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JANUARY 1, 2016
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Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 3
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Solutions for car events cause big policy stir in city
By Zack Hoopes Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) After a tense political battle, the people have retained the right to drink on their mulch. One of the more unusual police proposals to come out of city hall in recent memory - and one which was ultimately unsuccessful - was this year’s initiative to rein in on the resort’s increasingly unruly automotive-centric events. The topic seemed to start in earnest after Spring Cruisin’, held this year from May 14-17, which generated widespread complaints from residents about boorish behavior not necessarily from hot rod drivers themselves, but from other “fringe” vehicles and roadside spectators, who were often intoxicated. For some time, the city has been aware that automotive events - particularly the spring and fall Cruisin’ shows, as well as the H2O International VW/Audi show - have created a number of unique problems in the resort. The H2O show actually takes place at Fort Whaley, but most participants and spectators stay in Ocean City. The events tend to attract a number of unpleasant hangers-on who do not participate in the shows themselves, but rather race up and down Coastal Highway, with the encouragement of (usually intoxicated) spectators who line the road and egg them on. OC BikeFest suffers the same issue, to a certain extent, although it generates statistically less complaints, according to police. This is despite the efforts of the events’ promoters, who are unable to control spectators outside their actual event grounds and who aren’t registered to participate in the actual car or bike shows - but come anyway to “run with the pack.” In an attempt to cut down on the nuisance, the city council introduced
Ocean City Today Business ..................................33 Calendar ..................................59 Commentary..............................69 Classifieds ................................57 Entertainment ..........................46 Lifestyle ....................................37 Obituaries ................................25 Public notices ..........................63 Sports ......................................27 News: editor@oceancitytoday.net Sales: sales@oceancitytoday.net Classifieds: classifieds@oceancitytoday.net Phone: 410-723-6397 Visit us on the Web at www.oceancitytoday.net and at Facebook/Ocean City Today Published Fridays by FLAG Publications, Inc. 8200 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, Md. 21842 P.O. Box 3500, Ocean City, Md. 21843 Available by subscription at $150 a year.
two ordinances over the summer that were met with considerable skepticism, given that they seemed to have left open several interpretive holes that would allow for excessive police enforcement - including a prohibition on standing on one’s own landscaping. Up until this week, the city had been set to pass two ordinances that would give police greater powers to curtail roadside activities. The first ordinance banned open containers of alcohol in parking areas that are required, by the city’s zoning code, for any business license holder. Not only would those doing the drinking be subject to fines, and possible arrest, but the business itself could be fined or have its license revoked for allowing consumption to take place. Further, a second ordinance would have prohibited “nuisance See ORDINANCE Page 5
The area on Philadelphia Ave. between Eighth and Ninth streets is often used as an impromptu burnout strip by peripheral participants during automotive event weekends, as seen here during the 2015 Spring Cruisin.’
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Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 5
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Ordinance bans trailer parking on Baltimore Avenue Continued from Page 3 uses” of required parking as well as “destructive uses” of landscaping. Similar to parking, landscaped setbacks are required on most all buildings in Ocean City under the zoning code, for both aesthetic purposes as well as to help absorb stormwater runoff. The definition of “nuisance use” included the setup of “tents, trailers, structures, cooking devices, chairs, tables, coolers, or other objects for congregational purposes that prevent the use of the parking area for its intended purpose.” The definition of “destructive use” of landscaping was similar, and also included a prohibition on “the congregation, loitering, or lingering of persons...for any purpose other than immediate passage.” Both ordinances had come directly from Myrtle Beach, having been used there to help curtail ill-behavior during Bike Week and other automotive-centric events. Businesses, however, noted that the proposed ordinances essentially have the police the ability to dictate how private property could be used even going so far as to criminalize the mere act of standing in one’s own landscaping, even if doing so had no discernable impact on adjacent traffic or the public at large. Staunch opposition, including protest from the Ocean City HotelMotel-Restaurant Association and Greater Ocean City Chamber of Commerce, caused an abrupt aboutface. In a nod to the fact that laws to control public disturbances already exist - albeit with less sweeping con-
trol than the new ordinances would’ve given police - the city ratcheted far back. The new law, as eventually passed, requires all properties with parking areas fronting Coastal Highway, Philadelphia Avenue, or Baltimore Avenue to post a sign reminding visitors of the state’s public space doctrine. A suggested, simplified wording is “Warning: Disturbing the public peace and disorderly conduct is a violation of state law.” The city would provide the signs, which would likely be placed in similar locations to city-issued tow signs. Business owners would no longer be liable for keeping people off their property - the only penalty, under the new proposal, is a fine for not posting the signage by May 1. The sign law seems to address a certain level of confusion over what police can and cannot do, rather than give them new powers. Currently, city police officers can go onto private property if they see a violation of public order occurring the city does not need to pass legislation allowing them to do so, although some seemed to think that a police officer could come exercise that power only if a complaint was made. The signs, rather, would seem to serve to remind property owners and guests that the police have that prerogative, and that they will be taking a particular eye toward enforcement. Further, the city also passed a third, although somewhat unrelated ordinance, to ban the parking of trailers on Baltimore Avenue, where the parking lane is narrow, and to require permits to do so on all other public ways. These permits, per ordinance, would be issued only to registered participants of city events. How exactly this scheme will be implemented has yet to be seen, but it is set to go into effect May 1.
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Smoking policy in effect; enforced lightly in first year
By Zack Hoopes Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) The big news at the beginning of 2015 — leading from extensive discussions in 2014 — was the finalization of Ocean City’s beach and Boardwalk smoking ban. Or rather, the news was the signing of the ordinance, because the reality of the ban on the streets was, and still is, up for debate. Last year, the council passed a resolution stating that, as of May 2015, smoking would be in some way “modified” on the beach and Boardwalk, in anticipation of actually defining what that meant later
on. This spring, a council featuring three new members began the arduous process of actually figuring out the details, a process that spanned multiple meetings as well as a session in which the council toured the Boardwalk in a van to inspect each of the proposed smoking zone locations. The final policy product stipulated that smoking and vaping is banned on the beach and within 15 feet of the Boardwalk, except in designated areas. Those areas are delineated by 22gallon metal drums, painted orange, with signage alerting passersby smoking or vaping must be contained within a 15-foot radius. Most of the drums are placed 15 feet east of the boards, or of the concrete tram lane south of Fourth Street, See ORANGE Page 6
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YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Orange barrels mark smoking zones on beach Continued from Page 5 roughly one every block, with the intent being that smokers walking the boards will be willing to step out into the sand to have a cigarette (or e-cigarette). Four orange cans are also placed on the concrete passages leading from the inlet parking lot to the Boardwalk. Additionally, a second row of orange butt cans is located farther out on the sand below North Division Street, where the beach rapidly widens. This is so that smokers spending the day on the beach will not have to walk the whole way back to the Boardwalk to smoke. Above 27th Street, where the Boardwalk ends, smoking is similarly restricted to orange cans located roughly 50 feet east of the dune line. The cans will be spread more widely as one heads north toward less-crowded areas of the beach. However, in a seeming attempt to implement a smoking policy that suits everyone and causes the least controversy, the city has still opened itself up to a considerable amount of criticism. From a functional standpoint, a common complaint has been that the number and spacing of orange “smoking zone” barrels is too frequent — Council Secretary Mary Knight said her colleagues were “legislating to a minority” by creating so many smoking areas despite the fact that only 15 percent of the population actually smokes. For smokers, the annoyance of having to set up near a barrel is still present — but for nonsmokers, it seems that half the beach, especially in some downtown areas, is not actually smoke-free given the amount of prime sand that is within 15 feet of a barrel. No one, smokers and not, seems to be getting what they were actually looking for. Further, the enforcement ques-
The city’s orange barrels, used to designate beach smoking areas, often became gathering points for refuse when beach trash cans were full. The city was cautious not to seem heavyhanded during the first year of the new smoking policy.
tion has been, and still is, somewhat up in the air. When the policy was cemented, the Ocean City Police Department said that it was planning for a “soft rollout” during the first year, concentrating more on education than giving out fines right off the bat. Out of hundreds of recorded interactions with the public regarding the policy, the OCPD gave out only three fines in 2015. Rather than complaints from smokers, the majority of public dissent with the policy seems to have come from nonsmokers who say the city isn’t doing enough to actually ensure that the ban is in effect in practicality. The second year of the policy is still up for review. Mayor and acting City Manager Rick Meehan recently asked the OCPD to present a review of this past summer’s smoking policy experience, noting that the council will be looking for stiffer enforcement in 2016.
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Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 7
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Boardwalk busker designated space rule implemented
By Zack Hoopes Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) The city took a big step in 2015 toward either improving, or worsening, the Boardwalk street performer situation – depending on who you ask. This past spring, the city’s Boardwalk Task Force – a five-person committee convened to address the allegedly unruly proliferation of buskers on the boards – endorsed new legislation to better control the situation, at least from the city’s perspective. This involved performers signing up a week in advance for one of 32 designated spaces if they wanted to perform on the Boardwalk from Ninth Street south. The spaces ranged in size from 25 to 100 square feet, and are rotated twice per week, requiring performers to come to City Hall to register. Signups began at 9 a.m. on a given Monday, for spaces to be used the following Monday through Thursday. Likewise, signups for the following Friday through Sunday began at 9 a.m. the preceding Friday. No performer can take the same space twice in a row. The idea, the city said, is to cut down on congestion on the Boardwalk’s most-crowded stretch, as well as mitigate the impact on adjacent properties of having the same performer next to them night after night. The city believes the regulation meets previous court mandates – which have ruled against the municipality – for limiting freedom of speech, since anyone not taking part in the rotation system will still have an opportunity to express themselves – just north of Ninth Street. Further, the regulations exempt any
group distributing expressive materials, but not vending them, such as political groups distributing fliers or buttons. All other performers, whether seeking compensation or not, must comply. The new regulations were sparked by widespread complaints from business owners during the summer of 2014 that an increasing number of Boardwalk buskers were crowding public spaces, limiting access to storefronts and drawing crowds that slowed the movement of pedestrian traffic on the boards. Moreover, while the city had long had a hands-off approach when it came to political or social justice groups, the vast majority of Boardwalk buskers seemed to be there purely for financial gain, collecting tips or even set fees for artwork, musical performances, etc. – all while avoiding the overhead of having a physical storefront. Previously, the city had limited the number of buskers by requiring photo ID permits, which had to be obtained at city hall. In a 2011 lawsuit, however, Boardwalk spray-paint artist Mark Chase sued the city for an unjustified infringement of First Amendment rights. U.S. District Court Judge Ellen Hollander had sided with Chase, finding that the city’s permit policy was not specifically tailored to a public need and was simply used as an arbitrary barrier to entry. Thus, the city was put in the difficult position of crafting a new policy that would address the concerns of Boardwalk businesses, while also not running afoul of the previous court ruling. When the new signup system went into effect on July 27, 2015, it sparked almost immediate pushback from street performers. The major issue was that competition for lucrative downtown spaces – where tourists tend to spend most of their money – resulted in performers camping out overnight See PERFORMERS Page 8
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Ocean City Today
PAGE 8
JANUARY 1, 2016
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Performers camp out at city hall as competition grows Continued from Page 7 prior to the signups. Buskers in sleeping bags, trying to be the first in line at City Hall, became a common sight. Although nothing has been finalized, the task force has already held one hearing this fall in anticipation of changes for 2016. The clear direction of the group is to create a lottery system, where performers would put their names into a literal hat at the city clerk’s office, and the first pick of spaces would go to the first drawn names. Performers would still be required to not pick the same space continuously. The number of registrations could be cut back to once per week as well, since multiple drawings could occur at the same time, as well as separate drawings for performers who need larger areas, such as magic shows. This would, hopefully, eliminate the “first in line” incentive and reduce the burden on income-seeking buskers who were sleeping outside city hall. The task force’s recommendations are slated for discussion by the city council this spring. The Boardwalk performer ordinance is only in effect from May 1 to Sept. 30.
City balks at new rental restrictions By Zack Hoopes Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) The city began 2015 in a state of limbo with regard to further rental controls in the resort – and left it in much the same way. Although a lot was said during the year regarding the ongoing issue of rowdy vacation rentals cropping up in residentially zoned neighborhoods – “party houses” is a common parlance – very little concrete actually happened. The most important step was taken in the spring when, after a long public hearing, the city’s planning and zoning commission endorsed the idea of creating an R-1A zoning designation. This zone would be even more restrictive than the current R-1 designation, which restricts properties to single-family, detached dwellings. The R-1A zone, it was proposed, would go one step further in the city’s zoning pyramid by prohibiting rentals of the property for less than a specified time period – potentially a few months, maybe up to a year. This would ensure that the residents of the residential zone were actually residing at the property, as opposed to it being used as commercial vacation housing. Only existing R-1 zones would be subject to rezoning, and the commission would only entertain the change if a sig-
nificant majority of the property owners in the zone supported it. But despite the commission’s endorsement of the idea, the city council was reluctant to codify the measure given the pushback from the real estate community. The move, many realtors claimed, would stand to limit the ability of buyers to help pay for future homes by renting out properties to pay the mortgage until they retired. It would also cut back on the availability of single-family homes for vacationers who preferred that type of accommodation as opposed to a condo or hotel. Many of these visitors, realtors claimed, were likely future full-time residents. From a legal standpoint opposition realtors, including the influential Coastal Association of Realtors, claimed a strict interpretation of property rights. The city’s zoning code requires that R-1 structures be built with a single shared kitchen and occupied by no more than four unrelated persons, but otherwise doesn’t break down what qualifies as a “single-family residential” use. Essentially, the zoning code specifies that R-1 properties must be built as single-family, long-term residences. It doesn’t say they have to be used as such, other than the four unrelated-persons statute.
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However, there was a clear establishment, both in 2014 and 2015, that something needed to be done. Demand for further rental restriction was strong, beginning with the Mallard Island neighborhood and quickly spreading to Little Salisbury and Heron Harbor, some of the few areas left in the resort that are predominantly owner-occupied. The effect, owners say, is that the trash, traffic, noise, and sometimes-lewd behavior of vacation renters is driving away long-term residents and lowering property values. The value of an R-1 property, owners say, is often couched in the assumption that the neighborhood is for resident families. Turn it into a detached hotel, and that value drops. Further, proponents point out, the R1A designation would have a limited impact on the vacation housing market given that there are only 268 registered rentals in current R-1 zones, less than two percent of the total vacation rental housing stock. The council, however, tabled any further legal steps for the creation of an R1A option until the issue could be rolled into the city’s upcoming comprehensive zoning revision – a process that could take many years. In the meantime, the council did endorse a stop-gap measure proposed by See R-1A Page 10
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 9
Berin Ber ngson g s o n Re R ea e a l ttyy
8600 Coastal Highway Ocean City, MD 21842
E-Mail: molly@mollyb.com Visit Us: www.BeringsonRealty.com Licensed in Maryland & Delaware
OCEANFRONT PENTHOUSE
OCEANFRONT 13305 Wight St Ocean City #302S
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Spectacular views. 2 level penthouse, tastefully furnished. 3BR w/den and 3BA. Amenities: fitness center, game room, parking garage, pools, tennis, playground, security, movie theater. On-site rental co. Over $32,000 in rental income. $674,900 (498120)
OCEANFRONT 9400 Coastal Hwy, Ocean City, #303
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Lovely efficiency unit 1BR/1BA sleeps 5, efficiency direct oceanfront, turn condo w/southern exposure. key ready for new Totally remodeled w/new owner. Fully furnished everything. Sealy posturpedic w/newer A/C, refrig, & murphy bed. Outdoor pool, stove. Excellent rental great security. Wood/ceramic managed by in-house flooring throughout. Beautiful rental agents. Sleeps 4. Indoor & outdoor pools, backsplash in kitchen. Very fitness center, tennis, tiki bar, & much more. $157,900 clean, very nice & would be an balcony. $149,000 (490414) (500896) excellent rental. $169,900 (500981) Updated unit on east end of north building. New kitchen updates incl: counters, sink, backsplash, etc. Bath updates as well. Great parking. Storage & new elevators in building. Outdoor & kids pool.
$156,900 (498503)
OCEAN BLOCK 3010 Phila. Ave Ocean City, #108S
OCEAN VIEW
12108 Coastal Hwy Ocean City 2BR/2BA 13 week time share. 2 parking spaces. Fireplace, private storage & outdoor pool. $49,999 (498478)
OCEAN BLOCK 9200 Coastal Hwy, Ocean City Decorator furnished,
view of ocean from Remodeled first large balcony. Gas floor end unit. 1 fireplace, corian block to beach and countertops. Sepaclose to boardrate dining area. Cewalk. Kitchen appliances newer. Wine ramic tile. 3 TVs & VCR/DVDs. Outdoor pool & cooler, low condo fee includes cable and in- fitness center. Outside storage. Covered parking. Excellent rental property. $409,000 (471879) ternet. Outdoor pool. $118,000 (495346)
CUSTOM BUILT 11206 W Marie Dr, Bishopville
4BR/2BA on large corner lot w/many upgrades. Split floor plan w/open living area. room w/gas REDUCED! Living fireplace & beautiful kitchen w/corian counter tops. Upgraded cabinetry. Energy Star appliances & breakfast nook. Master on first level w/tiled bath & walk in closet. $399,999 (494151)
WATERFRONT
In the Links at Lighthouse Sound Golf Community. Breathtaking views of Bay, Arthur Hills golf course & skyline of OC are unsurpassed. Custom built bayfront home w/5BR/4.5BA & 3 car garage on over an acre of landscaped property. Watch sunrise from great room, kitchen & 3 of large BRs. Can be purchased fully furnished. $1,299,000 (498666)
“REDUCED” SELLER SAYS Lovely 1BR/1BA condo w/all 2BR/2BA in 9400 Building. BRING OFFER!! Largest floor the amenities. Huge indoor Large double balcony plan! 2BR/2BA oceanfront pool, hot tubs, saunas, w/ocean & bay views. Fully living room & BR. Also, restaurant/bar entertainment, furnished. Outdoor pool, Bayfront bedroom, sunrise & on-site management, storage locker, game room. sunset, floor-to-ceiling windows conferencing & much more. On-site management. Newer w/fantastic views. Large eat-in REDUCED! furniture, paint, carpet. Tiled Parking garage connected kitchen, 2 story living w/wide staircase, Great amenities - large indoor to the building. Excellent rental. Best of the 1 bedroom units. bathrooms. Upgraded kitchen. New HVAC & hot water pool, exercise room, private beach storage, beach access w/showers. Excellent investment potential. $274,900 (499933) heater. Excellent rental. $257,900 (495059) LOW CONDO FEES. $324,900 (494496)
OCEANFRONT 10900 Coastal Hwy, OCEANFRONT 10300 Coastal Hwy, Ocean City Ocean City
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MOBILE HOME 103 Marine Cir, Ocean City
Affordable & sold turnkey. 1BR/1BA & next to pool. 1 block to ocean. Fully furnished. Fee covers taxes, water, sewer, pool, trash pickup, grass cutting, park management & management fees. $64,900 (486989)
South Heron Gull Ct, Ocean City, Lot 91
Reduced again! Motivated! Awesome lot in fantastic neighborhood of Heron Harbour. Build here & enjoy all the amenities: outdoor pools, indoor pool, docks, fitness center, game room and more. $679,900 (478285)
BAYFRONT
1st floor convenience. Unit totally reOcean view, Lovely done. New kitchen 1BR/1BA in South with ceramic flooring building 3rd floor. Close and backsplash. to beach. Ceramic tile throughout. Building New paint, ac, and slider glass. Low condo fee. Ceramic flooring and carpet throughout. Could not has elevator. Nice be nicer and close to beach. $159,900 (492110)
4601 Coastal Hwy 602, Ocean City
OCEAN BLOCK 9 41st St, Ocean City
Beautiful 3BR/3BA luxury 1BR/1BA, 2nd floor unit condo next to famous 45th in northern Ocean Point st. village. Features custom III building (not on kitchen w/granite counters Coastal Highway). & SS appliances, ceiling Perfect location accross fans, FP, ceramic tile & from convention center crown molding. Designer & very close to beach. furnished, custom blinds. Sold fully furnished. Amentities: bayfront Great rental potential- huge front deck, lovely views, private outdoor pool, year round indoor pool, elevator & bayfront open bedroom set apart from living area. Bright & cheery & priced to grassy area. $519,900 (500531) sell quickly!!! $129,900 (496620)
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Minutes to beach, Serene setting in quiet boardwalk & golf. North Ocean City. Outdoor Covered front porch, pool & storage cabana. fireplace, hardwood Carefully maintained floors, large country w/improvements. Current kitchen. Attached renter may extend rental garage. Huge bonus or can move in 60 days. Convenient 1st floor of very room. Future media room with private entrance. nice building w/ample parking. $124,900 (500158) NO HOA fees or restrictions, city taxes or traffic!!
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WATERFRONT
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On the 7th tee of Lighthouse Sound. Views of Assawoman Bay, teaming w/ wildlife and waterfowl. $389,000 (495633)
Lot 3 Ocean View Lane
Awesome waterfront lot. Exclusive community. 161 ft wide waterfront. 30 ft. deep water pier. Southern exposure w/unobstructed views of Assateague, ocean and bay. Membership privileges at Marsh Harbour. $849,900 (484861)
Ocean City Today
PAGE 10
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Council struggles with salary study recommendations
By Zack Hoopes Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Potentially dramatic long-term change is often uneventful at first — something at least some in City Hall are hoping for when it comes to Ocean City’s public payscales. If any news in the world of municipal finance can be considered big, 2015’s big story was the completion of the city’s long-awaited pay study, commissioned in 2014, but only finished this past spring. The bedrock of the study, performed by consultants from Management Advisory Group International (MAGI), was an extensive survey of various municipal job titles in Ocean City, determining what employees do, how they’re qualified to do it, and exactly how much of it they do. MAGI then compared this data with other public agencies whose job titles matched Ocean City’s not only in name, but also in function, to establish market rates. The goal was creating new, unified pay brackets that would replace the current hodgepodge of municipal pay scales that vary between city departments and tenure tracks. More specifically, those payscales would be narrower in range — meaning the range from any given pay grade’s minimum starting salary, to the salary cap — than the current wider-ranging payscales that have caused some inequity amongst public employee pay. Typically, according to MAGI, most public agencies see a 50-to-60 percent range within payscales. That is to say, after many years in a given position, an employee’s salary will max out at 50 to 60 percent more than the minimum starting salary for the position. In Ocean City, however, MAGI found that payscales had a range of at least 70 percent, with some executive titles having an 83 percent range between where they started and where they’ve capped out. Under the new policy, all payscales will have a 60 percent range. This will be universal. For instance, the lowest of the new pay brackets will be grade 101, used
for janitors and custodians, and will have a starting minimum of $22,745 per year and a cap of $36,397 — a range of exactly 60 percent. Similarly, the highest pay bracket will be grade 130, used for the Chief of Police, City Engineer, Finance Director and Public Works Director, and will have a starting minimum of $93,622 and a cap of $149,815 — again, a range of exactly 60 percent. Further, the difference between the midpoint of one pay bracket, and the midpoint of the bracket above it, will be set at five percent between all brackets. This will eliminate the large pay increases that often occurred when employees were promoted between brackets with wider ranges, a financial consideration that often prevented merit raises. For many positions, the new brackets will mean that starting pay will be a bit higher, in order to bring previously-underpaid positions in line with current market rates. By the same token, salary ceilings will be lowered. The former change, applied to the existing employee base, will cost the town $115,165 per year in order to grant raises to 54 employees whose salaries are currently below the market minimum for their pay grade under the MAGI-determined scale. From a political perspective, the council had no issue adopting the new payscales and upping salaries for those 54 employees. But it was what to do with the top end that caused some consternation. As it stands, 25 employees will be paid above the salary cap for their new pay brackets, which go into effect Jan. 1. Simultaneously, the city’s budget includes a two percent raise to be given to all employees as of the same date. But since the city just established new, market rate brackets, there’s no reason to arbitrarily bump those pay tables up another two percent on the day they’re implemented. Thus, granting a two percent raise to those 25 employees would mean involve pushing them further above their theoretical salary cap, but not raising the salary cap itself. Ultimately, four members of the council voted to do just that, with the staunch opposition of the other three. Curiously, those three — Wayne Hartman, Matt James, and Tony DeLuca — See NEW Page 11
R-1A zoning opposed by realtors Continued from Page 8 realtors themselves, conceived as a proactive move that would, if effective, reduce the pressure realtors are feeling from R-1A proponents. That measure would require a separate application for R-1 rental licenses on top of the city’s normal licensing process, requiring R-1 landlords list how their property is being advertised for vacation rentals, and for how many occupants. The city would then be able to inspect the premises for compliance with occupancy limits and to hold owners or real-
tors accountable if the property is being marketed for a number of persons above the approved capacity. Proponents of R-1A have been critical, however, that the city would still be unable to practically enforce the four unrelated persons statute – a definition that fits in theory, but is unenforceable due to the inability of city zoning and building officials to arbitrarily demand ID from renters. Given the size of many single-family homes, the legal safety capacity could still be several dozen persons.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Commissioners to begin phasing out liquor control dept.
By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Last year, the commissioners decided to give the prohibitionera Department of Liquor Control one last year, and one last chance, to “rightsize” after the 2014 state-level decision to end the county’s monopoly on liquor sales. Under the current system, no one is forced to purchase from the county if they don’t choose to, which was one of the harshest criticisms of the old system. The county purchases from the same wholesalers everyone else does, but at much larger volumes. Where they make their money, Bobby Cowger, director, explained, is by selling their stockpiled inventory to customers at lower rates than the wholesalers as prices fluctuate. Wholesalers, as well as the department, also charge per-bottle fees for orders less than a full case. Prices average about $1.45 per bottle from the wholesalers, while the department increased their charges this year from 50 cents to 75 cents. “I’m the biggest purchaser of liquor in Worcester County. There are bigger bars, but they’re not the biggest purchasers,” Cowger said. Some of the most-vocal critics of the old liquor control board, which the county absorbed in 2011, have become some of the best customers, according to Cowger. While store closures, staff reductions and the assurances Cowger went a long way in securing the grace period, that ended with the commissioners voting to implement the first stage of an exit strategy developed by county staff. “I know I’m up against the gun. There are those who want to drive the DLC out of business, which will put 20-plus people, including me, out of jobs,” he said. The department had a tough row to hoe and it’s been up to Cowger to demonstrate it was still viable in the face of more competition. Cowger maintained throughout the year the losses have stabilized and the changes he’s made will enable the department to show a profit this year. He was apparently mistaken. The county finance department, at the review in December, charged the department with a loss of $92,000 this year, even after exhausting a $400,000 reserve. With that, the county moved towards an internally developed exit strategy. The first stage of the plan requires a
change in state law to allow for appropriate liquor licenses for private package stores. With the new legislative session in Annapolis set to begin on Jan. 13, the county voted to send a letter to the statelevel officials requesting the rule change. Now-retired County Attorney Sonny Bloxom spoke for the plan as it was outlined in public for the first time, which included a self-fulfilling sunset clause to aid the transition from public to private operations and recommendations to help the county divest itself of its four retail stores. Somewhat incongruously, the commissioners also voted to extend the lease at the Gold Coast Mall liquor store for one year at the same meeting, since it’s profitable according to county figures, and the overall retail operations aren’t expected to end until 2017, if Bloxom’s proposal is adopted as written. Commissioner Joe Mitrecic, a stalwart critic of the department, warned against being too specific at this early stage, and called for the commissioners to review the strategy before officially sanctioning it. The Department of Liquor Control manages four retail stores spread throughout the county as well as a warehouse in Snow Hill. Of those facilities, the county owns one building, which, according to Bloxom, has less than $40,000 left on the mortgage, and leases three. Of these, Bloxom said, the store at 16th Street in Ocean City is the “most problematic” as it has eight years left on a 10-year lease with a remaining balance in rent of about $677,000 as of June 30, 2017. The Northern Worcester store, at the Gold Coast Mall, will have a balance of about $122,400 as of June 30, 2017. The warehouse, he noted, has about $465,000 left on its mortgage, inventory and equipment. The DLC employs 19 full-time and two part-time employees. During the summer months, these numbers are augmented with temporary workers. The county is examining different severance scenarios for outgoing employees, as well as a bonus structure for those who remain at the department until the doors are closed for good. The current best guess provided by county staff is those expenses will run nearly $1 million in severance and unemployment expenses. Bloxom said the worst-case scenario of the exit strategy is a total cost of $2.3 million, while the best case is less than $1 million. The budgeted cost to run the department last year was about $10.5 million. The next step is to halt wholesale operations after next summer, but before Sept. 30, except to stock the county stores and to liquidate remaining inventory. Finally, wrap up retail and wholesale operations by June 30, 2017.
New pay brackets solve issues Continued from Page 10 were the three newest members of the council, clearly illustrating a policy rift with those who have been ensconced in city government longer. “To pay for a pay study, and then add to that and go beyond it defeats the point
of the pay study and compounds the problems we already have,” Hartman said. “We’re going to pay people even further above the salary range that we paid a professional to analyze … I’m kind of perplexed as to the reason we even do these expensive pay studies.”
PAGE 11
Ocean City Today
PAGE 12
Everyone knows late fall and early winter have been warmer than usual, what with dandelions popping up in the yard, the occasional hummingbird hovering around pineapple sage that should have died off a month ago and all the good rockfishing still up in Jersey because the water isn’t yet quite cold enough down this way. How much warmer has it been these last few weeks? Significantly warmer, according to the NOAA weather station near Coast Guard Station Ocean City at the inlet. The station records air and water temperatures, wind speed, tides and barometric pressure 10 times an hour, 24 hours a day and it’s available online at tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/stationhome.html?id=8570283. The charts on this page reflect a specific time, 9 a.m., over a 57-day period from Nov. 1 to Dec. 27 in both 2014 and 2015. Why just one time? To produce a constant and accurate day-to-day comparison. Why 9 a.m. instead of 2 p.m. or 1:30 p.m. or 5 p.m.? Well, it’s because that was the easiest thing to do with a file that contains 13,680 sets of data per period, or 27,360 overall, that can’t be sorted or searched efficiently in a spreadsheet program.
