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

Friday, April 18, 2008

20080417 News Clips


NewsClips 04-17-2008

STATE NEWS

Rhetoric heating in slots battle

O'Malley, Franchot exchange barbs

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.slots17apr17,0,4162453.story

The statewide battle over a November referendum that would legalize slot machine gambling in Maryland heated up yesterday with sniping between Gov. Martin O'Malley, the ballot measure's chief proponent, and Comptroller Peter Franchot, an outspoken opponent.
The rhetoric is a preview to what is shaping up as a debate that will span the next seven months until voters decide on a constitutional amendment that would authorize slots. Not only are O'Malley and Franchot staking out sides, but so are a host of other politicos, clergy and business leaders who are casting the slots fight in broad terms and as one of high stakes. Both sides traded the "hypocrite" label. Slots opponents noted that O'Malley once called gambling a "morally bankrupt" way to fund education, although he campaigned for governor on a plan allowing limited slots at Maryland racetracks. Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller, a longtime supporter of slots, warned that without the added revenue the state would be forced to make deep budget cuts in education and public safety, because "there is no political will whatsoever to raise any additional taxes between now and the next election." Miller also lambasted Franchot for not being "a team player." "Franchot knows he's not going to be the one to have to make the cuts, so he can look back and say, 'Tsk, tsk,'" Miller said. "He'll always be on the outside throwing gas on the flames." The anti-slots camp organized under the ballot committee Marylanders United to Stop Slots held a rally yesterday at an Annapolis church. The group's steering committee includes Prince George's County State's Attorney Glenn F. Ivey, a Democrat; Rep. Wayne T. Gilchrest, a Republican; Taylor Branch, the Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.; and more than a dozen state lawmakers.

Justices uphold lethal method

Republican leaders urge O'Malley to act on Md. executions

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nation/bal-te.lethal17apr17,0,4586454.story

In a decision expected to clear the way for states to resume executions by lethal injection, the Supreme Court upheld yesterday Kentucky's execution procedures, which are used by nearly every state with a death penalty law, including Maryland. Within hours of yesterday's ruling, the governor of Virginia announced that he was lifting his state's moratorium on executions, while several prosecutors and governors around the country said they would seek execution dates as quickly as the courts can set them. Gov. Martin O'Malley has made no move to order new procedures, but after the high court decision, Republican leaders urged him to do so. In a sharply worded letter to the governor, Republican leaders of the House of Delegates accused O'Malley of engaging in "a de facto suspension of the law" and called on him to immediately issue new execution procedures to begin the approval process. "To take those [Division of Correction] procedures and put them into the format of a regulation and run them through the process is a relatively easy thing to accomplish," said Del. Anthony J. O'Donnell, the House minority leader. "But if we have a governor who decides to casually pick and choose what he's going to adhere to in the Constitution, we're all at great risk. We feel strongly about that."

Debate over slots spins on economy

http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080417/METRO/174017526/1004

Both sides in Maryland"s slots debate are going for voters" pocketbooks. As the campaigns for and against allowing slot-machine gambling start up, the economy will be a theme for both sides. A group of about 30 slots opponents gathered at an Annapolis church yesterday to begin their public campaign urging voters to reject a November referendum to allow up to 15,000 slots machines at five locations. A major talking point was to reject arguments that slots are needed to prevent tax increases. Maryland"s top slots supporter — Gov. Martin O"Malley — said before the opponents" announcement yesterday that defeating slots means school construction and other important state programs would be put in danger. "Hopefully, the opponents have a suggestion as to where else the people of Maryland, the state of Maryland will get these important dollars that are currently building schools and addressing public needs in Pennsylvania, Delaware and West Virginia," the governor said, citing neighboring states where slot machines are in place. Bishop John R. Schol of the Baltimore-Washington Conference of the United Methodist Church, who attended the announcement, said he is telling pastors to promote alternative solutions to a bad economy, "Many states don't have slots, and they can figure it out," Bishop Schol said.

General Assembly Expands Dental Care for Poor Children

New Funding Increases Medicaid Rates Paid to Dentists

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/16/AR2008041601365.html

Advocates for children's dental care were biting their nails through much of Maryland's recent General Assembly session. But despite a flurry of spending cuts, millions of additional state dollars aimed at expanding dental care for poor children made it into the state's budget for the coming fiscal year. The added funds, which will be used to boost rates paid to dentists who treat Medicaid children and help expand public dental care in underserved areas, are part of a long-term strategy to provide more dental care to poor children throughout the state. The barriers to dental care are complex, but one contributing factor has been the shortage of dentists willing to accept Medicaid patients. Many have cited the state's historically low Medicaid reimbursement rates as a deterrent to providing services.

