindayhoff.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/kevindayhoff Twitpic: http://twitpic.com/photos/kevindayhoff Kevin Dayhoff's The New Bedford Herald: http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/ = www.newbedfordherald.net Explore Carroll: www.explorecarroll.com The Tentacle: www.thetentacle.com

Friday, August 27, 2010

DAYHOFF: Clock docs make house call to fix historic Westminster clock tower on Main Street

DAYHOFF: Clock docs make house call to fix historic Westminster clock tower on Main Street


DAYHOFF: Clock docs make house call to fix historic Westminster clock tower on Main Street



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(Enlarge) Wayne Reifsnider, assistant superintendent for the City of Westminster Street Department, works to replace the hands of the 1896 Westminster town clock in the early morning hours of Aug. 3. Reifsnider was assisting a crew from Precision Repair, a timepiece restoration company, which performed a bit of delicate surgery four stories above Westminster's Main Street as part of an overall restoration project for the historic clock. (Photo by Kevin E. Dayhoff)
In the early morning hours of Aug. 3, the old clock atop the old Westminster fire hall -- which served Westminster from 1896 to 1998 at 66 E. Main St. -- got a brand new shiny pair of hands. The venerable timepiece has been a fixture in town since it was dedicated at 3:30 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 26, 1896.

City of Westminster workers used a crane from Thomas Bennett and Hunter, a local road-building firm; and Dave Booth of Precision Repair, a timepiece restoration firm, to accomplish the delicate surgery performed four stories in the air.
Clock doctor Booth was assisted by Wayne Reifsnider, assistant city Street Department superintendent. Meanwhile, Superintendent Larry Bloom, along with Jeff Glass, the city public works director; and city workers Shawn Lockard and Alan Miller, served as ground support.
Keeping the old timepiece working has been challenging for the city workers in the last number of years.
Miller said it was good to get it worked on, as he looked briefly up at the old clock. Lockard added, “I’m glad that we’re finally getting it fixed.”
Booth and Reifsnider subsequently jumped into the steel cage and away they were whisked into the air four stories to replace the clock hands on the old historic clock that has been a fixture in the center of town since it was dedicated at 3:30 in the afternoon on Thanksgiving Day, November 26, 1896...


Wayne Reifsnider, assistant superintendent for the City of Westminster Street Department, works to replace the hands of the 1896...


A YouTube of the event may be found at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvICD3mOouw

20100803 picture caption information
 20100803 clocktowerhands (14)


Wayne Reifsnider works away at replacing the clock hands of the 1896 Westminster town clock Tuesday morning 

20100803 clocktowerhands (2)

Left to Right: Wayne Reifsnider, David Booth, and Alan Miller examine the new powder coated aluminum clock hands that were later installed on the face the historic Westminster clock Tuesday morning. 20100803 clocktowerhands (2)
  
20100803 clocktowerhands (5)

City workers used a Thomas Bennett and Hunter crane to replace the clock hands on the face of the 1896 timepiece that overlooks Westminster.  20100803 clocktowerhands (5)

 20100803 clocktowerhands (9)

Left to Right: Wayne Reifsnider, Shawn Lockard and Alan Miller prepare a steel cage that was used to hoist workers up four stories to do repairs on the old town clock Tuesday morning. 20100803 clocktowerhands (9)

 20100803 clocktowerhands (22)

City workers had to use a big Thomas Bennett and Hunter crane to perform repairs on the clock tower Tuesday morning.

20100803 clocktowerhands (29)

Wayne Reifsnider works away at replacing the clock hands of the 1896 Westminster town clock Tuesday morning.

DAYHOFF: Clock docs make house call to fix historic Westminster clock tower on Main Street

August 8, 2010

There are three versions of my story on the Westminster clock tower.


There was a short version published in my Sunday history column, “Archives,” that appears in the Baltimore Sunday Sun.  It only appeared in the print version of the newspaper.

Then, there is a much longer version of the piece that was submitted, but edited a good bit for length.  I will eventually put that on my website…

A YouTube of the event may be found at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvICD3mOouw



Westminster MD Clock Tower Fund

Keeping the old timepiece working has been challenging for the city workers in the last number of years.

The project was part of an ongoing restoration of the clock, which at 114 years of age has indeed suffered the ravages of time. To make matters worse, several years ago a few youngsters broke into the clock tower and vandalized the historic icon of the community.