JANUARY 1, 2016
Average difference from low to high
GRAPHICS/PHOTOS BY STEWART DOBSON
Besides, it doesn’t make much difference what time is selected, as long as it’s constant, when the goal is to show the average difference from one year to the next. The actual highs and lows shown for the period were done separately. Bear in mind that the air temperature right at the inlet will not be the same as, say, what it will be even two or three blocks away, because of the modifying effect of the water. Generally, the moderating influence of the water temperature will prevent the air temperature at the inlet from being as warm or as cold as elsewhere in Ocean City, or on the mainland. – Stewart Dobson
Normally, these shamrocks would be in their dormant stage this late in the year, but continue to flourish as the year comes to a close. Similarly, the hummingbird at the right should have headed south in late October, but was here for the holidays instead.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Inlet threatened by continual influx of sand, sediment
By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Though it’s been getting progressively worse — especially after Hurricane Sandy — local officials, first gathered by Del. Mary Beth Carozza at a meeting at the Marlin Club this past spring, are working towards a solution for shoaling at the Ocean City Inlet. The Inlet serves both commercial and recreational boating interests, but it was the departure of a commercial fishing fleet helmed by Joe Letts from Ocean City waters in favor of New Jersey earlier this year, due to ease of access, that led to the issue’s prominence. The dredges will keep dredging, the beaches will still be replenished and the inlet will continue to fill up with sand — potentially damaging boats, the commercial and recreational fishing industries as well as Ocean City’s reputation as a maritime hotspot. The commercial fishermen, in an industry worth millions to the area, are also acting as a bellwether for the recreational fishing industry including tournaments like the White Marlin Open, which is worth millions. The problem was described by Merrill Campbell, the manager of the Ocean City dock for Southern Connection seafood, in April. “This is just from my March 1 diary,” Campbell began, a boat ran aground at 3 p.m. “carrying $12,000 in clams trying to hit high tide. The Instigator carrying $20,000 worth of fish hit and slid at 3:30. The Starbright, sister to the Instigator, I believe made it at 4:30. The day before the Ocean Gold carried in $40,000 worth of seafood and couldn’t get back out.” Campbell said in just that one 24hour period the dock handled $92,000 in seafood. “They started pulling hard dredges in 1962. When you exit the channel north or south you’re aground,” waterman Jack Kaeufer said. Attorney Mark Cropper, attending as a recreational boater, agreed. “Sandbars exist now that were never there before. The sandbar in front of Hooper’s didn’t exist. I’ve been stopped dead in the middle of the channel. The bay is filling in,” Cropper said. How that sand comes to be there, according to the Army Corps of Engineers, is a matter for study. Bob Blama, a project manager with the corps, who would retire by the end of the year, earned high praise from the watermen for his efforts to maintain the inlet and channels and his responsiveness to their upkeep needs. “A resource study from 1998 said sand from Delaware jetties shoots out on flood tides and goes back out. About 190,000 cubic yards per year
end up on Assateague Island. There are a plethora of theories, but we don’t know why,” Blama said. The results of that study, paired with the conversations had during the meeting were enough to get a proposal for a study to figure out the root cause. Locally, the portion of the process, as explained by Blama at the time, was pretty simple — officials would need to
SPRING SPRING
PAGE 13
send letters of intent. Ocean City and Worcester County governments as well as Del. Carozza and Sen. Jim Mathias wasted little time in sending the letters, but the answer would wait until October to be revealed. By June, the advanced maintenance funds Blama thought he could get in the amount of $250,000 had been secured from Superstorm Sandy
S AV E
THE
recovery money. The money would first be used in August to fund dredging operations. In October, the Army Corps of Engineers decided against using the results of a 17-year old report, which couldn’t include data for events like Superstorm Sandy, in favor of pursuing a new hydrodynamic study of the See CONGRESSIONAL Page 14
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Ocean City Today
PAGE 14
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 County solar deal rife with differing opinions, options
By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) While it remains to be seen if Worcester County can get a two-megawatt solar facility up and running by the end of 2016 in order to take advantage of lucrative federal benefits, the commissioners spent considerable time insisting county staff had particular knowledge of an emerging industry before finally relenting and bringing in outside help to evaluate proposals. Despite repeated and clear statements from county department heads that hiring a consultant to the tune of $6,000 would reap many times that
in the meat of any approved deal, those statements held surprisingly little sway with the county commissioners until it became clear that the delay was endangering the prospect of any sort of deal going through. It also wasn’t the first time staff recommendations were ignored on this very issue. At the outset it was determined that Worcester County might enter the solar sphere, but it looks like it might be forced to do it all at once, since the commissioners decided to delay an information session by a Columbia, Md.-based consulting firm outlining the process — against staff advice — to just before a sales pitch on July 21. In making the motion to delay, Commissioner Joe Mitrecic said he feared the presentation might “sway one way or another,” while listening to the coming sales pitch two weeks
later. “To postpone until after would be a mistake. I think you need to hear this before or in conjunction with a presentation from a contractor or developer,” County Attorney Sonny Bloxom said. “This is a very specialized field Kelly [Shannahan], Bill [Bradshaw, county engineer] and I found it very educational in the trends in wind and solar energy generation. It’s very important for you to hear together at your next meeting — you’re going to need help beyond staff.” Mitrecic’s motion was originally to delay the information session until after the sales meeting, but later amended his motion to allow it to proceed before, which passed unanimously. At that meeting Commissioner Chip Bertino asked a loaded question. See YEAR Page 15
JANUARY 1, 2016
Congressional OK needed to study source of shoaling Continued from Page 13 Inlet to determine the source of shoaling. The funding and authority both derive from Congress. The process is nuanced, but the Army Corps is, at the federal level, pushing for a report to allow the study of the hydrodynamics of the area, and how they contribute to the shoaling. If Congress approves the report, federal tax dollars would fully fund the study. “Hydrodynamic models are an efficient, comprehensive approach to representing coastal water dynamics. These numerical models can be used to simulate currents, water levels, sediment transport and salinity,” Chris Gardner, Corps spokesman said. This report would then be submitted to Corps headquarters for approval by the end of the calendar year. If such approval were granted, according to the letter, the Corps’ Baltimore District would then develop a project management plan once a non-federal sponsor is identified. Luckily, three nonfederal sponsors, the state by means of Del. Carozza and Sen. Mathias, the county and the Town of Ocean City, have already identified themselves in signing on to the earlier letter of intent. This is also where local money begins to figure into the picture. “Regarding the cost-share for implementation,” Gardner said, “should there be a recommendation from the [hydrodynamic] study, it would be 65 percent federal and 35 percent local.” It has not yet been determined if the local share could be achieved through in-kind donations, such as providing a disposal site. Carozza said the Corps’ letter, by acknowledging these issues, commits it to certain things. “They’re on record as recognizing the urgent need. We have them committed to the long-term while still in the short-term,” she said.
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YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Continued from Page 14 “Do we have the capabilities in house to evaluate this project?” Bertino asked County Engineer Bill Bradshaw. Bradshaw said he felt the county did not, and his recommendation was to hire specialists since the project was complex. Bertino made the motion to hire the consultant, but it died due to lack of a second. As ordered, county staff evaluated the proposed arrangement, structured so the only financial liability the county incurred would be the cost of the produced power for the next 20 years, which, due in part to the subsidies, would be significantly cheaper than the traditional arrangement. Bradshaw said the county pays eight cents per kilowatt, plus three cents transmission, under the terms of their current power purchase agreement. The estimated cost of the solar generation, subsidies included, would be 5.5 cents. Richard Anderson of CQI, the firm eventually, begrudgingly, hired by the county, said the county had significant bargaining position when it came time to outline a power purchase agreement contract with a developer. Customarily, Anderson said, the county can factor in a number of “escape clauses” to the agreement, such as if the solar generator production
falls below a certain percentage, with 85 percent being the norm. Also, price increases are generally held to a set schedule and percentage independent from energy market fluctuations. In this case, Anderson said, two-percent increases after five years of fixed prices was standard. A 30 percent federal tax credit, Anderson said, is available to projects that are up and running before December 2016. State credits on solar power projects are due to expire this year. To take advantage of these incentives, Anderson said, time is of the essence. “How do we know we would be getting the best deal?” County Attorney Sonny Bloxom asked, and left the question hanging. Mitrecic moved to direct staff to find and evaluate comparable arrangements both inside and outside of Maryland to determine the viability of the project in Worcester County, which passed unanimously. “I’m not in favor of spending taxpayer money on consultants. I don’t think the project is as complex as staff thinks it is, and I think the commissioners can make the best determination based upon their recommendations,” Mitrecic said. “I’m pro solar over wind — I’m not sold on wind,” Commissioner Ted Elder said. Elder said, since the beginning of
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his term in December, he’s been “really impressed” with the staff and has “every confidence” they can evaluate solar proposals correctly. Commission Vice President Merrill Lockfaw said evaluating these types of deals might not be exactly within county engineer’s wheelhouse, but the county was not ready to pursue an outside hire. “I go back to my days at the academy,” County Attorney Sonny Bloxom said. “When I learned celestial navigation they didn’t hand me a sextant and a textbook, I had professors and teachers to help guide me.” Staff nonetheless had been handed their marching orders and proceeded to march. In August, the issue was revisited. “There is some feeling among the commissioners the staff is smart enough to handle this, but it takes time to learn an entire industry. It’s a whole lot quicker to hire someone who does this day in, day out,” Bloxom said. “I agree with Bloxom,” Merrill Lockfaw said. “It’s not that this committee isn’t capable, but we don’t want to make the same mistake as Pocomoke.” Lockfaw represents Pocomoke City on the board of commissioners. In an interesting bit of side-drama, criticisms of the deal brokered by Pocomoke City started now-former Economic Development Director Bill
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Badger down the path to his resignation in early September. Badger noted the commissioners were still haggling over getting help, while the residents of Pocomoke City were saving $2,000 per week in taxpayer money on electric costs due to their solar deal. At this point, about two months of debate over a $6,000 expenditure had occurred. “The [committee has] justifiable reasons or they would have never stated so. If we disregard what the committee is telling us now we could have made the same decision weeks ago. The time is wasted if we don’t take their recommendation,” Lockfaw said. He moved to proceed with the request for proposal and hire CQI to evaluate the responses. Mitrecic asked if the motion could be split into its component parts. Lockfaw did not agree to split the motion. Commissioner Chip Bertino seconded the motion. Commissioners Lockfaw, Bertino, Purnell and Bud Church voted for the motion, while Bunting, Elder and Mitrecic voted against. In December, Worcester agreed to sign with Cleveland-based WGL Energy to provide two of the eight megawatts the county uses annually for public facilities, locking in a rate of 6.43 cents per kilowatt-hour for the next 20 years. See SOLAR Page 16
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By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) After growing increasingly frustrated with how he saw projects and goals for the county and the different view county leadership had for the same situations, former Economic Development Director Bill Badger resigned from his post in early September, to be eventually succeeded by his deputy, Merry Mears. “My goals were pretty simple: create jobs, increase tax revenue and foster a business-friendly environment,” Badger said after his resignation had been made public. “The county government was not necessarily supportive of that mission. The situation wasn’t going to change, so I had to.” Badger’s pursuit of those goals occasionally led to clashes with staff, one example being during a county meeting where the merits of a solar deal in Pocomoke City were being, in Badger’s opinion, unfairly criticized. After a confrontation with County Attorney Sonny Bloxom, himself a Pocomoke City native, Badger stormed out of the meeting. Also earlier this year, Badger promoted a plan to reevaluate the way water and sewer fees were being handled at Riddle Farm, feeling the price tag was too high. He pointed to the successes he’d had across the bridge using tax increment financing in developing the Arundel Mills shopping center and Park Place condominium developments. The county examined the issue, studied it, and ultimately decided to keep the status quo, fearing the loss of customers already in the pipeline, or delays due to the uncertainty presented by the county revisiting the issue. No new applications for service in the Riddle Farm area have been discussed in public since. Badger also shepherded some projects the county has decided to invest in and study, including a proposed excursion train and a proposed sports
stadium. He replaced former director Jerry Redden and, because of his work elsewhere in the state, was inducted into the Maryland Economic Development Association Hall of Fame last year. “The county has a great deputy director who will do a fantastic job,” Badger said before Mears’ promotion. After a little more than a month acting as interim director, county officials named Mears Economic Development Director of Worcester County. “I’ve gotten nothing but support in this role and during the transition,” Mears said. “My vision is a two-tiered approach. In the broadest, macro sense of economic development, we need to focus on infrastructure, including broadband and access to natural gas. The second [tier] will bring a focus on small business,” Mears said. Aerospace, she said, would also be a focus. “Worcester County is just 15 miles from NASA, and I’d like to provide incentives to get contractors to set up here,” she said. Mears pointed to the business incubator in Pocomoke City, which offers low rent to budding businesses. She said providing workforce development to veterans was also a priority, which touches on her past experience at the Lower Shore Workforce Alliance. Before starting with Worcester County three years ago and a brief stint with Wicomico County, Mears spent 12 years at the LSWA, finishing as director. The LSWA provides grants to people so that they have the opportunity to upgrade their skillsets. “It’s a close sister to economic development,” she said. Most importantly, Mears said, her experience at LSWA allowed her to create alliances to ensure the workplace needs in the area are met. She said these skills are easily transferrable to her new job. “We are often presented with opportunities linked to increasing jobs — which has been and will continue to be a focus. The difference is I will take a team approach and work together with leadership to the betterment of Worcester County.”
Solar consultant eventually hired Continued from Page 15 Additionally, there is a guarantee of 85 percent production on the facility, and if the company does not meet its requirement, the county is able to walk away from the deal. Bloxom said this deal does not preclude other deals with other providers that may wish to do future business with the county. The production site for the power is located in Church Hill, in Queen Anne’s county. Worcester included a stipulation that all production equipment is produced in North America, to which WGL acquiesced.
The county currently pays 8.1 cents per kilowatt hour for electricity, with a projected bi-annual escalation of two percent, according to County Engineer Bill Bradshaw. Using those figures, the county is set to save about $162,000 in the first year alone, and could save more than $3.7 million over the life of the deal. On the downside, the initial outlay for this power purchase agreement is among the highest of the options, with a cap of $300,000. This is used to cover interconnection costs between the solar array and Delmarva Power, Bradshaw said.
JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
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Ocean City Today
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YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Schools, county cannot agree on costs for Showell
By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Still reeling from the fallout of the fiscal 2016 budget talks, which led to an unprecedented “work to rule” protest in all of the county’s schools that lasted until a deal was struck eliminating 30 support positions in order to restore teacher raises, the relationship between the Worcester County Commissioners and Board of Education was further strained when it came time to discuss the replacement of Showell Elementary School. The budget proposal delivered by the schools to the county for the project exceeded $50 million due, in part, to delays in approval. Finding this number unacceptable, the commissioners took a “fact-finding mission” to Anne Arundel County to visit Lothian Elementary school, which was being replaced at a cost of about $30 million, in May. Around this time a committee was formed, although the names of all members had not been made public at that time, it’s since been revealed commissioners Jim Bunting, Chip Bertino and Ted Elder along with un-
named representatives from the Board of Education have met privately to discuss replacing the facility. The goal of the tour was to compare schools built to Maryland standards on vastly different budgets to determine if and where efficiencies can be found. But comparing Anne Arundel County apples to Worcester County apples proved more challenging. The Anne Arundel school district is the 46th largest in the United States and the fifth largest in Maryland. Lisa Seaman-Crawford, the director of facilities for Anne Arundel schools, said she manages 126 facilities, with 121 of them being schools. The Worcester County district is composed of 14 schools. Seaman-Crawford said she manages three-to-four construction projects per year using a construction management agency. Every three years the county puts out a request for purchase and rotates through contractors, she continued. Anne Arundel schools are built based on a prototype template, meaning almost all of the schools have somewhat similar design specifications. The Lothian school, she said, was able to realize savings both because the county already owned the property on which it was built, and the students at Lothian could be moved to a neighboring middle
school during construction. Worcester’s plan for Showell has not yet reached the design phase, and so must be developed from the ground up. The Board of Education believes time is the most important factor when dealing with construction, and blames most of the increased costs on delays in decision making. “The primary factor associated with the increase is time. We built Ocean City Elementary School in 2005 at a cost of $141 per square foot. Three years later … the bids for the Pocomoke High School project came in at $238 per square foot,” Joe Price, facilities planner for the schools said, according to former schools spokeswoman Barb Witherow. Securing contractors is also a concern for the schools. “Worcester County does not have an abundance of potential bidders like the western shore. On our most recent project, Snow Hill High School, five of our contractors are from the eastern shore while 12 are from the western shore and two are from Pennsylvania. Travel and mobilizing personnel and equipment impact the costs associated with bids, and therefore, construction costs,” Price was reported to have said, according to Witherow. At their Oct. 6 meeting, the commissioners presented a budget to Board of Education representatives,
JANUARY 1, 2016
including Superintendent Dr. Jerry Wilson, some $17.4 million less than earlier projections of construction costs. Further, the schools were to limit their budget for architectural and engineering fees by more than half to $255,000. When it came time to formalize these changes in a capital improvement plan submission to the state’s Interagency Committee for School Construction, Kathy Whited, county budget officer, noticed the schools had made some revisions of their own. The first revised the enrollment at the school downward from 657 to 616. Additionally, the board noted this change was identified as a directive from the commissioners. The commissioners did reduce the footprint of the proposed facility from 104,000 to 90,000 square feet. The reduction in size and keeping the same student/space ratio mandates the change in enrollment, the Board of Education argued. “The 104,000 square feet also allowed for additional growth classrooms, provisions for a future mandate for all-day pre-Kindergarten and for any other space requirements identified during the design phase,” Sterrs said. Another change identified by Whited includes an additional projected $1,755,000 for inflation and is See DUBIOUS Page 20
JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
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Ocean City Today
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YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Dubious meeting results in school construction deal Continued from Page 18 added to the estimated bond amount for the school of about $30 million, upping the total project cost to almost $39 million. Wilson stood by the decision to change enrollment figures and add more than $2 million in inflation to a pro-forma budget developed by the county, citing internal procedures when called to the carpet by the commissioners two weeks later. In response, after a lengthy debate and a 4-2 vote, the county commissioners decided to take the battle to the state, by submitting a letter outlining their grievances with the Board
of Education’s course of conduct in planning a replacement school. Commission President Jim Bunting, along with Commissioner Chip Bertino, harshly criticized the schools’ process while facing criticism themselves from commissioners Joe Mitrecic and Bud Church. In the end, no positions had been changed, and no concessions granted. While this should have effectively killed the project for the year the state, instead of denying the project and moving along with their business, granted the county and schools time to reconcile. David Lever, the executive director of the Public School Construction Program, couldn’t say how far, or for how long, this extension could last, placing the onus on the county and schools to get on the same page quickly.
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“We have a strong interest in seeing that good projects are done,” Lever said. “It’s a technical failure to meet the deadline.” Lever said a Worcester County and Board of Education agreement is a “fundamental requirement” to receiving about $9 million in state aid. The project could continue, theoretically, if the county decided it wanted to pick up the entire tab for construction, Lever said. In response, Bunting said a meeting would be held between the committee and the schools “soon.” Ocean City Today learned later that not only had the meeting already been held, a decision had been reached. A letter approving the project was sent to Lever by County Administrator Harold Higgins dated Dec. 4, pursuant to an updated plan submitted by Wilson on Dec. 2, formally acquiescing to county demands. According to the minutes from the Nov. 3 meeting, which were approved without comment during a subsequent meeting of the commissioners, the motion to send the letter torpedoing the project is as follows: “…to send a letter to the IAC [Interagency Committee of School Construction] advising that the Commissioners did not approve the BOE’s 2017 CIP [capital improvement plan] without the requested amendments to the proposed enrollment of 657 students and a total budget of $37,181,000 for the SES replacement project.” County Attorney Sonny Bloxom said the “without requested amendments” phrase is the key operator allowing the county administrator to endorse a plan without ratification in public. Because the requested amendments are now included in the plan, Bloxom maintained, the commissioners’ objection to the plan has
also been removed, allowing the endorsement. The two dissenting commissioners, Church and Mitrecic, said they were not informed of the committee meeting beforehand and had no idea a deal had been struck until much later. “I was told I was sent an email,” Mitrecic said, adding that he never actually saw it. The remaining commissioners not on the committee, Merrill Lockfaw and Diana Purnell, both said they were told about the committee meeting. Mitrecic and Church, in separate interviews, said they were brought on board with the plan during an “open work session” that all seven commissioners attended at the winter Maryland Association of Counties conference held in Cambridge. This work session, according to County Public Information Officer Kim Moses, was advertised outside of the county administrative offices within the Government Center, posted on a bulletin board. At the time of the interview the posting had been replaced with the agenda for the regularly scheduled commissioners’ meeting. The county’s website calendar, listing commissioner and various board meetings, makes no mention of the open work session. Moses, who normally produces the minutes for all county commissioner meetings, said she was not in attendance during the open work session. Moses said she believed Assistant County Administrator Kelly Shannahan took minutes of the session, where various projects were discussed, including the Showell replacement school. During the final meeting of the commissioners this year, this open work session was not mentioned.
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Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
WORLD WAR II: OPERATION PAPER CLIP
By Sam Ghaleb Contributing Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Seventy years ago after the defeat of Germany, the United States started an operation to move hundreds of German scientists and engineers from Germany to the U.S., to help unlock the secrets of the latest German weapons technology. In the last months of the war, Germany deployed novel weapons such as the V-1 cruise missile and the V-2 rocket. Both were used in large numbers to hit the city of London and the port of Antwerp in Belgium, causing heavy damage. Germany also developed and de-
ployed the Me-262 jet fighter, the Me-163 rocket aircraft and the Type XXI U-boat, which was a high underwater-speed submarine that could have revolutionized submarine warfare and given the Germans a distinct advantage. If all these weapons could have been deployed early enough, the outcome of World War II in Europe could have been very different. In the chaos following World War II, the U.S. government faced many difficult decisions, including what to do with the Third Reich’s scientific minds. These were the brains behind the Nazis’ once-indomitable war machine. So began “Operation Paper
Clip,” a decade-long, covert project to bring Hitler’s scientists and their families to the United States. The project was originally called “Operation Overcast.” After WWII ended in 1945, victorious Soviet and U.S. intelligence teams began a treasure hunt throughout occupied Germany for military and scientific booty. They were looking for things like new rocket and aircraft designs, medicines, and electronics. But they were also hunting down the most precious “spoils” of all: the scientists whose work had nearly won the war for Germany.
PAGE 21 Of particular interest to the U.S. were scientists specializing in aerodynamics and rocketry (such as those involved in the V-1 and V-2 rocket projects), chemical weapons, chemical reaction technology and medicine. These scientists and their families were secretly brought to the United States without State Department review and approval. Their service for Hitler’s Third Reich, as well as the classification of many as war criminals or security threats also disqualified them from officially obtaining visas. Continued from Page 22
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WORLD WAR II: OPERATION PAPER CLIP Continued from Page 21 President Truman, however, authorized Operation Paper Clip under one condition: no German scientist would be accepted into the U.S. if he had any war crimes record. Also, one of the main aims of the operation was capturing equipment before the Soviets arrived. The U.S. Army in the final stage of the war destroyed some of the German equipment to prevent it from being captured by the advancing Red Army. Separate from Paper Clip was an even-more-secret effort to capture German nuclear secrets, equipment and personnel (Operation ALSOS). Another American project (TICOM) gathered German experts in cryptography – the science of coding and decoding messages. Originally, the U.S. military intended merely to debrief the German
scientists and send them back to Germany. But when it realized the extent of the scientist’s knowledge and expertise, the War Department decided it would be a waste to send the scientists home. Following the discovery of flying disc fighters/laser beam weaponry in German military bases, the War Department decided that NASA and the CIA must control this technology, and the Nazi scientists and engineers who had worked on this technology. Realizing that the importation of scientists who had so recently worked for the Nazi regime so hated by Americans was a delicate public relations situation, the U.S. military cloaked the operation in secrecy. In announcing the plan, a military spokesman merely indicated that some German scientists who had worked on rocket development had “volunteered” to come to the United
States and work for a “very moderate salary.” The voluntary nature of the scheme was somewhat undercut by the admission that the scientists were in “protective custody.” Upon their arrival in the United States on Nov. 16, newsmen and photographers were not allowed to interview or photograph the newcomers. A few days later, a source in Sweden claimed that the scientists were members of the Nazi team at Peenemunde where the V-weapons had been developed. The situation pointed out one of the many ironies connected with the Cold War. The United States and the Soviet Union, once allies against Germany and the Nazi regime during World War II, were now in a fierce contest to acquire the best and brightest scientists who had helped arm the German forces in order to construct
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JANUARY 1, 2016 weapons systems to threaten each other. The majority of the scientists, numbering almost 500 when they came to the U.S., were deployed at White Sands Proving Ground, N.M., Fort Bliss, Texas and Huntsville, Ala., to work on guided missile and ballistic missile technology. This, in turn, led to the foundation of NASA and the U.S. Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) program. Many of these men were accused of war crimes, and others had stood trial at Nuremberg. One was convicted of mass murder and slavery. These scientists were directly responsible for major advances in rocketry, jet aircraft, medical treatments and electronics. Much of the information surrounding Operation Paperclip is still classified. One of the most controversial figures in this whole operation was the German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, who led a group of engineers in creating the V-2 ballistic missile. The weapon eventually killed 7,000 Allied troops and civilians in London and Antwerp, Belgium, and led to the deaths of 20,000 prisoners in the German forced labor camp where it was manufactured. From 1937 to 1945, von Braun was the technical director of the Peenemunde rocket research center, where the V-2 rocket was developed. To bring him to the United States, his dossier was rewritten so he didn’t appear to have been an enthusiastic Nazi. Von Braun and his colleagues ultimately found a new home. After surrendering to the Americans near the end of the war, the scientists were moved to the United States, where they quickly became a vital part of the U.S. Army’s own ballistic missile program, and the new National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), that was created for the sole purpose of exploring space flight and putting man in space. From NASA’s space flight facility in Huntsville, Ala., von Braun and his team took aim at developing the Saturn rocket, which would eventually be used to land the U.S. astronauts on the moon in July 1969. Von Braun, also became a celebrity in the 1950s and early 1960s, as one of Walt Disney’s experts on the “World of Tomorrow.” In 1970, he became NASA’s associate administrator. The basic fact remains that von Braun and all the other German scientists and engineers, designed and developed cutting-edge technology intended to help Hitler dominate the globe, “and he and most of his colleagues, did so with what von Braun never would deny was total commitment and enthusiasm.” The question that still needs to be answered, was Operation Paperclip a moral outrage on the part of the United States, or did it help the U.S. win the Cold War? In other words, did the ends justify the means?
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
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Glick remembered for philanthropy, generosity Staff Report (Jan. 1, 2016) Ocean City lost one of its favorites in Hal Glick, a real estate pioneer going back to the 1970s and such a champion of charities and worthy causes that the annual Hal Glick Distinguished Service Award is given to those who exhibit the qualities that he embodied. “You can’t find anybody that doesn’t like Hal. Every time I would mention his name, that he’s my partner, people would say, ‘Oh, I know Hal. I like Hal. He’s a great guy,’” said Bob Warfield, a former business partner in the real estate firm Moore, Warfield and Glick. “Everybody liked him. He was just a super-nice person, and he was concerned for you. He did everything that way.” Glick started out as a clothing retailer, and owned a store in Salisbury for many years. He became close with Bruce Moore, his future employer and partner, through the business. “I was just beginning in real estate and was doing part-time clothing sales,” Moore said. “Hal lived in Ocean City and would get up early each morning to go to Salisbury. We would also stop for gas at the same place. One morning, about 6 a.m., he was complaining as he was filling up about the retail clothing business. I said ‘Hal, you should get your realtor’s license.’ So he did, and ended up coming on with us. “After two years, he was our top
agent. I was afraid we were going to lose him, so we made him a partner.” Dr. Leonard Berger, owner of the Clarion Fontainebleau resort, met Glick more than 30 years ago. “He was a special friend of mine. When I first moved here in 1982, he befriended me and helped me out. He was that kind of guy,” Berger said. “He was a stupendous guy. He was loved by all and loved by Ocean City. He did a lot for the city.” Throughout the 1980s and 90s, Glick was instrumental in a number of real estate and development deals in the resort area. He also became a fixture on boards and committees for local organizations. “He served on a lot of boards in Ocean City,” said real estate developer Jeff Thaler, a colleague and friend of Glick’s. “I sat on a lot of boards with him, and when he spoke at a meeting, no matter what it was, people listened. They knew he was going to make the right decision ... he was the kind of guy who could give you advice you didn’t want to hear and the advice that you needed to hear.” Thaler and Warren Rosenfeld cofounded an event and award ceremony, initially conceived as a fundraiser to honor Glick. The event would eventually become an annual award to highlight philanthropic efforts within the Ocean City community. “Everyone is using the term ‘true gentleman’ for Hal Glick. In Yiddish we
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have the term ‘mensch,’ which means, basically, a stand-up guy. Hal Glick was the very definition of a mensch,” Rosenfeld said. Philanthropy and service to Ocean City and Worcester County became synonymous with Glick over the years. “He is probably the greatest fundraiser I’ve ever known. It’s got to be over $1 million the man raised, and that’s just in the last 10 years. The money was always for an organization in Ocean City or Worcester County... it was never for anything that didn’t affect us directly,” Thaler said. Though he shied away from the limelight for himself, Glick’s reputation often preceded him. “He was an icon for Ocean City – a very important figure and always volunteering for the community,” Berger said. “He was very active. He was on the [Governor’s] Economic Development Committee, the Education Committee, and the [Roland E. Powell] Convention Center committee. He was always doing something, always planning something.” Though he contributed to any number of projects, he had a few favorites, like Temple Bat Yam, the local Jewish charity and place of worship. “I knew him before Bat Yam, from the real estate business, but it wasn’t until Bat Yam that we became close ... it was probably in the mid-90s when Bat Yam was just starting,” Thaler recalled.
“He wasn’t an original member, neither was I, but it was really in those years that we and some other folks came in and got it into gear. We went from next to nothing to over 300 families in two years.” Berger agrees. “He was very active in Temple Bat Yam and did a lot of fundraising for the synagogue,” he said. But more than what he did, his friends will miss Hal Glick for who he was. “He was just an absolute delight. He and I worked for years and years side by side and never had a cross word,” Warfield said. “Hal was a gentleman, and a sweetheart, but he was very competitive and very driven,” Moore said. “I guess you wouldn’t know it if you weren’t close to him … he was a workaholic, but he was never pushy or over the top.” “When you were in a meeting or talking to him and there were 1,000 people in the room, you were the only person,” Thaler said. “He gave you that feeling. You knew he cared.” Glick, 74, succumbed to cancer on Dec. 24, and services were held Dec. 29. In lieu of flowers, the family requested donations be made in his memory to Temple Bat Yam. “He had 350 friends there, people loved him,” Moore said following the service. “He was a great father, a great friend, and a great partner.”
Ocean City Today
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OBITUARIES HAROLD POTTS GLICK Bishopville
Harold Potts Glick, 74, passed away on Dec. 24, 2015, at his home after a courageous battle with cancer. He was born on Nov. 15, 1941 in Baltimore. He was the son of the late Saul Glick and Miriam Glick Rubin (nee: Potts). Hal grew up in Onancock, on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. Harold Glick His family owned and operated a retail department store, Glick & Sons. Hal was a 1960 graduate of Randolph Macon Military Academy in Front Royal, Va. and a 1965 graduate of the University of Maryland Business School with a B.S. degree in accounting. He passed the CPA exam in 1966. He decided to use his retail knowledge and experience and opened and operated a fine men's clothing store in Salisbury, Mike Hals, LTD, with his brother, Mike in 1967. He opened the first Unisex hair salon, A Cut Above, above the store in 1975. Hal began to feel he was not achieving his goals, so in 1979, he decided to venture into the real estate business. He sold out the clothing store, obtained his real estate license and joined Bruce Moore and Robert Warfield at Moore & Warfield Real Estate in Ocean City, as the 12th sales associate. Hal loved the real estate business and through his successes, he was asked to
be a partner in the firm. In 1983, the company became Moore, Warfield & Glick, Inc. Realtors. He loved Ocean City and the business. The agents and staff became his extended family. The company expanded through the years, opening offices in Delaware and Virginia. It became the largest independently owned and operated "resort" real estate company in the area. Hal was very involved with the local and state real estate boards, holding all the elected offices and winning numerous awards. His most treasured was winning "Realtor of the Year" award in 1987 and the "Realtor Community Service" award in 1998. Hal partnered in the development of many condominiums and subdivisions in Ocean City and surrounding areas. In 2003, the company was sold to Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. Hal's service did not stop within his industry. He served on the Advisory Board of Equitable Trust for Maryland National Bank and Nations Bank; on the Roland E. Powell Convention Center feasibility committee resulting in the addition and renovation of the convention center; on the Governor's Economic Development Committee as vice president and chaired the Education Committee, promoting customer service seminars in Ocean City. He was a member of the Atlantic General Hospital Corporation. In 2002, he was the recipient of the annual "Spirit of Ocean City Award" from the Ocean City Chamber of Commerce. This award is presented to an individual who owns and operates a
business in Ocean City while unselfishly and tirelessly promoting the town. For over 30 years, the name Hal Glick has been synonymous with Ocean City real estate. So, to his surprise, in 2009, the Coastal Association of Realtors presented Hal with the "First Annual Lifetime Achievement Award" for his dedication to the real estate industry and the community. Hal actively supported numerous animal rights organizations. He had a great passion to stop the cruelty to all animals. This led him to eating a pesco-vegetarian diet since 1990. He co-chaired a committee, that raised funds for the Worcester County Humane Society for six years. He was a past member of Beth Israel in Salisbury for 27 years serving on the Board of Directors for five years. Hal has been an active member of Temple Bat Yam since 1993. He has served on the Board of Directors for many years and served as the President from 20002004. He chaired many fundraising projects necessary to build the Temple. He especially enjoyed the annual golf tournament and seeing all the players having so much fun. In 2010, Hal was presented the first "Hal Glick Distinguished Service Award," an annual award that bears his name, that has and will benefit many charitable institutions on Delmarva. Hal enjoyed tennis and golfing for many years, accomplishing two "hole-inones." He loved attending and watching all sporting events and collecting memorabilia since he was a child. He was a real family man. He loved
JANUARY 1, 2016 his family above all else. His children and grandchildren were the center of his life. He loved being Pop-Pop. Hal, with wife Christine, enjoyed a wonderful social life together with so many great friends. He loved traveling, fine dining, attending sporting events, especially the Orioles, Redskins and the Terps. Hal and Christine were always together and never liked to be apart. Hal will always be remembered for his kindness. He was a loyal and good friend to so many. Hal is survived by his wife, Christine Glick; his son, Shawn; his loving companion, Valeria Bobroff of New York; his daughter, Lauren of Ocean City and six grandchildren, Zachary Ettz, Madeline Shanahan, Milla Glick, Sadie Glick, Miriam Glick and Ella Glick. He is also survived by his nephew, Geoff Glick, whom he loved like a son, and many loved relatives, family and friends. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his step-father, Victor Rubin; his brother, Michael Glick; his exwife, Miriam Solomon Glick and his four-legged companion, Deeg and his many pet lopped-eared rabbits. The family would like to thank his many great friends, doctors and nurses for the love and support they have shown through his illness. A funeral service was held Tuesday, Dec. 29, 2015 at Temple Bat Yam in Berlin. Interment was in Beth Israel Cemetery in Salisbury. A celebration of Hal's life will be announced. In lieu of flowers, contributions may
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be made in his memory to: Temple Bat Yam, 11036 Worcester Highway, Berlin, Md. 21811 or Worcester County Humane Society, PO Box 48, Berlin, Md. 21811. Arrangements are in the care of Holloway Funeral Home PA, 501 Snow Hill Road, Salisbury. Visit www.hollowayfh.com to express condolences to the family.