Top Gilchrest aide to join Kratovil campaign

http://www.politickermd.com/kevinagnese/1822/top-gilchrest-aide-join-kratovil-campaign

Lynn Caligiuri, a longtime aide to Rep. Wayne Gilchrest (R-Kennedyville) has been hired by the congressional campaign of Frank Kratovil (D-Stevensville) to assist in fundraising matters, according to Erik Gulbrandsen, the campaign’s communications director. “She will be helping us to go after some of the Republican money and some of the national money,” Gulbrandsen told PolitickerMD.com. Tony Caligiuri, Lynn’s husband and Gilchrest’s chief of staff, has already pledged his support to Kratovil. Gilchrest has not endorsed a candidate.

Fort Meade plans laid out

Defense agency will move workers there as part base realignment

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.meade17apr17,0,3077857.story

Nearly 4,300 workers will work out of the new headquarters of the Defense Information Systems Agency, the biggest of the new tenants moving to Fort Meade in Anne Arundel County as part of the Pentagon's base realignment and closure process. The Arlington, Va.-based agency, established in 1960, handles the military's communications network. Yesterday, at a ceremony attended by more than 150 people, including Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown and Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, officials laid out the plans for a 1-million-square-foot office building on 95 acres that are now a golf course. Officials said yesterday that they are working to ensure that roads and schools can handle the influx of new workers. Interstate 175 is to be widened, but not until after many workers have moved in, said Robert Hannon, chief executive of Anne Arundel County's economic development arm.

Special Election Bill Among Those To Be Signed

http://wjz.com/local/omalley.election.bill.2.702018.html

A bill to allow a special election to replace Congressman Albert Wynn will be signed into law Thursday, along with dozens more bills. Governor Martin O'Malley will sign the Wynn bill, which changes state law governing special elections to allow the Wynn seat to be filled without a special primary, too. Wynn lost a Democratic primary in February and then announced he would retire before his term ends. Wynn is leaving in June to take a Washington law firm job. His term was to run though January.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Today's catch: Fewer crabs

Our view: Bistate efforts help, but harvest restrictions just a start

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.crab17apr17001521,0,4580670.story

While the Chesapeake Bay's fish and shellfish populations have long been in decline, our elected leaders have seldom taken sufficient measures to protect them. This week's announcement that Gov. Martin O'Malley and Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine will direct their respective regulatory agencies to reduce the harvest of female crabs by 34 percent is a welcome development. The prospect of real partnership between the states on this issue is noteworthy. The southward fall migration of mature female crabs makes this very much a shared enterprise - and one that Maryland's southern neighbor has often been reluctant to restrict. Maryland and Virginia need something equivalent to industrial cap-and-trade rules: Set strict individual harvest quotas (based on the annual survey) and grant watermen the right to trade or sell their allocation to others. That would leave fewer watermen on the bay, but the ones left behind would be able to earn a living.

Clawing for Life

Facing disaster, two governors act to save the Chesapeake Bay's crabs.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/16/AR2008041603281.html

THE MOMENT that Chesapeake Bay watermen had been dreading arrived Tuesday. Faced with a dire drop in the blue crab harvest, the governors of Maryland and Virginia announced sharp new limits on the volume of sooks (as female crabs, the ones generally used to make crab cakes, are known) that can be taken from the bay's waters. The new rules mean that inevitably, and through little fault of their own, some watermen will be driven out of business and out of the only way of life they have known. The governors are ordering state agencies to cut the harvest of female blue crabs this year by a third. But it is really more of a stopgap designed to avert utter catastrophe than a lasting solution. Assuming no dramatic foreseeable improvement in the bay's ecology, the states must do what they have pointedly failed to so far: Devise a long-term strategy for the revival of the crab population. Part of the problem may have been competition or a lack of coordination between the two states; part of it may have been political cold feet by politicians loath to deliver bad news to the bay's 1,000 watermen and the thousands of others whose jobs depend on the crab harvest. But muddling through is no longer an option; to do so could mean extinction for a fishery that is synonymous with the Chesapeake Bay.