Although Booth is donating his time, other expenses incurred in the clock repair are being covered by private donations collected by a fund spearheaded by Westminster councilwoman Suzanne Albert.

For more information, please see my Explore Carroll article on the clock tower repairs here: http://tinyurl.com/2bnrsrg or here: http://kevindayhoffwestgov-net.blogspot.com/2010/08/dayhoff-clock-docs-make-house-call-to_10.html

If you would like to contribute, send a donation to the Westminster Clock Tower Fund at the Community Foundation of Carroll County, 255 Clifton Boulevard, Westminster, Md. 21158.

*****
*****
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://www.kevindayhoffart.com/
My http://www.explorecarroll.com/ columns appear in the copy of the Baltimore Sunday Sun that is distributed in Carroll County: https://subscribe.baltsun.com/Circulation/
*****

Sunday, August 08, 2010

DAYHOFF: Clock docs make house call to fix historic Westminster clock tower on Main Street

DAYHOFF: Clock docs make house call to fix historic Westminster ... Explore Carroll By Kevin Dayhoff (Enlarge) Wayne Reifsnider, assistant superintendent for the City of Westminster Street Department, works to replace the hands of the 1896 ...

DAYHOFF: Clock docs make house call to fix historic Westminster clock tower on Main Street Eagle Archives Posted 8/08/10 by Carroll Eagle, Westminster Eagle

(Enlarge) Wayne Reifsnider, assistant superintendent for the City of Westminster Street Department, works to replace the hands of the 1896 Westminster town clock in the early morning hours of Aug. 3. Reifsnider was assisting a crew from Precision Repair, a timepiece restoration company, which performed a bit of delicate surgery four stories above Westminster's Main Street as part of an overall restoration project for the historic clock. (Photo by Kevin E. Dayhoff)


In the early morning hours of Aug. 3, the old clock atop the old Westminster fire hall -- which served Westminster from 1896 to 1998 at 66 E. Main St. -- got a brand new shiny pair of hands. The venerable timepiece has been a fixture in town since it was dedicated at 3:30 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 26, 1896.


City of Westminster workers used a crane from Thomas Bennett and Hunter, a local road-building firm; and Dave Booth of Precision Repair, a timepiece restoration firm, to accomplish the delicate surgery performed four stories in the air.

Clock doctor Booth was assisted by Wayne Reifsnider, assistant city Street Department superintendent. Meanwhile, Superintendent Larry Bloom, along with Jeff Glass, the city public works director; and city workers Shawn Lockard and Alan Miller, served as ground support.

Keeping the old timepiece working has been challenging for the city workers in the last number of years.

Miller said it was good to get it worked on, as he looked briefly up at the old clock. Lockard added, “I’m glad that we’re finally getting it fixed.”

[...]

If you would like to contribute, send a donation to the Westminster Clock Tower Fund at the Community Foundation of Carroll County, 255 Clifton Boulevard, Westminster, Md. 21158...http://www.explorecarroll.com/community/4596/clock-docs-make-timely-house-call-citys-historic-timepiece/

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

City officials hope to eliminate curfew by Bryan Schutt for the Carroll County Times


Growing up in Westminster in the 1950s, I only recall the curfew from the fact that at 10 PM, the bell in the clock tower on top of the old firehall would ring.

Of course, I had my own curfew – my Mom’s – and to be certain that is all that was needed in my family.

Westminster’s curfew law, which if I am not mistaken was enacted around 1947(?,) has long since been an anachronism, quite unconstitutional and ultimately totally unenforceable.

So much so that I sure dislike the city going to the expense of taking it off the books. It has not been used in decades… Whatever.


City officials hope to eliminate curfew by Bryan Schutt for the Carroll County Times

By Bryan Schutt, Times Staff Writer Tuesday, August 26, 2008


Westminster has a curfew, but maybe not for long.

Although not enforced recently, a juvenile curfew of 10 p.m. to 30 minutes before sunrise has been in place for decades. It hasn’t been enforced because it was deemed unconstitutional.

After public criticism during the previous two Westminster Common Council meetings about not enforcing the curfew, the city may invalidate the law for good.

Following a discussion initiated by Mayor Thomas Ferguson, the Common Council instructed the city attorney to draft a document detailing what would be required to repeal the curfew laws.