THEODORE T. PIKULSKY, SR. Berlin
Theodore (Ted) T. Pikulsky, Sr. passed away Nov. 27, 2015 at the Salisbury Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Born in Footedale, Pa., he was the son of the late Peter and Helen (Merick) Pikulsky. Pikulsky is survived by his wife of two years, Diana Robinson of Berlin. He is also survived by his former wife of 35 years, Julia Panella Pikulsky of Ocean City; his brother, Edward Pikulsky of Salisbury; three children, Theodore T. Pikulsky, Jr. and his wife, Patrice of Selbyville, Brian Pikulsky and wife, Teresa of Annapolis and daughter, Paula Curran and husband, Matthew, of Cabin John; grandchildren, Theodore T. Pikulsky, III of Washington, D.C., John R. (JR) Pikulsky, serving with the United States Peace Corps in Mali, Africa, Kaleigh and Ellie Pikulsky of Annapolis and Julia, Anna and Sean Curran of Cabin John. He is also survived by several nieces and nephews. Pikulsky owned and operated Dixieland in New Church, with his son, Theodore (JR) and daughter-in-law, Patrice, from 1989 until his retirement due to health concerns in 2010. He was a builder/developer of commercial and residential properties in Virginia, Maryland and Delaware with one of his most-notable projects the construction of Hawaiian Village in Ocean City. Pikulsky graduated from the University of Maryland, with both a BA and MA in history after serving in the United States Army. He was an avid boater, classic car collector and a licensed private pilot. A memorial mass will be celebrated on Saturday, Jan. 2, 2016 at Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church in Pocomoke at 11 a.m. A luncheon will follow at the community center located next to the church after the mass. Donations in Pikulsky’s memory can be sent to the Reverend William J. Porter Altar Server Scholarship, c/o Peggy O’Malley, St. Luke Catholic Church, 14401 Sinepuxent Avenue, Ocean City, Md. 21842; a scholarship established by grandson, Ted, III, in 2003.
HARRY LEE PALMER, SR. Girdletree
Harry Lee Palmer, Sr., age 85, died Sunday, Dec. 27, 2015, at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury. Born in Bishop, Md., he was the son of the late John Sylvester Palmer and Mattie Frances Baker Palmer. He was preceded in death by his wife, Roberta Adkins Palmer, in 1989. He is survived by his family, Teresa Elizabeth Palmer of Arizona, Melvin Sylvester Palmer and his wife, Phyliss of Arnold, Md., Harry Lee Palmer, Jr. and his wife, Nenita, of King George, Va., Humphrey Morgan Palmer and his wife, Danelle, of Laurel, Del. and Terina Etta Haldiman and her husband, David, of
Ocean City Today
Virginia Beach, Va. There are 11 grandchildren, Teresa Soley, Tina Hamn, Tanya Freeman, Jeaneen Randolph, Jennifer Nations, Richard Phelps, James Dean Lewis, Sabrina Lewis, Andrea Lewis, Christina Haldiman and David Haldiman, Jr., and 13 great-grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews. Also surviving is a Harry Palmer, Sr. sister, Marie Marousek and her husband, Jim, and a brother, Rollie R. Palmer and his wife, Rosalie, and sister-in-law, Barbara Palmer. He was preceded in death by his sisters, Virginia Taylor, Ethel Gray, Alice Carey, Isabelle Irving and brothers, Melvin Sylvester Palmer and Thomas Palmer. Mr. Palmer had been a machine operator with Moore Business Forms in Snow Hill. He was a lifelong member of the Church of Christ in Snow Hill. A funeral service will be held on
Thursday, Dec. 31, 2015, at 2 p.m. at the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin. Evangelist Frank Georhringer will officiate. Friends may call at the Burbage Funeral Home one hour prior to the service. Interment will follow in New Hope Cemetery in Willards, Md. A donation in his memory may be made to the Church of Christ, 4848 Washington St., Snow Hill, Md. 21863. Letters of condolence may be sent via: www.burbagefuneralhome.com.
VIRGINIA ELLEN CROPPER Delray Beach
Virginia Ellen Cropper, 75, passed away Dec. 19, 2015 at her home, under the care of Hospice by the Sea. Ellen was born in Berlin, Md. on Sept. 8, 1940. She was the daughter of Reese F. Cropper, Sr. and Virginia Esham Cropper, now deceased. She is survived by a sister, Joan C. Vetare and her husband, Frank, of Berlin, and a brother, Reese F. Cropper, Jr. of Deerfield Beach, Fla. A sister, Patricia Cropper Wilde, pre-
PAGE 25
deceased her. In addition there are several nieces and nephews and many cousins. Ellen graduated from Stephen Decatur High School, Berlin. She then graduated from Penn Hall in Chambersburg, Pa. and obtained a Bachelors degree from Richmond Professional Institute (RPI) in Richmond, Va. She had a successful career on Wall Street, first working at a bank and then with several investment firms on Wall Street. Her primary position was with the stock options division of Jefferies & Company, becoming a vice president and was the first female manager of a Wall Street options department. After leaving the investment business, she was in real estate sales on Long Island, N.Y. Ellen had retired to Palm Beach County Florida in 2005 and was a resident and member of St. Andrews Country Club in Boca Raton, where she held the women’s nine hole golf championship for five years. Ellen requested her remains be cremated and no formal service be held.
Continued on Page 26
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Ocean City Today
OBITUARIES Continued from Page 25 NEIL “BUCK” BROWN Salisbury
Neil “Buck” Brown, age 84, passed away suddenly from cardiac arrest at PRMC on Friday, Dec. 18, 2015. Buck was born in East McKeesport, Pa. and was the son of the late Harry M. and Ruth B. Brown of Ocean City. He is survived by his wife of 64 years, Mary McCabe Brown; “Buck” Brown son, Marc Brown and his wife, Lisa, their children, Amber Welsch and husband, Jim, Collins Brown and wife, Leah; daughters, Marcia Helms and her children, Shanan Rogers and Jennifer Pace; Margo Barker (Oct. 15, 1963 May 1, 2007) and her children, A. J. and Jordan Watson; great grandchildren, Logan, Summer, Hailey, Dylan, Carolina, Cole and Wyatt; brothers, Bill and Gordon Brown and several nieces and nephews. Buck also leaves behind his loving “Denny’s Family” in Salisbury. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his daughter, Margo Susan Barker (2007), brother, Captain Dale Brown and sister, Marilyn Balderson. Buck grew up in Ocean City, Md. and established Neil B. Brown, Tile Contractor in the mid 1950’s. He took great pride in his craft and would often point out the homes, motels and
restaurants where his tile work still stands today. In the 1970’s, he opened “Buck’s Place,” a store and restaurant located on the way to Assateague Island, which enabled him to combine his love for the island with his passion for business. He is also greatly remembered for sitting in front of Buck’s with his German Shepherd, Freemont, his best friend and true companion, while enjoying an ice cream cone together. He served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean Conflict and was a member of the American Legion Post 166 in Ocean City. He was a founding member of the Assateague Beach Buggy Association, known today as AMSA, where he was a life member. He was a life member of the Ocean City Volunteer Fire Company, where he held several offices and was instrumental in establishing the Ambulance Squad and Cadet Program in the early 1960’s. Buck’s wishes were for his body to be donated to The Anatomy Board of Maryland for medical education and research. A Memorial Service will be held at the Ocean City Volunteer Fire Company, Station 5 (West Ocean City) on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016 at 1 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family request donations be sent to the Ocean City Volunteer Fire Company in his memory at 1501 Philadelphia Ave., Ocean City, Md.
JANUARY 1, 2016
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015
Raise removal sparks ‘work to rule’ protest at schools
By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) As soon as the ink was dry on the fiscal 2016 budget and salary steps for county teachers, as well as numerous other employees, weren’t included, little time was wasted before a “work-to-rule” protest was launched, eventually including all of the county’s schools. When teachers work to rule, they fulfill the bare minimum required by their contract, entering school at the exact time they are required and leaving promptly at the end of the school day. The idea being a demonstration of how far teachers in the county are going above and beyond the letter of their contracts in the course of their jobs. This was the fourth time in six years the county commissioners had decided to forgo step increases for county employees. There is an escape clause in the code that allows salary steps to be skipped due to financial limitations. The county has used this measure in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2015 to not fund step increases. The county commissioners decide, as a part of its budget process, how to fill 13 separate areas of the Board of Educa-
tion’s budget, of which one is employee salary. The teachers’ union can then negotiate a contract based on that figure. Teachers expect a step increase, or a merit and experience based bump, annually and sign a contract to that effect. A teacher beginning their teaching career in Worcester county at step one in 2009 would be on step six in 2015 if all the steps had been paid. As it stands, they should be on step four (step one: 2010, 2011, 2012; step two: 2013, step three: 2014, step four: 2015). With a Bachelor’s degree that teacher earns a base salary of $44,715 and could argue they should be making $46,749 at step six. In Dorchester County, the same teacher at step six earns $44,385, or a few hundred dollars less per year than a lower-stepped Worcester teacher. In Wicomico, the salary is $45,466, a difference of less than $1,000 annually, and Somerset it’s $45,677. The same Worcester teacher on step eight earns $49,003 and can make a case for being on step 10 at $50,979. In Dorchester, that teacher on step 10 earns $46,645, in Wicomico, it’s $50,311 and in Somerset, it’s $49,919. With what the Board of Education See TEACHERS Page 70
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Sports & Recreation
Jan. 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
Page 27
www.oceancitytoday.net
Stephen Decatur senior Dayona Godwin now holds the girls' basketball all-time scorer record.
Worcester Prep junior Carter Hill was a member of the school's inaugural cross country program this fall.
Worcester Prep senior Grace Tunis was named one of 20 Wendy’s High School Heisman Award state finalists.
SPORTS YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 By Lisa Capitelli Managing Editor (Jan. 1, 2016) From a new pro and amateur volleyball tournament to a record-breaking fishing competition and Worcester Prep girls’ soccer undefeated season, here are some of the top sports stories for 2015: Stephen Decatur girls’ lacrosse team state runner-up Stephen Decatur made its first appearance in the girls’ lacrosse state championship game since 2006 on May 20, but unfortunately, the Lady Seahawks came up a bit short, falling to the Century Knights 10-7 at Stevenson University. “It was a good game. We played really well. It could have gone either way,” Decatur Coach Bob Musitano said. “I thought we handled ourselves very well. I was proud of them. You can’t ask for any more from the girls than what we got.” Decatur was 17-0 going into the state championship game. Seventeen is the most wins in a season for the program. The Seahawks captured the Bayside Conference title during the 2015 spring season and won their second consecutive 3A-2A East Regional trophy. The team has advanced to the state semifinals six times in the program’s 15-year history and has made it twice to the championship game, according to Musitano, who said the 2015 season was “a complete success.”
New volleyball tournament The National Volleyball League hosted a successful inaugural pro and amateur tournament with a junior clinic, May 29-31, in Ocean City. Professional beach volleyball players from around the world converged in the resort to compete for a $75,000 prize purse. The tournament on the beach between Talbot and Dorchester streets consisted of 38 men’s and 25 women’s teams. Ocean City was the league’s third stop of the 2015 season. Eric Haddock and Roberto Rodriguez-Bertran of Puerto Rico, and Kristen Batt-Rohr, of Florida and her partner, Brazilian Priscilla Piantadosi-Lima, were the men’s and women’s division winners. “The NVL had a great time in Ocean City and we hope to be back next year,” said Albert Hannemann, founder and CEO of the National Volleyball League. “Ideally, we would come back in late June to capture a greater audience with kids being out of school.” The Ocean City Championships was one of eight professional events for the NVL in 2015. “We did have a good attendance flow throughout the weekend with amazing feedback onsite from attendees and on social media,” Hannemann said. Running across Maryland Caitlin Adams, 18, began her 390-mile run across Maryland on
May 23 in Cumberland to raise funds for Limbs for Life, a nonprofit organization that supplies prosthetic limbs to those who cannot afford them. She chose Limbs for Life because of the way the charity is structured — first-come, first-served. It doesn’t matter if a person was born without a limb, underwent an amputation or lost it in the line of duty. Each limb provided by Limbs for Life costs about $2,500. She has raised nearly $24,000 according to her website, www.crowdrise.com/CaitlinsMdRun-Prosthetics. She had frequent guests on her journey, and college, high school and special friends like her boyfriend and mother, joined her to cross the bridge into Ocean City on June 27. After running across the Route 50 bridge, she was joined by Shannon Simm and her 2-year-old son, Nathan, who helped organize “Caitlin’s Big Finish” under the Boardwalk Arch. Nathan was born with Fibular Hemimelia, a congenital disorder characterized by the absence or underdevelopment of the fibula, resulting in an amputation in 2013. “When we got to the bridge it really hit me that this is over, but it was one of the best parts of the entire run — one of the reasons I did this is so kids like Nathan can do anything they want,” she said. He’s an inspiration and he doesn’t even know it yet.”
First woman wins White Marlin Open top prize There are numerous ways to celebrate a birthday. Cheryl McLeskey and Steve Richardson received a check for more than $1 million for theirs. McLeskey reeled in the first-place white marlin of the 42nd annual White Marlin Open aboard Richardson’s boat, the Backlash, on Aug. 5. The fish, weighing 94 pounds – the third largest in tournament history – was worth $1,176,113. McLeskey, of Virginia Beach, is the first woman to land the winning white marlin during the Open. This was also her first time participating in the tournament. “It’s such an indescribable feeling,” she said. The marlin took the bait around 2:50 p.m., and by 3 p.m. it was on the boat. “It came up to the bait and I just ran to the line … the adrenaline was incredible … It took about 10 minutes to get in,” McLeskey said. “We knew when we saw it jump it could be a potential winner … the second we got it in the boat we came right in [to the scale]. We were so excited we couldn’t get there fast enough.” Richardson, of Virginia Beach, said he had no doubt it would meet the White Marlin Open weight and length minimums of 70 pounds and 67 inches. The boat registration number for Continued on Page 28
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Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
SPORTS YEAR IN REVIEW 2015
Caitlin Adams, right, is joined by friends, family and supporters as she makes here way to the Ocean City Boardwalk Arch at North Division Street on June 27. Adams began her 390-mile run on May 23 in Cumberland, Md. to raise funds for Limbs for Life, a nonprofit organization that supplies prosthetic limbs to those who cannot afford them.
Continued from Page 27 the tournament was 87. Richardson’s birthday is Aug. 7 (8/7) and McLeskey’s is Aug. 8 (8/8), so they hoped it would weigh 87 pounds. “When I was first told the boat number I immediately had a good feeling,â€? McLeskey said. The Backlash crew was presented with their paycheck on Aug. 8, McLeskey’s birthday. “It will be the most memorable birthday ever,â€? she said. “It felt like winning the Super Bowl of sports fishing ‌â€? “It was a good 60th birthday present. It was a happy birthday,â€? said Richardson, who has participated in the White Marlin Open more than 20 times since 1981. A total of 307 boats entered into the tournament and a record $3,916,840 was awarded to White Marlin Open winners. The last time 300 or more boats registered for the Open was 2008 when about $2.3 million was paid out.
Poor Girls Open record payout and participation It was a record-breaking event all around for the 22nd annual Capt. Steve Harman’s Poor Girls Open, held Aug. 13-15. A record 634 lady anglers fished on 136 boats. A total of $174,250 was awarded to tournament winners, and organizers presented a check for $85,000 to the American Cancer Society. “‘Awesome.’ That’s the only way I can describe it. We pretty much set every record. It was another great event for Bahia Marina,� said Earl Conley, co-director of the Open. Many women make it an annual tradition to participate in the tournament, including cancer survivors. Although it is a competition, there is clear camaraderie among the anglers. Ladies say they enjoy fishing in the tournament because it benefits a worthy cause. Proceeds are donated to the American Cancer Society and earmarked for breast cancer research and program development under the “Pink
Cheryl McLeskey of Virginia Beach poses at Harbour Island Marina on 14th Street with the 94pound white marlin she landed on Aug. 5 while fishing on the Backlash. McLeskey and her teammates won $1,176,113. She is the first woman to land the first-place marlin.
Ribbon Classic at the Beach Series� — an assortment of local activities to raise breast cancer awareness while garnering money for the organization. During the Poor Girls Open awards banquet, tournament organizers and the Harman family presented a check for $85,000 to the American Cancer Society. About $4,400 in additional funds will go to the ACS from a 50/50 raffle that took place during tournament activity at Bahia Marina on 22nd Street, bayside. The total donated by the Harman family through this tournament and other events over the past eight years is more than $600,000. Capt. Steve Harman and his wife, Pam, started the Poor Girls Open in 1994 to provide women with an opportunity to compete for prizes and money in a ladies-only tournament and to raise money for local charities.
Harman died in February 2004, so organizers thought it was appropriate the tournament be renamed in his memory.
Worcester Prep girls’ soccer team has perfect 11-0 season The Worcester Prep girls’ soccer team capped a perfect season with a 40 victory over the Saints Peter & Paul Sabres in the Eastern Shore Independent Athletic Conference championship game on Oct. 23 in Berlin. “These girls earned it. They have been working and working,� Prep Coach Carol Hartnett said. “This was a decisive win. One we can be proud of.� Worcester won 11 games in its undefeated season. The Mallards scored 61 goals and only allowed one. “No one ever imagined [going undefeated]. That’s what makes it extra Continued on Page 30
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JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
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The Harman family and organizers of the 22nd annual Capt. Steve Harman's Poor Girls Open ladies-only tournament, held Aug. 13-15, present a check for $85,000 to American Cancer Society representatives during an awards banquet at the Ocean City Marlin Club. Proceeds are donated to the American Cancer Society and earmarked for breast cancer research and program development.
Ocean City Today
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JANUARY 1, 2016
SPORTS YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Continued from Page 28 special,” she said. “We just went along through our season and it sort of happened.”
Successful first Worcester Prep cross country season This was the first year for the Worcester Prep cross country program. Twelve boys and eight girls participated this fall. Coach Keith Geiger thought the season was a terrific success and was surprised with how well the runners performed. “The boys won a couple meets and the girls were very competitive all year long. I’m honored to have been a part of it,” he said. “I think this sport is such a great addition to the WPS athletic programs.” With only one runner graduating from the boys’ team, Geiger thinks the squad will also be strong next year. “Our top seven or eight boys will all be returning. Our top three girls are all sophomores, so that’s a great place to build,” he said. “We are losing two senior girls that were very important – Lauren Dykes and Sarah Koon – so we’ll have to recruit some more girls to the program. But, I think the team is gaining some popularity and hopefully we can continue to grow.” The Stephen Decatur girls' lacrosse team won the Bayside Conference championship and became two-time regional champs in 2015. The squad was a state runner-up.
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Heisman award state finalist When Grace Tunis heard her phone at 5 a.m. on Nov. 4, she saw an email notifying her that the Wendy’s High School Heisman Award state finalist results had been posted. “I was like ‘oh, man, I wonder if I won,’ so I checked,” the Worcester Prep senior said. “I searched my name and saw I was a state finalist.” She went to school that day and the word had spread. “When your college counselor and soccer coach comes up and hugs you in the hallway that’s when I knew it was kind of special,” she said. “It’s been pretty exciting. People on Facebook have been commenting and old coaches have been congratulating me. Even students’ parents have been saying ‘congrats.’” Thousands of students from all over the country apply for the annual High School Heisman Award. Students are judged on their academic achievements, community service, leadership and athletic accomplishments. Tunis has been a member of Worcester’s soccer, basketball and lacrosse teams since her freshman year. She was captain of the lacrosse team and an Academic All-American last spring as a junior. This year, she was named captain of the soccer and basketball teams. Tunis is co-president of the Worcester Volunteers and the Recycling Club. She started the Big Brother Big Sister Club at Worcester, where members visit elementary schools to talk with and mentor students. She is a member of the school chorus, chamber ensemble, National Honor Society, Cum Laude Society,
JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
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SPORTS YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 National Spanish Honor Society and is an AP Scholar with Distinction. Tunis is also editor of the school yearbook. She is currently taking AP Literature, AP calculus BC, honors Spanish 4, honors computer science and physics.
Cheerleaders finish sixth at national competition in Florida The Berlin Pop Warner cheerleaders placed sixth overall during the national competition on Dec. 7 at Walt Disney World’s Wide World of Sports. “The girls were nervous and we missed getting trophies by a tenth of a point,” Head Coach Jessie Parsons said. “Overall it was a good experience and a lot of fun.” The trip made the girls even more determined to return next year with plans to incorporate additional back hand springs, twist downs and stunts to their routine. “Getting to this point was hard and we had never gotten this far before,” Parsons said. The 16 junior peewee cheerleaders range in age from 8-12 years old, and most of the girls have been cheering together for a number of years. They began training for competitions in August when they practiced four nights a week. Once school started, practices were scheduled three days a week. In addition, the cheerleaders performed every Saturday for the Pop Warner football games. It was the first time in program history a Berlin Seahawks Pop Warner squad advanced that far.
Dayona Godwin breaks SDHS girls’ basketball scoring record Stephen Decatur senior Dayona Godwin was having mixed emotions throughout the day on Dec. 15, as she was both nervous and excited for that evening’s basketball game against Crisfield. Going into the match, Godwin was just 18 points away from breaking Elise Mercer’s (2001-2005) all-time Decatur girls’ basketball scoring record of 1,494. When Godwin stepped on the Crisfield Crabbers’ basketball court, she was still a bit nervous, but it slowly faded as she started playing. Godwin tied the record on a foul shot in the third quarter. “A couple possessions after that, that’s when I drove it down the court and scored,” she said. “When it happened, it was just overwhelming. I was filled with emotion. “It was shocking to think I’m the girls’ all-time leading scorer,” Godwin continued. “I had to let that sink in for a little bit and just kept playing basketball.” Decatur won the game 67-35. Godwin, a team captain, led the Seahawks with 31 points and 11 rebounds. As of Dec. 28, Godwin has 1,565 career points. She scored 302 her freshman year, 589 as a sophomore and 504 last season as a junior. On Feb. 25, Godwin and the Seahawks won their first BayContinued on Page 32
The Worcester Prep girls' soccer team went undefeated in 2015 and captured the Eastern Shore Independent Athletic Conference championship.
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JANUARY 1, 2016
SPORTS YEAR IN REVIEW 2015
Continued from Page 31 side Conference title since 1977, defeating Queen Anne’s 51-36. Godwin was the team’s top producer with 21 points. Godwin started the 2015-16 season with 1,395 career points. Since breaking the record, Godwin said many people have asked her if she thinks she can reach the 2,000-point mark. “It certainly is something I’d like to accomplish, but it’s in the back of my mind,” she said. “My main focus right now is just getting wins for my team.”
Above, The Berlin Pop Warner cheerleaders placed sixth during the national competition on Dec. 7 at Walt Disney World’s Wide World of Sports. Above left, The National Volleyball League hosted a successful inaugural pro and amateur tournament with a junior clinic, May 29-31, in Ocean City. Professional beach volleyball players from around the world converging in the resort.
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Business
Jan. 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
Page 33
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) There were a number of businesses that celebrated milestone years in Ocean City during 2015 including Fager’s Island, Wockenfuss, the Clarion Resort Fontainebleau Hotel, Planet Maze, Harbor Inn and Brass Balls Saloon. Many others changed locations to Ocean City or the surrounding areas including BomShell Boutique, Bridge Auto Repair, the Green Doors, General’s Kitchen, Coach’s Corner, Yummy Sweet Shop and Mattress Masters. In addition, a few businesses in the area changed hands including Yoga Yoga, Captain’s Galley, Kids Resale, OC Kebab House, CrossFit Ocean City and the Superfresh on 94th Street turned into an ACME. A few others expanded or added additional businesses while Tony Luke’s, Buddy’s Crabs & Ribs, Tokyo Seafood Buffett and T.J.Maxx opened up its first location in Ocean City. Here are some of the resort’s 2015 business highlights: Ocean City • The iconic Baltimore-based Ocean City candy company, Wockenfuss, celebrated its 100th anniversary this year. • The former Philadelphia Ave. and 15th Street location of English’s Chicken was attempted to be auctioned off on Feb. 20, but ultimately remained available for purchase. • Owners Ray and Deborah McGrath expanded Primo Hoagies on 133rd Street by adding a bar and knocking down a wall to connect the sandwich shop and neighboring Brewski Brothers, purchased by the couple a year earlier, last winter. • Clarion Resort Fontainebleau Hotel celebrated its 30th anniversary with a big party in Horizons Oceanfront Restaurant. It all began in March 1985, when Dr. Leonard Berger retired to Ocean City and found himself bored. He walked up the beach, made an offer on what was then the Sheraton at 101st Street and Coastal Highway and the rest, as they say, is history. • Kevin Killian opened Gracie Ocean City in the beginning of March on the corner of Wicomico Street and Baltimore Ave. in downtown Ocean City. The facility offers Gracie Jiu Jitsu, Judo, boxing, wrestling and Muay Thai. Classes are available for those with no prior experience. Women’s and children’s classes are also offered. For information, call 410-289-JITZ or visit Gracie Ocean City on Facebook. • Quiet Storm clothing retailer Bill Dreibelbis knows his lacrosse, which explains the theme of his “Quiet
In November, ACME opened in the former location of Superfresh on 94th Street.
Storm Surf & Turf’” in Fenwick Island. The newest store in Quiet Storm’s portfolio is the first one to focus on lacrosse. But while it carries major manufactures of lacrosse brands, it has not forgotten the operation’s roots. • Speedworld, the go-karting facility at the Jolly Roger Amusement Park on 30th Street, opened “Cyclone: The World’s First Cart Coaster” in March. The track stands five stories tall on the park’s northern edge, just south of 32nd Street. The raceway is more than 1,500 feet long, built on 78 pilings that are buttressed together by 22,320 square feet of lumber and 83,000 steel bolts. • After a little more than a threemonth hiatus, General’s Kitchen opened up in its new location in April on 67th Street below the Skye Bar. • Vincent Sebastian uses recipes that have been passed down from generations and cooks his menu items from scratch at Vinny’s Pizza and Italian Grill on 25th Street. The restaurant opened in April selling items such as sandwiches, ribeye cheesesteaks and subs with Boar’s Head deli meats. The restaurant also offers pasta entrees including lasagna, eggplant dishes, chicken parmesan, spaghetti and homemade meatballs. • Fox Sun & Surf on 143rd Street upgraded its seating to luxury recliners designed for ultimate comfort with retractable armrests for cud-
dling and electronic controls to recline the seat back, which instantaneously raises the footrest and reopened on April 30. • Harvey Blonder expanded his brand of Baltimore-based Buddy’s Crabs & Ribs to a serene bay view property on Wicomico Street in downtown Ocean City on May 6. The restaurant offers steamed-to-order crabs, jumbo lump crab cakes, succulent baby back ribs, boardwalk fries, salads, burgers and hand-prepped fried chicken. • The Albright, Thaler and Gordon families celebrated the 20th anniversary of Plant Maze in 2015, which they opened in 1995 to host parties for their young children during the offseason months. The 33rd Street one-stop shop features an 18-hole Lost Galaxy miniature golf course, an arcade, state-of-the-art Lasertron, an indoor climbing wall and maze. • Asan Karikov opened a nautical and resort wear shop, Old Salt, on 21st Street in May selling brandname clothing including Old Bay, Guy Harvey, Sloane Ranger and licensed sportswear products in addition to apparel, outerwear, accessories and souvenirs. • Grotto Pizza opened its first location on the Ocean City Boardwalk at 14th Street inside the Commander Hotel in May. • Tokyo Seafood Buffett on 131st Street opened in May. Diners have almost a dozen categories of food to
choose from including barbeque, soup, salad, dessert, ice cream and a selection of sushi. The crown jewel is the assortment of seafood including a raw bar, steamed blue and snow crabs, oysters and steamed shrimp. • After spending 24 years on 61st Street and taking an almost five-year hiatus, Coach’s Corner Diner is back to serve breakfast and lunch daily out of the Beachmark Motel on 74th Street. Omelets, breakfast sandwiches, pancakes, cheesesteaks, salads, cold sandwiches and desserts are a few of the homemade choices prepared fresh in owner Marty Furst’s kitchen since opening on Mother’s Day weekend. • Mione’s Pizza opened a second location on 67th Street in Ocean City on May 19. • On May 22, Ropewalk opened on 82nd Street with fresh seafood, a great bay view and a wide range of activities for all members of the family. Some entrees include seafood mac and cheese, Atlantic salmon, yellowfin tuna, filet mignon and tequila lime mahi. • During Memorial Day weekend, Kenny Diu expanded his OC Wasabi brand by opening a new location, Wasabi Express, and joining forces with friends to add Juice Shack to his take-out restaurant on 16th Street and Philadelphia Avenue. • Escape Room, on 118th Street in the OC Square shopping center, Continued on Page 34
Ocean City Today
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YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Continued from Page 33 opened on Memorial Day weekend. It features three rooms to solve, which can hold six or more players. Participants may be uncovering clues and finding keys to unlock answers with strangers. • Yummy Sweet Shop moved from Ocean Pines to 82nd Street in Ocean City offering its selection of homemade cupcakes, cake pops, custom cakes and candy. The store also sells ice cream from Chesapeake Bay Farms. • Inspired on Somerset Street, located just steps from the Ocean City Boardwalk, opened its thrift shop doors in May. Proceeds from sales help to open a sexual violence advocacy and resource center next door. • Fager’s Island on 60th Street celebrated its 40th anniversary in June. • In June, Philadelphia favorite Tony Luke’s opened its Philly-style sandwich and cheesesteak shop on 33rd Street in Ocean City — its first location in Maryland. • Brass Balls Saloon, located between 11th and 12th Streets on the Boardwalk celebrated its 35th anniversary in 2015. • Joy Quinn-Whalen opened her fourth Spice and Tea Exchange in the 67th Street Town Center featuring hundreds of different varieties and flavors of spices and teas. • Shmagel’s Bagels opened in July
on 33rd Street with bagels, naturally. The store offers other tasty options such as muffins and breakfast sandwiches with smoothies or iced and specialty coffees to compliment the pairings. • A Christmas to Remember opened on 80th Street where customers can find thousands of ornaments, displays and decorations. Operator Paula Thalis said the store has the largest selection of its kind in the state, all organized into easy-tofind themes. • Asan Karikov transformed OC Kebab House into an outside dining and late night stop for customers looking for authentic Mediterranean cuisine on South Baltimore Avenue between Dorchester and Talbot Streets. The menu features classic Greek and Turkish foods including platters with lamb, beef, chicken and seafood. Other food items include kebabs, chops, salads, homemade hummus, gyros, steaks, wraps, soups and falafel. • Three generations of Sheree Musson’s family have kept Harbor Inn, located at the end of Somerset Avenue, a neighborhood bar for residents and tourists open to visitors since 1935. • T.J.Maxx, one of the nation’s largest off-price retailers with more than 1,000 stores currently operating in 49 states and Puerto Rico, opened
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a new store in the Gold Coast Mall on 115th Street in Ocean City on Sunday, Oct. 18. • In November, ACME took over the Superfresh on 94th Street • Logan Willey’s dream became reality when she opened Real Raw Organics Kombucha Brewery and Café on Nov. 28. Kombucha, a probioticfilled fermented tea, is brewed at the 34th Street shop by using naturally flavored organic fruit juices. Additional menu highlights include breakfast bowls with bananas or yogurt, a coconut curry hummus plate, a cheese board, fresh salads, an avocado or black bean taco and a couple of sandwiches such as apple and brie with organic ham. West Ocean City • Yoga Yoga offers a wide variety of classes and workshops for all skill levels in West Ocean City. Kim Wilson, an avid Bikram participant, took over the space formally known as Bikram Yoga and added new classes. • Owner Gina March moved BomShell Boutique, a woman’s clothing store, to Ocean Gateway in West Ocean City at the beginning of the year. • In February, Atlantic Physical Therapy added a seventh location in West Ocean City. • Bridge Auto Repair was the last auto repair shop in Ocean City and moved a couple miles over the bridge to a new West Ocean City location in March. It’s located across the street from Taylor Marine and next door to the Brass Balls facility on Ocean Gateway. • In April, Pino Tomasello opened Sello’s, an Italian restaurant, in West Ocean City. • Sunset Cycles owner, Manny Perez, decided to quit his job as a government contractor making six figures, cash in some of his 401K, sell his custom motorcycle and open up
JANUARY 1, 2016
his dream shop on Rt. 611 in West Ocean City behind the Decatur Business Center in April. • Shrimp Boat owner Joe White, who took over Captain’s Galley in West Ocean City, announced his intention to combine his two venues and offer fresh dishes, including fish, on a daily basis at the waterfront restaurant. White and three partners, attorney Hugh Cropper IV, Ocean City Realtor Ken Church and Dr. Jeff Greenwood, who practices emergency medicine in Berlin, purchased the waterfront restaurant in April. • Ocean Pines resident Kristin Johnson took over ownership of Kids Resale in West Ocean City, adding a strong social media presence on Facebook and offering consistent hours for customers to shop in April. • Your Doc’s In opened May 30 on Route 50 in West Ocean City offering illness and injury care, occupational medicine, laboratory services, sports medicine, DOT exams and EKG from its fourth location on the Eastern Shore. • The Green Doors relocated to West Ocean City from Snow Hill, selling painted vintage furniture and locally handcrafted décor, jewelry and artwork in the Ocean Creek Plaza on Route 50. • TSS: The Supplement Shop opened up in the Decatur Business Center on Rt. 611 in West Ocean City at the end of July offering protein powders, gainers, vitamins, proteins, weight loss and pre-workout supplements in addition to workout gear including shirts. • Sandals Bridal and Formal Wear opened Aug. 20 in Teal Marsh Shopping Center on Route 611 with dresses for prom, mothers, flower girls, homecoming and, of course, brides. • Powerhouse Gym owners Tony and Nick Taghipour opened Beach
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During Memorial Day weekend, Kenny Diu expanded his OC Wasabi brand by opening a new location, Wasabi Express, and joining forces with friends to add Juice Shack to his take-out restaurant on 16th Street and Philadelphia Avenue.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Bounce on 611 in West Ocean City on Oct. 30. The funhouse for children features an arcade where tickets can be redeemed for prizes, a snack bar with smoothies and other healthy treats and inflatables including a bounce house, toddler area, obstacle course, climbing walls, rope walk and slides. In addition, there is a kid’s fitness section with bikes, snow skis, an elliptical machine as well as other fitness equipment compliment Beach Bounce, while parents can sit in comfy chairs watching their kids on 16 security cameras. • On Nov. 9, Dynamic Physical Therapy opened its first location in Maryland inside the Ocean Creek Plaza on Ocean Gateway in West Ocean City. The facility is a full service rehabilitation provider with licensed professionals who offer specialized treatment programs for motor vehicle and work related injuries, orthopedic conditions, sports injuries and fall prevention. • The Polished Nail is the brainchild of Nona Clubb, a dental hygienist and licensed nail technician, who joined Cosmetologist Christa Andrews and Stylist Jennell Siano at Waves Salon in Trader Lee’s shopping center on Route 611 in November. Clubb can transform an everyday manicure or pedicure into an experience using her background in infection control, organic lotions, scrubs
and oils, a heating pad as well as LED lighting, cure gel or shellac polish. Berlin • Go Organic grocery store in Berlin announced a major change in February when the three-year-old shop began preparations to convert to a food cooperative. A co-op, owner Beth Gourley said, is a food distribution outlet owned and governed by investors and shareholders. • As financial institutions merge and regional, national and even international mega-banks become more dominant, Calvin B. Taylor Bank, headquartered in Berlin, celebrated its 125th year as an independent entity in 2015. • Owner David Crocetti opened a pizza shop in Berlin the first weekend in April. Piaza pizza dough is handmade to handle being cooked in a thousand degree flame-fired brick oven. Cook time is a little more than two minutes with at least 40 items to choose to be added to a pizza. • At the end of August, Berlin gymnastics hub Twisters announced it’s planning a major expansion with soccer, karate and a trampoline park as possible additions at the new facility. • Greta and Andrew DelCorro took over CrossFit Ocean City at the end of August, offering a place for everyone to work out in a variety of ways and intensities at their own pace. Functional movements participants will
perform include running, rowing, jumping rope, weightlifting with cattle bells, medicine balls and Olympic lifts in addition to sit-ups, squats, push-ups and handstands. It is located off Route 50 on Grays Corner Road in Berlin.