On the map

Visit by state leaders may be first for city

http://www.times-news.com/editorials

It what may be a first for Cumberland, Maryland's governor, lieutenant governor and entire Cabinet will spend a full day here as part of the state's "Capital for a Day" program.
More than just a social call, the visit will feature a regular Cabinet meeting and will enable the state's top elected leaders to see firsthand the good things that are happening in the Queen City, as well as focusing on what needs to be improved. Cumberland Mayor Lee Fiedler, who was on hand in Annapolis Monday when the Oct. 11 visit was announced, said the city is honored that it will be one of the cities to be visited. "It's a chance we have and we'll do a lot of work and hard planning for this. We're going to showcase what we're doing and the problems. We're going to work with them ... There's going to be a lot of planning going on to make sure we bring important things in our area in front of them," he said.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

20080416 TimesWatch Tracker


TimesWatch Tracker
Documenting and Exposing the Liberal
Agenda of the New York Times

TimesWatch Tracker: Our Latest Analysis

Wednesday, April 16 2008

Maureen Dowd Massacres Obama's "Elitism"
Maureen Dowd: "Behind closed doors in San Francisco, elitism's epicenter, Barack Obama showed his elitism, attributing the emotional, spiritual and cultural values of working-class, 'lunch pail' Pennsylvanians to economic woes."

NYT Smothers McCain's Conservative Tax-Cut Plan with Dem Assaults
Michael Cooper, always on the bright side: "With the address, Mr. McCain labored to overcome the impression that he does not understand the economy well, and the idea being pushed by his Democratic rivals that he does not comprehend the economic pain felt by many Americans."

Reporter Says European Health Care Far Superior to "High-Cost" U.S. "Failure"
"If your latest battle with your H.M.O. has you pounding your head with frustration, 'Sick Around the World' on PBS may spur you to more drastic action, like leaving the United States altogether."

Times Greets Bush-Supporting Berlusconi's Comeback in Italy with Raspberry
Oh no, not him again: "Silvio Berlusconi, the idiosyncratic billionaire who already dominates much of Italy's public life, snatched back political power in elections that ended Monday...the least bad choice...."


20080416 News Clips


20080416 News Clips

NewsClips 04-16-2008

STATE NEWS

Anti Slots Campaign Heats Up In Maryland

http://wbal.com/stories/templates/news.aspx?articleid=4859&zoneid=2

Maryland's public referendum on slot machine gambling isn't until November. But opponents are starting their campaign to defeat the initiative today. A group called Marylanders United to Stop Slots is meeting this afternoon at an Annapolis church to announce their plans to campaign against slots. Opponents will argue today that the money should be made up through budget cuts and better enforcement of existing tax laws, not gambling.

Anti-Slots Effort Relies Heavily On Ex-Duncan Campaign Staff

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/15/AR2008041502948.html

Former Montgomery County executive Douglas M. Duncan is not expected to attend today's kickoff of a grass-roots campaign to defeat November's statewide referendum on slot machine gambling. But if the message at the event has a familiar ring, there is good reason: It is crafted by the people behind Duncan's 2006 Democratic primary bid against Gov. Martin O'Malley. Scott Arceneaux, who was Duncan's gubernatorial campaign manager, is now a senior adviser to Marylanders United to Stop Slots. "Politics is a small world, and Doug ran on an anti-slots program, so it's not surprising that we have all ended up working on this issue," Arceneaux said. "But this will be a much broader campaign, and it will include a diverse group of people." To that end, the fledgling anti-slots group plans to roll out the names today of almost 100 members of its steering committee, including Rep. Wayne T. Gilchrest (R-Md.), a longtime slots opponent who lost his 1st District primary in February to a more conservative state senator. At one campaign event, Duncan warned that legalization of slot machines would usher in a Las Vegas-style economy, in which generations of Maryland children would "sit in a cage, changing money for people" instead of pursuing careers in biotechnology and other more lucrative fields.

Council scolds school leaders

Officials clash over handling of proposal to not fill 200 teaching jobs

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/annearundel/bal-ar.teachers16apr16,0,6704536.story

Angry County Council members yesterday accused the Anne Arundel County school system of vilifying the county government for the superintendent's proposal to leave 200 teaching positions unfilled, with the council chairwoman blasting school officials for running "one hell of a PR [public relations] scam." "Whoever's doing your PR over there is doing one heck of a job, not a fair one, but a good job," Council Chairwoman Cathleen M. Vitale scolded the district's top business and human resources officials. "I'm wondering when I will see the press release that says the superintendent cut 200 positions ... so [he] can move forward with other non-core programs and initiatives." Council members insisted they funded 294 new teaching positions last year, and it was the school district's decision to use the money in other ways and pull the funding from such a controversial area as classroom teachers. During the past three weeks, a grass-roots letter-writing campaign was launched in several schools. Parents met on playgrounds and school libraries and cafeterias to hammer out strategies for bombarding the County Council, Leopold, school board members and local media with letters of protest. They printed fliers and pamphlets with information on the budget. They are planning to speak before the school board tonight and into May.

