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DA I LY U P DAT E S AT G A Z E T T E . N E T
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
25 cents The Gazette
Former Army Ranger enters plea in ’06 death Judge allows Smith to be released after more than five years in prison
n
BY
VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Gaithersburg’s Kyle Craig, 14, portrays the “Where’s Waldo” character at the Gaithersburg Book Festival on Saturday morning in Gaithersburg.
Despite heat, rain, festival reads on Storm caused Gaithersburg event to close an hour early n
BY
SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER
burg Book Festival. According to Gaithersburg mayor and book festival founder Jud Ashman, the day’s events overall “went very well,” although some unforeseeable events caused some small issues. “It was our hottest book festival yet,” Ashman said. “It could have been worse and frankly I’m glad it held out as long as it did. It started storm-
other plans while three were unable to make it down from the northeast. A few others had to cancel last minute due to illness and personal reasons. “Our author programs were so well-received, even though we did have those couple snags. It really went well and everyone got good face-time with their favorite authors,” Ashman said.
ing around 5 [p.m.] or so and it caused us to have to shut everything down early.” In addition to the storm and heat, the May 12 Amtrak crash in Philadelphia, which shut down service between Philadelphia and New York City, impacted travel for a number of authors scheduled to attend. Ashman said that some of those authors were able to make
A former Army Ranger accused of killing his roommate in Gaithersburg in 2006 has reached a plea agreement that lets him go free after serving more than five years in prison. On Thursday, Gary James Smith, 32, now living in Olney, entered an Alford plea in Montgomery Circuit Court to involuntary manslaughter in the death of fellow soldier Michael McQueen. An Alford plea means Smith does not admit guilt but acknowledges that there is evidence that could convict him. Twice, Smith was convicted of killing McQueen, but both convictions were thrown out on appeal. A third trial had been scheduled for this month. As part of the agreement,
S m i t h pleaded guilty to a charge of reckless endangerment. “ H e wanted a Smith compromise that would end this,” his attorney, Andrew Jezic, said Thursday about the agreement reached with the Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office and McQueen’s family. The end result is that Smith is free to continue studying engineering at Montgomery College and working as a carpenter. “It means I now have a chance to move on with my life, go to school and be with my family members,” Smith said Thursday. Representatives of McQueen’s family could not be reached for comment. “Today’s sentencing of Gary
See RANGER, Page A-10
School board to appoint interim CollegeTracks expands to Watkins Mill superintendent STAFF WRITER
On Saturday, book readers and book writers braved the humidity and forecasted storm for the sixth annual Gaithers-
Admissions help available for Gaithersburg students
n
BY
SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER STAFF WRITER
Beginning in the fall, CollegeTracks will offer its college applications and admissions assistance at Watkins Mill High School in Gaithersburg. Nancy Leopold, executive director of CollegeTracks, explained that this expan-
sion will make the program available at three high schools throughout the county. “We are a college access and success program,” Leopold said. “We work with low to moderate income, first generation to college, minority or immigrant students to help them get through, or in, college.” She explained that CollegeTracks started in 2003 at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School as an all volunteer organization. Now, 12 years later, Leopold said that they have 13 full-time staff members and are also located in Wheaton High School
See FESTIVAL, Page A-10
and now at Watkins Mill. “[These students] are less likely to have adults in their life with college-going experience or the knowledge to get through the ever more intricate admissions process,” Leopold said. CollegeTracks at Watkins Mill will have three permanent staff members at the school and will begin their work with juniors before expanding to work with seniors the following year. Some aspects of
See COLLEGE, Page A-10
Shady Grove Metro ‘urban village’ launched Development in Derwood-Rockville area begins n
BY
SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER STAFF WRITER
The Westside at Shady Grove Metro broke ground on May 12 in Derwood with the first townhomes expected to be finished this year with move-ins beginning early 2016. The development is being made possible by a public-private partnership be-
INDEX A&E Automotive Business Calendar Classified Obituaries Opinion Sports
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B-4 B-11 A-11 A-2 B-8 A-12 A-13 B-1
tween the county and Bethesda developer EYA. Westside plans to have 407 townhomes, more than 1,000 rental homes, 131,000 square feet of office space and a total of 21,828 square feet of retail space, according to a release. Current plans call for the addition of a library on the site, as well. A percentage of the residences will be moderately priced dwelling units and workforce housing. The townhomes start at the upper $500,000s and go through the upper $700,000s. McLean Quinn, the vice president of acquisition and development
for EYA, said they are targeting rent at $2.35 per square foot. The current plan is to have four apartment buildings, two of which will have retail spaces on the bottom. Those two will start development this summer and be complete late 2016 or early 2017. In addition to the residential and retail space, there will be green space as well as a community swimming pool, clubhouse, fitness center, dog park, garden and walking paths. The sales center at 16658 Crabbs Branch Way is open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
See DEVELOPMENT, Page A-10
SPORTS
CHANGE OF SCENERY Longtime girls basketball coach at Watkins Mill steps down. B-1
Volume 28, No. 20 Two sections, 28 Pages Copyright © 2015 The Gazette
Please
RECYCLE
n
Top choice for leadership position withdrew BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
The Montgomery County school board will vote to conditionally appoint an interim superintendent Wednesday, a few days after its top choice for a permanent leader withdrew his name. The appointment, if approved by state schools Superintendent Lillian M. Lowery, would run from July 1 through June of next year, according to a school board news release. Andrew Houlihan, chief academic officer of the Houston Independent School District, informed school board President Patricia O’Neill on Sunday that he was no longer interested in becoming the district’s next superintendent. The school board said Thursday that Houlihan, 36, was its “preferred candidate” for superintendent. The board announced its plan to vote for an interim leader a day after it received a letter
from Alan Goodwin, principal of Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda, on behalf of 29 high school principals. Monday’s letter requested that the board ask Interim Superintendent Larry A. Bowers to continue in the post for the next school year. O’Neill said Tuesday she could not comment on whether or not the board would appoint Bowers a second time. Bowers was appointed after Joshua P. Starr resigned from the superintendent position in February before his four-year contract would have expired this summer. Bowers previously said he planned to retire at the end of June. On Tuesday, Bowers had no comment, according to Dana Tofig, a school system spokesman. Goodwin said Tuesday that he thought, and the other principals agreed, it might be best for the board to slow down the process to identify the next superintendent. If Bowers continued, the board would have more time to continue its search, said
See INTERIM, Page A-10
THE GAZETTE
Page A-2
EVENTS
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Send items at least two weeks in advance of the paper in which you would like them to appear. Go to calendar.gazette.net and click on the submit button. Questions? Call 301-670-2070.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 20 Bloody Orators Toastmasters meeting, 6:30 to 7:30 p.m., American Red Cross, Jerome H. Holland Laboratory, 15601 Crabbs Branch Way, Derwood. Improve your communication and leadership skills in a self-paced atmosphere of fun and fellowship. Free for first-time visitors. contact-614319@toastmastersclubs.org.
Royal Assassinations in the Ancient Near East, 8 p.m., Jewish Community Cen-
ter of Greater Washington, 6125 Montrose Road, Rockville. A lecture on interesting and important royal assassinations in the ancient world, including in ancient Israel and Judah. $5-$10. baf.jccgw@gmail.com. Child-loss support group, 6:30 to 8 p.m., Montgomery Hospice, 1355 Piccard Drive, Suite 100, Rockville. Free. Registration required: 301-921-4400. 9th Annual Rockville Ride of Silence, 7 p.m., Rockville Memorial Library, 21 Maryland Ave., Rockville. Rockville Bike Advisory Committee will host ride to honor those who have been injured or killed while riding on public roadways. This year’s ride will honor Jamie Roberts, a 24-year-old Rockville native and basketball coach who was killed on June 13, 2014, while cycling across the country to raise money for cancer charities. 10 miles; not for beginners. rockvillebikerides@gmail.com. Garden Party Luncheon, noon, $7 ages 55-59, donations age 60-plus. “A Class Act” with Anna Pappas, 1 p.m., free. Damascus Senior Center, 9701 Main St.