[…]


Read Mr. Schutt’s entire article here:
City officials hope to eliminate curfew

20080826 City officials hope to eliminate curfew by Bryan Schutt

Saturday, October 13, 2007

20071012 News Clips


News Clips

Oct. 12, 2007

STATE NEWS

O'Malley says he'll call next week for session
Republican Brinkley says he is willing to debate the governor on his budget proposals
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bal-md.governor12oct12,0,2023573.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout
Gov. Martin O'Malley said yesterday that he expects to call a special session of the General Assembly and to introduce bills outlining his budget proposals early next week. During an interview on WAMU's The Kojo Nnamdi Show, the governor also criticized Republican lawmakers for obstructing his efforts to solve the state's $1.7 billion budget shortfall. Senate GOP leaders have said they would not support O'Malley's slot machine gambling proposal, expected to raise $550 mill ion annually, during a special session.
Senate Minority Leader David R. Brinkley, a Frederick County Republican, said the governor "is being intellectually dishonest when he makes accusations of that type, and he knows it." Brinkley offered to debate O'Malley on the budget.
"He wants a special session so he can ramrod a massive tax increase. He knows he is delinquent in sharing details with anybody. If anything, we are certainly exercising our responsibility and diligence to the taxpayers of the state," Brinkley said.
Given the GOP's unwillingness to cooperate during a special session, O'Malley said he would consider putting the issue to a statewide referendum in 2008.

Waterways fee is shaky
Leopold restoration proposal facing opposition from council
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/annearundel/bal-ar.smartfund12oct12,0,61288.story
A proposal by Anne Arundel's chief executive to create a fee to repair damaged waterways might be headed for legislative purgatory, with Republicans and Democrats alike arguing that it would overburden taxpayers, curb affordable housing and put new retail centers at a competitive disadvantage. An alternative has emerged, from Republican council Chairman Ronald C. Dillon Jr., who during election season last year opposed a broad-based storm-water restoration fee on all property owners.
At Tuesday's work session on the topic, however, he said that Leopold's plan to levy a fee only on future development doesn't go far enough because it fails to address the disparate environmental impact of older development.
Anne Arundel officials said this week that the county faces a $5 billion price tag to restore waterways and install controls to curb runo ff - a figure several times higher than previously estimated. They called County Executive John R. Leopold's plan to create a $5.3 million fund "a good start." Leopold said he would "entertain" placing charges on existing development if there's enough council support.

Wind farm idea is floated
Offshore turbines would be visible from Ocean City
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bay_environment/bal-te.md.wind12oct12,0,1599641.story
A New Jersey-based company wants to build about 150 wind turbines, each more than 40 stories tall, in the Atlantic Ocean 12 miles from the tourist-packed beaches of Ocean City. The developers presented the broad outlines of their concept for Maryland's coast yesterday during a closed-door meeting with members of the state Public Service Commission. No written proposal has been submitted, but company officials said a wind farm would cost about $1.6 billion. The firm has also met with Gov. Martin O'Malley's office and the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, which has started studying the potential impact on birds and fish.
The project would be subject to approval by the U.S. Department of the Interior because the turbines would be in federal waters. And approval would be needed from Maryland agencies to bring power cables ashore.

O'Malley promises word on special session soon
http://www.examiner.com/a-985189~O_Malley_promises_word_on_special_session_soon.html
Gov. Martin O'Malley said Thursday that "early next week" he'll have an announcement about calling a special session of the Gener al Assembly to deal with his deficit-reducing package, and that "early next week you'll see the legislation rolling out" with details on his slot machines proposal. Rumors were thick in Annapolis on Wednesday that the governor would announce the next day that he was calling the legislature back on Oct. 29. But O'Malley's staffers insisted they did not know the date, and the governor did not give a date at a closed Cabinet meeting Thursday morning. Staff of the House speaker and Senate president also said they hadn't been given a date. All he would say about the slots proposal is that it would be "a combination of locations at racetracks and some other destination locations." O'Malley also slammed Republicans for not supporting "any tax reform measures" and for pulling back their support on slots, "and they won't be advancing any cuts that they would be willing to vote for."
House Republican Leader Anthony O'Donnell repeated his willingness to share his party's pro posed cuts with O'Malley privately, but "clearly this governor has no desire to rein in spending in state government."
"We have a solid plan," O'Donnell said. It includes slots but no tax increases.