State aims to help children without insurance

Letters to notify families who might be eligible for federal program

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/howard/bal-md.ho.health16apr16,0,525714.story

Inspired by Howard County's success in finding uninsured children eligible for federal health coverage, state officials are launching a search of their own. Health officials are preparing to mail notices to tens of thousands of people across Maryland whose family members might be eligible for a federal program that provides access to affordable health care. A bill approved this month by the General Assembly directs the comptroller's office to review state tax information to determine who might be eligible and then notify the families. Part of that plan is to use existing programs that people might not know about, such as the federally funded State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). In addition to recruiting more uninsured children, state health officials said a second mailing will be conducted to notify families that are newly eligible for Medicaid following General Assembly approval of expanded eligibility criteria.

Governors act to cut harvest of crabs

Md.-Va. effort aims to protect species

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bay_environment/bal-te.md.governors16apr16,0,4479862.story

The governors of Maryland and Virginia have agreed to take immediate steps to reduce by one-third the amount of female blue crabs harvested from the Chesapeake Bay - an unprecedented joint effort to stop the skid of the bay's iconic species.
Maryland officials said they are prepared to offer other work to watermen to make up for lost income. Natural resources officials pointed out that there is $3 million in the capital budget to help the seafood industry. Some of it could be used to hire watermen to build oyster reefs or start aquaculture businesses, officials said.
"What will happen to our watermen and their livelihoods if we fail to take any action?" O'Malley asked. "The right thing for our watermen is that we act now, and that is what we are doing." Bill Matuszeski, former director of the federal-state Chesapeake Bay Program, said now is a "unique time" for the bay because Kaine, O'Malley and Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell, also a Democrat, are working together instead of pointing fingers at one another. "This is a good sign," he said. "The governors of Maryland and Virginia are saying ... that this is essentially one crab population, and that it is not respectful of state boundaries."

Montgomery Weighs Rise In Energy, Land Taxes

Council Seeking Ways To Balance '09 Budget

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/15/AR2008041501566.html

Montgomery County residents would pay more to heat their homes and keep the lights on, under two council proposals introduced yesterday that would raise local energy taxes to help balance the budget and encourage conservation. The energy tax measures, which would each raise $11 million, are meant to give the council flexibility to scale back Leggett's call for the largest property tax increase in two decades to close a $297 million shortfall. "I see no way that we could make up this money through anything other than magic," council member Marc Elrich (D-At Large) said, calling a property tax increase all but inevitable. "It's unrealistic to say we're not going to go there; it's a question of how much we're going to go there."

Praisner's Husband Wins Primary

Democrats Nominate Widower to Succeed Wife on Council

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/15/AR2008041501183.html

Don Praisner, the husband of the late Montgomery County Council member Marilyn Praisner, won the Democratic nomination yesterday to serve out his wife's term in District 4, a victory that reflected her popularity from 17 years in office. The winners of the primary contests will compete in a May 13 general election in District 4, where Democrats hold a wide advantage in voter registration. The election came at a turbulent time for the council as it faces a projected $297 million budget shortfall for fiscal 2009 and wrestles with decisions on raising taxes, cutting services or revising labor contracts.

Republican candidates were united in their opposition to Leggett's proposal to increase property tax revenue above the limit set by the county's charter. Fennel promised property tax relief. The other GOP candidates -- McKinnis; Thomas Hardman, an information technology developer; and Robert P. Patton, an athletic fields specialist -- also pledged to stick to the charter limit.

Anne Arundel wins some, loses some at General Assembly

http://www.examiner.com/a-1343277~Anne_Arundel_wins_some__loses_some_at_General_Assembly.html

Anne Arundel received millions of dollars in bond bills and higher fees in the 2008 General Assembly, but the county took a notable revenue hit, lawmakers said. The state legislature approved the county’s push to increase fees on well drillers and restaurants, approved a requirement for the Maryland Department of the Environment to repay the county for testing during the coal fly ash incident, and approved more than $1 million in grant funding for new art houses and homeless shelters. However, the General Assembly also made video bingo machines, hundreds of which are in Anne Arundel’s three bingo halls, illegal. The county collects nearly $2 million in taxes and fees on the machines, which must be out of the state by July 2009. Leopold didn’t receive additional money for public school teachers nationally certified in science, technology, engineering and math. The hope was to encourage better teaching in a fast-growing area of education, but it died in the Senate.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

The austerity option

Our view: County executive makes right call with lean budget

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.baltcounty16apr16001517,0,4211704.story

Baltimore County Executive James T. Smith Jr. probably shouldn't expect a lot of thank-you notes from his county employees this year. The $2.58 billion budget he unveiled yesterday doesn't give most of them cost-of-living raises. Teachers have expressed their displeasure with picketing and a work-to-rule protest. But the proposed budget does hold the line on spending and taxes - keeping property tax and personal income tax rates exactly where they've been for a decade and a half. Mr. Smith could have proposed raising taxes. That's what Gov. Martin O'Malley chose to do last year to address the state's structural deficit. But the county's financial situation is simply not as dire. Asking teachers and other county employees to tighten their belts for one year is the right call, but like a homeowner who defers maintenance, it's a strategy that can't continue forever.

