LET’S DEW THIS!
SCHOOL SAFETY: County
Alli Sports announced this week that the 2013 Dew Tour will kick off in June in OC PAGE 3A
commissioners agree to four projects to improve building security, but pass on tinted windows PAGE 16A
INSIDE THIS ISSUE: BUSINESS . . . . . . . . . . 45A CLASSIFIED . . . . . . . . . 31A ENTERTAINMENT . . . . . . 5B LEGALS . . . . . . . . . . . . 14B
LIFESTYLE . . . . . . . . . . . 1B OPINION . . . . . . . . . . . 20A OUT&ABOUT . . . . . . . . . 11B SPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . 39A
WKND. WALK SUPPORTS FIGHT AGAINST CHILDHOOD CANCERS…PAGE 1B
Ocean City Today APRIL 5, 2013
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A La Quinta Inns & Suites franchise was recently approved by the city’s Planning and Zoning Commission to replace Ocean Voyager between 32nd and 33rd streets. Construction is likely to begin after the summer season.
LAQUINTATOREPLACE AGING33RDST.MOTEL Parking not ideal, but still an improvement ZACK HOOPES ■ Staff Writer (April 5, 2013) The city’s Planning and Zoning Commission approved a proposal this week that will see the aging Ocean Voyager motel on 33rd Street razed and redeveloped following this summer season into a La Quinta Inns & Suites franchise. The Ocean Voyager, as it now stands, is a two-story motel-style structure that occupies the block bordered by 33rd and 32nd streets to the north and south,
and Baltimore and Philadelphia avenues on the east and west. The motel also contains the Pirate’s Den restaurant and pool bar on its first floor. The proposed structure will be a five-story hotel, built in the standard style of the La Quinta franchise. Four floors of rooms will be built on colonnades, so that patrons can park on the first level, under the hotel. The new structure will also contain a bar/restaurant, with a maximum seating capacity of approximately 50 people. See FIRE on Page 30A
City may add third weekend surf beach, more flexibility ZACK HOOPES ■ Staff Writer
OCEAN CITY TODAY/BRANDI MELLINGER
Our own Brandi Mellinger was fortunate to get pretty close to this beautiful barred owl early Saturday. The majestic woodland bird, known best as the “hoot owl” for its distinctive call, was perfectly content watching Route 113 traffic breeze by at sunrise, and he sat tight long enough for her to get this incredible photo at close range.
(April 5, 2013) Ocean City government’s subcommittee for surf beach scheduling held its inaugural meeting this week, putting forward a tentative deal that will seek to solve the economic disadvantage that surfboarders have when it comes to gaining shoreline elbow-room.
What surfers have working against them is that they take up several times the amount of space as the bathers with whom they compete for the beach, but generally don’t spend proportionally more money on lodging and food than the average summer guest. “You’d think it wouldn’t make a difference if somebody has to See BEACH on Page 8A