Fed raises short term interest rate By Lauren Bunting Contributing Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) The Federal Reserve recently raised the short-term interest rate to a range between 0.25-0.5 percent. The rate hike changes the rate at which the Fed can buy and sell bonds, which in turn regulates the money supply in the U.S. Since 2008, the Fed has kept rates near zero to help offset the effects of the financial crisis. But, what does this rate hike mean to homebuyers and sellers? The clear benefit to anyone who has money in a bank account is better interest earnings, as long as the banks pass the extra interest along to their customers. But most borrowing rates, like 30-year mortgages, are tied
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to longer-term interest rates, not the Fed rate. “This action marks the end of an extraordinary seven-year period during which the federal funds rate was held near zero to support the recovery of the economy from the worst financial crisis and recession since the Great Depression,” Janet Yellen, the Federal Reserve Chairperson, said about the rate hike. “It also recognizes the considerable progress that has been made toward restoring jobs, raising incomes and easing the economic hardship of millions of Americans. And it reflects the committee’s confidence that the economy will continue to strengthen. The economic recovery has clearly come a long way although it is not yet complete.” “The process of normalizing interest rates is likely to proceed gradually,” she added. Most likely the mortgage rate industry will also see very gradual increases in rates. Freddie Mac reported that the average on a 30year fixed loan dipped to 3.96 percent from 3.97 percent last week despite
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• Owner Dick Cerv has helped customers find their perfect mattress for almost 15 years at Mattress Masters in Ocean Pines, and his free same-day delivery policy moved with the shop, just a block away from its previous location on Cathell Road, off 589.
In June, Philadelphia favorite Tony Luke’s opened its old Philly-style sandwich and famous cheesesteak shop on 33rd Street in Ocean City — its first location in Maryland.
REAL ESTATE REPORT
Increase expected to have ripple effect on other types of lending, like mortgages
PAGE 35
the Fed raising the short-term interest rates. “The Fed raising short-term rates by itself doesn’t have a very profound effect on mortgage rates,” Freddie Mac’s chief economist, Sean Becketti, said. And, the average 30-year mortgage rate is up slightly from 3.83 a year ago and from 3.76 in late October. With rates this low, it gives home shoppers more “buying power” and they are able to afford a more expensive home. If rates were to increase, the increase in monthly payment will most negatively affect buyers that have high debt-to-income ratios, who could be priced out of a market if their monthly payment were to increase even by $50 per month. Even if mortgage rates go up approximately one-half point this upcoming year to about 4.5 percent, that would mean about a $700 annual increase to a homeowner with a $200,000 mortgage. Lauren Bunting is a licensed REALTOR/Associate Broker with Bunting Realty, Inc. in Berlin.
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REAL ESTATE MARKETPLACE Ocean City Today
PAGE 36
OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING!!
This is one of the most desirable locations in North Ocean City. Features bright and cheery home with 3-bedrooms, 2-baths, tile floors thoughout. Large living room that overlooking the water and has a gas fireplace, nice size eat-in kitchen, granite countertop and breakfast bar, electric radiant range, self-cleaning oven, dishwasher, frost free refrigerator, laundry room with washer/dryer. Enjoy the porch right on the water. Situated on a over sized lot with battered-piled bulk heading plus the pier has an electric boat lift. Priced to sell for only $440,000. THE ORIGINAL Montego Bay Specialists Since 1971!!
JANUARY 1, 2016
BRING YOUR BOAT
If you have always wanted a place on the water this is the ONE! The huge living room overlooks the water and the home features, 2-bedrooms 2-baths and is sold furnished. You can park your boat right at your back door. The screened in porch is just right for your summertime fun and relaxation. You will not believe this location in one of the fastest growing communities in North Ocean City that offers 3-pools and 2-tennis courts. Offered at the REDUCED PRICE of only 240,000. Don’t wait now. WE ARE THE ORIGINAL Montego Bay Specialists since 1971.
101 SEA LANE
Larry Holdren Real Estate, Inc©
JUST REDUCED
13337 PEACH TREE ROAD
Larry Holdren Real Estate, Inc©
13901 Coastal Hwy., Ocean City, MD
13901 Coastal Hwy., Ocean City, MD
For More Information Call 800-252-2223 • 410-250-2700
For More Information Call 800-252-2223 • 410-250-2700
STEPS TO THE BEACH!
CLOSE TO THE BEACH
www.larryholdrenrealestate.com • email: ocmdhre@gmail.com
This 2BR/1BA home is located in the Sundowner Mobile Home Park in N. Ocean City. The property is located less than a block from the beach. Features include a front living room floorplan, central air and gas heat. Monthly fee is just $122 and pays for the taxes, water & sewer, trash pickup, management fee and use of the community swimming pool. Offered at $56,900.
Call Michael “Montego Mike” Grimes
800-745-5988 • 410-250-3020
www.larryholdrenrealestate.com • email: ocmdhre@gmail.com
This 2BR/2BA home is located in the Montego Bay community in N. Ocean City and is within walking distance to the beach, bus & restaurants. The home features a split BR/BA floorplan, a front porch, a large family room, cen. air and a laundry room. Outside there is a utility shed and a 2-car parking pad. The community offers pools, tennis, min. golf and a bayfront boardwalk. The HOA dues are just $190/yr. Offered at $164,900.
104 135TH STREET
Montego Bay Realty
108 S. Ocean Drive • Ocean City, MD
montegomike@verizon.net www.montegobayrealty.com
13320 NANTUCKET ROAD
Montego Bay Realty
Call Bill Rothstein 443-280-2530
800-745-5988 • 410-250-3020
montegomike@verizon.net www.montegobayrealty.com
108 S. Ocean Drive • Ocean City, MD
Dec 31 - Jan 7 DAY/TIME
ADDRESS
Daily
Assateague Point, Berlin
Daily 11-3
Villas, OC Inlet Isle
BR/BA
STYLE
3 & 4BR, 3BA
Condo
Mobile
From $100,000
Condo
From $740,000
Condo
$624,900
3BR/2BA
New SF
$244,900
–
Condos, Towns & SF
Sun. 12-5 & Mon-Sat 10-5 70th St. Bayside Broadmarsh
3BR/2 Full & 2 Half BA
Townhomes
Sun. 12-5 & Mon-Sat 10-5 Seaside Village, West Ocean City
3BR/2 Full & 2 Half BA
Daily 10-5 Sat-Mon 11-4 pm
Gateway Grand – 48th Street Heron Harbour Sales Office, 120th St., Bayside
Saturday 11-1
501 Edgewater Ave., South Bay #302
Saturday 1-4pm
179 Windjammer Road, Ocean Pines
Saturday 2-4
Saturday 11-3pm
Sat & Sun 10-5pm Sat. & Sun. 12-5
4711 Coastal Hwy., Wight Bay #238 Summer House, 120th St., Bayside
Sunset Island, Ocean City
12602 Bay Buoy Ct., Ocean City
Sun. 12-5 & Mon-Sat 10-5 11769 Maid at Arms Way
1BR/2BR/3BR
PRICE
3BR/4BR
1BR/2/BR/3BR/4/BR+
Condo, Towns & SF
2BR/2BA
Condo
3BR/3BA
3BR/3BA 3BR/2BA
4BR/4.5BA
Condo
Single Family
Single Family Townhome
AGENCY/AGENT
Tony Matrona/Resort Homes
Inquire
Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty
—
Nanette Pavier/Holiday Real Estate
$179,900
Lauren Bunting/Bunting Realty
Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty Lauren Bunting/Bunting Realty
Joyce Melbourne/Beach Real Estate
$350,000
Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty
$329,900
Harbor Homes
From $489,900
Evergreene Homes
From $342,500 Terry Riley/Vantage Resort Realty
From $299,900 Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty
From $294,371 Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty
Lifestyle y p p a H ! r a e Y New
Jan. 1, 2016
Ocean City Today Arts, Calendar, Crossword, Dining, Entertaiment, Events, Features, Music
Page 37
Ocean City Today
PAGE 38
JANUARY 1, 2016
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) From the annual Winterfest of Lights and Ocean City Air Show to runs, walks and a swim benefiting different organizations, here are some of the year’s top stories: OC Air Show Ocean City’s eighth annual Air Show took off June 13-14, bringing international performers, World War II bomber planes and numerous other acrobatic displays along the Boardwalk and beach. “We’ve pulled off the air show version of a hat trick with the addition of the F-22 Raptor demo team. We have three of the biggest acts in the air show industry, all performing in the same year [U.S. Navy Blue Angels and Breitling Jet Team],” said OC Air Show President Brian Lilley. The Ocean City Air Show featured performances by the B-25 Mitchell “Panchito” WWII Bomber, an L-39 Albatross Cold War era jet, World War II P-51 Mustang, C-130 Fat Albert and more high-flying acts. Jonathon Billie gave a single-ship demonstration with an F-22 Raptor. “Nothing compared to the power and noise of the F-22 Raptor as it screamed across the beach and demonstrated what this most advanced fighter jet can do in the sky,” said Cathy Bassett, press officer for the show. Tens of thousands were in town for the 2015 Air Show with people cramming the beach, balconies and rooftops for a view of the spectacular. Event organizers are looking ahead to the 2016 OC Air Show when the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds are slated to make their return June 1819. Air Show organizers also announced that the U.S. Navy Blue Angels will return for the 10th anniversary show, June 17-18, 2017. Their inaugural appearance at this year’s event drew record-breaking crowds to the resort. “The OC Air Show keeps getting bigger and better thanks to the support of the Town of Ocean City and the hundreds of thousands of spectators who come out to make it a success some from as far away as New
York, Ohio and the Carolinas,” Lilley said, in a press release. “With the confirmation of the Thunderbirds in 2016 and the Blue Angels in 2017 it will mark four straight years that the OC Air Show has featured a major military jet demonstration team.” Visit www.ocairshow.com for more information. Penguin Swim On New Year’s Day 2015, approximately 850 participants plunged into the 41-degree Atlantic Ocean during the 21st annual Penguin Swim, helping to raise more than $91,000 for Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. Swimmers met at the Princess Royale on 91st Street at 11:30 a.m. for final registration and participants raced into the ocean at 1 p.m. The air temperature was about 43 degrees. People came out dressed as penguins, characters from the movie Avatar, Elvis, a huge giraffe, princesses and Batman’s Penguin. One older gentleman who participated dressed like Baby New Year. “This event supports your local, not-for-profit hospital,” AGH Event Coordinator Alli Justice said. “It’s a bucket list kind of thing and we’ve grown the event exponentially.” An award ceremony inside the Princess Royale followed the event, where participants had the opportunity to warm up in pools and hot tubs. Awards were presented to the youngest and oldest swimmers, as well as to the top team and individual money raisers. For the second year, participants who were out of town on New Year’s Day engaged in a “virtual swim.” These penguins raised money, registered online and took a photo of their dip before posting it to social media sites. In 21 years, the Penguin Swim has raised more than $1 million for AGH. The 2016 Penguin Swim is scheduled for Friday, Jan. 1 at 1 p.m. The hospital has been providing health care to residents of Worcester, Wicomico and Somerset counties as well as Sussex County, Del., since May 1993. For more information about Atlantic General Hospital, visit www.atlanticgeneral.org.
U.S. Navy Blue Angels’ pilots perform an inverted upright low pass over the beach in Ocean City during a practice run on June 12 for the eighth annual Air Show, held June 13-14 in the resort.
A 12-minute tram ride takes guests through 58 acres of more than 400 displays from fairytale characters to the 12 Days of Christmas accompanied by holiday music. From Nov. 19 through Jan. 3, 2016, visitors will have the opportunity to see almost one million lights during their ride through Winterfest of Lights at Northside Park on 125th Street.
$5 SMIRNOFF BLOODY MARY’S AT 10 A.M.-2 P.M.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 39
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015
Happy Hour 12-6 pm
New Years Eve Dinner Special & Entertainment ALL NIGHT!
Runners and walkers take off from the starting line of the fourth annual Susan G. Komen Ocean City Race for the Cure on April 19, which included a 5K timed competitive run, 5K recreational run and walk and 1-mile fun walk. More than 2,100 people registered for the events and organizers estimated about several hundred spectators were on hand to watch.
Winterfest of Lights In the 2014 Winterfest of Lights season, 111,042 passengers took a ride through illuminated Northside Park during the 46-night holiday spectacular. “We were up 18 percent from last year and broke all records this year. The only number that decreased was the number of tram cars used, which means we moved more people over a longer period of time,” said Frank Miller, special events superintendent for the Town of Ocean City. “This year exceeded our expectations and I am happy the thousands of dollars made off this event will go towards the City’s needs.” The 127th Street display includes a 12-minute tram ride with holiday music through 58 acres of over 400 displays and one million lights from
Nov. 20 through Jan. 4, 2015, according to Miller. An average of 2,414 people rode the train through the park each night. There were 19,294 more passengers who took the mile-long train ride this year than 2013’s ridership, when the Winterfest of Lights was in operation four fewer days (42). Attendance during the final weekend of the 22nd annual event was lower than usual, with 2,500 riders on Friday, Jan. 2, 600 passengers on Saturday, Jan. 3 and 230 on the last night, Sunday, Jan. 4. Rain and wind limited the number of passengers riding the Winterfest Express on the final weekend. Saturday, Jan. 3 started off strong, but the Ravens and Steelers playoff game killed numbers later on in the night. The biggest night overall was Satur-
day, Nov. 29, when 7,799 people road the tram. The second largest attendance night was Saturday, Dec. 13, when 7,156 riders enjoyed the displays. Winterfest of Lights has a different layout each year to keep excursions fresh for returning visitors. Riders have the challenge to find their favorite displays in new locations. The city’s crew began setup in early October to transform the park into a winter wonderland. “Winterfest is about creating memories for our patrons. We want them to come and leave with great memories,” said Miller. “That warm feeling, smiling faces and happiness is what we want people to remember as they get into their cars to head home.” The 23rd annual Winterfest of Lights kicked off Nov. 19 and runs Continued on Page 40
Monday – Thursday • 11am – 4pm
LION SOLD! OVER A MIL
Monday: 1/2 Price Entrees
Opposite Directions starting at 6pm DJ Billy T Starting at 9pm
$5.99 LUNCH SPECIALS Dinner Specials Starting at 5pm $3.00 surcharge for entrees with steak, crab & crab legs
WATER FRONT WI-FI www.weocharborside.com
NEW YEAR’S EVE
Tuesday: Taco Night Party Favors Wednesday: $5 Burger & Chicken Breast Sandwiches Champagne Toast at Midnight Thursday: All You Can Eat Ribs & Steamed Shrimp Friday: Fried Oyster & Soft Shell Friday - All Day/Night ALS MONDAY FUNDAY LOC Sunday: 1/2 Price Entrees All Day/Night $3.00 surcharge for entrees with steak, crab & crab legs Specials are not to be combined with any other offer, discount or coupons. Some restrictions apply. No substitutions, dine in only. Excludes Holidays & Holiday Weekends
HAPPY HOUR with Awesome Food & Drink Specials!
MONDAY – FRIDAY 4-7PM
FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS DURING ALL LIVE NFL GAMES
Entertainment THURSDAY - SUNDAY
16 oz Coors Light, Miller Lite Drafts & Natural Light Cans $1.50+ tax All Day & All Night Bar & Pub Areas Only
Ladies Night Every Friday, 7PM-til
$2 16 oz. Coors Light & Miller Lite Drafts $3 Shooters • $4 Glass Wine $5.50 Original Orange Crush (in Area barOnly and- pub areas only) Bar and Pub Some Restrictions
Closed Jan 4th Through Jan 10th, Re-Open Jan 11th
4 COURSE DINNER Only $30! Incl: Soup, Salad, Entree & Dessert DINNER CHOICES 14 oz. Prime Rib Tuna Chesapeake Chicken Florentine Entertainment by DJ Mikey J
New Years Day Breakfast 9am-til Prime Rib & Eggs Mimosas Bloody Marys
College Football Playoffs + NFL Food & Drink Specials
SHRIMP SALAD MONDAYS
$8.99
HOME COOKING THURSDAYS
$8.99
Keno & ATM • Eat in or Carry Out Kids Menu Available
WWW.DUFFYSOC.COM
410-250-1449
130TH ST. IN THE MONTEGO BAY SHOPPING CENTER
Ocean City Today
PAGE 40
YEAR IN REVIEW 2015
JANUARY 1, 2016
HOROSCOPE ARIES - Mar 21/Apr 20
Aries, you are familiar with the expression, “Your eyes are bigger than your stomach.” This week you have bitten off a project that is just too much to chew. Enlist some help.
TAURUS - Apr 21/May 21
Taurus, you are on a roll, and now it is only a matter of maintaining momentum for a few more days. Don’t let anyone slow you down this week.
GEMINI - May 22/Jun 21
Gemini, you may not know where your path is taking you, but you are fully aware that an adventure is in store. Take some time to prepare for the unknown that lies ahead.
CANCER - Jun 22/Jul 22
Walkers begin their Boardwalk stroll from the starting line in the inlet parking lot during Ocean City’s fifth annual American Cancer Society Making Strides Against Breast Cancer 5K run and walk on Oct. 18. The 5K run started about 15 minutes before the walk. Close to 1,000 people participated.
Continued from Page 39 nightly through Sunday, Jan. 3. Hours of operation are 5:30-9:30 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, and 5:30-10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. The cost to ride the train is $5 for adults. Children 11 and younger ride for free. During the warm weather Thanksgiving weekend, Winterfest of Lights posted a new attendance record. Altogether, 22,423 people checked in and checked out the more than 400 illuminated displays from Wednesday, Nov. 25 through Sunday, Nov. 29 at Northside Park on 125th Street. “Last year was a benchmark year, and we never thought we could duplicate its success,” Miller said. “We’re grateful for the people that come out in the great weather conditions.” As of Dec. 21, about 85,000 people had toured the spectacular and attendance is up 20 percent from the same time period last year. The Winterfest of Lights has won numerous awards and received an abundance of accolades throughout its 23 years. The American Bus Association named Winterfest of Lights one of the Top 100 Events in North America for 2014, an honor it also earned in 2013 and 2011. Maryland Life Magazine has voted it “Maryland’s Finest Holiday Tradition.” The attraction was ranked No. 1 in 2008 on the Professional Travel Guide Editor’s Top 10 of the nation’s largest and best holiday lights displays. Winterfest of Lights was No. 2 in the country on “America Online City Guide’s Top 11 Lighting Displays.” It followed Disney-MGM Studios display in Orlando. For more information, call the Ocean City Recreation and Parks Department at 410-250-0125. Race for the Cure A total of 2,171 people registered for the fourth annual Susan G. Komen Ocean City Race for the Cure on April 19.
The event supports breast cancer research and raises awareness with a timed 5K, a 5K fun run or walk and a 1-mile family walk, where participants were encouraged to dress in beach attire for the chance to win a prize. Organizers estimated there were several hundred spectators and women took part in a “Parade of Pink” survivor recognition walk in addition to a group photo. More than $200,000 was generated through registration, donations, sponsorships, raffles and merchandise sales, according to Kim Schmulowitz, communications and marketing director for Komen Maryland. Since the inaugural race in 2012, Ocean City cancer survivors, supporters and race participants have raised more than $1 million for the organization. The 2016 event is scheduled for April 16. For more information, visit www.komenmd.org. The Susan G. Komen organization is the largest contributor to breast cancer research outside of the federal government. Through events such as Race for the Cure, Komen Maryland has invested $40 million in community breast cancer programs since 1993. The majority of revenue comes from the Komen Maryland Race for the Cure in Hunt Valley and Ocean City. Seventy-five percent of donations raised in Maryland stay in the state with the remaining 25 percent supporting peer reviewed scientific research funded by the organization. Making Strides Close to 1,000 people participated in Ocean City’s fifth annual American Cancer Society Making Strides Against Breast Cancer 5K run and walk on the resort Boardwalk, Sunday, Oct. 18. “I think the event went really well,” said Beverly Furst, chairwoman of the
Ocean City run and walk. “Despite the chilly morning, we had a great turnout and the inlet was a sea of pink. I feel the morning was very moving. I’m always amazed how our community comes together to support those that have been touched by cancer. This community is always very generous and for that, I’m grateful.” Dozens of breast cancer survivors were celebrated and recognized after the opening ceremony, and many took part in the run and walk as well. Funds raised through Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walks enable the American Cancer Society to finish the fight against breast cancer by investing in groundbreaking research, providing free, comprehensive information and support to those touched by breast cancer, and helping people reduce their breast cancer risk or find it early when it’s most treatable. The Ocean City Making Strides 5K run and walk is one of several events that make up the Pink Ribbon Classic at the Beach Series, an assortment of local activities to increase breast cancer awareness while raising money for the American Cancer Society. The Pink Ribbon Classic Series was started in 1996 by a group of volunteers. The 2015 Classic included a ladiesonly fishing tournament; card, game and mahj party; tennis, golf and mah jongg tournaments; Jammin’ Out Cancer; Brews for Boobs, “Pamper Yourself for Charity” raffle and the 5K. Since its inception, the Pink Ribbon Classic Series has raised about $1.5 million for breast cancer research, awareness, programs and services. As of Dec. 18, more than $245,000 has been raised through the 2015 Pink Ribbon events, according to www.makingstrideswalk.org/oceancitymd. Donations will be accepted until Dec. 31.
Learning from your mistakes can help you to grow, Cancer. Accept a challenge presented to you this week, even if it scares you. You may find it’s not so challenging after all.
LEO - Jul 23/Aug 23
Leo, many opportunities are within reach, but you are just not sure which way to go. Seek advice from Pisces when you get a spare moment.
VIRGO - Aug 24/Sept 22
Virgo, no one will know what you’re like deep inside unless you share a few secrets. You don’t have to give everything away, but let some information slip out.
LIBRA - Sept 23/Oct 23
Some can see straight past your protective facade, Libra. So why not take it off and simply let others see the real you? You won’t be disappointed, and neither will they.
SCORPIO - Oct 24/Nov 22
Now is not a time to drag your feet, Scorpio. You have a full slate of tasks to tackle, and it seems like the hours will slip away quickly. Recharge and refocus.
SAGITTARIUS - Nov 23/Dec 21
Sagittarius, you never shy away from a challenge, but you also know when to pick your battles. If something arises this week that seems a waste of time, pass it by.
CAPRICORN - Dec 22/Jan 20
Capricorn, when a past conflict pops up this week, push it aside. It is better to focus on the positive things that are in store for you rather than problems from the past.
AQUARIUS - Jan 21/Feb 18
Don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t accomplish something, Aquarius. As you have proven time and again, you simply need to set a goal in your sights to get things done.
PISCES - Feb 19/Mar 20
Pisces, when you love someone, it can be difficult to step aside and let that person make his or her own mistakes. Be patient.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 41
cate meighan inside going out appy New Year to all of you! Since there is so much going on to usher in 2016 right here in Ocean City, I hope that you all have an opportunity to ring in the new year in grand style (whatever that means for you). Duffy’s Tavern on 130th Street in the Montego Bay Shopping Center is offering a special four-course dinner for just $30 on New Year’s Eve. Entertainment will be provided by DJ Mikey J. Duffy’s will also begin serving a New Year’s Day breakfast at 9 a.m. for those of you hungry after a night of partying. Call 410-250-1449 for more info. Bourbon Street on the Beach on 116th Street has an early bird special with $3 off all entrees from 4-6 p.m. with seating for its special menu beginning at 4 p.m. Before dinner, you can first kick off your evening with a special happy hour in the lounge from 3-7 p.m. while grooving to music by Oho. Live entertainment will be provided by Ricky & Lennon Laricci from 8 p.m. until midnight and, of course, there will be a champagne toast to ring in 2016. Bourbon Street will also have a New Year’s Day Hangover Party with Dave Sherman and Chris Button from 3-10 p.m. Check out www.bourbonstreetonthebeach.com for more information. If you’re a fan of the Greene Turtle, you’ll be happy to know that both local restaurants have some New Year’s Eve fun planned. At the Original Greene Turtle on 116th Street, there will be dine-in-only specials, drink specials and JJ the DJ will be playing your favorites from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. At the Greene Turtle West on Route 611 in West OC, there will also be a special menu and Funk Shue will be performing live. Both locations will have a champagne toast and party favors available at midnight. Clarion Resort Fontainebleau Hotel on 101st Street is throwing a New Year’s Eve Gala that is sure to appeal to anyone that wants to usher in 2016 in the most formal way possible. A gourmet dinner will be served from 8-10 p.m. with an open bar from 8 p.m. until 1 a.m. There will be dancing and live entertainment from 9 p.m. until 3 a.m. with Power Play in the Crystal Ballroom and First Class performing in Horizons/Ocean Club. Gala tickets are $145 per person and reservations for this special evening are required. To reserve your seats please call 410-524-7500. The Princess Royale on 91st Street will be celebrating New Year’s with a gourmet dinner in the Palmetto Ballroom. You can enjoy a five-course meal and an open bar that will be extended for six hours, plus live entertainment by the Tommy Edwards Band. Tickets are $129 per person and you can reserve yours by calling 410-524-7777. Ropewalk located on 82nd Street will offer a special menu for a great evening out. You can enjoy special en-
H
trees, three-course meals and entertainment to keep you grooving from 9 p.m. Call 410-524-1009 for more info on Ropewalk’s festivities. BJ’s on the Water on 75th Street is one of the few places in town that isn’t making you secure a reservation. Instead it is striving to make New Year’s Eve a hassle-free experience. BJ’s will be serving its entire menu from 11 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. and DJ Fast Eddy will have you on your feet dancing from 10 p.m. until 4 a.m. and you can expect champagne and party favors at midnight. You can also spend New Year’s Day at BJ’s watching football and downing some of those famous Bloody Mary’s from 11 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. The Bonfire on 71st Street will be opening at 4 p.m. on New Year’s Eve for a very special buffet. Adults can eat for $39 and children ages 3-6 pay just $7.99, while kids 7-12 eat for just $15.99. Bonfire will also host a family New Year’s Eve special beginning at 8:30 p.m. If interested, you’ll want to call and make reservations for that at 410-524-7171. Longboard Cafe on 67th Street is celebrating with its third annual “It’s 12 O’clock Somewhere” New Year’s Eve party. Doors will open at 6 p.m. with hors d’oeuvres and a buffet served all evening long. Reduced drink prices, a champagne toast and live entertainment by Joe Smooth and John Remy will help to make this a fun night to remember for everyone. Tickets are just $55 and going fast so head on over to www.longboardcafe.net to reserve yours! Skye Bar on 66th Street will be having a two-story bash beginning at 9 p.m. Tickets are just $20 per person and the evening will include a cash bar, live entertainment by High Five Swan Dive and there will be free champagne and party favors at midnight. Call 410723-6762 for reservations. Naturally, Fager’s Island on 60th Street is gearing up for one heck of a party and $40 gets you drink specials, a great menu and music by Everett Spells, The Loop and DJ Groove. The admission price includes a midnight champagne toast, party favors and a 2016 VIP card. “Dress to impress” in fashionable attire and a coat check will be available. Get your tickets online at www.fagers.com. KY West on 54th Street has a special evening planned to help you usher in 2016 in style. It will be serving a four-course meal, which comes with a complimentary glass of champagne and party favors, plus DJ Roadie will begin spinning your favorites at 6 p.m. KY West is offering two separate seatings: those eating between 5-7 p.m. will pay $69 a person. If seated between 8-10 p.m. the cost is then $89 per person. Call 443-664-2836 to make reservations now. Seacrets on 49th Street will feaContinued on Page 43
Open On The Bay
Entire Week B et w ee n C h r i s t m a s & New Years
82nd Street, OC, MD 410-524-1009
C o m e J o i n U s N e w Ye a r s E v e E n t re e S p e c i a l s & 3 C o u r s e D i n n e r s Open R eservations Live DJ • 9pm- til C h a m p a g n e To a s t & Pa r t y Fa v o r s
HAPPY HOUR ALL DAY & NIGHT EVERY DAY 1/2 PRICE BADA BING AND WINGS 1 BUCK A SHUCK ROPEWALK LIBERTIES SUNDAY FRIDAY DINNER SATURDAY DINNER 3 Course Chefs SPECIAL SPECIAL Select Dinner Crab Cake Night Smoked Prime Rib $ .99
16
F EN W I C K OYSTER HO USE 700 Co as ta l Hw y. Fenwic k Isla nd , D E 3 0 2 - 5 8 1 - 0 15 3
Open Enti re Week B e t w e e n Ch r i s t m a s & New Years
HAPPY HOUR
Same Food & Drink Specials As OC! All Day/Night Every Day (tables & bar)
FRIDAY DINNER SPECIAL
Crab Cake & Mac & Cheese Night
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
3 Course Chefs Buy 1 Get 1 FREE Select Dinner DESSERTS $ .99
16
Ocean City Today
PAGE 42
JANUARY 1, 2016
OUT & ABOUT
CATE MEIGHAN/OCEAN CITY TODAY
Enjoying brunch on Sunday at Fager’s Island on 60th Street, from left, are Chase Schmeling, Jack Fager, Ciara Rudas and Damian Fager.
CATE MEIGHAN/OCEAN CITY TODAY
Fager’s Island bartenders Alex Tolan and Ollie Hariell serve guests attending the 60th Street restaurant’s jazz brunch on Sunday.
CATE MEIGHAN/OCEAN CITY TODAY
Welcoming guests to the Greene Turtle on Route 611 in West Ocean City, from left, are Julie Frey, Triston Chang, Christina Benedict and Jake Clapsadle.
CATE MEIGHAN/OCEAN CITY TODAY
Everett Spells performs during Fager’s Island’s jazz brunch on Sunday.
Country music artist and Ocean City native Jimmy Charles performs an acoustic set at the Ocean Pines Yacht Club on Dec. 17 during his annual fundraiser for Coastal Hospice. The event raised $2,600 for Coastal Hospice’s “Be an Angel” campaign, which helps fund the charity care provided by the nonprofit organization.