The young, the proud, the Republican

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.vozzella16apr16,0,4504875.column

About 60 future lawyers turned out the other day to hear Bob Ehrlich speak to the Republican Law Society at the University of Maryland Law School. I didn't know there were that many Republicans in all of Baltimore. "You'd be surprised," said Sebastian Kurian, a third-year student and the society president. "We actually have a fairly large number of Republicans at the school." They just keep a lower profile than the Democrats on campus - and not just because, according to Kurian, "99 percent of the faculty and professors are Democrats and liberals."A lot of the Democratic students enroll in the law school "specifically to work in government or to run for office someday," he said, so they're likely to be politically active. (One alum, Gov. Martin O'Malley, attended his 20th reunion Saturday.) But Kurian said the Republican students are more focused on their futures in corporate law.
"We'd be more likely to give a campaign contribution but not exactly go out and do some grass-roots work," he said. "We're not as involved in the political scene." But they were still glad to hear from the former GOP Gov - and to hear that his firm, Womble Carlyle, will be on campus this fall to recruit interns for summer 2009.
If Ehrlich is looking for campaign recruits, sounds like he'd better look elsewhere. Kurian, who has a job lined up with Miles & Stockbridge, at least sounds willing to write him a check. "I'm going to be working for a big firm here in Baltimore, and I'm terrified of my first tax bill," he said. "So it would be nice to get as many Republicans in office as possible."

NATIONAL NEWS

Hoyer Wants to Make Your Taxes Simpler Next Year

http://www.thebaynet.com/news/index.cfm/fa/viewstory/story_ID/8240

As taxpayers in Maryland completed their tax returns today, Congressman Steny H. Hoyer (D-MD) joined a majority in the House of Representatives in support of the Taxpayer Assistance and Simplification Act, a bill that strengthens taxpayer protections and restores measures of accountability and fairness to the federal tax code. Rep. Hoyer also reported on how the 110th Congress is working to simplify the tax code, make it more equitable and ensure taxpayer dollars are spent more wisely.
“This bill takes action on behalf of America’s taxpayers with provisions that will strengthen protections and restore accountability and fairness to the tax code,” stated Rep. Hoyer. “While further action is required, the 110th Congress is moving forward in the right direction, after years of ill-conceived policy-making that made the tax code more complex, more onerous and less fair for the vast majority of Americans.” “For far too long, the tax code has given greater advantages to corporations and left middle class families to fend for themselves,” added Rep. Hoyer. “I am proud to back legislation that will require companies to pay their fair share and help ensure taxpayers who play by the rules get the assistance they need and deserve.”

20080416 Today is Beatrice Dalle - French movie day


Today is Beatrice Dalle - French movie day

(17 fois Cécile Cassard) Pretty Killer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nTryJX7cn4

Scène de danse entre Beatrice Dalle et Romain Duris, tirée du film dix-sept fois Cecile Cassard (Christophe Honoré).

Now the party is over,

And I guess im over too,

The music is going slower,

I just cant take my eyes of you,

Pretty killer,

Little crime,

Dancing with another guy.

I have no chance to kiss you later,

I think I’ve lost too many times,

I am too drunk to be your lover,

You’re too sober to be mine.

Pretty killer...

There’s no more common eyedline,

no more djs to save my life,

what I could I do to froddon him,

I’ve forgot to take my knife...

Betty Blue - Last Scene

37°2 le matin

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BIaU1us81Ts

37,2 le matin – Rose

http://youtube.com/watch?v=1drrmSLOIdU

Scène du film de Jean-Jacques Beineix où Béatrice Dalle s'emballe et verse un pot de peinture sur la caisse du monstrueux proprio.

20080416 Today is Beatrice Dalle - French movie day

37°2 le matin

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR0rp__rRAk


20080415 The Newest Maryland State Highway Sign


The Newest Maryland State Highway Sign

April 15, 2008

Hat Tip: CJ

20080415 The Newest Maryland State Highway Sign

20080416 This week in The Tentacle


This week in The Tentacle

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

How to Make Trash Go Away

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Tomorrow the Carroll County Board of Commissioners will deliberate in open session and – hopefully – make a decision regarding the offer from Frederick County to join forces to make 1,100 tons of trash a day go away.