THURSDAY, MAY 21 American Red Cross Blood Drive, 1 to 6:30 p.m., Damascus United Methodist Church, 9700 New Church St., Damascus. Contact Sharon_R_Clem@mcpsmd.org or call 800-733-2767 for an appointment. Double-red-cell donations will be accepted. Walk-ins accommodated during available time slots. David.Hull@redcross. org or 240-676-9955. Student exhibition reception, 5 to 7:30 p.m., Montgomery College’s Department of Visual and Performing Arts, Cafritz Foundation Arts Center, 930 King St., Silver Spring. 240-567-1461 or Wilfred.Brunner@montgomerycollege.edu. Evening Grief Support Group, 6:30 to 8 p.m., Church of Christ at Olney, 17020 Georgia Ave. Six-week group led by Montgomery Hospice professional counselors. Registration required: 301-921-4400. Parent Loss Support Group, 6:30 to 8 p.m., Montgomery Hospice, 1355 Piccard Drive, Suite 100, Rockville. For adults who have experienced the death of one or both parents. Six-week group led by professional counselors. Registra-
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
tion required: 301-921-4400
FRIDAY, MAY 22 American Red Cross Blood Drive, noon to 5 p.m., Medstar Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, second floor, training rooms A and B, Olney. Contact Sharon_R_Clem@mcpsmd. org or call 800-733-2767 for an appointment. Double-red-cell donations will be accepted. Walk-ins accommodated during available time slots. David.Hull@redcross. org or 240-676-9955. Blessing of the Animals, 4;30 to 5 p.m., Animal Exchange parking lot, 605 Hungerford Drive, Rockville. With Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish clerics, followed by individual blessings. 301-424-7387 or animalexchange@erols.com. Evening Canoe/Kayak Paddle, 6 to 7:30 p.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. A leisurely tour with a naturalist; brief paddling lesson for beginners. Canoes/kayaks, lifejackets, and paddles provided. $3 for Maryland residents, $5 for others. Registration required. 301-924-2127 or bethany. lillard@maryland.gov.
SATURDAY, MAY 23 Mum Plant Sale, 8 a.m. to noon, commuter parking lot, 17 Fulks Corner Road, Gaithersburg. Also in the parking lot next to Bank of America building, 11499 Columbia Pike, Silver Spring. Single mum plant in a pot is $1.50. Bring boxes for purchases. 301-253-5947 or Potomac@ mums.org. Film screening of “How I Became an Elephant,” 6 to 8:30 p.m., Sandy Spring
Friends School, Yarnall library, 16923 Norwood Road, Sandy Spring. Free; donations accepted. Movie contains some violent scenes; best for viewers older than 12. Go to tinyurl.com/nugm62b for tickets. 301871-7557 or theydeservetobefree@gmail. com. Shavuot fetival, 7 p.m., Am Kolel’s Sanctuary Retreat Center, 19520 Darnestown Road, Beallsville. Holiday dinner, followed by screening of “Growing Legacy,” about the Montgomery County Agricultural Reserve. $54 for dinner, program, lodging, breakfast. Also, 11 a.m. May 24 — Ten Commandments reading and vegetarian potluck lunch, followed by outdoor festival at 2 p.m.; no charge. 301349-2799 or www.sanctuaryretreatcenter. com.
SUNDAY, MAY 24 Annual Juilliard Reunion Concert, 4 to 6 p.m., Church of the Little Flower, 5607
SAT
23
“Saturn at Opposition,” viewing,
9 to 10:30 p.m., Observatory Park, 100 DeSellum Ave., Gaithersburg. Free. Suitable for ages 11 and older. Hosted by Gaithersburg Community Museum. Check facebook.com/GaithersburgCommunityMuseum for possible cancellation due to weather. Massachusetts Ave., Bethesda. Opera, classics, chamber music and Broadway. Free. 301-320-4538 or Terry_Eberhardt@ hcpss.org.
MONDAY, MAY 25 Memorial Day Young Life 5K Splatter Run, Black Hill Regional Park, 20930
Lake Ridge Drive, Boyds. Register at 8 a.m.; race at 9 a.m. $35 for adults; $20 for children 12 and younger. Includes Tshirt. 240-285-7369 or chris.eckard12@ gmail.com. American Red Cross Blood Drive, 8 a.m. to noon, Trinity United Methodist Church, 13700 Schaeffer Road, Germantown. Contact Sharon_R_Clem@mcpsmd. org or call 800-733-2767 for an appointment. Double-red-cell donations will be accepted. Walk-ins accommodated during available time slots. David.Hull@redcross. org or 240-676-9955. Hike for Health, 9 a.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. A brisk 2.5-mile hike on moderately challenging terrain, or take the extended hike of 6 miles. Bring appropriate shoes, water. Meet at Kingfisher Overlook. $3 per person for Maryland residents, $5 for others. 301-924-2127 or bethany.lillard@ maryland.gov.
TUESDAY, MAY 26 Breastfeeding Class, 7 to 9:30 p.m., Washington Adventist Hospital, 7600 Carroll Ave., Takoma Park. For mothers and fathers. $40; free if registering for childbirth and baby care course at the same time. 301-891-4852 or nmonfort@adventisthealthcare.com.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 27 Health Decisions Done Right: A Lecture on Joint Surgery, 10 a.m., Ingleside at
King Farm, 701 King Farm Blvd., Rockville. Presentation by Dr. Joseph Hanna of the Orthopaedic Center. hhenry@veandco. com. Open house, 8:15 to 11 a.m., Sandy Spring Friends School, 16923 Norwood Road, Sandy Spring. Tour the campus, have breakfast. To register: 301-774-7455, ext. 101, or erin.ryan@ssfs.org.
PHOTO GALLERY
Winston Churchill High School’s Reed Moshyedi (right) advances on goal against Dulaney High School’s Bennett Heitt during the class 4A state semifinal at Northeast High School on Saturday in Pasadena. Go to clicked.Gazette.net. SPORTS It’s the final weekend of spring high school sports, with state championships scheduled to be awarded in baseball, lacrosse, softball, tennis and track and field. Check online for coverage.
Get complete, current weather information
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GAZETTE CONTACTS The Gazette – 9030 Comprint Court
Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Main phone: 301-948-3120 Circulation: 301-670-7350 Nathan Oravec,managing editor, Gaithersburg : noravec@gazette.net, 301-670-7155 Samantha Schmieder, staff writer: sschmieder@gazette.net, 301-670-2043 The Gazette (ISSN 1077-5641) is published weekly for $29.99 a year by The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877. Periodicals postage paid at Gaithersburg, Md. Postmaster: Send address changes. VOL. 28, NO. 20 • 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
CORRECTIONS The Gazette corrects errors promptly on Page A-2 and online. To comment on the accuracy or adequacy of coverage, contact editor Nathan Oravec at 301-670-7155 or email noravec@gazette.net.