GOP primary challenger reporting cash surge
http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/displayUpdate.htm?StoryID=66267
The challenger in the upcoming Republican primary in the 1st Congressional District is reporting a surge in contributions.
State Sen. Andy Harris' campaign is reporting $352,000 in third quarter contributions - a total that could be a record for the district.
Incumbent Congressman Wayne Gilchrest's campaign has until midnight Monday to report its numbers. Gilchrest raised $82,000 in the second quarter.
Harris told The (Salisbury) Daily Times he couldn't have raised th at amount if people weren't confident in his record and disappointed in incumbent Wayne Gilchrest.


EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Settling accounts
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.franchot12oct12,0,3316214.story
Cracking down on state tax evaders ought to be a top priority, particularly when Maryland is facing a $1.7 billion budget deficit. After all, every dollar collected from an unpaid tax bill is a dollar less in new taxes or budget cuts. So Comptroller Peter Franchot's recent announcement that his office could clear as much as $200 million within the next four years - if he can expand his staff, pay them a bit more, and upgrade technology - deserves serious consideration.
So why is the O'Malley administration acting so cool to the idea ?
In recent weeks, Maryland has been collecting about $2 million more each month from businesses thanks to a pilot program with the IRS that allows the state to attach payments to federal vendors. Improved technology could allow many more such programs. The agency could tap a veritable warehouse of data to check and crosscheck financial transactions against tax returns.
Mr. Franchot's job is chiefly to collect taxes. Mr. O'Malley's is to run state government. They don't have to be best friends, but voters expect them to do their jobs and not use public policy to settle accounts - other than unpaid tax bills.

SCHIP on the merits
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.schip11oct11,0,380908.story
From a Maryland perspective, the campaign to override President Bush's veto of legislation expand ing access to health insurance for working-class children isn't going well. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid started out by leveling a thinly veiled threat at Republican Rep. Roscoe G. Bartlett, the only Marylander to vote against the measure. But Mr. Bartlett has reveled in the attention, saying he was pleased to be identified as the only one who got it right.
No one likes being bullied. But we urge Mr. Bartlett to reconsider the various options for SCHIP on the merits. This is a program designed primarily by Senate Republicans to help the growing ranks of working people who can't get insurance through employers and can't afford the full cost of buying it on their own. It's been a great success.
Mr. Bartlett is rooting for a compromise that would help less-needy folks buy insurance with refundable tax credits. He says he wants to maintain their control over health care choices.

We don't need a referendum on slots
http://www.examiner.com/a-985192~Editorial__We_don_t_need_a_referendum_on_slots.html
If fixing the $1.7 billion structural deficit is O'Malley's top priority, sending slots to the people won't help the process. He suggested that idea earlier this week because: "We would finally let the people decide, in a way, what their representatives have been incapable of deciding for the last four years."
We agree with his sentiment. But this is from a man who wants to call a special session this fall to speed the passage of a host of new taxes. Any referendum would have to wait until next fall, assuming three-fifths of state legislators in both chambers agree to send it to the voters.
The state cannot afford to wait another year while surrounding states bank the hundreds of millions of dollars Marylanders spend playing slots across the bo rder.We've chronicled hundreds of millions of dollars the state spent on public schools, golf courses and other projects that achieved no measurable - and sometimes a negative - return on investment for Maryland taxpayers. Cutting that waste could cancel a large chunk of the state's debt and eliminate the need to raise taxes.
Debating how to do so is our legislators' duty. They should take those issues up - and slots - on return to Annapolis in January.

By O'Malley's own hand
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071012/EDITORIAL/110120001
Call it Martin O'Malley's $1.7 billion problem.Eleven months ago, Marylanders voted a Republican governor out of office and gave General Assembly Democrats majorities of more than 2-1 in the House of Delegates and the state Senate. So, who would be to b lame if Mr. O'Malley, a Democrat, fails to get legislation authorizing tax increases and slot machines through the legislature at a special session next month?
The fact is that Mr. O'Malley's plan is in trouble in part because: 1) He has failed to convince many of his liberal Democratic political allies that slots are a good idea; and 2) the tax increases that the governor is pushing have also alienated some of his prominent liberal supporters, including House Speaker Mike Busch, Anne Arundel Democrat, who is no fan of slots. So partisan politics is not the problem.
Mr. O'Malley's political problems are self-made - the result of a combination of extremely liberal politics and a heavyhanded personal style that grates on people. If he continues to insist on a special session, then it is his job to pull a bipartisan coalition together. After that heavylifting is done, Mr. O'Malley will have to reveal to Marylanders his plan to get the state out of its $1.7 billion fiscal hole. They want to know whether his plan goes beyond reaching into their wallets.