In recent separate interviews with Carroll County Public Works Director Mike Evans, and Carroll County Commissioners Mike Zimmer and Dean Minnich, the conversation quickly turned away from the actual choice to the intellectual, critical criteria necessary in order to make such a legacy decision.

Both commissioners bristled over the political threats and emotional advocacy and pleaded for more scientific information.

Commissioner Minnich immediately identified science and long-term safety as a decision driver. Commissioner Zimmer also identified science; and both commissioners agreed that a thorough public education and discussion process was critical.

And what an education process it has been so far. In a series of recent conversations with a few old-timers, all agreed that we have never witnessed such an exhaustive and open public discussion and education process on any public policy decision or environmental issue.

Bear in mind, a review of my files indicates that this is my fourth go-round regarding what to do with trash in Carroll County in 41 years – going back to 1967. It was a few short years after the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970, that trash really hit the fan in Carroll County.

Read the entire column here: How to Make Trash Go Away


Las Vegas Bound

Tom McLaughlin

Viva Las Vegas! Viva Las Vegas! The Elvis Presley tune has not left my brain since I decided to visit that city in the desert.


Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Havemus Papam!

Roy Meachum

After the cardinals' votes are counted, a white plume from the Sistine Chapel tells St. Peter's Square and the world "We have a pope!" "Havemus Papam," in Latin, once the customary language within the Vatican's walls.


A Change in Direction Needed

Nick Diaz

As your son or daughter and their friends were moving from elementary school to middle school, you may have noticed that a number of them did not want to be identified as “smart kids” – even though they had always done rather well during their elementary years. Some of them were afraid that they would be picked on by other students if it were known that they were bright. Others just wanted to fit in.


Monday, April 14, 2008

General Assembly Journal 2008 – Volume 9

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

It never ceases to amaze. The Maryland General Assembly Session is 90 days long, as defined in the state constitution. Legislators are summoned to Annapolis on the second Wednesday of January every year. At that moment, the 90-day session seems almost eternal, the thought of time away from home and family adds burden to those long winter nights.


Charlton Heston: A Commentary

Steven R. Berryman

I would never pretend to write a biography or obituary for Charlton Heston, and certainly have nothing first hand to offer as does The Tentacle’s Roy Meachum, but I have been affected by his life and his death. And his work.


Friday, April 11, 2008

Mother Egypt Cries – Again!

Roy Meachum

Lurking in newspapers' back pages, correspondents report there are riots along the Nile over the scarcity and cost of bread. For Egypt's millions of poor, it is not simply "the staff of life." Those flat loaves are life itself.


"Leatherheads" & "Smokey Joe"

Roy Meachum

Much to my surprise, "Smokey Joe's Cafe" enchanted and George Clooney's new flick did not.


Thursday, April 10, 2008

Sine Die Came Too Late

Chris Cavey

This week the General Assembly was dismissed from Annapolis to return home to the real world. And not a moment too soon. The annual legislative session is like a visit to the dentist; you know it has to happen and you’re glad when you are finished – especially if you had a political root canal.


An Open Letter to the Commissioners

Joan McIntyre

I want to thank you in advance of the adoption of next year’s budget. I do this primarily because I know this may well be the most difficult budget year in many of your careers. There will be very little thanks in this particular portion of your job.


Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Wendi Peters – Mount Airy’s Steel Magnolia

Kevin E. Dayhoff

People were delighted to see former Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr., last Friday when he came to Frederick County in support of Mount Airy Councilwoman Wendi Wagner Peter’s re-election bid.


Fallen from Grace

Tom McLaughlin

I have trouble equating human life with money. It’s like combining an apple and an orange to make a new fruit. Shakespeare and algebra simply will not go together in a publishable book.


Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Bemoaning Rick Weldon's Farewell

Roy Meachum

The legislative process, state or federal, frequently invokes the image of grass growing; it is generally long and tedious, unmemorable. The real trick for a journalist comes from watching out for "moles," the bills that work slightly undercover, like the fuzzy critters.


How to Avoid Getting Run Over…

Farrell Keough

Sometimes you are the bug and sometimes you are the windshield. It seems that recently we taxpaying residents of Maryland have been the bug. Of course, this covers a multitude of sins.


Monday, April 7, 2008

“1984” Predicts 2008

Steven R. Berryman

Enabling legislation passed by our Maryland General Assembly will allow Frederick to use red light cameras for law enforcement. Frederick is now one small step closer to becoming Montgomery County. Your accuser may be “Big Brother” instead of a police officer. Beware the trend.