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THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Page A-3
Hearing postponed to decide development of former golf course n BY
Aug. 24 date set
SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER STAFF WRITER
The public hearing on Development Plan Amendment 15-01, which seeks to amend Montgomery Village’s Development Plan to allow development of up to 86 townhouses on 17.3
acres of land on the former Montgomery Village Golf Course, has been postponed by the hearing examiner until 9:30 a.m. Aug. 24 in the Rita C. Davidson Memorial Hearing Room at 100 Maryland Ave. in Rockville, according to documents from the county’s Office of Zoning and Administrative Hearings. The original hearing was set to take place on May 8, however, the Montgomery County Planning Board
recommended in a document dated April 28 and corrected on April 30 that the Development Plan Amendment should be deferred by the hearing examiner “due to its inconsistency with the 1985 Gaithersburg Vicinity Master Plan.” The planning board is currently drafting a Montgomery Village Master Plan and a draft is set to be presented in July. The recommendation went on to explain that the public would “be
better served if the land use decision is made through the comprehensive process of the new Master Plan currently underway.” The planning board has been holding informational public meetings with Montgomery Village residents since October 2014 to take into account their comments and concerns regarding the new master plan. Many of the residents’ concerns have been in
regard to the future use for the former golf course. Though the current use guidelines for the former golf course state that the land should be kept for recreation and conservation, the new master plan may have different restrictions and therefore affect the approval or denial of the application. sschmieder@gazette.net
Author chat
City seeks applications from artists The City of Gaithersburg is inviting individual artists as well as art groups to apply to exhibit their work at one of its three art galleries in the Arts Barn, Kentlands Mansion and the Activity Center at Bohrer Park for the 2016-2017 season, according to a release from the city. Applications for the season, which runs from January 2016 through June 2017, are being accepted now. According to the release, the works will be selected by a jury committee and group as well as individual shows will be considered. Applicants can pick which specific exhibitions and venues they wish to have their work displayed in. The deadline is Friday, June 5, and all applications and a $25 fee must be submitted by 5 p.m. More information can be found at www. gaithersburgmd.gov. — GAZETTE STAFF
DEATHS Elza Helena Carvalho Elza Helena Carvalho, 66, of Rio de Janeiro died April 18, 2015. Carvalho, who had been a resident of Montgomery County since 1985 and lived in Gaithersburg since 1987, retired to her hometown of Rio de Janeiro in 2011. Burial was in Cemitério São Francisco Xavier in Rio de Janeiro.
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Washington Grove’s Tom Clifford talks with authors Chuck McCutcheon and David Mark at the Gaithersburg Book Festival on Saturday morning.
POLICE BLOTTER The following is a summary of incidents in the Gaithersburg area to which Montgomery County police responded recently. The words “arrested” and “charged” do not imply guilt. This information was provided by the county.
Strong-arm robbery • Lakeforest Mall transit center, 701 Russell Ave., at 7:13 p.m. May 3. Two juvenile victims were approached and assaulted by six male subjects, some of which were known to
the victims. No weapons used, took property. • 18400 block of Lost Knife Circle, at 4:12 p.m. on May 5. Two subjects approached the victim and obtained property.
Commercial burglary • Sherry’s Consignments, 106 N. Frederick Ave., between 4 p.m. on May 2 and 9:30 a.m. on May 4. No forced entry, took cash. • Vacant buildings at Montgomery Village Golf Glub, 19550 Montgomery Village Ave., at 4:47 p.m. on May 5. Three buildings
were entered and vandalized.
Indecent exposure • 127 Goucher Terrace at 10:35 p.m. on May 1. Victim saw a subject outside her window exposing himself. Victim called police, and the subject fled. Residential burglary • 400 block of North Summit Avenue, between 1:30-9 p.m. on May 3. No entry gained, nothing taken.
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• 500 block of South Frederick Avenue, between 7-11 a.m. on May 4. No forced entry, took property. • 400 block of Midsummer Drive, between 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on May 4. Forced entry, took property.
Vehicle larceny • Two thefts from vehicles in the early morning hours of April 28 in the parking lot of Deer Park Road. No forced entry, took property.
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• 9000 block of Warfield Road in Gaithersburg, between 3-3:15 p.m. on April 29. Forced entry, took property. • Three thefts from vehicles in the early morning hours of April 30. Affected streets included Airpark Road, Queen Air Drive and Benji Court. Incidents could be related. Forced entry, took property. • Two thefts from vehicles in the 19000 block of Mills Choice Road in the early morning hours of May 2. No forced entry, took property.
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THE GAZETTE
Page A-4
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Gaithersburg exhibit helps visualize results of gun violence Installation on view at St. Rose of Lima through June 6 n
BY
SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER STAFF WRITER
Through June 6, those driving by St. Rose of Lima parish in Gaithersburg will get a visual depiction of the 155 people who died throughout the greater Washington, D.C., area in 2014 as a result of gun violence. The “Memorial for the Lost” is an installation that has been traveling throughout the D.C.area for the past year. Before being set up at St. Rose on Saturday, it had been located at St. Francis of Assisi parish in Derwood since May 2. Bill Derge is a member of St. Rose of Lima Parish and of their Pax Christi group. The display is presented by Heeding God’s Call Greater Washington and was first started by the Heeding God’s Call Philadelphia chapter. “What it is is we put up a
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
A memorial to the victims of gun violence in the greater Washington area is on view outside Saint Rose of Lima in Gaithersburg. number of posts and we hang Tshirts on them with the names and the dates of the people who
died of gun violence in the D.C.area in 2014,” Derge said. Those attending services
and meetings at the church are able to see the set up as they walk by and it is visible to the
public, as well. “It’s close enough to the road, and it’s a pretty busy road, that people will be able to see it. It’s just to remind people, to give them a graphic idea, of how extensive it is in the D.C.-area,” Derge said, adding that the shirts are different colors to represent Virginia, Maryland and D.C. Derge believes that physically representing those who are lost to guns through this visual method will evoke more emotion than just showing someone statistics on a piece of paper. “If you see a number, it’s kind of abstract, but if you see the shirts and each one represents a person, it hits home a little more,” Derge said. Derge said that he hopes the installation will get people talking about gun violence. He meets with Pax Christi every month to discuss topics such as gun violence and prison reform, and the ways in which they can be changed for the better. “The idea that gun violence is such a pervasive thing in our
culture, we really want to change the culture,” Derge said. From 4 to 6 p.m. May 31, the conversation will continue with an event at St. Rose about the prevention of gun violence cosponsored by Action in Montgomery and the D.C. chapter of Heeding God’s Call. Bob Cooke, the co-chair of Pax Christi Metro D.C.-Baltimore, wrote in an email about the many people who will be present at the meeting and what will be discussed. In addition to the Rev. James Atwood and the Rev. Timothy Tutt, Montgomery County Police Chief Tom Manger, and Phil Andrews, the director of criminal prevention initiative with the Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office, will be present at the event. Cooke explained that each person will speak about different aspects of gun violence including personal experience losing someone, mental illness and America’s gun addiction. sschmieder@gazette.net
Suspected drug user dies after being shocked with a Taser by police Man pronounced dead two days later in hospital n
BY
VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER
County detectives are investigating the death of a Burtonsville man who died at Holy
Cross Hospital in Silver Spring on May 12, two days after he was shocked with a Taser by police in the Briggs Chaney area of the county. Police have identified the man as Dajuan Graham, 40. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore has performed an autopsy, and the
results are pending, according to a Police Department news release. The Medical Examiner’s office did not immediately respond to a call on Tuesday from The Gazette about the autopsy. A Taser is a weapon used to fire electrified barbs into the body for the purpose of immo-
bilizing a person. The altercation began about 10:40 p.m. on May 10 when witnesses told a 3rd District officer, who was conducting a traffic stop at the Briggs Chaney shopping center, that a man was walking in the Castle Boulevard roadway. The witnesses told the officer that the man was acting erratically and that they believed he may have been under the influence of the drug PCP, according to the release. The officer and a second officer approached Graham, who was standing in the southbound lanes of Castle Boulevard with his hands inside his shorts pockets, according to the release. The officers asked Graham to take his hands out of his pock-
ets to show that he did not have a weapon, but he did not cooperate. “He refused to comply and continued to grunt, raise and lower his shoulders, and assumed a threatening stance,” according to the release. The officers warned Graham they would use a Taser if he did not show his hands and when he again didn’t comply, one of the officers shocked him with a Taser in the right abdomen and the right upper thigh, according to the release. While being treated at the hospital, Graham’s handcuffs were taken off at the request of the medical staff, according to the release. Graham then assaulted the officer and hospital security
staff, injuring the police officer, according to the release. The officer left Graham in the care of medical staff and security personnel, according to the release. “At no time when officers were interacting with Graham was he unconscious; in fact at the hospital, Graham was making statements and utterances,” according to the release. The next day on May 11, at about 4 p.m., Graham was taken to the Cardiac Care unit perspiring heavily with an elevated heart rate. On May 12, about 9:45 p.m., he suffered “a medical event” and was pronounced dead, according to the release. vterhune@gazette.net
1951680
Another fun filled event from The Gazette!