CATE MEIGHAN/OCEAN CITY TODAY
Matt Dillion, left, and Craig Rummel have Bloody Mary’s on Sunday at Fager’s Island on 60th Street.
Luann Johnson, left, and Maegan Beatty of Snow Hill enjoy the music and silent auction during the Jimmy Charles concert on Dec. 17 at the Ocean Pines Yacht Club.
Coastal Hospice patient care volunteer Marnien O’Brien and her daughter, Paige, attend the Jimmy Charles concert at the Ocean Pines Yacht Club on Dec.17.
JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
PAGE 43
cate meighan Continued from Page 41
ture Full Circle, Jon Maurer Band and 9 Mile Roots will all be playing at the Tiki Bar, or you can catch Garden State Radio and JJ Rupp Band in Morley Hall Nite Club. Three DJ’s will also be spinning until 4 a.m. and, of course, Seacrets will have a champagne toast to ring in 2016. Cover charge is $30 at 5 p.m. and $40 at 8 p.m. Cover charge will not exceed $40. Check out www.seacrets.com to make reservations for dinner. There will be four dinner seatings. 45th Street Taphouse Bar & Grille will be celebrating with a six-course beer pairing dinner, each served with a 10-ounce brew. Taphouse is taking reservations for two seatings on New Year’s Eve. The first at 6 p.m. is $50 per person and the second seating at 9 p.m. is $60 for each individual. Both seatings include a champagne toast and party favors. Call 443-664-2201 for reservations. Coins Pub & Restaurant in the 28th Street Plaza is planning a New Year’s Eve party that includes entertainment by Full Circle. Call Charlotte at 410-430-5401 for all of the details. Pit & Pub, also on 28th Street, will also be hosting a party for the locals. There will be no cover, happy hour drink prices and DJ Harvey Sinco will be spinning tracks from 8 p.m. until 2 a.m. Pit & Pub will be having a champagne toast and party favors at midnight. The Grand Hotel at 2100 Baltimore Ave. has two different celebrations on tap for you to choose from. There will be an open bar from 8 p.m. until 1 a.m., a hot and cold smorgasbord, with gourmet dinner being served from 8-10 p.m. and live entertainment by Debbie Thompson and the Trio at the Terrace Restaurant for $119 a person. At The Epic you can party from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. with an open bar, hors d’oeuvres and DJ David Colt to keep the party going. The cost of this night at The Epic is $75 per person and you can call 410-289-6191 to make reservations for either party at The Grand Hotel. Cowboy Coast at 17th Street and Coastal Highway will be hosting a New Year’s Eve bash with Sam Grow performing live onstage. Ocean 98’s own DJ BK will be spinning your favorites all night long while you enjoy an open bar, special menu and free mechanical bull rides. Tickets are $60 per person and are available through www.ticketweb.com. Adolfo’s Restaurant at 13th Street and the Boardwalk will be ringing in the new year with Rhonda Apple and Dale Britt. Call 410-289-4001 for more info and to make reservations. Alex’s Italian Restaurant on Route 50 in West Ocean City will be serving a great menu that includes New York strip, rack of lamb, veal, chicken and center cut filet mignon. Reservations
at Alex’s are suggested and you can make yours by calling 410-213-0303. I don’t know about you, but I’m kind of all partied out after the last few weeks. I’m actually ready to chill for a bit while turning that proverbial page and starting over with a clean slate and new year. If you’re not like me and still looking for some fun things to do then you’re in luck because while OC slows down, it never goes completely to sleep. Fager’s Island will be hosting Winter Warmer 2016 on Saturday, Jan. 2 from 1-5 p.m. Here’s an opportunity for you to sample a variety of seasonal craft brews paired with some great comfort food. Selections from Burley Oak, Oskar Blues, 3rd Wave and many more will be available. Admission for this event is $40 and attendees will receive a commemorative pint glass. For more information check out www.fagers.com. HYPHY Entertainment’s Gatsby GetDown will take place at Guido’s Burritos, located on 33rd Street and Coastal Highway on Saturday, Jan. 2. Get ready to dance your butt off from 9 p.m. until 2 a.m. Drink specials, giveaways and more fun included on this special night in OC. Check out HYPHY Entertainment on Facebook for more details on this event. While most of the Boardwalk businesses have closed up until spring, you can still always stop in at The Purple Moose Saloon, on the boards between Caroline and Talbot Streets. Live entertainment is still a regular feature here and on Saturday, Jan. 2 Fuzzbox Piranha will be hitting the stage. This three-piece rock band has been an Ocean City staple for well over a decade, playing all of your favorite classic and modern rock hits. The fun starts on Saturday at 9 p.m. at the Purple Moose Saloon. Seacrets Closing Bell-Closing Party will take place on Sunday, Jan. 3 beginning at 4 p.m. at the 49th Street venue. This bash is the last hurrah for Seacrets until it reopens during President’s Day weekend. That means there will be some major food and drink specials right up until closing bell. As far as entertainment goes, Full Circle will be performing onstage in the Morley Hall Nite Club. Check out www.seacrets.com for more information. The Carousel Hotel located on 101st Street and Coastal Highway is presenting a free ice show by “Next Ice” beginning each evening at 6:30 p.m. The Next Ice Age is a nonprofit group that aims to put on a respectable performance that will entertain viewers while also proving just how challenging the sport of figure skating really is. If you’re looking to grab a great meal in OC then BJ’s on the Water is always a favorite stop. It is currently
featuring winter half-price specials on particular entrees that are sure to please. On Sunday, you can enjoy the fried seafood platter. Monday’s spotlight is on the crab imperial dinner and Tuesday’s feature is the twin crab cake dinner. Wednesday is stuffed flounder and Thursday you can grab the flash fried shrimp dinner for half price. All entrees are served with two sides. Mione’s Pizza on 67th Street and Coastal Highway, TownCenter, always has some great specials and the current one might just be the best one yet. On Thursday you can score a large cheese pizza for just $9.25 and that price runs from open to close. Mione’s also has a Sunday football special that includes one large 18inch cheese pizza and 10 wings for just $19.99. Johnny’s Pizza & Pub on 56th
Street and Coastal Highway still has winter lunch specials that run from Monday through Friday. You can get a 6-inch pizza, salad and unlimited soda for just $5.99. Half of any sub, fries and an unlimited soda is just $6.99. Harborside Bar & Grill on South Harbor Road in West OC has some cool lunch specials for $5.99 running from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m., Monday through Thursday. Harborside’s dinner specials begin at 5 p.m., with Monday being halfprice entree night. On Tuesdays you can fill up on tacos, Thursday is allyou-can-eat ribs and steamed shrimp and then on Friday the special is on fried oyster and soft shells. If you have an event coming up that needs a mention or know of something really cool coming in 2016 that I have overlooked, then please send me an email at cate@oceancitytoday.net!
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Ocean City Today
PAGE 44
JANUARY 1, 2016
Fireworks and celebration at Northside Park for NYE
By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan 1, 2016) No plans for New Year’s Eve? Why not head over to Northside Park and catch the Town of Ocean City’s fireworks show to ring in 2016. There will be live entertainment from Baltimore’s DJ Kutt, hot chocolate for a small fee, giveaways with a Coca Cola Boardwalk cruiser bicycle as the final gift, and an opportunity to ride through the Winterfest of Lights for the final time in 2015, which will have extended hours until midnight for the special occasion. “This is the fourth year we have hosted the event and the attendance continues to grow,” said Jessica Waters, communications manager for the Town of Ocean City. “The Winterfest New Year’s Eve event is a great place for families who are looking for something fun for all ages.” Winterfest of Lights has become a tradition for local residents and families vacationing during the holiday season. Many visit the award-winning festival each year to take the guided open-air tour through the 125th Street park accompanied by holiday tunes. Abbey Burger, an event sponsor located on 126th Street, will be offering food and drink specials throughout the evening.
“It’s a perfect place for families who want to do something that is little to no cost,” Waters said. The New Year’s Eve festivities begin at 5:30 p.m. inside the Winterfest Pavilion. Winterfest of Lights runs nightly through Jan. 3, 2016 at Northside Park. Hours of operation are 5:30-9:30 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, and 5:3010:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. The cost to ride the train is $5 for adults. Children 11 and younger ride for free. “The New Year’s Eve fireworks show was recently added to the Winterfest of Lights and it has been a huge hit amongst residents and visitors who are looking for a fun way to ring in the new year,” Mayor Rick Meehan stated in a release. For more information, call the Ocean City Recreation and Parks Department at 410-250-0125 or visit www.ococean.com/events. The Town of Ocean City’s Transportation Department will offer free bus services from 6 a.m. on Dec. 31 to 6 a.m. on Jan. 1. On Dec. 31, bus services will run every 20 minutes from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. and every 10 minutes from 6 p.m. until 4 a.m. on Jan. 1. Buses on New Year’s Day will also run every 20 minutes from 4-7 a.m., at which time they will resume a normal winter service schedule of every 40 minutes.
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Berlin will literally drop the ball on New Year’s Eve during a celebration on Main Street.
Ring in 2016 with music, food and contests in Berlin
By Josh Davis Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Berlin will ring in the new year on Main Street with a celebration including music, food trucks, trivia contests and giveaways on Thursday, Dec. 31. Economic and Community Development Director Ivy Wells said the town would “crank it up a notch this year” during the event. Local businesses will donate items for prizes, and Wells promised an improved lights show. Dave Miller, who will host the event with DJ Big Al Reno, said he hopes to bring a “Dick Clark” atmosphere to the sixth annual bash. “Dick Clark was kind of an icon on New Year’s Eve,” he said. “Now all the kids know Ryan Seacrest, so maybe we’ll be sort of a Dick Clark meets Ryan Seacrest – the future meets the present.” A veteran host of several events in Berlin, this is Miller’s first year as New Year’s Eve emcee. “We’re going to have two mics – one on the stage and one working the crowd remotely to talk about some resolutions and some of the great things people have experienced in 2015,” Miller said. “We want to get a little back and forth with the audience to keep it fun and keep the crowd engaged.”
The celebration starts at 9 p.m. and runs until 1 a.m. Food options abound, as Main Street Deli will stay open late, Rosenfeld’s Jewish Delicatessen and Crush ‘n Crab will operate food trucks, and Eastern Shore Kettle Corn will sell snacks. Additionally, the Atlantic Hotel will provide an outdoor bar. Portions of downtown Berlin will be closed, from Main and West streets to Main and Jefferson streets, starting at 5 p.m. Parking is available at town hall, St. Paul’s Church, the post office and the Main Street parking lots near Leaky Pete’s and Worcester Youth and Family Counseling Services. Residents are encouraged to walk. Wells said she expected between 3,000-5,000 people, “depending on the weather.” “It’s just a chance to be able to come downtown and see all your friends and neighbors, and to ring in the new year in America’s ‘coolest’ small town,” she said. “We’ll have fun with it,” Miller said. “Obviously there will be some comedic banter, but ultimately I think the event should be something that conveys the gratitude that we all have for our beautiful town, and for our families and friends.”
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JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
PAGE 45
Penguin Swim participants race in and out of the 41-degree ocean near 91st Street on New Year’s Day last year. Approximately 850 people participated in the 21st annual event and raised about $79,000 for Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. The 2016 event will take place at 1 p.m. on New Year’s Day, Friday.
Make your reservations now for
Penguin Swim on New Year’s Day Twenty-second annual OC dip fundraiser for Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin
By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Hundreds of people will plunge into the ocean off 91st Street during the 22nd annual Penguin Swim on New Year’s Day, an event to benefit Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. “This event supports your local, not-for-profit hospital,” AGH Event Coordinator Alli Justice said. “It’s a bucket list kind-of-thing. We’ve grown the event exponentially and have added even more fun for the entire family.” There will be carnival games, girls dressed as mermaids, a costume contest, live entertainment by Harry O, a trick pony, ice art and games. “Erik Cantine is back again on Jan. 1 and plans to craft not one, but a few, ice art displays for us to enjoy at the event,” Justice said. In 2015, about 850 people plunged into the surf for the swim and raised more than $79,000 for the hospital (after expenses). There were 17 teams confirmed as of Dec. 18, but many people sign up late and register on New Year’s Day, Justice said. “We are hopeful that more will join us, especially with New Year’s Day falling on a Friday this year,” she said. “It’s a big beach so there is no cap to how many people can participate. The more the merrier, for
sure.” Besides knowing that it’s all for a good cause, swimmers will have other incentives. Participants who raise $25 will receive a T-shirt, baseball hat or penguin lunch box. Swimmers who collect $50 can choose from pint glasses, a novelty hat or fleece mitten scarf. Those reaching $100 will take home a duffel bag, long sleeve shirt or drink tumbler. Swimmers who donate $150 will have the option of a fleece blanket, sweatshirt or robe. A windbreaker jacket will be given to participants reaching $250, and anyone raising $500 or more will be able to choose one prize from each level, Justice said. The top three donors from each category, which includes individuals and adults, teams, businesses, community groups and 18 and under, will be awarded trophies and prizes. There will be a best costume contest and special recognition will be given to the oldest and youngest penguins. For the third year, participants who will be out of town on New Year’s Day can engage in a “virtual swim.” These penguins still raise money and register online, but must take a photo of their dip wherever they are and post it to social media sites. The photos will be shared during the event through a live feed. To show out-of-town photos on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, use the hashtag #OCPenguinSwim. Registration and check-in for the 2015 Penguin Swim starts at 11:30 a.m. on Friday, Jan.1, at the Princess
Royale Hotel on 91st Street, with the swim taking place at 1 p.m. It costs $25 per swimmer and each person will receive a 2016 Penguin Swim T-shirt. An award ceremony will follow the swim inside the Princess Royale atrium and there will be carnival games including frog hop, hoop shoot, football toss and ice corn hole. In addition, winners can pull a prize from a melting prize tree, Justice said. To sign up for the 2015 Penguin Swim or to make a donation, visit aghpenguinswim.org. The event can be found on Facebook at facebook.com/penguinswim or call the hospital foundation office with questions at 410-641-9671. Organizers are always looking for sponsors and checks can be made out to the AGH Foundation and mailed to: 9733 Healthway Drive Berlin, Md. 21811. For more information on event sponsorship opportunities, call 410641-9671 or email ajustice@atlanticgeneral.org. Proceeds from the event support strategic plans started by Atlantic General Hospital and back its mission to improve individual and community health. The hospital has been providing health care to residents of Worcester, Wicomico and Somerset counties in Maryland as well as Sussex County, Del., since May 1993. Since its inception, the Penguin Swim has raised more than $800,000 for the hospital.
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Ocean City Today
PAGE 46
JANUARY 1, 2016
NOW PLAYING BJ’S ON THE WATER 75th Street and the bay Ocean City 410-524-7575 www.bjsonthewater.com Dec. 31: DJ Fast Eddy, 9 p.m. Jan. 1: Tommy Edward & Melissa Rose, 9 p.m. Jan. 2: Old School, 9 p.m. Jan. 6: Thin Ice, 5 p.m. BOURBON STREET ON THE BEACH 116th Street, behind Fountain Head Towers Condominium Ocean City 443-664-2896 www.bourbonstreetonthebeach.com Dec. 31: O.H.O., 3-7 p.m.; Ricky & Lennon LaRicci, 8 p.m. Jan. 1: Dave Sherman & Chris Button, 3-10 p.m. Jan. 2: 33 RPM, 7-11 p.m. CAPTAIN’S TABLE
THIN ICE BJ’s on the Water: Wednesday, Jan. 6, 5 p.m.
15th St. & Baltimore Ave. Ocean City 410-289-7192 www.captainstableoc.com Every Friday & Saturday: Phil Perdue
Jan. 1: DJ BK & Al Reno, 2 p.m.; DJ Hook, 9 p.m.; The Loop, 10 p.m. Jan. 2: Opposite Directions, 1 p.m.; DJ Louie T, 9 p.m.; Animal House, 10 p.m. Jan. 3: Everett Spells, 10 a.m.
CASINO AT OCEAN DOWNS
HARBORSIDE BAR & GRILL
10218 Racetrack Road Berlin 410-641-0600 www.oceandowns.com Dec. 31: Monkee Paw, 4:30-8:30 p.m.; DJ Bixler, 8 p.m. to 2 a.m.; Aaron Howell Band, 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Jan. 1: Monkee Paw, 1:30-4:30 p.m.; Tear the Roof Off, 5:30-9:30 p.m. Jan. 2: TBA
12841 S. Harbor Road West Ocean City 410-213-1846 www.ocharborside.com Dec. 31: Opposite Directions, 6 p.m.; NYE Party w/DJ Billy T, 9 p.m. Jan. 1: DJ Billy T, 4 p.m. Jan. 2: Simple Truth, 2-6 p.m.; DJ Jeremy, 9 p.m. Jan. 3: Opposite Directions, 2-6 p.m.; DJ Billy T, 7 p.m. Jan. 7: Opposite Directions, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
COINS HARPOON HANNA’S 28th Street and Coastal Highway Ocean City 410-289-3100 www.coinspub.com Dec. 31: Full Circle, 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Route 54 and the bay Fenwick Island, Del. 800-227-0525 302-539-3095 www.harpoonhannasrestaurant.com Dec. 31: Melissa Alesi, 5-9 p.m.
THE COVE AT OCEAN PINES YACHT CLUB
HOOTERS
1 Mumford’s Landing Road Ocean Pines 410-641-7501 www.oceanpines.org Jan. 2: Kevin Poole, 6-10 p.m.
Rt. 50 & Keyser Point Road West Ocean City 410-213-1841 www.hootersofoc.com Jan. 2: DJ BK, 8 p.m.
DUFFY’S TAVERN
JOHNNY’S PIZZA & PUB
130th Street in the Montego Bay Shopping Center 410-250-1449 www.duffysoc.com Dec. 31: DJ Michey J
56th Street, bayside Ocean City 410-524-7499 www.johnnyspizzapub.com Dec. 31: Randy Lee Ashcraft and the Saltwater Cowboys
FAGER’S ISLAND KY WEST RESTAURANT & BAR 60th Street and the bay Ocean City 410-524-5500 www.fagers.com Dec. 31: Everett Spells, 6 p.m.; DJ Groove, 9 p.m.; The Loop, 10 p.m.
54th Street Ocean City 443-664-2836 www.kywestoceancity.com Every Saturday: DJ Rhoadie
FULL CIRCLE Coins: Thursday, Dec. 31, 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Seacrets: Thursday, Dec. 31; Saturday, Jan. 2, 5-9 p.m.; Sunday, Jan. 3, 5 p.m.
OCEAN CLUB NIGHTCLUB In the Horizons Restaurant In the Clarion Fontainebleau Hotel 101st Street and the ocean Ocean City 410-524-3535 www.clarionoc.com Dec. 31: New Year’s Eve Party w/Power Play and First Class Jan. 1-2: First Class, 9:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. SEACRETS 49th Street and the bay Ocean City 410-524-4900 www.seacrets.com Dec. 31: New Year’s Eve Bash w/ Jon Maurer Band, 9 Mile Roots, Garden State Radio, The JJ Rupp and
Full Circle, 4 p.m. to 4 a.m. Jan. 1: Rew Smith, 5-9 p.m.; Gypsy Wisdom, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Jan. 2: Full Circle, 5-9 p.m.; Steal the Sky, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Jan. 3: Closing Bell w/DJ BK & Full Circle, 5 p.m. SKYE RAW BAR & GRILLE 66th Street, bayside Ocean City 410-723-6762 www.skyebaroc.com Dec. 31: High Five Swan Dive WHISKER’S BAR & GRILL 11070 Cathell Road, Suite 17 Pines Plaza, Ocean Pines 443-365-2576 Jan. 1: Karaoke w/Donnie Berkey, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 47
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Cranberry pomegranate wreath for dessert
By Deborah Lee Walker Contributing Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) It’s New Year’s Eve and my stress level is off the chart. My daily itinerary, which has been so diligently prepared, is constantly up for revision. Thank God the planner is on the computer; otherwise, I would have to make changes the old fashion way. At last check, my aspirin bottle is almost empty and supply of wine has dwindled down to three cases. There is no way I have time to leave this sanctuary of cookery. I have connections and may have to
make an emergency call for liquid fortification to bridge the path of sanity. I have 10 guests arriving at 6 p.m. I keep telling myself this is not a big deal; after all I have cooked for as many as 300 people. But if this is the case, why do I keep checking to make sure my psychiatrist is on speed dial? A melt down is not on this menu, the only “white” I want see is powdered sugar on my cranberry pomegranate wreath. I have read every foodie magazine there is and have planned my menu according to the advice of professionals. These “experts” insist on a variety of appetizers. I hope my crab balls, fried oysters, caviar blinis, lamb lollipops, Mediterranean bruschetta and mari-
nated mushrooms meet the standards of sufficiency. I guess time will tell. At approximately 7:30, my guests will be seated at their assigned place. Personally, it doesn’t matter to me who sits next to who, but the rules of etiquette insist on dominance and control. My friends are down to earth and relish the art of fellowship, but they allow me to play the perfect host and go along with the rituals of formality. A cup of roasted bell pepper soup starts the second course. I chose red bell pepper soup because of its gorgeous festive color. I also roasted the peppers myself so I could get a nice char which will give the soup much more essence. Martha Stewart would be so proud of
Mayor’s Open House set for Jan. 1 By Katie Tabeling Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) In the spirit of the upcoming new year, Ocean City is creating a new tradition – hosting the annual Mayor’s Open House at the Performing Arts Center on New Year’s Day from 1 - 3 p.m. “It’s nice to do something different than before,” said Mayor Rick Meehan. “Right now, it’s the plan to host it at the Performing Arts Center in the future.” The Mayor’s Open House, originally a community event to give residents and property owners a chance to meet with the city’s officials, has been held at City Hall since 1997. It also served as a way for visitors and residents to become familiar with local officials. Last year broke tradition – the 2015 open house was held at the Performing Arts Center, which opened on 40th Street a few weeks before the new year. “It also introduced the center to the community as well. It’s a great central lo-
cation in the city, unlike City Hall which is more downtown,” said Meehan. “It’s a great opportunity.” Last year’s open house was a success with about 1,200 people attending, according to Meehan. The Mayor’s Open House is also taking advantage of its two-tiered auditorium this year by hosting live music. Local musician Bryan Russo organized several area musicians of different genres in a free concert, including acts such as Bryan Russo’s Bargain Scotch, Mickey Justice, Tim Cooney and Lauren Glick’s vocal students. When it was moved to the Performing Arts Center, it was decided that the event needed to be revamped, explained Ocean City’s Communications Manager Jessica Waters. She said it would be like an informal variety show. “You could stay for 15 minutes or for the whole thing,” Waters said. “It’s a nice way for the mayor to thank the community. It’s money from their taxes; it’s a great way to honor them with a free concert.”
In addition to entertainment, several organizations will be present, including the Ocean City Beautification Committee, the Ocean City Development Corporation and the Chamber of Commerce. Other important agencies, such as the Beach Patrol and the Community Response Team, will be represented and mingling in the crowd. Outside the center, the Ocean City Fire Department will have equipment on display. The police department’s mounted and canine units, a popular attraction, will also be at the event. “This is a nice way to welcome the new year by meeting with department heads and exchange ideas, make connections or just have casual conversations,” Meehan said. “It’s a great way to meet people during this happy time.” The Mayor’s Open House is a free event and Centerplate will provide light refreshments. For more information, visit oceancitymd.gov.
• • An Evening of Music and Rock n’ Roll History • • at Ocean City’s Performing Art Center • Saturday, March 26, 2016 @ 7:30 pm
• Rock Around The Clock • Shake Rattle & Roll • Razzle Dazzle • Skinnie Minnie • Rip It Up • See Ya Later Alligator • Rock This Joint • Crazy Man Crazy • Rocket 88 • and many many more!
1 FREE ADMISSION to O.C. Easter Kids Fun Fair and Art & Craft Show (3/25 or 3/26) with each Bill Haley Jr. & The Comets ticket purchased!
TICKETS $18.50 up to $28.50 Call Ticketmaster 1-800 551-7328 (seat) or go to Ticketmaster.com OR visit Ocean City, Maryland Convention Center Box Office at 4001 Coastal Highway M-F 8:00am - 4:30pm S-S 9:00am - 3:00pm 3.00 DISCOUNT on adult tickets available to groups of 12 or more
$
me. Watercress, arugula and Belgium endive salad with pear, Roquefort cheese, walnuts and champagne vinaigrette follows. If I do not serve a palette freshener in between courses, I shall forever be shunned by the culinary ethics committee. Therefore, I am preparing homemade black cherry sorbet. I am really inundated with cooking and do not know how I am going to fit all of this in. But at this point, what’s one more dish? This seems like a tremendous amount of food, but I am following the protocol for proper celebration during the holiday season. My main course consists of prime rib with au jus, shredded fresh horseradish, Yorkshire pudding, scalloped potatoes, al dente asparagus topped with homemade hollandaise See PRESENT Page 48
k c i w n e F in 4 5 . t R
Wishing You A
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Ocean City Today
PAGE 48
JANUARY 1, 2016
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Present wreath cake on gold service plate Continued from Page 47 sauce, Brussels sprouts with crispy pancetta, carrot soufflé, cranberry pomegranate wreath and homemade rolls with whipped butter that has been infused with fresh herbs. All of a sudden I have lost my appetite and my entire being yearns for the good old days. After studying thousands of dessert recipes, I feel my choice of cherries jubilee and a hand-dipped chocolate strawberry tree are a fabulous finale. I have even prepared a glorious gift bag that includes homemade chocolate truffles and a recipe for my cranberry pomegranate wreath. Even with his incredible feat, I feel I have not lived up to my potential and have ultimately failed. There is no doubt my nerves are shot and I am totally exhausted. I honestly do not know how a person can prepare such a feast, hold down a full-time job and raise a family. I am getting too old to put myself through this year after year. If this is how America eats and entertains during this joyful season; I think next year I may stay home, have a few glasses of wine, and enjoy the company of my kitty cats! Happy New Year. Cranberry Pomegranate Wreath Ingredients 2 (8-ounce) bags fresh cranberries 2 ½ cups cold water 1 ½ cups sugar
1 cup pecans, halved 4 tablespoons unsalted butter ½ cup yellow bell pepper, seeded and chopped ½ sweet onion, chopped 2/3 cup mandarin oranges, drained 1/3 cup currants 1/3 cup dried figs, stems removed and thinly sliced 4 cups pomegranate juice 2 pinches each cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg and cloves couple pinches of kosher salt 14 teaspoons unflavored gelatin unflavored cooking spray 1. In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, combine washed cranberries, 2 cups water, ½ cup sugar and cook covered just until cranberries are done. You do not want them to pop. Constantly stir to keep heat evenly distributed. Remove from stove and set aside. 2. In a medium sauté pan over medium-high heat, cook pecans in 2 tablespoons butter until they have developed a nice crunch. Remove pecans from pan and set aside on paper towels. 3. Using the same pan, sauté bell pepper, onion, currants and figs for 3 minutes. Set aside. 4. Meanwhile, combine the remaining 1 cup sugar, 3 cups pomegranate juice, cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg, cloves and salt in a saucepan over medium heat; simmer, and stir until sugar dis-
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solves. Remove from heat and let steep for 20 minutes. 5. Place remaining 1 cup pomegranate juice, ½ cup cold water in a bowl and sprinkle gelatin on top. Set aside without stirring until gelatin softens, about 5 minutes. 6. Combine all the ingredients and divide into 2 even batches. 7. Spray bundt pan generously with cooking spray. Pour one batch into pan and refrigerate for 45 minutes or until it starts to set. Stir second batch of cran-
berry pomegranate mixture and pour on top of first batch. Refrigerate overnight. 8. Run a knife around the edges of the bundt pan and invert the wreath onto a gold service plate. If necessary, set the pan in warm water to soften the gelatin. 9. Presentation follows: place the cranberry wreath on a gold service plate. Place fresh holly in the center and dust generously with powdered sugar. Secret Ingredient - Uniqueness. “Being unique is better than being perfect.” — Unknown
New Year’s Day Beach Walk at Assateague State Park By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 1, 2016) Shake off New Year’s Eve festivities while being surrounded by nature during Assateague Coastal Trust’s 36th annual Ilia Fehrer/Judy Johnson New Year’s Day Beach Walk at Assateague State Park on Friday, Jan. 1. The walk will also be a final 50th anniversary celebration of the Assateague Island National Seashore’s existence. Former National State Park Service Ranger, Chris Seymour, will be leading participants north, up the beach to scenic and pristine views, with Ocean City’s strip in the distance. Everyone will meet on the deck of the concession stand next to the beach, said Assateague Coastal Trust developmental director Steve Farr. “[Seymour] knows the island more than anyone,” Farr said. “It will be an educational, entertaining and invigorating day.” The retired park ranger has led the New Year’s Day Beach Walk for more than 25 years and only missed two years during that time due to a government shutdown and retirement. Keeping with the anniversary theme, Seymour will focus on “Happy Birthday” during the walk while talking about the life spans of Assateague animals and plants in addition to pointing out clues found on the beach that determine the age of Assateague. The walk has uncovered skeletons of sea life, clam shells thousands of years old, boat wrecks, dolphin carcasses and even a giant navigation buoy was spotted from Egg Harbor, N.J. throughout the last 35 years. The length and time of the beach walk varies, depending on the weather, but make sure to dress accordingly. The average time is about 1.5 to 2 hours. If it’s a nice day, Seymour can keep talking and walking. People can choose to walk as far as they want and turn back whenever. The ACT office started the tradition years ago, when the beach walk first began. Everyone who participated would sign a clam shell to record the memories. This started when only 20 people were participating. The shells are displayed in their office to remind everyone how special the New Year’s Beach Walk is to
everyone involved. Anywhere from 100 to 400 people come out every year and the numbers fluctuate depending on the weather. Last year, 150 people participated. The history of the beach walk is as rich as Assateague Island itself. In the early 1970s, Judy Johnson formed the Committee to Preserve Assateague Island to draw attention to its beauty. Around the same time, Ilia Fehrer, of Snow Hill, came down to Assateague on New Year’s Day wanting to reconnect with the wilderness. She was an avid voice in preserving the wetlands and shorelines on Assateague Island. Her family continued to join every year, even coming down from Baltimore. The invite went out to Assateague Coastal Trust, formally the Committee to Preserve Assateague Island to join and members started participating. It became bigger and bigger every year. “It’s a family tradition that turned into an organization’s tradition. We just keep it going,” said Assateague Coastkeeper Kathy Phillips. The first beach walk was organized by Fehrer and Johnson on Jan. 1, 1980, the same year former President Jimmy Carter declared “Year of the Coast.” The New Year’s Day tradition is now named in their honor. “Part of what this walk is about is to remember our founders and their efforts to preserve Assateague Island,” Phillips said. “The continued goal of keeping the island undeveloped and natural.” Entry into the park is free for the New Year’s walk, and hot chocolate and cookies will be offered at the end. “It’s a great way to get outdoors after a social evening,” Farr said. “Assateague is a beautiful island to walk on and its a good way to get blood flowing for the new year.” Meet ACT staff and Seymour at the Assateague State Park concession stand at 1 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 1 to join the walk. From Route 50, follow Route 611 south across the Verrazano Bridge, then drive to the end of the road and turn right into the State Park’s parking lot. Call ACT at 410-629-1538 or visit ACTforBays.org for more information.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
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Delmarva Birding Weekends in Jan. and April Event participants will hike on private farmland and woodland or take boat trips (Jan. 1, 2016) Organizers for two 2016 Delmarva Birding Weekends are seeking sponsors for both events. Due to the popularity of the annual Delmarva Birding Weekend, sponsors of the popular event will now benefit from two of the celebrated birding extravaganzas in both January and April. “We enjoy such a big difference in bird species in winter and spring, it just made sense to open up two weekends,” said Worcester County Tourism Director Lisa Challenger. Now duck, raptor and shorebird lovers can get a winter taste of Delmarva, Jan. 29-31 during the first Delmarva Birding Weekend of 2016. Boasting expert guides, the new winter trips will feature a near-shore maritime boat trip to enjoy pelagic
and arctic migrants, eagle-watching trips and jaunts in Delaware and Maryland through some of the most pristine habitats on the East Coast. “If participants thought the April weekend was spectacular, wait until they see what winter has to offer,” said guide and organizer Jim Rapp. “The sheer number of bald eagles and ducks will blow people away.” Registration is now open at www.delmarvabirding.com for the winter Delmarva Birding Weekend. The April event, which celebrates the migration of the spring suite of warblers, shorebirds, waterfowl and raptors, will open for registration soon. The Delmarva Peninsula is one of the country’s premier birding areas, due to an extensive variety of habitat protected by coastal parks, refuges and wildlife management areas. More than 400 bird species have been recorded in the region. In 2015, 168 species were tallied during spring Delmarva Birding Weekend alone.