The Yin and the Yang of Annapolis

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

This place is really odd. There is just no more appropriate one-word definition. We begin our legislative session in middle of winter’s icy grip, and we end it in all of spring’s emerging glory.


Moses Without a Chariot

Roy Meachum

Charlton Heston and I met a couple of times in Washington. He went to testify before a congressional hearing, something about the American Film Institute.

20080415 News Clips


20080415 News Clips

News Clips 04-15-2008

STATE NEWS

Harris leads in fundraising in 1st

Republican takes in twice rival's total

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.campaign15apr15,0,2453916.story

Republican state Sen. Andy Harris raised nearly twice as much as Democratic Queen Anne's County State's Attorney Frank Kratovil Jr. during the past two months in the race for Maryland's 1st Congressional District, according to figures released yesterday by the campaigns and the Federal Election Commission. Harris brought in more than $400,000 in contributions, compared with about $190,000 for Kratovil, during the final three weeks leading up to the Feb. 12 primary and the period through March 31 Doubling our opponent's fundraising totals clearly shows the Andy Harris campaign is gaining momentum heading into the general election," said Chris Meekins, Harris' campaign manager. "Andy's message of lowering taxes and decreasing wasteful government spending to stimulate economic growth is resonating with voters and donors."

City schools seeking helpers

Alonso makes appeal for 500 volunteers after student attack drew wide attention

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/education/k12/bal-te.md.volunteers15apr15,0,4861445.story?track=rss

Responding to a teacher assault that made national headlines, Baltimore schools chief Andres Alonso is launching a campaign to recruit 500 volunteers for the city schools in the next two weeks.
In a letter e-mailed to 2,500 community members over the weekend, Alonso wrote that "this essential work of making safe schools cannot be done by the administrators, teachers, staff or students at each school alone. I cannot say strongly enough how important it is for families and community members to rally around our schools, our teachers, and our students." Officials are in the process of identifying about 10 schools where dozens of volunteers will be directed. Michael Carter, a past chair of the Parent and Community Advisory Board, said he believes parents will step up to the plate now that safety is involved, "as long as we have things for parents to do."
"The overall need of addressing behavior still rests with parents who send their kids to school," said Carter, who is helping the system coordinate the volunteer recruitment. "You can't expect the Baltimore school system to be the social services department, but that's the work they have to do on a daily basis."
At a City Council meeting yesterday, Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke questioned whether small offenses are going unpunished, potentially sending a message to students that misbehavior goes unnoticed. Calling on the community to volunteer, Clarke said, "Our children in our schools need to know that we are imposing discipline."

Md.'s new 'green' watchdog

Attorney general launches public meetings seeking tips on curbing bay, river pollution

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bay_environment/bal-md.gansler15apr15,0,3940587.story

Taking on a new role as environmental watchdog, Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler says he plans to hold town hall-style meetings across Maryland to find strategies to cut pollution into the Chesapeake Bay. One goal of the meetings - which start tomorrow in Chestertown - is to get tips from residents about polluters the state could prosecute, Gansler said. While environmentalists praised more involvement from the state's top lawyer, some Republicans accused Gansler of overreaching. Del. Michael D. Smigiel Sr., a Republican from the Eastern Shore, said Gansler is trying to usurp the role of the Maryland Department of the Environment, which traditionally has policed pollution. "I think it's political grandstanding," said Smigiel. "I would hope he'd help Baltimore City curb its violent crime, maybe hold some meetings there instead of having an environmental attack on waterfront homeowners and farmers." Del. Richard A. Sossi, a Republican who represents the Chestertown area, said both Gansler and state Comptroller Peter Franchot came out of the box "wanting to be more activist, more involved" than past state officials in their roles. "My only concern is that sometimes they can get a little off the mark in their zeal to make a statement," Sossi said. "The environment is my priority," Gansler said. "I'm the head lawyer in the state, and my job is to promote and advocate for good public policy."

Smith offering 'very lean' budget to County Council

No property tax increase expected; cost-of-living raises not included

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_county/bal-md.co.budget15apr15,0,5604265.story

Baltimore County Executive James T. Smith Jr. is expected to present a budget today to county lawmakers that leaves them little to trim. Cost-of-living pay raises for county workers and anything else considered not essential to the daily functions of local government have already been left out of the spending plan, according to officials familiar with the final draft. While declining to elaborate on specifics, Smith said yesterday, "This is a very lean budget. We're not funding new initiatives."