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Tickets $8 In advance; $10 Day of the Event and at the door Purchase tickets at (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ladies-night-out-tickets-9881878966); or in person after May 8th at The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877. Call 301-670-7100 / LNO@gazette.net Sponsors
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Page A-5
County Council adds about $17 million to fiscal year 2016 budget BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
The Montgomery County Council will add about $17 million in spending to the county’s budget for fiscal 2016. The council took a preliminary vote Thursday to incorporate $18.2 million of priorities on its wish list into the budget. The council is scheduled to take a final vote on the budget on May 21. Council Administrator Steve Farber said roughly $15 million of the additional spending will be covered by putting less into reserves. The council also cut some of what County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) proposed for a net increase over his proposed budget of about $17 million. In a written statement Thursday, Leggett criticized the council’s decision to put less into reserves. “Unfortunately the Council opted to reduce county reserves by over $10 million to fund its reconciliation list,” he said. Leggett called the decision “imprudent” in light of challenges facing the county in the coming years including the decision Monday in a U.S. Supreme Court case, rising costs, and reduced state aid for education. The case before the Supreme Court, known as the Wynne case, dealt with double taxation and the decision will cost the county millions in the coming years. Those challenges, he said, make it more likely that the county might have to increase property taxes over the next few years, implement unprecedented service reductions or both. The fiscal 2016 Montgomery budget increases spending by 1.7 percent from the current fiscal year’s budget, for a total budget of $5.07 billion. The proposed spending plan does not cut any tax rates, as recent past budgets have done. Instead, it keeps property tax rates at the charter limit, keeps energy tax rates at their current levels, levies an additional tax
on electronic cigarettes and expands the tax on room rentals. Without cuts to the tax burden, Councilwoman Nancy Floreen said, she cannot support the budget. Floreen (D-At Large) of Garrett Park was the only council member to cast her straw vote against the budget. She said she is not against what the budget funds, but she can’t support spending more without providing relief to taxpayers, as well. Montgomery College was a key priority for the council this budget cycle. College representatives warned council members that the college faced steep tuition raises if Leggett’s proposed budget passed. To make up some of the county funding gap using only tuition revenue, the college would have needed to increase the current tuition by $14 per credit hour for county students, $28 for state students and $42 for out-of-state students, said Susan Madden, the college’s chief government relations officer. These increases would have let the college improve employee compensation and benefits, as it planned. On Thursday, the council provided $7.9 million more to the college than what Leggett proposed, an effort to help the college pay its faculty and staff and avoid a large tuition increase. Tuition still will go up, though. Montgomery College is planning to increase tuition $3 for students living in the county, $6 for students living elsewhere
Holiday schedule
Montgomery County and its municipalities will observe the following holiday schedules for Memorial Day on Monday.
Montgomery County • County offices, libraries, schools: closed. • County liquor stores: open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Recreation: All indoor and outdoor aquatic facilities will be open; administrative offices, senior centers and community recreation centers will be closed. • Montgomery Parks: All Parks facilities will be open. Operating schedules are at MontgomeryParks.org. • Ride On buses, Metrobus, Metrorail: Sunday schedule. • TRiPS Commuter Stores in Silver Spring and Friendship Heights: closed. • Trash and recycling pickup: no collection Monday; pickups one day later through week until Saturday. • Transfer station: closed. • Parking at public garages, lots, curbside meters: free. • State offices and courts: closed.
Gaithersburg • City Hall: closed. • Activity Center at Bohrer Park: closed. • Water Park at Bohrer Park will be open from noon to 6:30 p.m. • Miniature golf at Bohrer Park will be open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. • Skate Park will be open from noon to sunset. • Upcounty Senior Center: closed. • Arts Barn: closed. • Casey Community Center: closed. • Aquatic Center: closed. • Montgomery Village Foundation offices closed. — GAZETTE STAFF
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“I want to remind my colleagues at MCPS that this is just one year. We haven’t forgotten about you.” Councilman Craig L. Rice in Maryland, and $9 for students living outside the state. For 2014-15, county students paid $115 per credit hour, in-state students paid $235 and out-of-state students paid $323, according to the college’s website. Council President George L. Leventhal said Leggett presented a strong budget this year. “We have supported most of what he proposed,” Leventhal (D-At Large) of Takoma Park said. But after listening to the public, Leventhal said, the council “strengthened the budget by targeting limited additional re-
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sources to priorities in education, public safety, health and human services, libraries, parks, transportation and new initiatives like the Public Election Fund.” For fiscal 2016, the council agreed to place $1 million into the Public Election Fund, meeting Leggett halfway. The council had requested $2 million. Leggett argued that the budget couldn’t afford any money for the initiative. The election fund was created as part of the county’s new public campaign finance system that matches privately raised dollars with public funds. For libraries, the council agreed to provide an additional $638,880 to restore hours at five branches — Potomac, Chevy Chase, Kensington Park, Little Falls and Twinbrook — that experienced cuts during the recession. It also will provide an additional $150,000 for materials. Housing — a priority Leggett said he could not fund as promised — also will get more money from the council. The council voted to provide $687,500 more for the Montgomery Housing Initiative. The lion’s share of • LEAK DIAGNOSIS • WOOD ROT • TILE NEW & REPAIR • ROOFING NEW & REPAIR • BATH/KITCHEN/BASEMENT REMODELING • WINDOWS AND DOORS • CARPENTRY • DRYWALL & PAINTING • STRUCTURAL & TERMITE REPAIRS
that will address veteran homelessness. The budget provides about $253,095 for the Child Care Expansion and Quality Enhancement Initiative. That new program expands child care in the county. The council approved it earlier this year Notably absent from the three-page priority list was any additional funding for Montgomery County Public Schools. Councilman Craig L. Rice, chairman of the council’s Education Committee, said the council would have liked to have fully funded the school system’s request, it couldn’t. The council supported Leggett’s recommendation to fund the system at the state-required minimum. Leggett proposed $2.31 billion for the school system’s next operating budget, an amount
that meets the minimum funding level required by the state’s maintenance of effort law. The law forces counties to provide at least as much funding per student as the previous year. The school board asked for $84.7 million above maintenance of effort, according to school system spokesman Dana Tofig. Following Leggett’s recommendation means another year of class-size increases, Councilman Marc B. Elrich said. The budget, Elrich (D-At Large) of Takoma Park said, is really a “hold-the-line budget.” “I want to remind my colleagues at MCPS that this is just one year,” Rice (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown said. “We haven’t forgotten about you.” kalexander@gazette.net
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THE GAZETTE
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Maryland approves Pepco deal with conditions Groups across the state express disappointment
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BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
Maryland utility regulators have given the OK for Exelon to acquire Pepco, as long as conditions are met, including better reliability. In a 3-2 decision Friday, the Public Service Commission agreed to the proposed deal, detailing 46 conditions the companies must meet. Exelon Corp. of Chicago, parent of Baltimore Gas and Electric, plans to acquire Pepco Holdings for $6.83 billion in cash. The sale would bring together Exelon’s three electric and gas utilities — BGE, ComEd and PECO — with Pepco Holdings’ three utilities, Atlantic City Electric, Delmarva Power and Pepco, cementing Exelon’s hold on the mid-Atlantic market. Maryland is one of several jurisdictions that must approve Exelon’s acquisition for it to go through. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Virginia and New Jersey also have approved it. Delaware and Washington, D.C., have not taken action yet. Among the conditions in