“It’s our vast shallow bays and large tracts of protected marshes and baldcypress forests that make the Delmarva Peninsula one of the finest birding regions in the nation,” Rapp said. “During the Weekend, our guests will hike on private farmland and woodland that are normally offlimits to birders, and our waterborne trips go where the birds are. In late April we will see more brightly colored warblers and wading birds either here to breed or moving north. In the winter we are overwhelmed by an incredible diversity of ducks, shorebirds and raptors by the hundreds of thousands, and winter will get you great looks at larger birds.” Rapp added that none of the trips were physically taxing and that either event provides a rare opportunity to tally 100 species in a day in places
that are normally inaccessible to birders. The media attention given to the Delmarva Birding Weekends makes them particularly attractive to advertisers who want to promote both their business and conservation at the same time. To become a sponsor or for registration information, contact Rapp at dlitedirector@comcast.net, call 443-614-0261 or email marshhawk67@gmail.com or call, 443523-2201. Additional sponsor and registration information, field trip descriptions and other resources for Delmarva Birding are available at www.delmarvabirding.com. The Delmarva Birding Weekend is organized by Conservation Community Consulting in cooperation with Worcester County Tourism.
NEW DAILY DINNER SPECIALS STARTING AT 4PM MONDAY $15 CRAB CAKE DINNER TUESDAY 25% OFF ENTIRE CHECK (EXCLUDES HAPPY HOUR ITEMS)
KIWANIS DONATION The Kiwanis Club of Greater Ocean Pines–Ocean City donates $500 annually to five local schools to supplement the school's budget. Check presentations were made recently by Immediate PastPresident Carolyn Dryzga as part of her presidential year 2014-2015. Dryzga, left, presents a check to Buckingham Elementary School Principal Karen T. Marx.
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Ocean City Today
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JANUARY 1, 2016
Sleep Disorders Diagnostic Center to offer sleep studies
(Jan. 1, 2016) The Sleep Disorders Diagnostic Center at Atlantic General Hospital now offers sleep studies that can be conducted in the comfort of a patient’s home. During a traditional sleep study, an overnight stay in a hospital or sleep center is required. Upon arrival, a sleep technician attaches sensors to the torso and head that monitor brain waves, heartbeat and breathing. The results captured over the next eight hours of sleep help physicians determine if a patient has sleep apnea, restless leg syndrome and a variety of other sleep disorders. The testing can be very revealing, but isn’t always the most convenient or comfortable experience for patients trying to sleep normally in an unfamiliar environment. With a home sleep study, patients are in their own surroundings and can follow their usual routines, which will result in falling asleep faster and yield truer results. Unusual sleep hours can be accommodated as well. For those who work night shift or have a lifestyle that results in an unusual bedtime, it can be difficult to fall asleep for a typical 11 p.m. sleep study. The tech can even pre-program the machine to turn on and off at a certain time if the patient has an usual bedtime.
Convenience is just one of the benefits of a home sleep study. If a patient has an unusually restless night that may yield inconclusive results, there is an opportunity to monitor a second night’s sleep. The goal is the make the experience as simple and easy as possible for the patient. “We provide education before testing to make sure our patients know how to set up the equipment. A sleep tech actually sits down with the patients when they come in to pick it up,” said Maria Phillips, director of Imaging. Other providers of home sleep studies send the equipment through the mail with a set of instructions. There are four basic components to the setup, which takes about 10 minutes at home: a belt around the waist, a belt around the chest, a pulse and oxygen reader that clips to the finger, and a sensor that is placed beneath the nose. The studies are covered by most insurance companies and Medicare. Diagnosis is the same as a traditional sleep study. The results are read by a pulmonologists certified in sleep medicine and shared with a patient’s doctor. For more information, visit www.atlanticgeneral.org/Our-Services/SleepDisorders-Diagnostic-Center.aspx.
CHARITI R A E T S S ALL VOLUNTEERS Please join us for our
Annual Beef & Beer Fundraiser Friday, January 8, 2016 Ocean Pines Community Center 5:00-9:00 p.m. To Benefit Wounded Soldiers of MD
All-You-Can-Eat Beef Dinner by MONTY JONES OF THE LAZY RIVER SALOON
SHARON SORRENTINO • IRV BRUMBLEY • DJ DAWN DOOR PRIZES • LIVE AUCTION • GUEST SPEAKER OP YOUTH THEATER “BEAUTY AND THE BEAST” SPECIAL PERFORMANCE BY TOMMY EDWARD, ROD STEWART IMPERSONATOR
TICKETS $30.00
Contact Anna Foultz 410-641-7667
A special thank you to Marlene Ott, Associate Shamrock Realty Group for donating the tickets and program. We thank you from our hearts.
CHECK PRESENTATION Annually, the Kiwanis Club of Greater Ocean Pines–Ocean City donates $500 to five local schools to supplement the school's budget. Check presentations were made recently by Immediate PastPresident Carolyn Dryzga as part of her presidential year 2014-2015. Pictured, from left, are Mindy Bankert, Kiwanis Builders Club faculty adviser, Dryzga, and Stephen Decatur Middle School Principal Lynne Barton.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
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Association presents annual Fair Housing Poster Contest
(Jan. 1, 2016) Coastal Association of Realtors (CAR) presents the annual Fair Housing Poster Contest, which sends the winning student to Annapolis for a meeting with the governor or other state official. Sponsored by the Maryland Association of Realtors (MAR), the contest is a means for Realtors across the state to help increase awareness of this issue. “Fair housing” pertains to the Fair Housing Act, which prohibits discrimination in the sale and rental of housing based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status or handicap.
Artwork submitted by students must illustrate this year’s calendar theme, “Dreams Come True With Fair Housing.” CAR will choose a local winner from three age groups: kindergarten to second grade, third to fifth and sixth through eighth. Winners will receive Visa gift cards, courtesy of CAR. Their entries will be forwarded to MAR, who will choose one for inclusion in the 2017 statewide calendar. For a contest packet, contact Sarah Rayne, government and public affairs director for CAR, at 410-641-4409 or sarah@coastalrealtors.org. Deadline for submissions is Friday, Feb. 5.
CROSSWORD
Worcester County Humane Society volunteer Bill Morison shows some of the donations from the BJ's on the Water’s Dec. 9 holiday party at the 75th Street restaurant.
Kenille’s Kupboard, WCHS receive donations from party
(Jan. 1, 2016) Throughout the year, the Worcester County Humane Society is fortunate to have so many generous individual donors and businesses, who year after year, remain loyal and consistent with their donations and fundraising efforts for the no-kill animal shelter. One such business is BJ’s on the Water on 75th Street. Owners Billy and Maddy Carder held their annual holiday party at their bayside restaurant on Dec. 9 where partygoers were asked to bring donations for the Worcester County Humane Society and Kenille’s Kupboard. In return, they were able to partake in a turkey dinner with all the fixings. Each nonprofit had a huge, heaping pile of dog and cat food, kitty litter, dog treats, cleaning supplies as well as monetary donations to assist with the many animals that need help.
“The board, staff and volunteers at Worcester County Humane Society can’t thank Billy and Maddy enough for choosing our no-kill animal shelter as one of the recipients of the donations,” said Kelly Austin, WCHS board president. “The only way we have been able to continue with our mission is because of the generosity of our community.” Worcester County Humane Society, located off Route 611 on Eagles Nest Road, is a private, nonprofit, nokill animal shelter that currently house about 20 dogs and more than 100 cats. For information on available animals for adoption or how to donate visit www.worcestercountyhumanesociety.org. Follow the shelter on Facebook and Instagram for updates. The shelter is open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day except Mondays.
ATTENTION H.S. Seniors:
The MDDC Press Foundation is looking for an outstanding senior staff member from a high school newspaper in Maryland, DelDware or D.C.
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Ocean City Today
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JANUARY 1, 2016
COMMUNITY/SCHOOL
KIWANIS DONATE TO SCHOOLS The Kiwanis Club of Greater Ocean Pines–Ocean City donates $500 annually to five local schools to supplement the school's budget. Check presentations were made recently by Immediate PastPresident Carolyn Dryzga as part of her presidential year 2014-2015. (Left) Dryzga, right, presents a check to Ocean City Elementary Principal Dawn Rogers. (Right) Pictured, from left, are Showell Elementary Principal Diane Shorts, Kiwanis K-kids Adviser Jackie Todd, Faculty Adviser for Kiwanis K-Kids Club Evy Collins, Dryzga and student members of the Showell K-Kids Club.
SCHOLARSHIP AWARD MBS FOOD DRIVE In lieu of a Thanksgiving feast, the kindergarten and first and second grade students at Most Blessed Sacrament Catholic School held a food drive to benefit a local food pantry sponsored by the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. The Society of St. Vincent de Paul is a Catholic lay organization providing help to people in need. Pictured, standing, from left, are Victoria Campos, Laila Pascucci, Max Carpenter, Alexis Rupple, Christian Hill and Grace Deale, and seated, Carly Culver, Nathaniel Hallman, William Hand and Kate Wanner.
Dr. Bela Gulyas, right, presents a donation of $10,000 to Mark Record, principal of Most Blessed Sacrament Catholic School in Ocean Pines, in continuance of his philanthropy to benefit the school’s scholarship fund. This bequest is given in memory of his wife, Patricia A. Gulyas, who passed away in 2014. It is the second of five equal donations that will be made to the school. Last year’s gift to the scholarship fund benefitted 12 families whose children attend MBS. A parishioner of St. John Neumann Catholic Church and graduate of Trinity Catholic School in Ellicott City, Patricia Gulyas believed in high quality, versatile Catholic education for children and was a strong supporter of this cause.
MOBILE SCIENCE LAB Rebecca Johnson's third graders, Koen Watts and Charlie Pearce, investigate glue in the Food, Fiber, and You mobile science lab at Showell Elementary. The mobile science lab, purchased by the PTA, visits Showell annually.
PHOTO COURTESY TED PAGE
CHILI COOKOFF The Democratic Women's Club of Worcester County held a chili cookoff on Nov. 14 at the Ocean Pines Community Center. Attendees voted for their favorite and the winner was Kay Hickman of Ocean Pines. Pictured, from left, are Em Hensch, Tom Wilson, Kathy Emmert, Diana Gross, Sen. Jim Mathias, Women's Club President Judy Butler, Irene Daly, Vicky Wallace, Jean Fry, Karen Bray, June Bray and Harriet Batis.
JANUARY 1, 2016
Ocean City Today
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COMMUNITY/SCHOOLS
DAR INDUCTS MEMBERS The General Levin Winder Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) recently welcomed three of its four newest members during a luncheon meeting at the Atlantic Hotel. Regent Barbara May and Chaplain Ann Fowler administered the oath of membership to Janet Simpson, Carole Kreuger and Gail Weldin. Amy Oneal-Self was unable to attend and will take her oath of membership at a future meeting. Pictured, from left, are May, Fowler, Simpson, Kreuger and Weldin. The DAR is a women’s service organization dedicated to promoting patriotism, preserving American history, and securing America’s future through better education. For more information, visit www.dar.org.
‘EGG-SPERIMENT’
KICKER
WHEN I GROW UP…
The Democratic Women’s Club of Worcester County recently donated 30 lap blankets to Coastal Hospice to warm the patients in their care. Pictured are Eileen Larson and Ann Augustine of the Democratic Women’s Club, and Elaine Bean, community relations manager at Coastal Hospice.
Students from Tina Adams’ first grade class at Ocean City Elementary School wrote about what they want to be when they grow up. Pictured are Cassius Coley, John Koehler, Caleb Esham, Sean Ewing, Miriam Glick, Sadie Glick, Arieanna Stedding and Ashley Conway.
The scientists in Abby Harrison’s third grade class conducted an “egg-speriment” to determine what makes something float. Ryan Taylor and Aarnav Tiwari learned that objects float more readily in salt water because it has greater density than fresh water.
PHOTO COURTESY D.J. LANDIS, SR.
BRANDYWINE CALENDAR Kiwanis Club of Greater Ocean Pines - Ocean City member, Al Kastner, shows his fellow members the calendar from Brandywine Senior Living at Fenwick Island, with the picture for the December 2016 page, titled “Naughty is the New Nice,” of Mr. and Mrs. Claus at the Brandywine Christmas party.
WRITERS’ WORKSHOP Mike Johnson’s third grade writers are focused on great narratives. Showell Elementary’s Jayda Taylor and Claire Cutlip examine their efforts during a Writers’ Workshop Celebration.
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JANUARY 1, 2016
STUDENTS VISIT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Stephen Decatur High School newspaper students attended the 76th annual Columbia Scholastic Press Association fall conference held at Columbia University in New York City in early November. The conference participants learned techniques and strategies in news reporting, broadcast journalism and publishing. Pictured, in back, are Tifanee Mask, teacher Ellen Masters, newspaper adviser Brittany Tracy, Rebecca Evans, Tyler VanSice and Emily Cook, and in front, Allie Hastings, Elizabeth Masters, Caroline Hammond and Serena Wisner.
Family Friendly! Now Open 12pm till Everyday • Closed Jan 3rd reopen Jan 14th at 2pm
Call Charlotte 410-430-5401 Live Music by Full Circle 9:30pm
Happy Hour Daily 3 p.m.- 6 p.m. Food & Drink Specials
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Early Bird Daily 4 p.m.- 6 p.m. Special Dinner Menu Wednesday Night 5 p.m.- 9 p.m.
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Prime Rib w/ One Side $15.99 (some exclusions apply)
Sunday & Tuesday • 5-9 p.m. some exclusions may apply
28th Street Plaza • 410-289-3100 • www.coinspub.com
PICTURE WITH SANTA Paws and Claws in West Ocean City offered pictures with Santa on Dec. 5 and more than $700 was raised for the Worcester County Humane Society from many animals lovers bringing their pets to pose with Santa and Mrs. Claus. Stephanie and Jeff Valdivia brought their two horses, Spaz and Gotti.
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 55
Rt. 54 Fenwick Island, Delaware 302-539-3915 Maryland 410-250-1112
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TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY @ 140TH ST WEDNESDAY@ RT 54
1/2 PRICE PIZZA OPEN YEAR ROUND 11 A.M. EAT IN CARRY OUT FAST, FRIENDLY DELIVERY OCEAN CITY’S MOST FAMOUS SUB SHOP SINCE 1959 Fresh Dough Pizza • Fresh Baked Philly Rolls Meats, Cheeses, Vegetables, Sliced Daily Cones, Shakes & Sundaes
BIG GAME SPECIALS $2.00 16oz Miller Lite, Coors Light & Yuengling Drafts $2.00 Rail Drinks (Some Restrictions Apply) Plus Tax
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FOOTBALL!!! WEEK 17 January 2 Thru January 4 Sunday, January 3 Time New York at Buffalo New England at Miami New Orleans at Atlanta Baltimore at Cincinnati Pittsburgh at Cleveland Jacksonville at Houston Tennessee at Indianapolis Washington at Dallas Philadelphia at New York Detroit at Chicago Tampa Bay at Carolina Oakland at Kansas City San Diego at Denver Seattle at Arizona St. Louis at San Francisco Minnesota at Green Bay
1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 4:25 4:25 4:25 4:25 4:25 8:30
PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM PM
LAST WEEK’S SCORES WASHINGTON 38/PHILADELPHIA 24 CAROLINA 13/ATLANTA 20 DALLAS 6/BUFFALO 16 SAN FRANCISCO 17/DETROIT 32 HOUSTON 34/TENNESSEE 6
CLEVELAND 13/KANSAS CITY 17 INDIANAPOLIS 18/MIAMI 12 NEW ENGLAND 20/NY JETS 26 CHICAGO 26/TAMPA BAY 21 JACKSONVILLE 27/NEW ORLEANS 38
PITTSBURGH 17/BALTIMORE 20 GREEN BAY 8/ARIZONA 38 ST. LOUIS 23/SEATTLE 17 NY GIANTS 17/MINNESOTA 49 CINCINNATI 17/DENVER 20
PAGE 56
Ocean City Today
Ocean City Today
DINING GUIDE ■ CREDIT CARDS: V-Visa, MC-Master Card, AE-American Express, DIS-Discover ■ PRICE RANGE: $, $$, $$$ ________________________________ ■ 32 PALM, 32nd Street, in the Hilton Suites, Ocean City 410-289-2525 / www.oceancityhilton.com/dining / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Western Caribbean cuisine, Eastern Shore favorites, gourmet and tasty liquid desserts. ■ ALEX’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT, Route 50, West Ocean City 410-213-7717 / www.ocitalianfood.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Serving homemade Italian cuisine, steaks, seafood, chicken, pork and pasta. Elegant dining room with fireplace. Early bird specials every day from 5-6 p.m. ■ BARN 34, 3400 Coastal Highway, Ocean City 410-289-5376 / www.barn34oc.com / $$ / V-MCAE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Barn 34 is a unique and rustic setting with two distinctly different levels. Award winning breakfast at 7 a.m., great lunches from 1-5 p.m. and dinner at 5 p.m. Featuring fresh fish, hand cut steaks, crab cakes and awesome fish tacos. Daily specials. Happy hour is 4-7 p.m. Closed Tuesdays and Wednesdays. ■ BILLY’S SUB SHOP, 120th Street, Food Lion Shopping Center, 410-723-2500; 140th Street, Ocean City, 410-250-1778; Route 54, Fenwick Shoals, Fenwick Island, Del., 302-436-5661 / $ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Dine in, carry out. Fast delivery. Open 7 days 11 a.m. – 3 a.m. Ocean City’s most famous sub and pizza shop since 1959. An OC tradition where a sandwich is a meal, serving fresh dough pizza, subs, burgers, cones, shakes and sundaes with beach delivery available. ■ BJ’S ON THE WATER, 75th Street, Ocean City 410-524-7575 / www.bjsonthewater. com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open year-round. Entire dining menu served 11 a.m. to 1:30 a.m., seven days a week. Daily specials, daily duck feeding. Entertainment every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. No cover. Available for parties and banquets. Indoor and outdoor dining. ■ BLUE FISH JAPANESE & CHINESE RESTAURANT AND SUSHI BAR, 94th Street, Ocean City 410-5243983 / www.bluefishoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Japanese and Chinese restaurant and sushi bar with beer, wine and cocktails. Dine in, take out and delivery available. ■ BOURBON STREET ON THE BEACH, 116th Street & Coastal Hwy., (Behind Fountain Head Towers Condominium), Ocean City 443-664-2896 / www.bourbonstreetonthebeach. com / $$-$$$ / VMC-AE-DIS / Reservations recommended for large parties / Children’s menu/ Full bar / Eastern Shore fare with a New Orleans Flare. Seafood, Steaks & Pasta dishes—Specializing in Jambalaya, Creole, & Gumbo. Home of the Ragin’ Cajun Bloody Mary. Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. Weekly entertainment. Like us on Facebook. ■ CAPTAIN’S TABLE RESTAURANT, 15th Street and the Boardwalk, Ocean City 410-289-7192 / www.captainstableoc.com / $$-$$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Family-owned, serving fine seafood, steaks and poultry on the third floor of the Courtyard by Marriott. ■ COACHES CORNER, 74th Street and Coastal Highway, Ocean City 410-723-2468 / $ / V-MCDIS/ No reservations required / Children’s menu / Open 7 days a week, 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Happy hour, 67 a.m. Serving breakfast all day and lunch. Our restaurant offers casual dining atmosphere for families. Family owned and operated, everything home made from our white egg omelets to fresh squeezed OJ. ■ COINS, 28th Street and Coastal Highway, Ocean City 410-524 3100 / www.coinspub.com / $-$$ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar/ Open 7 days a week, 11 a.m. Our restaurant offers a casual dining atmosphere for families. Best crab cakes in town, hand-cut steaks, fresh seafood. Everything home-made. Happy hour 3-6 p.m., 6 days a week and early bird 4-6 p.m., daily specials. Closed Mondays. ■ DOUGH ROLLER, South Division Street & Boardwalk, 410-289-3501; 3rd Street & Boardwalk, 410289-2599; 41st Street & Coastal Hwy, 410-524-9254; 70th Street & Coastal Hwy, 410524-7981 / www.DoughRollerRestaurants.com / $ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Ocean City’s Favorite Family Restaurant for 35 years! Great kid’s menu. Dayton’s Boardwalk Famous Fried Chicken now available at 41st and 70th
St locations. Off-season special pricing and online ordering now available at both Coastal Highway locations. Visit our website for more information. ■ DUFFYS, 130th St., in Montego Bay Shopping Ctr. & Coastal Highway, Ocean City 410-250 1449 / www.duffysoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual dining, indoor or outdoor seating. Irish fare and American cuisine. Something for everyone. Our menu features appetizers, soups, salads, sandwiches, steaks and seafood. Second Season & Daily Dinner Specials. Saturday and Sunday, 9 a.m., serving breakfast, lunch and dinner; Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Dine In, Carry Out. Happy Hour, daily, noon to 6 pm. ■ FAGER’S ISLAND RESTAURANT & BAR, 60th Street on the bay, Ocean City 410-524-5500 / www.fagers.com / $$-$$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted in the dining room only / Children’s menu / Full bar / Upscale restaurant on the bay. Casual fine dining, fresh fish, prime rib and seafood. Lighter fare menu served on our decks or inside. ■ FOX’S PIZZA DEN, 31225 American Parkway, Selbyville, Del. 302-436-FOXS / www.foxspizzade.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Sit-down bar and restaurant. Full menu includes pizza, pastas, salads, sandwiches and more. Specializing pizza and chef specials. Open daily for lunch and dinner at 11 a.m. Take out and delivery. ■ GROTTO PIZZA, 14th Street on the boardwalk, Ocean City 443-664-2617 / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full Bar / OC’s newest spot to watch people on the boardwalk, indoor dining and deck dining. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. 125th Street and Coastal Highway, Ocean City 410-250-1234 / Serving lunch and dinner. Open 7 days. Grotto Pizza is a family casual dining restaurant that specializes in award winning pizza and hospitality. The full menu includes pizza, pasta, sandwiches, subs, appetizers, salads, beer, wine, cocktails and Grotto Gelato. Takeout available. ■ HARBORSIDE BAR & GRILL, 12841 S. Harbor Road, West Ocean City 410-213-1846 / www.ocharborside.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open seven days a week, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Casual waterfront dining serving seafood, steaks, sandwiches, salads, wraps and pasta. Home of the “Original Orange Crush.” Entertainment Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. ■ HARPOON HANNA’S RESTAURANT & BAR, Route 54 and the bay, Fenwick Island, Del. www.harpoonhannasrestaurant.com / $$ / V-MC-AEDIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual waterfront restaurant serving lunch, dinner. Fresh fish, seafood, steaks, sandwiches and all-you-can-eat Alaskan crab legs. Open year-round. ■ HEMINGWAY’S AT THE CORAL REEF, 17th Street, in the Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites, Ocean City 410-289-2612 / www.ocmdhotels.com/hemingways / $$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Elegant dining room, Floridian/island-style cuisine. Sea-food, tropical salsas, grilled steaks, pork chops, grilled pineapple, banana fritters, entree salads. ■ HIGGINS CRAB HOUSE, 31st Street, Ocean City, 410-289-2581 / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / We have proudly served Ocean City, Maryland for over 40 years. Known for All You Can Eat crabs, crab legs, fried chicken, steamed shrimp, and baby back ribs. ■ HOOTERS, Route 50 & Keyser Point Rd., West Ocean City 410-213-1841 and 5th Street, Ocean City / www.hootersofoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Full bar / Open daily at 11 a.m. Brand new menu. Delicious juicy burgers, garden fresh salads, 12 delicious wing sauces and signature seafood entrees. Tropical frozen drinks and signature Hooters cocktails. Large parties are welcome. Call for private party information. Carry out available. The year round Route 50 location features happy hour daily, live entertainment every weekend and Bike Night every Wednesday. ■ HORIZONS OCEANFRONT RESTAURANT, 101st Street, Ocean City 410-524-3535 / www.clarionoc.com / $-$$ ($20-45) / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Open tables / Children’s menu / Full bar / Horizons Oceanfront Restaurant is proud to serve delicious, beach-inspired dishes in both our oceanfront restaurants, Horizons and Breakers Pub. New all-day menu, available 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., features many favorites, as well as exciting new creations with a local flare. Deluxe Sunday breakfast buffet open year-round and AUCE prime rib, crab legs and seafood buffet available most weekends.
JANUARY 1, 2016
Get a Direct Link to Your Business
Add a QR Code to your Dining Guide listing and give your patrons a direct link to your Web site, Facebook page, App, etc. Cost is $15 for current advertisers ~ $25 for new listings Contact a Sales Representative at 410-723-6397
■ JOHNNY’S PIZZA PUB, 56th Street, Ocean City 410-723-5600 / www.johnnyspizzapub.com / $ / VMC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Ocean City’s official pizzeria and pub featuring homemade pizzas, serving 18 different gourmet pizzas including local favorites. Huge variety of calzones, subs, burgers and sandwiches to choose from. Ocean City’s place for jumbo wings with 20 different sauces. Voted best sound system for live music. Carry out or delivery til 2 a.m. ■ JULES FINE DINING, 118th Street, Ocean City 410-524-3396 / www.ocjules.com / $$, $$$ / V-MCAE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Local fare, global flair. Fresh seafood yearround, fresh local produce. ■ KY WEST BAR & RESTAURANT, 5401 Coastal Highway, Ocean City 443-664-2836 / www.kywestoceancity.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Ky West is becoming the local's fine dining and casual fare destination. Ocean City's best veal chop, the freshest seafood and great pasta dishes. Our experienced chefs deliver the finest in cuisine nightly. Ky West has a fine dining side, as well as a beautiful bar best described as New York funky chic. Whether you chill out on our sofas, hang in the bar, or grab a table, Ky West will provide excellent food & drink for a great dining adventure. ■ LONGBOARD CAFÉ, 67th Street Town Center, Ocean City 443 664 5639 / www.longboardcafe.net / $$ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / We are the locals favorite serving lunch and dinner. Longboard Cafés menu offers unparalleled flare from the lite fare to dinner entrees — offering a variety of burgers, paninis, sandwiches and salads … even a popular "veggies" menu featuring their famous wrinkled green beans. Signature house libiations and signature entrees made with the finest ingredients from local farms and fisheries. A family restaurant. ■ MIONE’S PIZZA & ITAILIAN RESTURANT, Route 50 (Tanger Outlets), West Ocean City 410-2132231 / www.mionesoc.com / $ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Beer, wine / Open 7 days a week, 11 a.m. 67th Street (Town Center), Ocean City 443-664-6635 / Beer, wine / Open Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. Come and enjoy family New York style pizza, subs and pasta. Daily lunch and dinner specials. Eat in or carry out. ■ OC WASABI, 33rd Street Plaza, Coastal Highway, Ocean City 410-524-7337 / www.ocwasabi.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Full bar / OC’s freshest, steamed sushi and sashimi and Japanese cuisine. Open Tuesday through Sunday, 411 p.m. ■ POPEYE’S LOUISIANA KITCHEN, Route 50, West Ocean City 443-664-2105 / $ / V-MC / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Family restaurant. Eat-in, carry out or drive-thru. Open seven days, yearround. Every Monday and Tuesday, two-piece chicken for 99 cents. Every Wednesday, free kids meal with purchase of combo. ■ ROPEWALK, 82nd Street on the bay, Ocean City 410-524-1109 / www.ropewalkoc.com / $$ / V-MCAE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full Bar / OC’s newest spot to watch the sunsets. Indoor dining and bar, deck dining and tiki bar. Serving lunch and dinner in relaxed casual atmosphere. Happy hour specials all day and all night every day available at tables and bar. ■ ROPEWALK - A FENWICK ISLAND OYSTER HOUSE, 700 Coastal Highway, Fenwick Island, Del. 302-581-0153 / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted except 6-9 p.m. / Children’s menu / Full Bar / Family friendly dining with a rotating oyster list and seafood creations paired with our fresh fruit crushes and extensive craft beer menu. Takeout available except between 6-9 p.m. ■ SEACRETS, 49th Street, Ocean City 410-5244900 / www.seacrets.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Island atmosphere. Soups, salads, Jamaican jerk chicken, appetizers, sandwiches, paninis, pizza and fresh seafood. ■ SEASONS OCEANFRONT RESTAURANT, 118th Street, in the Carousel Oceanfront Hotel and Condos, Ocean City 410-524-1000 / www.carouselhotel.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open seven days a week. Oceanfront dining in a casual atmosphere. Serving breakfast from 7-11 a.m., featuring a breakfast buffet or special order from the regular menu. Dinner served from 4-9 p.m., featuring a wide variety of entrees, seafood, ribs, steaks, pasta and prime rib. Join us for family theme night dinners. ■ SHRIMP BOAT, 9924 Stephen Decatur Highway, West Ocean City 410-213-0448 / shrimpboatoc.com / $- $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reser-
vations required / Children’s menu / Beer, wine / Steamed crabs and shrimp. Full menu featuring homemade soups, salads, seafood appetizers, fish and shrimp tacos, crab cakes, sandwiches, seafood dinner entrees, burgers and wings. Fresh seafood market with daily shrimp specials. ■ SICULI RUSTIC ITALIAN KITCHEN, 104 N. Main St., Berlin 410-629-0550 / FB-Siculi Italian Kitchen / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Full Bar / Family friendly. Open for lunch and dinner, 11 a.m.; Sunday brunch, 10:30 a.m. Locally sourced, freshly prepared. Award-winning brick oven pizza, steaks, seafood, chicken and veal selections. Daily lunch, happy hour and dinner specials. ■ SKYE RAW BAR & GRILLE, 66th Street, Ocean City 410-723-6762 / www.skyebaroc.com / $$$$$ / V-M-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Enjoy lunch, dinner, raw bar or lite fare in the Skye, at the top of 66th Street and Coastal Highway. Amazing views of Ocean City, the ocean and bay with spectacular sunsets overlooking Sunset Island. Celebrate happy hour, 3-6 p.m. with great food and drink specials. ■ THE COTTAGE CAFE, Route 1 (across from Sea Colony), Bethany Beach, Del. 302-539-8710 / www.cottagecafe.com / $, $$ / V-MC-AE / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Seafood, kids’ menu, happy hour specials. Lunch and dinner daily. Breakfast buffet on weekends. ■ THE COVE AT OCEAN PINES, 1 Mumford’s Landing Road, Ocean Pines 410-641-7501 / www.oceanpines.org/ $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS/No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / The Cove at Ocean Pines Yacht Club in a gorgeous bayfront setting, specializing in coastal cuisine. Serving lunch, dinner and Sunday brunch. Open Thursday at 4 p.m. for dinner. Open Friday-Sunday at 11 a.m. for lunch and dinner. Sunday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. for brunch buffet. Friday and/or Saturday, live entertainment. Sunday brunch buffet, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Happy Hour Thursday-Sunday, 4-7 p.m. ■ THE CRAB BAG, 130th Street, bayside, Ocean City 410-250-3337 / www.thecrabbag.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE / No reservations required / Full bar / Dine in and carryout. Open 7 Days a week, 11 am til late night. Huge menu; something for everyone. Hot steamed crabs, world famous fried chicken, ribs, burgers, barbecue, pasta, seafood, steaks, sandwiches and more. Lunch and weekly carry-out and dinner specials. The best happy hour at the beach with drink and food specials. ■ TOKYO SEAFOOD BUFFET, 131st Street (formerly JR’S North), Ocean City 410-390-5939 / $$ / V-MCAE/ No reservations required / Full bar/ OC’s largest seafood, all-you-can-eat buffet featuring soups, raw sushi and sashimi, steamed and baked seafood along with classic Chinese entrees and many classic desserts and fruits. Friday through Sunday buffet features hot steamed snow crab legs. ■ TONY LUKES, 33rd Street, Ocean City 410-524 0500 / www.tonylukes.com / $ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Breakfast, lunch and dinner. Our restaurant offers authentic cheesesteaks, roast pork and chicken cutlet sandwiches, burgers, salads and desserts at family friendly prices. Eat in and carry out. ■ VICTORIAN ROOM RESTAURANT, Dunes Manor Hotel, OCEANFRONT at 28th and Baltimore Ave, Ocean City 410-289-1100 / www.dunesmanor.com / $$ - $$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations not required but recommended / Full Bar / Children’s menu / Open year round. An elegant oceanfront dining atmosphere with local, farm to table/sea to table cuisine. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner daily 7:30am to 9:00pm (Fri & Sat to 10pm). Also featuring Zippy Lewis Lounge with happy hour from 47p.m., featuring Craft Beer selections and appetizer menu; Milton’s Out Door Cafe; and the Barefoot Beach Bar in season. ■ VINNY’S PIZZA & ITALIAN GRILL, 25th Street and Philadelphia Avenue, Ocean City 410-390-3713 / www.vinnyspizzaanditlaiangrille.com / $ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Beer, wine / Serving lunch and dinner. Our restaurant offers authentic Italian food featuring subs and fabulous authentic Italian entrees. Hand tossed, made from scratch pizzas. Family friendly, eat in and carry out. ■ WHISKERS PUB, 120th Street, OC Square, Ocean City 410-524-2609 / www.whiskerspub.com / $ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Old World saloon-type feel, Whisker’s is famous for its Certified Angus®burgers and delicious casual fare, as well as its entertaining atmosphere and photo lined walls of famous and infamous “whiskers.” Enjoy flat screen TVs to watch your favorite sports. Call for hours.
JANUARY 1, 2016
57 Classifieds now appear in Ocean City Today & the Bayside Gazette each week and online at oceancitytoday.net and baysideoc.com.
