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Thursday, September 13, 2007 • St. Mary’s County, Maryland
Times PRSTD STD US Postage Paid Permit No. 145 Waldorf, MD
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Established 2006 • Volume 2 • Issue 37 • FREE
County Dips Into Emergency Reserve Despite Harsh Criticism
Murder Trial Opens Next Week By Guy Leonard Staff Writer
By Adam Ross Staff Writer Standing firm on the board’s agreement to steer clear of funding initiatives outside the budget cycle, Commissioner Daniel H. Raley (D-Great Mills) stood apart from his often tight and unified constituents Tuesday, and was the lone dissenter of using county reserves to improve the Tri-County Animal Shelter in Hughesville. The dissension from Raley Tuesday followed a letter signed by all five of the county commissioners in June denying $30,000 to the shelter for the addition of three livestock stalls and an air conditioning upgrade because the request came prior to the 2008
Photo by Adam Ross
Overlooking Greens Rest subdivision in Great Mills where single-family homes are being built with the attached apartments, in some cases for rental purposes, according to Sabrina Hecht, a planner in land use and growth management.
SMC Considers Mandate On Rental Investment Properties By Adam Ross Staff Writer
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With the influx of military employees into St. Mary’s County and the hardening of national mortgage rates, more homeowners are turning into landlords, using their properties as rental investments to stay afloat. But that could change if the Board of County Commissioners pass a mandate requiring homeowners with accessory dwelling units to physically reside on the property. Commissioner Daniel H. Raley (D-Great Mills) calls it a “loophole” in the system when homeowners with an attached extra living space rent out both the house and
Prosecutors Ride For Juvenile Diabetes
the accessory quarters to complete strangers. In some cases, homeowners move out of Maryland altogether, leaving the renters to manage the array of chores that come with living in a house. The board is poised to do something about the mismanagement, unanimously voting Sept. 4 to authorize county government officials to draft a text amendment for the planning commission. At this point, it is unclear what the draft might specifically restrict. The commissioners are in a unique position with Naval Air Station Patuxent River and its transient workforce who rent in part because of the county’s See Dwelling page A-
By Guy Leonard Staff Writer Two prosecutors in State’s Attorney Richard Fritz’s office are going to tackle one of their toughest assignments this year starting Sept. 20 but it won’t be in front of a judge trying a case in open court. It will be on the open road riding lightweight bicycles in Whitefish, Montana. Both Assistant State’s Attorney’s Daniel White and Joseph Stanalonis will ride a 105-mile course next week to raise funds for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International’s (JDRF) effort to rid the world of the disease. White rode out one race earlier this year and is going back to make more of an impact with about 200 other riders from around the nation. “I do it to raise money and to raise awareness [of juvenile diabetes],” White said. White’s connection to juvenile diabetes is a very personal one because his 6-year-old son was diagnosed with the disease last
St. Mary’s College a Top College in the Nation
structure,” said David Zylak, director of Public Safety. “We are waiting ‘till our neighbors [Charles and Calvert counties] go to a full rebanding to follow.” Once Charles and Calvert counties complete the re-banding, St. Mary’s will follow suit for what Zylak deemed “a seamless transition.” Charles and Calvert are currently working towards receiving planning money for the re-banding, while St. Mary’s skipped the planning stage and went directly into the configuration stage of the process. “Nextel is in the process of getting signatures to make sure everyone is progressing towards the final goal,” Zylak said. Funded in full by Nextel Communications, the re-banding will likely cost $1.5 million, according to Elaine Kramer, the county’s chief financial officer. The county currently has $750,000 already set aside in its budget.
From academically rigorous liberal arts instruction to lush outdoor escapes, St. Mary’s College of Maryland is racking up a bevy of warm praise from some of America’s largest news outlets. Newsweek magazine listed St. Mary’s College last month as the nation’s “Hottest [School] for Loving the Great Outdoors,” part of the magazine’s 25 Hottest Universities, Kaplan College Guide. “This state school on the southern shores of Maryland has all the advantages of a small liberal-arts college without budget-breaking tuition. The academically rigorous school also has deep dies to nature,” reads the report from Newsweek. Newsweek is just one of many national recognitions St. Mary’s has received over the last couple of years, but unlike the past, this acknowledgment is correlated with an influx of enrollment applications, according to Marc Apter, the college’s associate vice president of marketing and public relations. “We have 79 applicants for next year, which is a long way from now,” Apter said Monday. “The applicants are basically attributable to the Newsweek article.” Meanwhile, Apter said the students “focused on the environment and the sustainability of [the college’s] biology program,” are the reason Newsweek took an interest in the college in the first place. St. Mary’s College runs the St. Mary’s River project, which has kept running data of the health of the Chesapeake Bay for 9 years. Run by professors Bob Paul and Chris Tanner, the program has been widely acknowledged as the “best research project focusing on the environment of the Chesapeake Bay,” Apter said. The college’s student body also made environmental headlines when it voted to tax itself $25 a student to convert campus from oil powered electricity to wind powered electricity. The student body has also contributed funds for the building of a river center
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Photo by Guy Leonard
Assistant State’s Attorneys Joseph Stanalonis and Daniel White prepare to set out on a training ride in preparation for a ride in Whitefish, Montana that will raise money for research to find a cure for juvenile diabetes.
Inside Op.-Ed .......... Page A - 4 Obituaries..... Page A - 7 Community... Page B - 4 Police ............ Page B - 7 Games........... Page B - 8 Classifieds..... Page B - 9
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See Murder Trial page A-
By Adam Ross Staff Writer
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Chopticon B-1
The prosecution in the county’s only homicide case this year was victorious in its efforts to convict Johntonna Young, 20, of first degree murder last week when a judge allowed them to use a statement Young made during his arrest was used to incriminate him, according to States Attorney Richard Fritz. During the motions hearing, attorney Sean Moran, Young’s public defender, tried to have a portion of Young’s statement suppressed that seemed to indicate he had admitted to shooting and killing a man in an attempted armed robbery early this year. Moran attempted to persuade Circuit Court Judge C. Clarke Raley that the arresting officer Det. Antonio Malaspina was not credible when he said, on the witness stand, that Young admitted to the killing when he was arrested at a Waldorf apartment March 3. Malaspina said in open court that was what the defendant told him, but that the statement was not recorded on an electronic recording device in the vehicle Malaspina had driven to the scene of the arrest.
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$1.5 Million Initiative Moves Forward To Alleviate Emergency Radio Interference By Adam Ross Staff Writer A state funding boost will foster an emergency services upgrade of mapping software and radio re-banding, two unfunded initiatives from the St. Mary’s Board of County Commissioners 2008 budget. The re-banding follows nearly four years of work between the county and the Federal Communications Commission to modify emergency service radios to minimize harmful public interference to safety communications. Interference largely comes from commercial operations, including mobile phones. By shifting radio frequencies from the upper to the lower end of 800 megahertz, the county can greatly reduce the amount of interference to its emergency radio operations. But the initiative comes with a cost, and has been ongoing for years. “It’s a lot of technical rebuilding of infra-