Maryland are strict benchmarks for reducing the frequency and duration of power outages, with penalties for failure. Exelon also was ordered to provide each Pepco customer with a $100 rate credit — a total of $48.6 million in residential rate credits — and $31.5 million for energy efficiency initiatives, 20 percent of which must be dedicated to limited-income programs. The PSC also required Exelon to provide $14.4 million in Green Sustainability Funds for Prince George’s and Montgomery counties and provide for the building of 20 megawatts of renewable energy sources, 10 megawatts of which must be in Pepco’s Maryland service territory. The order detailed conditions for Delmarva Power, too. Commission Chairman W. Kevin Hughes and Commissioners Lawrence Brenner and Kelly Speakes-Backman formed the three-vote majority. In a joint statement, Pepco and Exelon expressed pleasure with the decision, but said the companies must study the order to understand the conditions imposed by the PSC. Opponents criticized the approval. “I am deeply disappointed with the decision of the Maryland Public Service
Commission to approve the Pepco-Exelon merger,” Montgomery County Councilman Roger Berliner said in a written statement. Mike Tidwell, director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, said in a written statement that the commission made a “grave error” approving the deal. “This approval, with no meaningful conditions added by the commissioners, threatens to negatively affect Marylanders for decades to come,” Tidwell wrote. “The PSC has totally failed in its responsibility to protect the ratepayers from exactly the sort of monopolistic harm that they have now ushered in.” Tyson Slocum, the director of the Public Citizen’s Energy Program, condemned the decision in a written statement. “The commission should have stopped this power grab. Instead, it facilitated it,” Slocum wrote. Public Citizen, Chesapeake Climate Action Network and Berliner all were party to the case. Berliner is part of the Coalition for Utility Reform. Maryland law required Exelon and Pepco to prove the deal was in the public interest. Commissioners Anne E. Hoskins and Harold D. Williams wrote in their dissenting
opinion that the companies failed to provide sufficient or adequate evidence that the deal will not harm Marylanders. “The Public Utilities Article and Commission precedent provide unequivocally that the Commission must deny a merger application that imposes harm — including even the risk of harm — on consumers,” the dissenting opinion stated. “The merger undermines competition for both ideas and utility services at a transformative time in the electricity industry.” Berliner (D-Dist. 1) of Bethesda said many parties in the case, including Attorney General Brian E. Frosh, the Maryland Energy Administration, the Office of People’s Counsel, the Montgomery County Council, environmental organizations, and the commission’s staff, argued that the deal was not in the public interest. “How the Commission could conclude differently is hard to fathom,” Berliner said. “One can only conclude that this is a classic case of ‘regulatory capture.’” Regulatory capture describes when regulators become unduly influenced by those they regulate and therefore unable to distinguish between the public’s interest
and the interest of the utilities, he said. Berliner previously worked as a regulatory lawyer. “It happens often,” he said. “It’s so disappointing. This was a legacy moment for the O’Malley commission and they wilted.” The five sitting members of the Public Service Commission were appointed by former Gov. Martin J. O’Malley (D). As for the conditions in the deal, Berliner called those “crumbs.” “They threw some crumbs our way in order to gain the county’s support for a settlement,” he said. “I promise you we will take every crumb we can get, but that does not make it a satisfying meal.” Berliner said he would be surprised if there was no appeal considering how many opposed the deal from the start. In the course of the case, Montgomery County settled with the companies. County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) said he pushed for the deal and settled with the companies because some improvement is preferable to the Pepco that now serves Montgomery County. “I thought, looking at it long term, it was in the best interest of the county,” he said. kalexander@gazette.net
Leggett proposes privatizing department County branch and local nonprofit would fold into new corporation n
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett wants county economic development handled in the private sector. It’s an idea he said he has explored since serving on the County Council in the 1990s. Leggett (D) is asking the council to consider legislation to privatize economic development by folding both the county’s Department of Economic Development and the nonprofit Montgomery Business Development Corporation into a new entity. A new nonprofit corporation would be created with the responsibility of attracting and retaining businesses, marketing the county for economic development and fostering entrepreneurship. It would be directed by an 11-member board chosen from the private sector, appointed by the county executive and confirmed by the council. Under Leggett’s proposal, the county would fund the new entity. “We are in a very competitive region,” Leggett said. “The model that we’ve had in the past has served us very well, but I don’t think that it is a model that is flexible enough, that is in tune with the everyday kind of impacts that businesses make each and every day.” While Leggett said the idea of privatizing economic development was not well received in the ’90s, things are different now. Competition in the region and the need for flexibility to respond to markets and involve stakeholders in decisions is a better fit for a private entity, he said. “Given my history with this, going back some time ago, and given what I see in the competitive market in the region, I just thought it was time to do so,” he said. Leggett’s bill is scheduled to be introduced Thursday . Council President George L. Leventhal said he will introduce it at Leggett’s request. It currently has no co-sponsors, but several council members spoke in favor of the proposal at a press conference last week, so there could be co-sponsors added from the dais, Leventhal (D-At Large) of Takoma Park said. “We are hearing a frequent refrain from the private sector that the Department [of Economic Development], as it is constituted, is not sufficiently creative or nimble,” Leventhal said. “I think once Mr. [Steve] Silverman moved on, it seemed like a good time to try a different structure.” Silverman served as director of economic development for the county since 2009 but left the county in January to pursue a career in the private sector. kalexander@gazette.net
Post to host Memorial Day service Sunday
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Damascus American Legion Post 171 will hold a Memorial Day Service at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Post, 10201 Lewis Drive, Damascus. The public is invited to attend the service, which will include The Browningsville Band presenting a patriotic concert followed by the Memorial Day program. Retired Army Colonel William P. “Bill” Holmes, a decorated Vietnam veteran and fellow Legionnaire who was on active duty for 32 years, will serve as the keynote speaker. Following the program, the post’s Auxiliary unit will serve refreshments. For more information, call 301-253-0769 or email info@Legionpost171.org. — GAZETTE STAFF
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Energy tax rates to stay same in Montgomery County Council also passes new tax on e-cigarettes, expands room rental tax n
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
Fuel-energy tax rates will not continue to fall in Montgomery County. In a 5-4 vote on May 13, the County Council voted to keep the energy tax rates the same for fiscal 2016. Starting in fiscal 2013, the council has steadily reduced the tax rate each year. Montgomery County levies the fuel energy tax on “persons transmitting, distributing, manufacturing, producing or supplying electricity, gas, steam, coal, fuel oil, or liquefied petroleum gas,” according to county budget documents. The tax is based on how much energy is supplied and is paid by the supplier, who generally passes it on to customers. In 2010, the county hiked the energy tax rate for fiscal 2011 to generate about an extra $110 million in revenue and
close budget gaps during the recession. County Executive Isiah Leggett had proposed doubling the energy tax rates, which would have raised an additional $133 million in revenue. The council instead chose a lower rate that would raise about 85 percent of what Leggett had proposed, or about $110 million. The increase was to “sunset,” or revert back to the previous rate, at the end of fiscal 2012. However, Leggett recommended not following through on the sunset. Instead, the council committed to gradually reduce the rate over several years. For fiscal year 2016, Leggett (D) again recommended keeping the tax as it is, and for the first time since the rate was scheduled to sunset, a majority of the council has agreed with him. On May 13, the council considered cutting the tax yet again. A resolution was proposed by Councilwoman Nancy Floreen (D-At Large) of Garrett Park to cut the tax rate so it draws $11.5 million less in revenue. That equates to about 10 percent of the total increase the council
passed for fiscal 2011. The issue split the council, with freshman Councilman Tom Hucker (DDist. 5) of Silver Spring providing the swing vote against cutting the tax. “I’m uncomfortable cutting the energy tax at a time when there’s both an increase in [elementary school] class sizes because of insufficient funds and we will likely have to increase property taxes next year,” Hucker said after the meeting. Hucker also voted against cutting the tax during a joint committee meeting last week. What held his vote up, he said, was that he was talking to his fellow council members about ways to address the tax this year without being locked into an ongoing commitment. “It really isn’t possible,” he said. Council President George L. Leventhal said on May 13 he would delay the vote to Thursday because not all council members had decided where they stood. He said, as he understood it, four members favored cutting the tax and four opposed it.