HELP WANTED MODEL CASTING
for South Moon Under
Female applicants must be 5'8" or taller and fit a size 2 dress and size 25 jean. Male applicants must be 6' or taller and fit a size 32"-34" pant. All applicants must be of legal working age. Work permits required for anyone under the age of 18. Email your name, contact info, age, height and sizes with a head shot and full length shot to: models@southmoonunder.com. We will contact you if you fit the criteria.
Thank you for your interest.
HELP WANTED
Make 2015 the year of “Beauty” for you and others!
Work F/T or P/T, set your own hours, and make up to 50% commission. To become a Representative or to order product email snowhillavon@ comcast.net Like me on Facebook & for more beauty tips go to christinesbeautyshop
Classifieds 410-723-6397
HELP WANTED
Somerset Jewelers Two retail jobs, experience please. Dunes Manor Hotel location - FT/YR. Apply in person. Boardwalk - FT season/ PT winter. Flexible hours. Apply 412 South Boardwalk, weekends or mail resume P.O. Box 512, OC, MD 21843. ***PLUMBER WANTED*** *******TOP PAY******* *FOR THE RIGHT PERSON* Reputable HVAC company is looking for a Professional Plumber to serve the Delmarva area. 401K, Health Benefits, Bonuses and Plenty of Overtime if you want it. Clean Criminal Record & Drivers License are required. Drug Free Environment. SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY Call 443-497-1953
Multi-talented Newspaper Reporter Ever-growing weekly newspaper with strong ties to the community is looking for a versatile reporter with writing and reporting skills, and a passion for sports. Duties include news, sports, business and feature writing, along with photography. Quark® experience is a plus. Full-time position with some nights and weekends. Send resume and writing samples to weekly.newspaper.job@gmail.com
---Work At The BEACH... Work With The BEST!!
Top wages, excellent benefits package and free employee meal available to successful candidates.
Employment Opportunities:
Year Round, Full/Part Time: Room Attendant (Van will pick up in Salisbury), Housekeeping House Staff, AM Food Runner, Banquet Server, Bartender
Free Employee Meals and Great Benefits. Clarion Resort Fontainebleau Hotel Attn: Human Resources Dept. 10100 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, MD 21842 Phone: 410-524-3535 Fax: 410-723-9109 EOE M/F/D/V
SELL REAL ESTATE AT THE BEACH Interested in a career in Real Estate?
Coldwell Banker School of Real Estate is offering Licensing Classes Now SPACE IS LIMITED
Contact Kelley Bjorkland at 410-723-6063 or kelley.bjorkland@cbmove.com or visit www.CBRBSchool.com Nothing in this document is intended to create an employment relationship. Any affiliation by you with the Company is intended to be that of an independent contractor agent. Owned and Operated by NRT LLC
Hiring RN’s & GNA’s
All shifts. Please stop by to fill out an applications or fax your resume to 410-6410328. No phone calls, please. Come and find out why we are the area’s only CMS 5-Star rated skilled nursing facility.
Experienced Tree Climber
Busy northern Worcester County tree company has an immediate opening for an experienced tree climber. Must have experience in removals, trimming, rigging and bucket operator. MUST have valid driver’s license and be able to pass DOT physical and drug test. Call Jeff 443-235-0915.
RENTALS RENTALS
Waterfront Rental - 2BR/ 2BA - Unfurnished Mobile Home located at 11212 Gum Point Road. $750/monthly plus utilities. Call 410-4309797. Winter Rental. Large Master BR w/private bath. Share common areas. No pets. Smoke outside. All utilities included. $125/wk. 443-8802486
RENTALS
North OC 1BR Condo. Partially furnished. Non-smoker. No pets. $650 for winter. $800 YR. 443-783-4554
2BR/1.5BA Mobile in Bishopville. Unfurnished. No pets/ no smoking. Includes heat and air. $1,000. Call Howard Martin Realty 410-3525555. YR, 2BR Condo, 142nd St. Available now! $975/mo. + utils. Winter Rental - 2BR/ 2BA 142nd St. $500/mo. + utils. Call John 410-7268948.
Winter Rental - OC Maryland. 2BR/2BA Bayfront 39th St. $650/mo. + util. & sec. dep. Top floor available now. No smoking/pets. 703-9698485
3BR/2BA Remodeled Mobile. Waterfront. $1,000/mo. Not including utilities. Call Howard Martin Realty, 410352-5555. WINTER WEEKLY RENTALS Pool Front Rooms $170. Efficiencies $190. 2BR Apartments $275. Burgundy Inn 1210 Philadelphia Ave. 410-289-8581
WEEKLY • SEASONAL
R E N TA L S
Maryland 800.633.1000 Delaware 800.442.5626 VA C AT I O N S
cbvacations.com OPERATED BY A SUBSIDIARY OF NRT LLC
YR - MIDTOWN OCEANBLOCK First Floor 3BR, 1.5BA Beautifully renovated New appl.’s & hardwood floors. No pets. Ref’s & Sec. Dep. Req. $1095 per mo. Victor 410-422-5164
APARTMENTS FOR RENT *2BR, WOC, YR $1000/mo. *1BR, YR, Berlin $1000/mo. *1BR YR, Berlin $800/mo. *3BR House, YR, Bay Street $800/mo. *2BR, WR, Downtown OC $600-800/mo. For more information 443-614-4007
Apartments Starting at $675 Single Family Homes Starting at $995 Condos Starting at $975 CALL US TODAY! 410-208-9200
Open 7 Days A Week for property viewing in: * Berlin * Ocean City * * Ocean Pines * * Snow Hill *
RENTALS
2BR/2BA Fully Remodeled, Bright Furnished House in WOC. Near Harbor. Potential studio in loft. Vaulted ceilings, fireplace & deck. Optional Y/R $1230/month includes water. 240-620-3040
YR, Oceanside, Mid-Town, 4BR/1BA Apt. - Ocean view, plenty of parking. Great location! $1250/mo. + utils. 1 mo. sec. deposit req’d. 443-8802486 YR, Large 5BR/4BA Apt. Off 104th St., $1600/mo. + utils. 1 mo. sec. deposit req’d. Sleeps 12. Walking distance to stores and mall. 443-8802486 OC Winter Rental - 1 Bedroom Efficiency Apt., 47th St., fully furnished. $750/mo. Utilities and cable included. 443506-2738
RAMBLER MOTEL 9942 Elm Street, WOC (Behind Starbucks) Sleeps 4, $175 per week Manager onsite 410-213-1764
Yearly & Seasonal Rentals We Welcome Pets 7700 Coastal Hwy 410-289-8888 www.holidayoc.com
ROOMMATES ROOMMATES
YR/Seasonal OP House. 2 rooms available. Shared bath $550/mo. Includes utilities/ WiFi. Just move in. Pets ok. No smoking. Professional females. 410-208-3570 Own Spacious Room w/bath in upscale home in SOP. $450/mo. Security and half utilities. Text if interested 443-727-9018.
HOUSE SHARE HOUSE TO TO SHARE
Ocean View, Delaware. Room to share in a clean, modern 3BR/2.5BA. 60” TV, WiFi + all utilities included. $450/mo. Short-term ok. 443-669-3303
REAL ESTATE
Salisbury 3BR/1.5BA. Fully Remodeled 2-story w/basement. $129,900. New HVAC, fully hardwood flooring, W/D, deck, FP, cedar closet, garage. Request photos - a must see! 240-6203040 Direct Bayfront - For Sale By Owner. Fish from your dock, deep-water boatlift spectacular sunsets. Bayshore Drive townhouse: 1,400 sq. ft., two-stories, two bdrms., two baths, gas fireplace, den and many other upgrades. No HOA or condo fees. $399,900. By appointment only. Call Buddy Dykes (licensed Realtor) 443-6954324.
FOR SALE FOR SALE BY OWNER BY OWNER
3BR/2BA Rancher in OP South. 1 car garage. Shed, deck, corner lot. $198,900 OBO. 410-924-6634
COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL
Office/Retail in WOC. 926 sq. feet on Rt. 50. Next to the UPS store. $850/mo. rent, plus utilities. Howard Martin Realty 410-352-5555.
2 Office/Retail Spaces & 3 Warehouse Units available in West Ocean City. Call 443497-4200.
SERVICES SERVICES
No time to walk dog/clean a room? Don’t want to rake leaves? No job too small. Reliable. Call Lisa 443-7279018. Bishopville Movers Inc. Fast, reliable service. 410-352-5555
DONATIONS DONATIONS
Do you have an old bicycle not being used? It could mean a world of difference to a hard-working international student. We are looking to get as many bikes as possible. Your donation will be taxdeductible. Contact Gary at 410-726-1051.
Classifieds 410-723-6397
www.baysideoc.com www.oceancitytoday.net
FURNITURE
JUMPIN’ JACK FLASH
FURNITURE WAREHOUSE -- NEW AND USED Pick-Up & Delivery Available
410-250-7000
146th Street, Ocean City
Now you can order your classifieds online
PAGE 58
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
CLASSIFIED AD NETWORK
Serving the Newspapers of Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia since 1908.
MARYLAND STATEWIDE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING NETWORK
AUTOMOBILE DONATIONS
DONATE AUTOS, TRUCKS, RV'S. LUTHERAN MISSION SOCIETY. Your donation helps local families with food, clothing, shelter, counseling. Tax deductible. MVA License #W1044. 410-636-0123 or www.LutheranMissionSociety.org BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Drive traffic to your business and reach 4.1 million readers with just one phone call & one bill. See your business ad in 91 newspapers in Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia for just $495.00 per ad placement. The value of newspapers advertising HAS NEVER BEEN STRONGER … call 1-855-721-6332 x 6 today to place your ad before 4.1 million readers. Email Wanda Smith @ wsmith@mddcpress.com or visit our website at www.mddcpress.com.
BUSINESS SERVICES Place your ad on Facebook; Twitter; LinkedIN and Google Ads Words through MDDC’s Social Media Ad Network; Call today to find out maximize your presence on Social Media; 410-212-0616; or email Wanda Smith @ wsmith@mddcpress.com
LOTS & ACREAGE
GREAT MTN. LAND SALE 5.3AC. WAS $64,900 NOW $49,900 CLOSE TO TOWN/ NEAR LAKE CABIN SHELL $26,000 Rare chance to own private one of a kind Land with Mtn. views perfect for camp, build ATV, retire, recreation abounds on this mix of Open and wooded rolling land. New perc, elec, Survey. No time to build. Excellent financing. CONTACT OWNER 800-888-1262
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Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 59
Calendar Submit calendar items to: editor@oceancitytoday.net. Submission deadline is 5 p.m. Monday, the week of publication. Local submissions have priority. Area event listings are subject to space availability.
FRI. Jan. 1
SAT. Jan. 2
MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL’S ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE — Performing Arts Center,
WRITE IT! CREATIVE WRITING FORUM —
Ocean City convention center, 4001 Coastal Highway, 1-3 p.m. Joining the community event will be exhibits from various town departments including the Ocean City Police, Fire, Emergency Services and Beach Patrol, as well as partnering community agencies and organizations. Mayor Meehan and City Council members will be on hand to greet visitors. Also, musical performances. Info: Jessica Waters, 410-2898967.
PENGUIN SWIM — Princess Royale, 9100 Coastal Highway, Ocean City. Celebrate New Year’s Day by “getting wet for a good cause.” An annual dip into the chilly Atlantic Ocean to benefit Atlantic General Hospital. Registration and check-in begin at 11:30 a.m. with a 1 p.m. swim. Pre-registration and advance check-in from 2-4 p.m. on New Year’s Eve. Enjoy carnival games and other exciting fanfare in the hotel’s atrium. Special recognition for Best Costume and Oldest and Youngest Penguins, plus first, second and third place trophies awarded for top fundraising individuals and teams. Info: www.aghpenguinswim.org or penguinswim@atlanticgeneral.org.
Berlin library, 220 N. Main St., 10 a.m. Novice and experienced writers gather to share their writing projects. Info: 410641-0650.
FAMILY GAME DAY — Pocomoke library, 301 Market St., 10 a.m. to noon. Classic family fun board games … giant sized. For all ages. Info: 410-957-0878.
MODEL TRAIN DISPLAYS — Delaware Seaside Railroad Club, Clayton Crossing, 32422 Royal Blvd., Dagsboro, Del., Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., year round. See five layouts. Info: Bill Ziegler, wjziegler1@verizon.net or 302-5370964.
PANCAKE BREAKFAST — VFW, Post 8296, 104 66th St., bayside in Ocean City, 8-11 a.m. A $5 donation for all-you-can-eat pancakes or 2-2-2, two eggs, two pancakes and two bacon slices. Info: 410524-8196.
FARMERS MARKET — White Horse Park, 239 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Locally grown vegetables and fruits, eggs, honey, kettle korn, flowers, artisan breads, seafood, meats and more. New vendors welcome. Info: 410641-7717, Ext. 3006.
SUN. Jan. 3
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS — Atlantic General Hospital, Conference Room 2, 9733 Healthway Drive, Berlin, noon to 1 p.m. Group shares experience, strength and hope to help others. Open to the community and to AGH patients. Info: Rob, 443-783-3529.
pressure screening and health information. Info: Dawn Denton, 410-6419268.
TAKE OFF POUNDS SENSIBLY MEETING — Berlin group No. 169, Atlantic Gen-
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS #169 — At-
eral Hospital, conference room 1, 9733 Healthway Drive, Berlin, 5-6:30 p.m. TOPS is a support and educational group promoting weight loss and healthy lifestyle. It meets weekly. Info: Edna Berkey, 410-251-2083.
SUNDAY NIGHT SERENITY AL-ANON FAMILY GROUP MEETING — Woodlands in
CPAP MASK FITTING — Atlantic General
lantic General Hospital, Conference Room 1, 9733 Healthway Drive, Berlin, 2:30-3:30 p.m. Group is a 12-step program for anyone struggling with a compulsive eating problem. No initial meeting charge. Meeting contribution is $1 weekly. Info: Bett, 410-202-9078. Ocean Pines, Independent Living Apartment Building, 1135 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines, 7:30 p.m.
MON. Jan. 4
AARP MEETING — Ocean Pines Commu-
nity Center, 235 Ocean Parkway. Social time at 9:30 a.m., meeting at 10 a.m. Speaker will be Kim Richardson from Home Instead Senior Care. Take a can of food for Sarah’s Pantry. Info: Larry Walton, 443-831-1791 or lrwalto@yahoo.com.
HYPERTENSION CLINICS — Sponsored
by Atlantic General Hospital and takes place the first Monday of every month at Apple Discount Drugs, 314 Franklin Ave., in Berlin, 10 a.m. to noon and at Walgreens, 11310 Manklin Creek Rd., in Ocean Pines, 1-3 p.m. Free blood
DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP — St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, 405 Flower St., Berlin, first Monday of each month, 6-7 p.m. Speakers and education related to Diabetes. Open to the public. Info: AGH Diabetes Outpatient Education program, 410-641-9703. Hospital Sleep Disorders Diagnostic Center, 9733 Healthway Drive, Berlin. Free, monthly mask fitting clinic for patients who are having trouble adjusting to their CPAP equipment. By appointment only: Robin Rohlfing, 410-6419726.
GRIEF SUPPORT WORKSHOP — Atlantic General Hospital is offering this free workshop on Mondays from Jan. 4 through Feb. 8 from 2:30-4 p.m. Facilitated by experienced Pastoral and Supportive Care Services leaders. Register: Gail Mansell, 410-641-9725.
IPAD CHICKS - BEGINNERS — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 10 a.m. to noon. Explore the world of iPads while learning from each other. Register: Norma Kessler, 410-641-7017. (Men welcome.)
Continued on Page 60
PACKAGES FOR TROOPS American Legion Post #166 Commander Sarge Garlitz, back row, right, and other American Legion members join Stephen Decatur High School club representatives during the third annual presentation of Packages for Our Troops. SDHS students and faculty members collected various toiletries and other amenities for military and presented them on Veterans Day.
PAGE 60
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
CALENDAR Continued from Page 59 GREAT BOOKS DISCUSSION — Ocean
Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 2:30-4 p.m. The group meets twice a month to discuss both classic and modern reading selections. Info: Lisa Outten Harrison, 410-632-3970.
SOCIAL 1 1/2 — Bethany United
Atlantic General Hospital and takes place the first Wednesday of every month at Rite Aid, 10119 Old Ocean City Blvd., in Berlin, 10 a.m. to noon and at Rite Aid, 11011 Manklin Creek Road in Ocean Pines, 1-3 p.m. Free blood pressure screening and health information. Info: Dawn Denton, 410-641-9268.
Methodist Church, 8648 Stephen Decatur Highway, Berlin, Mondays, 6:30-8 p.m. Christian social club for those 50 and older are welcome to enjoy games, activities, bike rides, prayer and friendship. Info: 410-641-2136 or Bethany21811@gmail.com.
DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 7-8 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month. Speaker and education related to Diabetes. All welcome. Info: AGH Diabetes Outpatient Education program, 410-641-9703.
DELMARVA SWEET ADELINE CHORUS MEETS WEEKLY — The Delmarva Chorus,
Ocean City library, 10003 Coastal Highway, 10:30 a.m. Create rockets, hovercrafts and space rovers. For 3 to 7 year old children. Info: www.worcesterlibrary.org or 410-524-1818.
Sweet Adeline’s, meets each Monday from 7-9 p.m., at the Ocean Pines Community Center, 239 Ocean Parkway. Women interested in learning the craft of a cappella singing welcome. Info: 410641-6876.
TUES. Jan. 5
HYPERTENSION CLINICS — Sponsored by
Atlantic General Hospital and takes place at Rite Aid, 38169 Dupont Blvd., Selbyville, Del., 10 a.m. to noon and at Walgreens, 34960 Atlantic Ave. #2, Clarksville, Del., 1-3 p.m. Free blood pressure screening and health information. Info: Dawn Denton, 410-641-9268.
STORY TIME ‘PETS’ — Berlin library, 220
N. Main St., 10:30 a.m. For 2 to 5 year old children. Info: www.worcesterlibrary.org or 410-641-0650.
Pocomoke library, 301 Market St., 10:30 a.m. Create rockets, hovercrafts and space rovers. For 3 to 7 year old children. Info: www.worcesterlibrary.org or 410-957-0878.
YOUNG & RESTLESS ‘SPACE TRAVEL’ —
Berlin group 331, Worcester County Health Center, 9730 Healthway Drive, Berlin, 5:30-7 p.m. TOPS is a support and educational group promoting weight loss and healthy lifestyle. It meets weekly. Info: jeanduck47@gmail.com.
TAKE OFF POUNDS SENSIBLY MEETING -
ON YOUR OWN, BUT NOT ALONE - WOC
Fitness, 12319 Ocean Gateway, West Ocean City, 5 p.m. Weight loss support group with discussions about nutrition, exercise, health and weight loss. Cost is $5 per meeting. Info: dillon128@aol.com.
WED. Jan. 6 GRACE PARKER ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT BREAKFAST — First Presbyterian Church, 1301
Philadelphia Ave., Ocean City, 7 a.m. to noon. Eggs any style, pancakes, buckwheat pancakes, sausage, country ham, homemade biscuits, hash brown potatoes, grits, coffee and tea. Cost is $8 to eat in and $6 to carry out. Milk, soda and orange juice available. Info: 410-289-9340.
HYPERTENSION CLINICS — Sponsored by
YOUNG & RESTLESS ‘SPACE TRAVEL’ —
MIX IT UP! — Pocomoke library, 301
Market St., 2 p.m. Have fun producing today’s creative looks with mixed media. Wear an old shirt or apron. Supplies provided. Register: 410-957-0878.
E-READERS AND THE LIBRARY — Berlin library, 220 N. Main St., 2 p.m. Get free digital content. Bring your library card and tablet or e-reader to start downloading immediately. Info: 410-641-0650. MODEL TRAIN DISPLAYS — Delaware Seaside Railroad Club, Clayton Crossing, 32422 Royal Blvd., Dagsboro, Del., Wednesdays, 5-8 p.m., year round. See five layouts. Info: Bill Ziegler, wjziegler1@verizon.net or 302-5370964.
BINGO — Every Wednesday at Ocean
City Elks Lodge 2645, 138th Street and Sinepuxent Avenue, rear of the Fenwick Inn. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., games start 6:30 p.m. Food is available. Open to the public. No one allowed in the hall under 18 years of age during bingo. Info: 410-250-2645.
DELMARVA HAND DANCE CLUB — Meets every Wednesday at Peaky’s Rooftop Restaurant & Bar, located in the Fenwick Inn, 13801 Coastal Highway, Ocean City. Beginner and intermediate lessons, 5:30-6:30 p.m., followed by dancing 6:30-9 p.m. Jitterbug, swing, cha-cha to the sounds of the ’50s, ’60s and Carolina beach music. All are welcome. Info: 302200-DANCE (3262). KIWANIS CLUB OF GREATER OCEAN PINES/OCEAN CITY — Meets every
Wednesday at the Ocean Pines Community Center, 235 Ocean Parkway. Doors open at 7 a.m., meeting begins at 8 a.m. Info: 410-641-7330 or www.kiwanisofopoc.org.
BAYSIDE BEGINNINGS AL-ANON FAMILY GROUP MEETING — Ocean Pines Community Center, 235 Ocean Parkway, 7:30 p.m.
OCEAN CITY/BERLIN ROTARY CLUB MEETING — Captain’s Table Restaurant in the Courtyard by Marriott, 2 15th St, Ocean City, 6 p.m. Info: 410-641-1700 or
kbates@taylorbank.com.
ON YOUR OWN, BUT NOT ALONE - WOC
Fitness, 12319 Ocean Gateway, West Ocean City, noon. Weight loss support group with discussions about nutrition, exercise, health and weight loss. Cost is $5 per meeting. Info: dillon128@aol.com.
THURS. Jan. 7 WOMEN’S CLUB OF OCEAN PINES MEETING — Ocean Pines Community Center,
235 Ocean Parkway, 10 a.m. to noon. Speaker will be Dr. Tracy Rush, who provides professional chiropractic care in Berlin. Light refreshments served and 50/50 raffle. Info: Dianna Bolyard, 410208-9326.
PLAY TIME — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 10:30-11:30 a.m. For infant to 5 year old children. Info: www.worcesterlibrary.org or 410-2084014.
STORY TIME ‘ROBOTS’ — Snow Hill library, 307 N. Washington St., 10:30 a.m. For 2 to 5 year old children. Info: www.worcesterlibrary.org or 410-6323495.
ZUMBA — Pocomoke library, 301 Market St., 1 p.m., Thursdays, Jan. 7-28. Get your groove on and get fit. Register: 410-957-0878.
FARMERS’ MARKET — 10019 Old Ocean
City Blvd., Berlin, 3-6 p.m. Featuring local in season produce, gluten free and gluten full baked products, eggs, honey, kettle korn, natural pet treats, soaps and more. Info: 410-713-8803.
BEACH SINGLES — Every Thursday,
Beach Singles 45-Plus meets for happy hour at Harpoon Hanna’s, 39064 Harpoon Road, Fenwick Island, Del., 4 p.m. Info: Arlene, 302-436-9577; Kate, 410524-0649; or Dianne, 302-541-4642.
CHAIR AEROBICS — St. Peter’s Lutheran Church Community Life Center, 10301 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, 1-2 p.m. Free will offering appreciated. Sponsored by St. Peter’s Senior Adult Ministry. Info: 410-524-7474. COASTAL HOSPICE GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP — Ocean Pines library, 11107
Cathell Road, 11 a.m. Free and open to anyone who has lost a loved one, not just Coastal Hospice families. Info: 410-2518163.
ONGOING EVENTS
WINTERFEST OF LIGHTS — More than one million holiday lights throughout Ocean City, Nov. 19 through Jan 3, 2016. The heated Winterfest Village Pavilion at Northside Park, 200 125th St., features hot chocolate, the Yukon Cornelius gift shop, photos with Santa and the Winterfest Express. Tour the hundreds of animated, lighted displays. Cost is $5 for adults, children 12 and younger ride free. Hours are Sunday through Thurs-
day, 5:30-9:30 p.m. and Friday and Saturday, 5:30-10:30 p.m. Info: 800-6262326, 410-250-0125 or www.ococean.com.
DIGITAL DROP IN — Berlin library, 220 N. Main St., during January. Get help with your new e-reader or tablet. Drop in anytime, any day or schedule an individual tutorial: 410-641-0650. MAKE AND TAKE CRAFTS — Ocean City library, 10003 Coastal Highway, all through January. The Craft Cart contains supplies to make: picture frames, jewelry and other artwork. Make what you like and take what you make. For teens. Info: 410-524-1818.
WSW SUPPORT GROUP — OC Office, 12216 Ocean Gateway, Unit 1500, West Ocean City, 1 p.m., third Wednesday of each month. Info: Mary Henderson, 410-213-1177. FRIDAY NIGHT SERVICES — Temple Bat
Yam, 11036 Worcester Highway, Berlin, every Friday, 7:30 p.m. A reform Jewish Synagogue. Info: 410-641-4311.
MENTAL HEALTH SUPPORT & ADVOCACY GROUP — St. Peter’s Lutheran Church, 10301 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, noon to 1:30 p.m. on the second and fourth Fridays of every month. Info: 410-524-7474.
WORCESTER COUNTY PARKINSON’S SUPPORT GROUP — Ocean Pines library,
11107 Cathell Road, second Tuesday of each month, 2:30 p.m. Speakers, exercise, discussions and more. Info: 410208-3132.
STAR CHARITIES MEETING — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 10 a.m., on the first Friday of each month. Meeting of volunteers. Info: Anna Foultz, 410641-7667.
Pine’eer Craft and Gift Shop, White Horse Park, 239 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines. Shop will be open every Saturday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and every Sunday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Featuring the latest creations by members of the Pine’eer Craft Club.
PINE’EER CRAFT AND GIFT SHOP OPEN —
OCVFC LADIES AUXILIARY — The group meets monthly on the first Monday at 7 p.m. at the West Ocean City Fire Station, second floor, Keyser Point Road. New members welcome. Info: Denise, 443-3592014 or any Ladies Auxiliary member. Crossword answers from page 51
Ocean City Today
JANUARY 1, 2016
PAGE 61
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SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 734 OCEAN PKWY. BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Timothy E. Huntsberry, dated February 23, 2009 and recorded in Liber 5212, folio 190 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 15, 2016 AT 1:15 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with the buildings and improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Tax ID #03040410 and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, which is improved by a dwelling, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $28,000 by cash or certified check. Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co. Interest to be paid on the unpaid purchase money at the rate pursuant to the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received in the office of the Sub. Trustees. There will be no abatement of interest in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement or if settlement is delayed for any reason. The noteholder shall not be obligated to pay interest if it is the purchaser. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of all real property taxes, including agricultural taxes, if applicable, and any and all public and/or private charges or assessments, including water/sewer charges and ground rent, to be adjusted to date of sale and thereafter assumed by purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale forward. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale forward. Additional terms to be announced at the time of sale. If the Sub. Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law and equity shall be limited to a re-
fund of the deposit without interest. If the purchaser fails to go to settlement, the deposit shall be forfeited, to the Trustees for application against all expenses, attorney’s fees and the full commission on the sale price of the above-scheduled foreclosure sale. In the event of default, all expenses of this sale (including attorney’s fees and the full commission on the gross sale price of this sale) shall be charged against and paid out of the forfeited deposit. The Trustees may then re-advertise and resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser or may avail themselves of any legal or equitable remedies against the defaulting purchaser without reselling the property. In the event of a resale, the defaulting purchaser shall not be entitled to receive the surplus, if any, even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulting purchaser and the defaulting purchaser shall be liable to the Trustees and secured party for reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in connection with all litigation involving the Property or the proceeds of the resale. Trustees’ file number 59232. Diane S. Rosenberg, Mark D. Meyer, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 www.alexcooper.com OCD-12/31/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY AND ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON 406 MAPLE ST. POCOMOKE CITY, MD 21851 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust dated November 30, 2006 and recorded in Liber 4832, Folio 190 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, with an original principal balance of $68,250.00 and an original interest rate of 4.27% default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 19, 2016 AT 3:30 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any buildings or improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $8,000
in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale. The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within ten days of ratification, subject to order of court, purchaser agrees that property will be resold and entire deposit retained by Sub Trustees as liquidated damages for all losses occasioned by the purchaser’s default and purchaser shall have no further liability. The defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulted purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit without interest. PLEASE CONSULT WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M. Ward, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204
410-828-4838 OCD-12/31/3t _________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 731 ANCHOR CHAIN RD. OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Sylwester W. Dabrowski a/k/a Slyvester W. Dabrowski, dated October 30, 2006 and recorded in Liber 4866, folio 408 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof and at the request of the parties secured thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 11, 2016 AT 3:02 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., Maryland and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions, easements, encumbrances and agreements of record affecting the subject property, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the form of cashier’s or certified check, or in such other form as the Substitute Trustees may determine, at their sole discretion, for $35,000 at the time of sale. If the noteholder and/or servicer is the successful bidder, the deposit requirement is waived. Balance of the purchase price is to be paid within fifteen (15) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., Maryland. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase price at the rate of 5% per annum from date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees, if the property is purchased by an entity other than the noteholder and/or servicer. If payment of the balance does not occur within fifteen days of ratification, the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, and all other public charges and assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges, and front foot benefit charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current year to the date of sale, and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners as-
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PUBLIC NOTICES sociation dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale. The purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of the ground rent escrow, if required. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes, and all settlement charges shall be borne by the purchaser. If the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit to the purchaser. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against the Substitute Trustees. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume the risk of loss for the property immediately after the sale. (Matter #15-613623) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 609 MARKET ST. POCOMOKE CITY, MD 21851 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Paula Jenkins and Cleveland Jenkins a/k/a Cleveland S. Jenkins, dated May 9, 2006 and recorded in Liber 4703, folio 176 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof and at the request of the parties secured thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 11, 2016 AT 3:03 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., Maryland and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions, easements, encumbrances and agreements of record affecting the subject property, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the form of cashier’s or certified check, or in such other form as the Substitute Trustees may determine, at their sole discretion, for $26,000 at the time of sale. If the noteholder and/or servicer is the successful bidder, the deposit requirement is waived. Balance of the purchase price is to be
paid within fifteen (15) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., Maryland. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase price at the rate of 6.25% per annum from date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees, if the property is purchased by an entity other than the noteholder and/or servicer. If payment of the balance does not occur within fifteen days of ratification, the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, and all other public charges and assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges, and front foot benefit charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current year to the date of sale, and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale. The purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of the ground rent escrow, if required. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes, and all settlement charges shall be borne by the purchaser. If the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit to the purchaser. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against the Substitute Trustees. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume the risk of loss for the property immediately after the sale. (Matter #2013-36853) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 11 142ND ST., UNIT #315 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Yolanda B. Mandley and Vincent E. Mandley, dated June 8, 2012 and recorded in Liber 5946, folio 240 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof and at the request of the parties secured thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the Circuit Court for
Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 11, 2016 AT 3:04 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., Maryland and described as Unit No. 315 in Phase III, in “Hawaiian Village Condominium” and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions, easements, encumbrances and agreements of record affecting the subject property, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the form of cashier’s or certified check, or in such other form as the Substitute Trustees may determine, at their sole discretion, for $37,000 at the time of sale. If the noteholder and/or servicer is the successful bidder, the deposit requirement is waived. Balance of the purchase price is to be paid within fifteen (15) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., Maryland. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase price at the rate of 5% per annum from date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees, if the property is purchased by an entity other than the noteholder and/or servicer. If payment of the balance does not occur within fifteen days of ratification, the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, and all other public charges and assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges, and front foot benefit charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current year to the date of sale, and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale. The purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of the ground rent escrow, if required. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes, and all settlement charges shall be borne by the purchaser. If the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit to the purchaser. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against the Substitute Trustees. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume the risk of loss for the property immediately after the sale. (Matter #15-612957) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC.
908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ Rosenberg & Associates, LLC 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 (301) 907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 12917 LAKE AVE. OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from James D. Fletcher, dated November 10, 2010 and recorded in Liber 5576, folio 368 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 8, 2016 AT 1:05 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with the buildings and improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Tax ID #10-008689 and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, which is improved by a dwelling, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $20,000 by cash or certified check. Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co. Interest to be paid on the unpaid purchase money at the rate pursuant to the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received in the office of the Sub. Trustees. There will be no abatement of interest in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement or if settlement is delayed for any reason. The noteholder shall not be obligated to pay interest if it is the purchaser. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of all real property taxes, including agricultural taxes, if applicable, and any and all public and/or private charges or assessments, including water/sewer charges and ground rent, to be adjusted to date of sale and thereafter assumed by purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale forward. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale forward. Additional terms to be announced at the
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PUBLIC NOTICES time of sale. If the Sub. Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law and equity shall be limited to a refund of the deposit without interest. If the purchaser fails to go to settlement, the deposit shall be forfeited, to the Trustees for application against all expenses, attorney’s fees and the full commission on the sale price of the above-scheduled foreclosure sale. In the event of default, all expenses of this sale (including attorney’s fees and the full commission on the gross sale price of this sale) shall be charged against and paid out of the forfeited deposit. The Trustees may then re-advertise and resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser or may avail themselves of any legal or equitable remedies against the defaulting purchaser without reselling the property. In the event of a resale, the defaulting purchaser shall not be entitled to receive the surplus, if any, even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulting purchaser and the defaulting purchaser shall be liable to the Trustees and secured party for reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in connection with all litigation involving the Property or the proceeds of the resale. Trustees’ file number 57354. Diane S. Rosenberg, Mark D. Meyer, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 www.alexcooper.com OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY AND ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON 10045 FRIENDSHIP RD. BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust dated March 25, 2004 and recorded in Liber 4077, Folio 427 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, with an original principal balance of $112,000.00 and an original interest rate of 5.875% default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 12, 2016 AT 3:30 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any buildings or improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold in an “as
is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $11,000 in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale. The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within ten days of ratification, subject to order of court, purchaser agrees that property will be resold and entire deposit retained by Sub Trustees as liquidated damages for all losses occasioned by the purchaser’s default and purchaser shall have no further liability. The defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulted purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit without interest. PLEASE CONSULT WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M.