'Capitals for a Day' for rest of '08 named

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-day0415,0,590999.story

Gov. Martin O'Malley and the mayors of eight municipalities announced yesterday the locations of nearly a dozen cities around the state that will become "Capitals for a Day" during each month of the rest of the year. The program, in which the governor and his Cabinet members visit a city and "run state government," brought the Annapolis crowd to Salisbury, La Plata and Bel Air last year. This year, they will visit Hagerstown, Chestertown, Leonardtown, Pocomoke City, the Prince George's County "Port Towns," Cumberland, Gaithersburg and Ellicott City.

Tax Increases Would Be Legal, Attorneys Say

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/14/AR2008041402811.html

Lawyers for both the Prince George's County Council and County Executive Jack B. Johnson (D) have concluded that county leaders can raise the local income tax rate and the tax imposed on the recordation of home sales without asking voters for their approval at the ballot box. The Prince George's charter establishes some of the nation's toughest restrictions on raising taxes, stating that county leaders must send to a referendum any proposal to increase local taxes or fees. However, at a committee hearing of the council yesterday, county attorney Joseph R. Hamlin and council lawyer Ralph Grutzmacher both said the county's stringent charter language does not apply to the income tax or recordation tax because they were established by state law, which gives local governments guidelines for raising their rates. The Prince George's charter establishes some of the nation's toughest restrictions on raising taxes, stating that county leaders must send to a referendum any proposal to increase local taxes or fees. However, at a committee hearing of the council yesterday, county attorney Joseph R. Hamlin and council lawyer Ralph Grutzmacher both said the county's stringent charter language does not apply to the income tax or recordation tax because they were established by state law, which gives local governments guidelines for raising their rates.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Harford in Joisey eyes

Our view: Newcomers shouldn't fall for such drivel

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/harford/bal-ed.jersey15apr15001519,0,5302711.story

Harford County officials report that an e-mail circulated by unions representing workers at New Jersey's Fort Monmouth warns of an "active" Ku Klux Klan presence in Aberdeen and suggests local organic milk has a "high concentration" of a chemical found in rocket fuel. The e-mail is directed at workers soon to be transferred to Aberdeen Proving Ground under the federal base realignment and closure process. Neither of the allegations is true, of course. While some in New Jersey may be unhappy with the pending BRAC transfers, such slanderous disinformation does its authors no great honor.

Equal-access bill went too far

Competition between disabled, able-bodied bad possibility

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-va.kent15apr15,0,6705623.column

It's a long-held political truism that a legislative body can inflict its worst damage on its citizenry near the close of a session, when passions are high and legislators' attention is scattered toward the twin goals of getting bills passed and getting the heck out of town. In keeping with that time-honored tradition, the Maryland General Assembly waited until the end of its session last week to pass a bill that has the potential to wreak havoc on high school athletics. Left unclear from the bill's passage, however, are the twin questions of how compliance would be effectively measured and whether the bill, if signed by Gov. Martin O'Malley, could force competition between able and disabled athletes, an arrangement that would serve neither party well. The bill, however, says the state Board of Education and county boards must "ensure" that students with disabilities must be given opportunity to "try out for and, if selected, participate in mainstream athletic programs," opening up a potentially massive can of worms for local coaches and athletic administrators. To their credit, the bill's sponsors did provide an exception for when the inclusion of a student "presents an objective safety risk to the student or to others or fundamentally alters the nature of the school's mainstream physical education or mainstream athletic program."

Mandatory madness

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.sentencing15apr15001519,0,2524968.story

During the recent session of the Maryland General Assembly, the House of Delegates rejected a bill that would have given courtroom judges greater sentencing leeway for first-time, nonviolent drug law offenders - including drug treatment programs rather than prison. The bill, sponsored by Del. Curtis S. Anderson of Baltimore, would have been a step in the right direction, but it was defeated for the usual reason: politicians' fear of being labeled "soft on crime." Mr. Anderson says his sentencing reform proposal is based on reports from Maryland judges and drug treatment providers - most of whom favor treatment programs, not prison terms, for small-time, nonviolent drug offenders. America needs enlightened sentencing, not blind uniformity. That's why it is time to get our "sentence-first, verdict-later" lawmakers in Annapolis (and around the nation) out of the courtroom - and let judges do their jobs.

NATIONAL NEWS

Bartlett set to face off against McHugh for top GOP position on Armed Services Committee

http://www.politickermd.com/tags/maryland039ssixthcongressionaldistrict

U.S. Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R-Frederick) believes that he should become the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, but he is facing competition from a senior committee member. Rep. John McHugh (R-N.Y.) recently denied heavy speculation that he planned to resign his seat to run for a position in the New York state Senate. He also drafted a letter to colleagues expressing his interest in becoming the ranking member on the Armed Services Committee. Among those who may seek the position, McHugh is the only one who outranks Bartlett.