Hucker did not speak during the sometimes heated May 13 discussion, but at one point conveyed to Leventhal he was prepared to vote and the vote was called. Councilman Roger Berliner (D-Dist. 1) of Bethesda attempted to pass a compromise 5 percent reduction in energy tax revenue, but that failed 5-4. With Hucker on board with not cutting the tax, a majority of the council voted to follow Leggett’s lead and keep the tax rate the same for fiscal 2016. Overall, Leggett’s budget proposed increasing total spending by 1.4 percent, to about $5.06 billion. Among the elements that could change are reserves. Leggett’s budget recommended putting 8.6 percent of county revenues into reserves or about $402 million. Leggett’s budget calls for putting $32 million more in reserves than a council fiscal plan called for in fiscal 2016. Berliner argued the executive was putting too much into reserves and advocated for less, so the council could use the difference to fund its priorities and to
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reduce the energy tax. Councilwoman Nancy Navarro (DDist. 4) of Silver Spring said she exercised restraint in recommending funding for additional programs because of the county’s financial situation and uncertainties in its future. Navarro was among members who voted to keep the energy tax rates static. Several council members expressed an interest in talking about the energy tax policy outside of budget deliberations. Hucker said it is hard to have nuanced policy discussion on the tax in the context of the budget, but the policy should be considered. While the council split on the energy tax, it unanimously supported taxing distributors of electronic cigarettes for 30 percent of the wholesale price of e-cigarettes and other so-called vaping products, and unanimously supported expanding its room rental and transient tax to those who rent single rooms or homes through venues such as Airbnb. kalexander@gazette.net
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THE GAZETTE
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County Council adds $8 million to Montgomery College budget Increase will allow employee compensation, benefits improvements n
BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
The Montgomery County Council plans to tack on nearly $8 million to Montgomery College’s fiscal 2016 operating budget, a boost that lets the school increase employee compensation and benefits, as planned. The council’s Education Committee recommended in April that the full council place nearly $11 million in new county money for the college on the county’s reconciliation list. That
list includes items that Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett did not put in his recommended budget and that the council wants to fund if it can. The council took a preliminary vote on the county’s fiscal 2016 operating budget last Thursday. A final vote is scheduled for Thursday. The $7.9 million extra from the council was added to Leggett’s recommended $3 million increase in county funding for the college’s current fund. The current fund pays for operations, student services, instruction and other things, according to a report from the college president. Susan Madden, the college’s chief government relations of-
ficer, said about $6.8 million of the added money will go toward increasing employee compensation and benefits for all faculty and staff. “The council and the county executive clearly recognized our faculty and staff’s deep commitment to our students to help them succeed and thereby fuel our local economy with ready workers,” Montgomery College President DeRionne Pollard said in a statement. The remaining dollars will go toward various college initiatives, Madden said, though college officials are still hammering out exactly how to divvy up the roughly $1.1 million remaining of the $7.9 million from the council. The college had hoped to re-
ceive about $3 million from the county for the initiatives. The college planned to expand the Achieving Collegiate Excellence and Success program to six more high schools in Montgomery County Public Schools. With less funding than hoped for to spend on the initiatives, the program will expand to fewer schools, Madden said. The program involves collaboration from Montgomery College, the county school system and The Universities at Shady Grove. The college also hopes to use some of the money to pay for permanent staff at two community engagement centers, which are off-campus connection points between the college and
the public. The plan had been to make four temporary workers at the centers permanent, according to Marcus Rosano, a college spokesman. Some of the money will go toward efforts aimed at the college’s achievement gap. Madden said the council’s action helped the college keep tuition affordable with slight increases for the next school year. College officials had previously said significant increases were possible if the county didn’t provide more money to help the school pay for the compensation and benefit increases. Soon after the Education Committee recommended that the council try to add more money for the college, the insti-
tution’s Board of Trustees voted to follow the smaller per-credithour tuition increases the college initially proposed: $3 for students living in the county, $6 for students living elsewhere in Maryland, and $9 for students living outside the state. For 2014-15, county students paid $115 a credit hour, in-state students paid $235 and out-ofstate students paid $323, according to the college’s website. “Clearly, councilmembers heard our concerns and share our collective commitment to an affordable, high-quality, locally provided postsecondary education,” Pollard said in her statement. lpowers@gazette.net
Community members seek changes to Kensington school plan District acknowledges ‘challenges’ on the site
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BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
Under a Montgomery County Public Schools plan, a new Kensington middle school would be squeezed on a site with inadequate space that will make the school inferior, some opponents of the plan say. Adding underground parking to the plan, they say, could help fix some of the bigger problems they see. A group of residents said they are concerned that the site plan, as it stands, would limit athletic and academic spaces and pose safety hazards for drivers and pedestrians. The result, they said, is a school that would fall below the district’s project guidelines and would be unequal to other county schools, particularly Westland Middle School in the same cluster. However, a school district official said the middle school
will be similar to existing middle schools. He added that the district already considered — and decided against — a parking structure. The new school will be the second in the Bethesda-Chevy Chase cluster and will help address current overcrowding at Westland and expected enrollment growth. The district hopes to break ground this summer on the project estimated to cost around $48 million. The site includes about 12 acres that could be built on out of about 13.4 acres, according to James Song, the director of the school system’s Department of Facilities Management. The school system recently submitted revised site plans to the Montgomery County Planning Board to address recommended and required changes. Residents Richard Hatzfeld, Laura Dennis, John Sonnier and Susie Cooper are calling for the district to work with community members to help address problems they anticipate on the site where Rock Creek Hills Local Park
now sits. If the district were to add underground parking, it would provide more space, reduce the need for retaining walls and be safer for pedestrians around the school, Hatzfeld said. Safety concerns tied to the garage could be addressed through measures such as a gate that closes in the evening, he said. The garage idea stems from Montgomery County Planning Board staff who developed recommendations as part of a mandatory referral process for the site. Staff said in a March report that structured parking would be “a feasible solution.” Hatzfeld, Dennis, Sonnier and Cooper have studied past and current plans and said they found numerous flaws in the district’s design, ranging from athletic space to parking to a student walkway. Sonnier is a landscape designer. Under the current plan, Hatzfeld said, “they’re making this rush to get an expedient option out that isn’t going to be the best option.” The residents are concerned about pedestrian safety, including on a student pathway leading to the school, and the heights of retaining walls. They are also
concerned the school will start off crowded and quickly grow. As of Tuesday, about 230 people had signed a Change.org petition calling for “a better solution” for the middle school from school board and Montgomery County Council officials. Rick Bond, an architect who lives on Kensington Parkway near the site, said there hasn’t been enough transparency in the process. He wondered why the district decided to stray from standards it developed at an early stage. The Rock Creek Hills site does not have enough space, Bond said, which has translated to “compromise piled on compromise piled on compromise” for athletic spaces, classroom sizes and traffic circulation. The four-story design for part of the building is inefficient for circulation and layout, Bond said. He also sees classroom spaces reduced. Song said the middle school plan is not unique. The district builds schools on various sites and faces different challenges on each, he said. The site’s difficulty was acknowledged by Craig Shuman Jr., director of the district’s division
of construction, during a March 26 planning board hearing. The school system was trying to fit “10 pounds of sugar in a five-pound sack” on the site, he said. Song said underground parking would be expensive and hard to monitor for safety. Even with a garage, he said, the district still would need space for two traffic loops on the site, and it’s more efficient and less expensive to include parking on the loops. The district doesn’t have requirements for athletic spaces at middle school sites, he said. The Rock Creek Hills site will include a soccer field overlaid with two softball fields and four tennis courts. The classrooms are “very much typical” for county schools, Song said. The school’s classrooms, other instructional spaces, and core spaces such as cafeterias and gymnasiums are within acceptable ranges, he said. The district allows these areas to be 10 percent larger or smaller than district standards. “Overall, building-wise, I can say that [the middle school] has met the educational objectives,” he said. The building could hold about 1,000 students when it opens, with space set aside to expand by 200 students in the future. The 1,200 enrollment will match the district’s preferred maximum student population for
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middle schools, he said. Addressing other concerns, Song said the district will place crosswalks where they are safest and design retaining walls so they are difficult to climb. The district also has taken neighborhood roads into account, he said. The county planning board has recommended changes to the school’s design, including relocating the dropoff loop and reducing retaining walls. These are only recommendations, said Amy Lindsey, a county planning coordinator. The school system is only required to meet legal requirements tied to forest conservation to proceed with the project. The district’s revised plan includes “very, very minor design tweaks” to demonstrate that the school system has done its best to preserve forest and minimize impervious areas, Song said. One change aims to improve traffic circulation in the student dropoff loop and staff parking lot. An April 27 letter from Shuman to Lindsey offered a different description of the revised plan, which Shuman wrote “reflects several significant changes.” Lindsey said the goal was to provide the district with comments on its revised forest conservation plan this week. lpowers@gazette.net
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Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Page A-9
Teacher raises funds MCPS, unions may revise contracts District considering for leukemia research options with less state n
Hopes to name research grant in honor of former pupil
money coming in
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BY
BY
STAFF WRITER
PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER
During her 10 years as a teacher at Ronald McNair Elementary School in Germantown, Katie Kelly has known four students with leukemia. She said it makes her sad that children have to battle cancer while so young, but she also is working to help find a cure. Kelly is raising money for the National Capital Area Chapter of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society as a Woman of the Year candidate, a 10-week fundraising campaign that includes 10 D.C. metropolitan area women competing to see who raises the most money. “I’m raising money on behalf of my students and in particular Josh Bluestein,” Kelly wrote in an email. “Joshua was a fifth-grader at McNair when he was diagnosed and spent three [plus] years enduring grueling treatments. Unfortunately, it wasn’t enough and he passed away in August.” Kelly said that if her team reaches a goal of $50,000, a Leukemia & Lymphoma Society research grant will be named in Joshua’s honor. One way she is working toward that goal is to ask members of the McNair community to donate $20.14 in honor of Joshua. That amount represents the year of his death, Kelly said. The National Capital Area Chapter of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society has held the Woman of the Year Challenge, along with a corresponding Man of the Year Challenge, for the last 24 years, said Claudia Bahar, LLS campaign manager for the fundraiser. This year, 14 men are competing along with the 10 women. The campaign began April 2 and runs through June 13, when there will be a grand finale
LINDSAY A. POWERS
PHOTO BY LAURA MOSQUERA
Ronald McNair Elementary School teacher Katie Kelly is shown with Emma Baker. Emma was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia in May 2012, one of four students Kelly worked with who were diagnosed with leukemia. Kelly is raising funds to name a research grant for one of those students.