Political Notes - Debate on debates
http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/reporters_notebooks_display.htm?StoryID=66252
Fans of politics love a good debate, but is it too early for one about the 2008 Congressional race?
Democratic Congressional candidate Andrew Duck challenged Republican Roscoe Bartlett to a debate this week, but the incumbent said the request was premature.
"I look forward to debates with the Democratic nominee after Democratic voters make their choice from a field of candidates," Bartlett said in a statement.
Duck challenged Bartlett through a press release calling for a public debate where Bartlett would be asked to defend his votes against extending the State Child Health Insurance Program. Duck asked for it to take place before Oct. 18, the date Congress is scheduled to vote on an override of President Bush's veto of the bill.


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Four years ago, slots would have fixed everything
http://www.examiner.com/a-985191~Letters__October_12__2007.html
The Democratic party has a lot of guts putting blame on the GOP for stopping slots during a special session, (GOP senators fight 'nonfactor' label by standing firm against slots plan, Oct. 8). They had four regular sessions with Republicans to form a consensus about bringing slots to Maryland during the Ehrlich administration. In the final year of Ehrlich's administration, House Speaker Michael Busch failed to have a meeting of the minds between the House and Senate to work out the slots issue with Senate President Thomas V. "M ike" Miller.
Michael Busch and then Baltimore City Mayor Martin O'Malley stood in the way of Marylanders making their own choice about how to spend their hard-earned money. Now Gov. O'Malley and the Democrats want to blame Republicans for what Republicans have been telling them for the past four years. Slots generate revenue and if we had slots four years ago we wouldn't need any special session or tax increases.
J. Michael Collins
Reisterstown

NATIONAL NEWS

Md. delegation backs BRAC costs
http://www.capitalonline.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/10_11-49/TOP
Maryland's congressional delegation yesterday defended the process that will move thousands of military jobs to the state as cost effective and good for the country, after criticism from other states that spawned an ove rsight hearing.
The federal base realignment and closure plan will ultimately save the military millions of dollars, eliminating duplication of services, improving national defense and improving efficiency, said Heather Moeder Molino, deputy chief of staff for Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Cockeysville. Spokeswomen for Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Mechanicsville, and Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski, D-Md., said they are confident the hearing won't change anything.
"At the end of the day, it's going to make sense for these facilities to be at Aberdeen," said Stephanie Lundgren, a Hoyer spokeswoman. Melissa Schwartz, Ms. Mikulski's spokeswoman, said the New Jersey delegation is doing "exactly what the Maryland delegation would be doing if we lost one of our most valuable bases," but that the BRAC Commission's recommendations have already been signed into law.



Subject: FROSTBURG STATE ON SATURDAY "Protest O'Malley Tax Hikes on October 13 at FSU"
"Press Release - October 10, 2007

Protest O'Malley Tax Hikes on October 13 at FSU

This Saturday, October 13, Governor Martin O'Malley will be stopping by Frostburg State University in an attempt to sell his proposal to increase Maryland taxes. The stop will be apart of what Wall Street Journal editors have labeled, O'Malley's "tax-increase-a-day tour". The Governor has been introducing tax increases at several events across the state. At some of the Governor's recent stops he has revealed his plans to increase the sales tax 20% from 5 cents to six cents on the dollar, to double the cigarette tax to $2 per pack, and to increase the gas tax 12 cents per gallon. All these taxes add up from hundreds to thousands of dollars of new taxes on Maryland families and small businesses.

Wall Street Jour nal editors also noted that almost two-thirds of the people targeted by the Governor's burdensome tax increases are small business owners, and that they are Maryland's major employers.

The Frostburg State University chapter of College Republicans will be leading a protest of the Governor when he visits the university in order to raise awareness of his these heavy increases. The FSU College Republicans invite all other concerned citizens, Republicans, Independents, and Democrats alike, to join them as Governor O'Malley tries to 'sell' his taxes.

Only citizens' opposition and action will stop the Governor's oppressive taxes.

These are the facts and if you are interested in stopping these tax hikes please join us. Everyone is instructed to meet at the Clock Tower in front of the FSU Lane Center at 10:30 am on Saturday, October 13.

For more information please contact Mike Martel at (443) 474-6384. Participants' respectful protest is appreciated. Thank you.

Jeff Bailey
Maryland Federation of College Republicans
Western Maryland Vice-Chair"