Ward, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 706 TWIN TREE RD. OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Linda Young-Hedrick, dated August 5, 2003 and recorded in Liber 3835, folio 547 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof and at the request of the parties secured thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 11, 2016 AT 3:05 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., Maryland and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions, easements, encumbrances and agreements of record affecting the subject property, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the form of cashier’s or certified check, or in such other form as the Substitute Trustees may determine, at their sole discretion, for $11,000 at the time of sale. If the noteholder and/or servicer is the successful bidder, the deposit requirement is waived. Balance of the purchase price is to be paid within fifteen (15) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., Maryland. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase price at the rate of 5% per annum from date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees, if the property is purchased by an entity other than the noteholder and/or servicer. If payment of the balance does not occur within fifteen days of ratification, the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, and all other public charges and assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges, and front foot benefit charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current
year to the date of sale, and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale. The purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of the ground rent escrow, if required. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes, and all settlement charges shall be borne by the purchaser. If the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit to the purchaser. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against the Substitute Trustees. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume the risk of loss for the property immediately after the sale. (Matter #15-614632) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ COHN, GOLDBERG & DEUTSCH, LLC ATTORNEYS AT LAW 600 BALTIMORE AVENUE SUITE 208 TOWSON, MD 21204 410-296-2550 File #: 445898 Edward S. Cohn Stephen N. Goldberg Richard E. Solomon Richard J. Rogers Randall J. Rolls David W. Simpson, Jr. 600 Baltimore Avenue, Suite 208 Towson, MD 21204 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs v. Karl F. Baumann AND Cheryl L. Baumann 20 Fairhaven Court Ocean Pines, MD 21811 Defendants IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23-C-15-001015
NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 10th day of December, 2015, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings, made and reported, will be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 11th day of January, 2016, provided a copy of this notice be published in a newspaper of general circulation in Worcester County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 4th day of January, 2016. The Report of Sale states the amount of the foreclosure sale price to be $215,000.00. The property sold herein is known as 20 Fairhaven Court, Ocean Pines, MD 21811. Susan R. Braniecki
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PUBLIC NOTICES Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-12/17/3t _________________________________ Law Offices of Jeffrey Nadel 4041 Powder Mill Road, Suite 415 Calverton, Maryland 20705 240-473-5000 Jeffrey Nadel Scott Nadel 4041 Powder Mill Road, Suite 415 Calverton, MD 20705 Substitute Trustees Plaintiff v. Derrick S. Sieber 5001 Atlantic Avenue, Unit 202 Ocean City, MD 21842 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Civil No. 23-C-15-0543
will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 18th day of January, 2016, provided a copy of this NOTICE be inserted in some weekly newspaper printed in said County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 11th day of January, 2016. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $73,150.00. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ CHRISTOPHER T. WOODLEY ESQ. WILLIAMS, MOORE, SHOCKLEY & HARRISON 3509 COASTAL HIGHWAY P.O. BOX 739 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842
NOTICE
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given this 14th day of December, 2015, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings, made and reported, will be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 18th day of January, 2016, provided a copy of this notice be inserted in a weekly newspaper printed in said County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 11th day of January, 2016. The Report of Sale states the amount of the foreclosure sale price to be $260,000.00. The property sold herein is known as 5001 Atlantic Avenue, Unit 202, Ocean City, MD 21842. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-12/17/3t _________________________________
OF APPOINTMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS Estate No. 16281 TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF ROBERT RAY MANNING Notice is given that Stephen Patrick Manning, 82 Battersea Road, Berlin, MD 21811, was on December 15, 2015 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of Robert Ray Manning who died on October 15, 2015, with a will. Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal representative or the attorney. All persons having any objection to the appointment (or to the probate of the decedent’s will) shall file their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 15th day of June, 2016. Any person having a claim against the decedent must present the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before the earlier of the following dates: (1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the date of the decedent’s death; or (2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained from the Register of Wills. Stephen Patrick Manning Personal Representative True Test Copy Charlotte K. Cathell Register of Wills Worcester County
BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555 Carrie M. Ward, et al. 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. ANISHA M. WARRINGTON 909 Clarke Avenue Pocomoke City, MD 21851 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23C15001231
NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 16th day of December, 2015, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 909 Clarke Avenue, Pocomoke City, MD 21851, made and reported by the Substitute Trustee,
One W. Market Street Room 102 - Court House Snow Hill, MD 21863-1074 Name of newspaper designated by personal representative: Ocean City Digest Date of publication: December 24, 2015 OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555 Carrie M. Ward, et al. 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. WILLIAM A. FEARS 103 West Buckingham Road Berlin, MD 21811 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23C15000902
erty mentioned in these proceedings and described as 108 120th Street, Unit #816, a/k/a Unit #8, Ocean City, MD 21842, made and reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 18th day of January, 2016, provided a copy of this NOTICE be inserted in some weekly newspaper printed in said County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 11th day of January, 2016. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $137,600.00. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________ KATHRYN V. WESTBROOK ESQ. P.O. BOX 1109 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842
NOTICE
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given this 18th day of December, 2015, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 103 West Buckingham Road, Berlin, MD 21811, made and reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 18th day of January, 2016, provided a copy of this NOTICE be inserted in some weekly newspaper printed in said County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 11th day of January, 2016. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $83,000.00. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________
OF APPOINTMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS Estate No. 16344 TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF HAROLD JAMES HOLLOWAY JR. Notice is given that Barbara Ann Holloway, 8947 Libertytown Road, Berlin, MD 21811, was on December 17, 2015 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of Harold James Halloway Jr. who died on August 21, 2015, without a will. Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal representative or the attorney. All persons having any objection to the appointment (or to the probate of the decedent’s will) shall file their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 17th day of June, 2016. Any person having a claim against the decedent must present the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before the earlier of the following dates: (1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the date of the decedent’s death; or (2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained from the Register of Wills. Barbara Ann Holloway Personal Representative True Test Copy Charlotte K. Cathell Register of Wills
BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555 Carrie M. Ward, et al. 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. ANTHONY J. GAMBINO, JR. LYNNETTE A. GAMBINO 108 120th Street, Unit #816 a/k/a Unit #8 Ocean City, MD 21842 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23C14001215
NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 18th day of December, 2015, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the prop-
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PUBLIC NOTICES Worcester County One W. Market Street Room 102 - Court House Snow Hill, MD 21863-1074 Name of newspaper designated by personal representative: Ocean City Digest Date of publication: December 24, 2015 OCD-12/24/3t _________________________________
NOTICE
Atlantic Coastal Bays Critical Area, pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1-116(m), ZS 1-206(b)(2) and ZS 1305, and Natural Resources Article Sections NR 3-104(c)(4) and NR 3111, located at 13036 North Shore Road, at the southeast end of North Shore Road, Tax Map 22, Parcel 367, Lot 20 in the Tenth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS OCD-12/31/2t _________________________________
OF PUBLIC HEARING WORCESTER COUNTY BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS AGENDA
THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 2016 Pursuant to the provisions of the Worcester County Zoning Ordinance, notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held before the Board of Zoning Appeals for Worcester County, in the Board Room (Room 1102) on the first floor of the Worcester County Government Center, One West Market Street, Snow Hill, Maryland. 6:30 p.m. Case No. 15-50, on the application of Mark S. Cropper, Esquire, on behalf of and on the lands of the Johnson Family Trust requesting a special exception (transient use) for use of land to hold celebration functions and parties, in the A-1 Agricultural District, pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1-116(c)(3), ZS 1105(c)(5) & ZS 1-337(a), located at 7530 Cedartown Road, approximately 970 feet east of Double Bridges Road, Tax Map 56, Parcel 100, Lot 1, in the Second Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. 6:35 p.m. Case No. 16-2, on the lands of Francis Scott Key Motel, LLC requesting a special exception to expand non-conforming structures (cottage rental units) not to exceed fifty percent (50%) of the gross floor area and cubic content of the original units, associated with the proposed reconstruction of the eight cottages on property currently zoned R-3 Multifamily Residential District, and requesting a variance to the Ordinance prescribed left side yard setback of 6 feet to 5 feet (an encroachment of one foot), pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1116(c)(3), ZS 1-116(c)(4), ZS 1116(c)(5), ZS 1-207(b)(2), ZS 1-122(d)(1) and ZS 1-305, on property located at 9838 Elm Street, approximately 0.2 miles south of Ocean Gateway (SR 50), Tax Map 27, Parcel 207, Lots 16, 17, 18 and 19, in the Tenth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. 6:40 p.m. Case No. 16-1, on the application of Hugh Cropper IV, Esquire, on behalf of and on the lands of Ocean City Projects, LLC, requesting a variance to the Atlantic Coastal Bays Critical Area buffer regulations from 50 feet to 16.4 feet (an encroachment of 33.6 feet into the buffer management area), associated with a proposed single-family dwelling in the R-2 Suburban Residential District, classified as IDA Intensely Developed Area in the
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS BOARD OF PORT WARDENS Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 106, “Waterways,” Article II – “Shoreline Development” of the Code of the Town of Ocean City, Maryland, hereinafter referred to as the Code, same being the Port Wardens Ordinance of Ocean City, Maryland, notice is hereby given that public hearings will be conducted in the Council Chambers of City Hall located at 301 Baltimore Avenue, Ocean City, MD Thursday January 14, 2016 At 2:00 PM A request has been submitted to remove 10 mooring piles & replace with 10 mooring piles 6’ channel ward, relocate a 3’ x10’ tapered pier maximum 10’ channel ward. Located at 3701 Coastal Hwy Parcel # 4242 in the Town of OC, MD. Applicant: Coastal Compliance Solutions LLC Owner: Bradley on the Bay PW15-205 A request has been submitted to install one boatlift with all associated poles. Maximum channel ward extension of 25’.Located at 2818 Tern Dr. Slip 14 Parcel # 4717 in the Town of OC, MD. Applicant Hidden Oak Farms LLC Owner: David Sun PW15-206 A request has been submitted install 60’ +/- vinyl bulkhead with returns, remove floating dock & install 4 pole jetski lift, install 4 pole boatlift reconstruct 6’x11’ perpendicular pier, reconstruct 5’x40’ parallel dock replace existing boatlift with poles. Project to maintain existing channel ward distance 35’. Located at 300 Blue Heron Ct Parcel # 5313A in the Town of OC, MD. Applicant: Ocean City Boatlifts & Marine Construction Owner: Stephen Green PW15-207 A request has been submitted to install a 6 pole boatlift with associated poles in existing slip 45’ channel ward. Located at 411 14th St Slip 39 Parcel # 3486 in the Town of OC, MD. Applicant: Ocean City Boatlifts & Marine Construction Owner: Karen Osborne PW15-208 OCD-12/31/2t _________________________________
Town of Berlin
HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION January 13 2016– 5:15 PM Berlin Town Hall – Council Chambers 1. Call to Order 2. Agenda Adoption 3. Approval of Minutes: December 2, 2015 4. Calvin B. Taylor Bank24 N. Main Street – Case # 0113-16-1, Replacing windows 5. Robin Tomaselli- Berlin Arts & EntertainmentCase # 01-13-16-2, Community Mural @ Visitors Center 6. Layton & Colleen Bunting24 Broad StreetCase # 01-13-16-3, New Signage 7. Brian Robertson – 16 N. Main StreetCase # 01-13-16- 4, New Signage 8. Atlantic Hotel – 2 N. Main StreetCase # 01-13-16-5, Replace second floor windows with vinyl window 9. Comments from the Public 10. Comments from Staff 11. Comments from the Commissioners 12. Comments from the Chairman 13. Adjournment Any persons having questions about the above-referenced meeting or any persons needing special accommodations should contact Dave Engelhart at 410-641-4143. Written materials in alternate formats for persons with disabilities are made available upon request. TTY users dial 7-1-1 in the State of Maryland or 1-800-735-2258 outside Maryland. OCD-12/31/1t _________________________________
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PROPOSED EXPANSION OF THE OCEAN PINES SANITARY SERVICE AREA TO INCLUDE COMMUNITY CHURCH OF OCEAN PINES AND ST. JOHN NEUMANN CATHOLIC CHURCH FOR PUBLIC WATER AND SEWER SERVICE WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND The Worcester County Commissioners will hold a concurrent public hearing to consider proposed petitions to expand the Ocean Pines Sanitary Service Area for purposes of providing public water and sewer service to the Community Church of Ocean Pines and St. John Neumann Catholic Church more specifically described as follows: 1. The petition filed by Ms. Arlene Page on behalf of the Community Church of Ocean Pines for expansion of the Ocean Pines Sanitary Service Area to include the Community Church of Ocean Pines property located at 11227 Racetrack Road (MD Route 589) in Berlin, Maryland, which will be delineated on a service area map adopted by the County Commissioners. The sanitary service area expansion includes the follow-
ing parcel: Worcester County Tax Map 15, Parcel 239, Tax Account I.D. # 03-121941, located northwest of the current boundary of the Ocean Pines Sanitary Service Area. a. The petitioner is proposing that the sanitary services for the expanded area be provided by the purchase of nine (9) equivalent dwelling units (EDUs) of potable water and wastewater treatment capacity from the Ocean Pines Sanitary Service Area previously allocated to the property under County Commissioners’ Resolution No. 05-09, adopted on April 5, 2005, which approved the planning area expansion for the Greater Ocean Pines Service Area. 2. The petition filed by Ms. Sheila Zimmer on behalf of St. John Neumann Roman Catholic Church for expansion of the Ocean Pines Sanitary Service Area to include the St. John Neumann Roman Catholic Church property located east of Racetrack Road (MD Route 589) at 11211 Beauchamp Road in Berlin, Maryland, which will be delineated on a service area map adopted by the County Commissioners. The sanitary service area expansion includes the following parcel: Worcester County Tax Map 15, Parcel 230, Tax Account I.D. # 03-004317, located northwest of the current boundary of the Ocean Pines Sanitary Service Area. a. The petitioner is proposing that the sanitary services for the expanded area be provided by the purchase of three (3) equivalent dwelling units (EDUs) of potable water and wastewater treatment capacity from the Ocean Pines Sanitary Service Area previously allocated to the property under County Commissioners’ Resolution No. 05-09, adopted on April 5, 2005, which approved the planning area expansion for the Greater Ocean Pines Service Area. 3. The County Commissioners will evaluate the proposed expansions of the sanitary service area in accordance with the provisions of Section PW 5-305 of the Public Works Article of the Code of Public Local Laws of Worcester County, Maryland, the staff report and any matters related to Sections 1 and 2 above. The public hearing on these proposed petitions will be held on TUESDAY, JANUARY 5, 2016 at 10:30 A.M. in the COUNTY COMMISSIONERS MEETING ROOM ROOM 1101 GOVERNMENT CENTER ONE WEST MARKET STREET SNOW HILL, MARYLAND 21863 Copies of the staff report on the proposed petitions, and any associated documents, may be obtained from the Commissioners’ Office, Room 1103 (1st Floor) - Government Center, One West Market Street, Snow Hill, Maryland. These documents may be reviewed at the above address during the regular business hours of 8:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M., Monday through Friday (except Holidays). Anyone having questions should contact Robert Mitchell, Di-
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PUBLIC NOTICES rector of Environmental Programs, at 410-632-1220. All interested citizens are encouraged to attend the hearing and express their views on the proposed amendments and actions. Both written and oral testimony will be accepted. THE WORCESTER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OCD-12/24/2t _________________________________
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS TOWN OF OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 110 of the Code of Ocean City, Maryland, hereinafter referred to as the Code, same being the Zoning Ordinance for Ocean City, Maryland, notice is hereby given that public hearings will be conducted by the Board of Zoning Appeals for Ocean City, Maryland in the Council Chambers of City Hall located on Baltimore Avenue and Third Street, in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland on: THURSDAY, January 14, 2016 at 6:00 p.m. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 110-93(2), Powers, of the Code, an appeal has been filed pursuant to the provisions of Section 110-94(2)(b) requesting a special parking exception waiving the required five (5) parking spaces for use of five (5) additional motel rooms or waive the 600 foot maximum distance off-site requirement for use of additional parking at 2606 Philadelphia Ave. The site of this appeal is described as Lots 146, 147, 148,149, Parcel 4238 of the Neptune Dev - 4 Plat, further described as The Islander Motel and known locally as 2001 Philadelphia Ave and Lot 2, 3 and 11, Parcel 5889 of Block 78 for off-site parking further described as Fun Cycles and known locally as 2606 Philadelphia Ave, in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland. APPLICANT: KHEA LLC – (BZA 2445 15-09400014) 6:15 p.m. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 110-93(2), Powers, of the Code of Ocean City, Maryland. The appeal has been filed under the provisions of Section 110-94(2)(b) requesting a special exception to waive 1/2 parking spaces to allow interior renovations to existing efficiency unit. The site of the appeal is described as Parcel 5877, Lot 4, Block 78 and known locally as 2605 Baltimore Ave, Unit 12 in the Time and Tide Condominium in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland. APPLICANT: BROWN, PHILLIP R & CHRISTINE L – (BZA 2446 15-09400015) Further information concerning the public hearings may be examined in the office of the Department of Planning and Community Devel-
opment in City Hall. Alfred Harrison, Chairman Heather Stansbury, Attorney OCD-12/31/2t _________________________________
COMMISSIONERS OCD-12/31/2t _________________________________
NOTICE
OF INTRODUCTION OF BILL 15-14 WORCESTER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
OF INTRODUCTION OF BILL 15-13 WORCESTER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Take Notice that Bill 15-13 (Public Safety - Public Safety Radio Coverage Code) was introduced by Commissioners Bertino, Bunting, Church, Elder, Lockfaw, Mitrecic and Purnell on December 15, 2015. A fair summary of the bill is as follows: Public Safety Article - Subtitle II - Public Safety Emergency Radio Coverage. (Repeals and reenacts this Subtitle to update regulations regarding in-building emergency radio coverage in compliance with the International Building Code and the National Fire Protection Association Code and in conjunction with the Worcester County Emergency Radio System Replacement project; provides that these regulations shall be referred to as the “Worcester County Public Safety Radio Coverage Code”; defines the purpose and intent of this subtitle to ensure uninterrupted operation of Worcester County’s wireless communications systems and to provide that new buildings are constructed in a manner which does not interfere with Worcester County’s wireless communications network; defines the countywide scope of these regulations, including the municipalities, subject to modification within any municipality; provides for severability of this Subtitle to preserve the Subtitle as a whole should any section or provision be declared unconstitutional or invalid; assigns administration of this Subtitle to the Worcester County Department of Emergency Services and enforcement of this Subtitle to the appropriate building or fire code official; defines the terms and acronyms used in the Subtitle; establishes general provisions, including radio coverage determinations, qualifications of personnel, permit requirements, annual certifications and required notifications; and establishes violations and penalties for violating the provisions of this Subtitle, including misdemeanor violations, civil infractions, other remedies and defining offenders.) A Public Hearing will be held on Bill 15-13 at the Commissioners' Meeting Room, Room 1101 - Government Center, One West Market Street, Snow Hill, Maryland, on Tuesday, January 19, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. This is only a fair summary of the bill. A full copy of the bill is posted on the Legislative Bulletin Board in the main hall of the Worcester County Government Center outside Room 1103, is available for public inspection in Room 1103 of the Worcester County Government Center and is available on the County Website at http://www.co.worcester.md.us/commissioners/legsltn.aspx . THE WORCESTER COUNTY
NOTICE
Take Notice that Bill 15-14 (Zoning - Nonprofit Environmental Organization Offices in the E-1 Estate District) was introduced by Commissioners Bertino, Bunting, Church, Elder, Lockfaw, Mitrecic and Purnell on December 15, 2015. A fair summary of the bill is as follows: § ZS 1-203(c)(10). (Repeals and reenacts this subsection to permit by special exception in the E-1 Estate District nonprofit environmental conservation and land preservation organization offices in addition to public and private noncommercial cultural, social and recreational areas and centers, including parks, playgrounds, beaches, community centers, country clubs, swimming pools and golf courses but excluding summer camps, marinas and boat landings; establishes minimum lot requirements for lot area, lot width, and front, side and rear yard setbacks; requires all outdoor swimming pools, including outdoor deck and patio areas, and locker areas to be located at least two hundred feet from any perimeter property line or public road right-of-way.) A Public Hearing will be held on Bill 15-14 at the Commissioners' Meeting Room, Room 1101 - Government Center, One West Market Street, Snow Hill, Maryland, on Tuesday, January 19, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. This is only a fair summary of the bill. A full copy of the bill is posted on the Legislative Bulletin Board in the main hall of the Worcester County Government Center outside Room 1103, is available for public inspection in Room 1103 of the Worcester County Government Center and is available on the County Website at http://www.co.worcester.md.us/commissioners/legsltn.aspx . THE WORCESTER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OCD-12/31/2t _________________________________
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Planning and Zoning Commission. TOWN OF OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 110 of the Code of Ocean City, Maryland, hereinafter referred to as the Code, same being the Zoning Ordinance for Ocean City, Maryland, notice is hereby given that public hearings will be conducted by the Planning and Zoning Commission for Ocean City, Maryland in the Council Chambers of City Hall lo-
cated on Baltimore Avenue and Third Street, in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland on: Wednesday, January 20, 2016 at 7:00 PM PUBLIC HEARING ZONING CODE AMENDMENT – To consider amending section 110422 (3), Permitted Uses within MH, Mobile Home Residential Districts, to change the maximum 7/12 roof pitch to the maximum 9/12 roof pitch. APPLICANT: PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION – File #15-14100006 OCD-12/31/2t _________________________________
Town of Ocean City
BID SOLICITATION Northside Park Bridge Painting The Town of Ocean City is seeking bids from qualified and experienced vendors to prepare and paint the metal Lagoon Bridge located at Northside Park in conformity with the specifications detailed in the Bid Documents. Bid Documents for the Northside Park Bridge Painting may be obtained from the Town of Ocean City’s Procurement Department by either e-mailing the Purchasing Associate, Nicholas Rice, at nrice@oceancitymd.gov or by calling 410-723-6643 during normal business hours, or via the Bid tab on the Town’s website. Vendors are responsible for checking this website for addenda prior to submitting their bids. The Town of Ocean City is not responsible for the content of any Bid Document received through any third party bid service. It is the sole responsibility of the vendor to ensure the completeness and accuracy of their Completed Bid Documents. A pre-bid conference will be held in the Community Room at Northside Park located at 200 125th Street, Ocean City, MD 21842 on Thursday, February 4, 2016 at 10:00 a.m. The last day for questions will be noon on Tuesday, February 16, 2016. Sealed Bid Documents are due no later than Thursday, February 25, 2016 by 1:00 p.m. and will be opened and read aloud at the Procurement Department located at 204 65th Street, Bldg. A, Ocean City, Maryland 21842. Late Bid Documents will not be accepted. Minority vendors are encouraged to compete for award of the solicitation. OCD-12/31/1t _________________________________
LEGAL ADVERTISING
Call: 410-723-6397 ~ Fax: 410-723-6511 or E-mail: legals@oceancitytoday.net
Commentary
Pretty good year in a pretty good area
Any number of predictions might be made and myriad past issues explored as we enter the new year and consider what lies ahead, as well as what went right or wrong in 2015. That, however, would be a pointless exercise. In the grand scheme of things, our accomplishments outweighed our difficulties, which were insignificant as compared to those experienced elsewhere. We did not, in the coastal area, suffer any calamities or face any great struggles. By and large, we went about our business, did the best we could, disagreed or concurred, and continued to proceed in a relatively peaceful fashion. If we’re guilty of anything, it would be getting caught up in the moment and attaching too much importance to matters that would hardly alter the course of our existence. On the flip side, our communities continued the area’s long tradition of unparalleled generosity, donating hundreds of thousands of dollars to charity and community improvement efforts. In addition, most of our businesses did well in the past year as the economy continued its gradual climb back to normalcy, and more new shops, services and enterprises emerged unscathed from that critical first year of operations. In all, the good far outweighed the bad over the past 12 months, and there is no reason to think that won’t be the case in the year ahead. All in all, we have it pretty good here – good schools, good surroundings, a good economy and a good outlook – a circumstance that makes the matter of New Year forecasting a matter of looking for upsets in the local equilibrium or trying to find trouble where little exists. Consequently, our prediction for 2016 involves no guesswork. We’ll go through the year just as we have all the others and come out as we always do, which is much better off than most people. So relax, keep things in perspective and put a happy new year on your agenda.
Ocean City Today P.O. Box 3500, Ocean City, Md. 21843 Phone: 410-723-6397 / Fax: 410-723-6511.
EDITOR/PUBLISHER.......................... Stewart Dobson MANAGING EDITOR................................ Lisa Capitelli STAFF WRITERS .................. Zack Hoopes, Josh Davis, .............. Brian Gilliland, Kara Hallissey, Katie Tabeling ASSISTANT PUBLISHER .......................... Elaine Brady ACCOUNT MANAGERS ........ Mary Cooper, Shelby Shea CLASSIFIEDS/LEGALS MANAGER ...... Donna L. Moran SENIOR DESIGNER ................................ Susan Parks GRAPHIC ARTISTS................ Kelly Brown, Kaitlin Sowa .............................................................. Debbie Haas COMPTROLLER.................................. Christine Brown ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT ...................... Gini Tufts Ocean City Today is published weekly by FLAG Publications, Inc. at 8200 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, Md. 21842. Ocean City Today is available by subscription at $150 a year. Visit us on the Web at www.oceancitytoday.net.
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Letters to the editor Petition author sees problems
Editor, Although Mr. Hoopes was accurate in describing the petition’s return to circuit court, he made some errors in last week’s article that should be corrected: 1) In the Smallwood legal case that (City Solicitor Guy) Ayres uses to attempt to quash the petition, the majority of the court said the petitioners have a right to vote on their taxes. It was a right guaranteed under the Maryland Constitution. The Smallwood petitions went to public votes. Mr. Ayres, who has told everyone the O.C. petition is illegal and is trying to quash the petition, has based his legal argument on a case that sent two petitions to a public vote. 2) We believe our petition is legal and that the city had a requirement to put it up for a vote and didn’t. We have two laws in the Code of Maryland that say we are right. One is revealed in the Ayres complaint: Md. Code Local Government Section 4-305, requiring the city to put the petition up for a vote within 60 days; and one unique to municipal governance, not counties: Local Government, Article Title 4, Subtitle Mu-
nicipal Charter Amendment Section 4-306. 3) When Mayor (Rick) Meehan says that the litigation against the petition “is seeking a court opinion,” he is deceiving the voters. Mr. Hoopes does the truth no favors, either, when he parrots the mayor: “the state-level case opened by the city as an inquest into whether the ... ballot initiative was legal.” I can assure voters that the politicians are not seeking either an opinion or an inquest. They are seeking to dismiss or quash the petition in every instance, and are using taxpayers’ money to do it. These statements are misleading for voters. Every legal document filed by the city and paid for by the taxpayer has sought to dismiss or quash the petition. Mr. Ayres, despite what he says, will attempt to dismiss the petition again. I might add that as the son of a survivor of the Christian genocide in Turkey (1914– 1922), much like the children of holocaust survivors, I grew up with a heightened sensitivity to the personal loss of freedom due to government encroachment. This is not a republican or democrat position; it involves human rights and freedoms, which are nonpartisan for
me. As a matter of fact, the recent Supreme Court decision by Ginsberg best supports our position. For this reason, I and others are in this lawsuit to represent the Ocean City residents. Both sides are claiming they represent the voter, but we are the only ones who have about 1,500 voter signatures. Mayor, let’s be honest. Stop lying, please, and tell the truth. If the town wanted to “get the court’s opinion” as you claim, it could have done so at any time. We are not lawyers. We promised the almost 1,500 voters that signed the petition that they would have an opportunity, for the first time in Maryland history, to vote on their tax. We are doing our best. Please remember, folks, that the Mayor and four council members — Mary Knight, Doug Cymek, Dennis Dare, and Tony Deluca — who voted to kill the people’s petition by lawyer are running for reelection this year. The voters can repay the favor. Tony Christ Ocean City LETTERS TO THE EDITOR E-mail: editor@oceancitytoday.net Mail: Ocean City Today, P.O. Box 3500 Ocean City, Md. 21843 All letters are subject to editing for clarity and potentially libelous material
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PUBLIC EYE
Let’s resolve nothing YEAR IN REVIEW 2015 Teachers protest 2016 budget Ocean City Today
By Stewart Dobson Editor/Publisher I do not make New Year’s resolutions, having realized many years ago that each of us is born with a finite amount of resolve, so there’s no point in wasting it by trying to live up to a promise we didn’t really want to make. The way I see it, if whatever you promised to do truly was that important, you would not have waited until your By mind was fuzzy with a Stewart New Year’s Day hangDobson over to start doing it. For many of us, after all, New Year’s Day is one of those times when we swear to ourselves, “I’ll never do that again” only to realize two days later that there’s nothing to be gained by making a hasty decision. It stands to reason that if we are genetically coded to be a certain height, have a certain hair color, a certain level of intelligence and, for some of us, fragile leg hair that will rub off if you wear cowboy boots too long in life, we also have a pre-set amount of resolve. We have one nonrefillable tank of it, so I say it’s better to use it sparingly
in case something really important arises. Such as, being trapped down in a chasm between two giant boulders and the only way out is to chew off your leg. That would take a great deal of resolve, which you might not have if you used too much of it earlier in the year. I mean, there you are, wedged into the rocks tighter than a slice of ham in a vending machine sandwich, knowing that you will have to find the courage to do something awful to escape and then suddenly realize you’re a quart low on resolve because, “Wow, I sure picked the wrong year to give up gluten.” If you think I’m kidding, consider this: Ever wonder why old people will walk out in the street and appear to dare cars to hit them as they cross to the other side? They’re not being clueless or ever ornery, as many people contend, it’s that they have made too many resolutions over the years and therefore have nothing left with which to resolve not to get run over. They can’t help it. That’s why I prefer to play it safe and keep my resolutions to a minimum. This way, I don’t find myself in a situation that requires resolve I have squandered on meaningless things. After all, my little walks in traffic have been working out so far.
Continued from Page 26 defines as a master’s degree equivalent with an advanced professional certificate, Dorchester County will be left behind, because their salary info doesn’t match the qualifications Worcester uses. Until the very end of the published scale – steps 13 and up – Dorchester county teachers with master’s degrees earn more than Worcester teachers with an equivalent and advanced certificate. For the other counties, things begin to change around the step-seven mark. A Worcester teacher hired in 2005 would be on step seven instead of step 10. At step seven, the salary is $49,436 and step 10 is $53,190 in Worcester. Moving to either Wicomico or Somerset would earn that teacher $54,167 or $54,511, respectively. The decision is lucrative with or without the missed steps. Under these circumstances, Wicomico always pays a higher rate until step 15, where it stops at $65,939 for three steps and Worcester jumps from $65,629 to $71,285 between steps 15 and 16 alone. Somerset stays ahead of Worcester until step 13. With a master’s degree plus 30 graduate hours, with a very few exceptions, the salary earned because of the missing steps is always lower than it is in other counties. However, with the steps restored, Worcester County’s pay almost
JANUARY 1, 2016
always exceeds the other counties. The same holds true for teachers with a doctorate. Without the steps, other counties pay more than Worcester, but with the steps restored the salaries are almost always higher. Eventually, the teachers and government were able to sign a deal involving laying off about 30 support staff. The money raised from this and other cuts was able to make the teachers’ steps, and peace was once again restored. The money to pay for raises comes from property taxes, as they are the main revenue source for Worcester County government.For assessment purposes, the county is divided into three areas: Ocean City, the northeastern section of Worcester and the southern and western ends of the county. One of these areas is assessed each year, with the most attention necessarily given to Ocean City, area 1. Last year, Ocean City was reassessed, and both experts and officials believed it to be the start of a bona fide recovery on the shore. However, the numbers didn’t bear this out. The most recent release of estimated assessments still has the county moving in a positive direction, albeit slowly — the amount of the assessment increase multiplied by the current tax rate comes out to about $1.67 million in new revenue.
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