With budget shortfalls nearly certain, Montgomery County’s school board “in all likelihood” will try to revise contracts with three employee associations, said board President Patricia O’Neill. County school officials had hoped that Gov. Larry Hogan would fully fund the Geographic Cost of Education Index, a supplemental funding system for counties where education costs are higher. Hogan announced Thursday, however, that he would fund the index at 50 percent, even though state legislators had set aside money for full funding.
The governor’s decision means the Montgomery school system will get about $17.7 million from the state out of roughly $35 million it had expected from GCEI. The school system will need to address what it sees as a $53 million gap between what the board requested and what the County Council likely will approve. The council took a preliminary vote on Thursday to approve the county’s fiscal 2016 operating budget, which includes $2.31 billion for the school district. That amount meets the minimum funding level required by the state’s maintenance of effort law, which prohibits a cut in perstudent funding from one year to the next. The council’s final vote on the budget is set for Thursday. O’Neill said the union contract renegotiations would need
gala and the winners will be announced. Kelly already has held a number of fundraising events including happy hours and arrangements with area restaurants to donate a specific amount of a night’s profits to her efforts. “I’ve learned so much about myself,” Kelly said. “It’s caused me to step out of my comfort zone. There is no limit to what people will do [to help]. It’s thrilling and inspirational.” As part of her fundraising plan, Kelly said she put together a team of family and friends — Team Faith, Hope, Believe — to help her generate ideas and get the word out. “So far, people have donated $30,000,” she said. She is excited to think she can raise at least $20,000 more to get that grant in honor of Joshua. And to make an impact on the future of other children diagnosed with the disease. “It’s really an incredible experience,” she said. “It’s totally changed my outlook on life.” pmcewan@gazette.net
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to happen soon, because the board will take final action on a fiscal 2016 operating budget in June. On Thursday, she described union officials as “alarmed” and “unhappy.” “I’m not happy either that we’re in this position,” she said. Based on the current threeyear agreements, employees in the three associations are scheduled to receive a 2-percent salary increase in October, according to Dana Tofig, a school system spokesman. That’s in addition to step increases for eligible employees. The unions include the Montgomery County Education Association, the Montgomery County Association of Administrators and Principals, and SEIU Local 500. In letters sent this month before the governor’s announcement, O’Neill notified union officials that the school board
was ”exercising its contractual right to reopen negotiations regarding the salary provisions” of the agreements. “We would like to initiate these negotiations as soon as possible and look forward to constructive and collaborative efforts with you and your organization to resolve this difficult situation,” O’Neill wrote in a May 4 letter to Doug Prouty, president of the county teachers union. Prouty said that, in larger conversations between district and union officials about the budget, one idea has been delaying salary increases. Such a move would mean that employees would see a salary bump next fiscal year, but later than previously planned. Union and district officials have been “scrubbing the budget” to look for potential savings, Prouty said. lpowers@gazette.net
THE GAZETTE
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RANGER
Continued from Page A-1 Smith, Jr., is the culmination of years of effort in holding him accountable in the death of Michael McQueen,” Ramon Korionoff, a spokesman for the state’s attorney’s office, wrote in an email Thursday. “It won’t bring the victim back but hopefully it can start the family on the road to healing.” Smith was originally charged with murder after police found McQueen, 22, dead of a gunshot wound inside the Gaithersburg apartment he shared with Smith. Smith was found outside the apartment crying and covered in blood. The question for a jury to decide was whether Smith shot McQueen or whether McQueen committed suicide, Jezic said. In Smith’s first trial in 2008, the jury found McQueen not guilty of first- and second-degree murder, but guilty of de-
FESTIVAL
Continued from Page A-1 This year, the festival teamed with the city and an app designer to introduce the first Gaithersburg Book Festival iPhone and Android cell phone application. Ashman said that the purpose of the app was to work in place of the printed program.
COLLEGE
Continued from Page A-1 the college admissions process that CollegeTracks helps students with include financial aid application help, test preparation and essay writing. Leopold explained that she and her staff worked closely with Montgomery County Public Schools to decide which school to expand to and settled on Watkins Mill due to the amount of students eligible for free or reduced lunch. CollegeTracks and Leopold dream of one day expanding to reach the “tens of thousands of high
praved heart murder, a crime which is not intentional, Jezic said. The jury’s verdict was overturned by the state’s Court of Appeals in 2011. In Smith’s second trial in 2012, the jury found Smith not guilty of depraved heart murder, but guilty of involuntary manslaughter. That conviction was overturned by the Maryland Court of Special Appeals last August. Smith was released from prison in October and has been living under house arrest until the plea agreement was reached in April, Jezic said. Under the agreement, Circuit Court Judge Joseph Dugan Jr. gave Smith credit for time served in prison and ordered a period of unsupervised probation. Smith will not be allowed to have firearms for 18 months, Jezic said. If Smith had gone through another jury trial, he would have run the risk of being found guilty, Jezic said.
Smith said that would mean losing more time than he already has missed with family and friends, including his elderly grandparents. “It was hard not to be there for them during my two stints in prison,” said Smith, who spent time in Hagerstown-area and Salisbury prisons while waiting for state appeals courts to rule in his case. Last weekend, Smith said he went to the beach with his girlfriend after not seeing the Atlantic Ocean for nine years. “It was great. We had a phenomenal time,” he said. According to the agreement, Smith may ask for a reconsideration of his Alford plea for involuntary manslaughter in 4½ years and ask for probation before judgment. If granted, the involuntary manslaughter can be expunged from his record, Jezic said, but the reckless endangerment charge will remain.
He explained because the WiFi signal and cell phone service in Olde Towne isn’t very good, it was convenient for attendees who wanted to check the website for the schedule to just be able to pull it up on the already downloaded app. Ashman said that despite the odd challenges that came this year, about 20,000 people were estimated to have at-
tended, which is the same estimate as last year, and he thinks if it had been a little cooler and there was no storm, the attendance could have been higher. “I’m very happy. I’ve gotten really nothing but excellent, positive feedback from attendees, authors and committee members,” Ashman said.
school students who need our services.” “There are probably 12 more school in MCPS that have large, critical masses of kids who [need the program],” Leopold said. In 2010, CollegeTracks began to offer a college success program that helped their students succeed once they were attending college. “These same kids, through no fault of their own, who have trouble getting to college have no safety net,” she explained, adding that though their peers might be able to call their parents and ask for financial as-
sistance or advice, most of the students her organization helps don’t have that privilege. The college success program keeps in touch with students via in-person and oncampus meetings, and also by phone call, text and email. The announcement of the expansion came at the 2015 graduate celebration on May 12. It is being made possible by a public-private partnership with CollegeTracks, the county government and The Norman and Ruth Rales Foundation.
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Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
DEVELOPMENT
Continued from Page A-1 daily. Greg Ossont, deputy director of the Department of General Services for Montgomery County, explained that the development project goes back to the Shady Grove Sector plan and has been implemented as part of County Executive Isiah Leggett’s Smart Growth Initiative. According to the county’s website, the Smart Growth Initiative looks to the future to make sure there are quality jobs, sufficient and affordable housing near mass transit, redevelopment of old industrial sites and investments in county-owned facilities. Ossont explained that the county’s infrastructure in the area surrounding Shady Grove Metro was aging and would need to be replaced eventually. Instead, they got rid of them altogether and moved the current
INTERIM
Continued from Page A-1 Goodwin, who is head of high school principals in the Montgomery County Association of Administrators and Principals. The letter pointed to challenges posed by recent funding shortfalls and Houlihan’s decision to withdraw. “We believe that Larry Bowers is, at this point in time, the best person to bring stability and expertise to deal with the challenges MCPS faces, as he has done this spring,” the letter said. During Bowers’ time as interim superintendent, Goodwin said, he has led the school system well through a tough budget season. He said he hoped that Bowers would agree to stay. “But at the same time, he’s put in his many, many years and he deserves to retire if he wants to retire,” he said. Bowers has worked for Montgomery County Public Schools for about 37 years. O’Neill said Houlihan sent her a letter about his withdrawal electronically on Sunday, soon after he visited the county. “It said that after reflecting on the superintendency here in Montgomery County, he decided
uses to other facilities throughout the county, clearing that land for the “urban village.” “Where we are today is the west side of Crabbs Branch has been completely cleared of all the county uses,” Ossont said. “Everything has been relocated and demolished and that site has been cleared. The builder has effectively taken us through the site plan process and purchased the first phase of residential lots from the county so now they are ready to build.” Ossont said that in order to facilitate the new residential buildings the developers and county will need to enhance the water and sewer capacity, rebuild Crabbs Branch Way, improve the transportation network and add walkable retail. “Not as much commercial as Rockville’s town center, but it’s the same type of product,” Ossont said. Quinn called commercial uses like these, “neighborhoodserving, amenity retail,” which
he listed as things like a corner store, dry cleaners, neighborhood cafes and fast-casual as well as sit-down restaurants. He said the plan calls for the uses to be largely residential, with both townhouses and multifamily buildings. “I think what’s different is that it hasn’t been designed to be a regional shopping destination,” Quinn said, explaining that it will be for the daily use of residents, who would be able to reach big-name department stores by car or metro. “Our company’s motto is ‘life within walking distance’ and we use that motto to drive all our decisions, including where we develop, what kind of communities we hope to develop,” Quinn said. According to Quinn, a large majority of the units will be within half a mile of the metro or less.
that it was not a good fit for him, his family and for the system,” she said. O’Neill said Houlihan’s intelligence, energy, ideas and varied experience in Houston stood out to her. “I wouldn’t have supported his moving as far in the process as he did if I didn’t believe he had the ability to be our superintendent,” she said Monday. She said his withdrawal came as a surprise. Houlihan, along with O’Neill and school board Vice President Michael Durso, met Friday with Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett (D), County Council President George L. Leventhal and Councilman Craig L. Rice (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown, who is chairman of the council’s Education Committee. That meeting went “extraordinarily well,” O’Neill said. After the meeting, Leventhal (D-At large) of Takoma Park said his impression of Houlihan was “very positive.” “He has real depth and he communicates a lot of knowledge and a lot of sensitivity,” he said. After announcing Houlihan as its top pick, the board had planned to continue vetting Houlihan. Four board members had planned to visit Houston. Houli-
han recently met with a community panel of representatives from a range of county entities. Houlihan was one of 25 candidates the board considered in its search for a new leader. The board interviewed seven of the candidates in person. On Friday, Durso said he thought Houlihan was “energetic” and “enthusiastic” and has held interesting positions in his career. Houlihan has served in multiple senior leadership roles in the Houston school system, including chief academic officer, starting last month, according to a school system press release. He has been the chief human resources officer, chief major projects officer, a school support officer and a principal, according to the district’s website. Houlihan had also expressed interest in leading the school district in Palm Beach County, Fla., according to a March 27 letter from Houlihan to the search firm Ray and Associates. The Palm Beach Post reported that Robert Avossa, who was selected for the Palm Beach position, was also a finalist for Montgomery County superintendent.
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Page A-11
BUSINESS
Residents seek 500-foot buffer from large gas stations Attorney for Costco in Wheaton says proposal has ‘no basis’ n
BY
KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER
Representatives of Costco Wholesale Corp. and residents living near the Wheaton Costco gave differing views last week on a proposed Montgomery County zoning ordinance amendment. The amendment would increase the distance that large gas stations have to be from schools, parks and other facilities. It would expand the buffer zone between stations pumping at least 3.6 million gallons annually and the schools and other facilities to 500 feet. Also, it would include residences and “environmentally sensitive” areas, such as streams and wetlands, under that protection. Currently, the buffer zone is 300 feet from schools, parks, day care centers and outdoor civic or
Tech council honors industry leaders The Tech Council of Maryland in Rockville presented its 27th annual Industry Awards last week in North Bethesda to the following: • Chief Financial Officer of the Year: Robert Kramer of Emergent BioSolutions in Gaithersburg, which develops biodefense products, including anthrax vaccines. • Chief Information Officer/ Chief Technology Officer of the Year: Herman Wong, senior director, information technology with Amarex Clinical Research of Germantown, a contract research organization. • Life Science Firm of the Year: Novavax of Gaithersburg, which develops flu and ebola vaccines. • Chief Executive Officer of the Year: Stephen Hoffman, CEO and chief scientific officer of Sanaria of Rockville, which
GAZETTE FILE PHOTO
A battle over proposed gas pumps at Costco at Westfield Wheaton mall has led Montgomery County to consider new buffer requirements for future gas station plans. recreational facilities. The County Council approved that limit in 2012. There was “no evidence” justifying the 300-foot buffer in 2012 and none presented since then to justify an increased buffer, Patricia Harris, an attorney representing Costco, said during a May 12 public hearing before the Montgomery County Council. develops malaria vaccines. • Technology Firm of the Year: WeddingWire of Chevy Chase, which provides online wedding resources. • Government Contracting Firm of the Year: Phacil of Arlington, Va., a federal information technology contractor. • Emerging Firm of the Year: ZeroFox of Baltimore, which provides cybersecurity services for social media. • STEM Educator of the Year: Virginia Brown, molecular genetics teacher at Churchill High School in Potomac. • Advocate of the Year: state Sen. Edward J. Kasemeyer (DDist. 12) of Columbia, chairman of the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee.
Home care franchise opens in Gaithersburg David Hoffman has opened a Gaithersburg franchise of FirstLight HomeCare, which
“Auto emissions have fallen significantly as a result of advances in clean-air technology. There simply is no basis to increase setbacks when auto emissions are dramatically decreasing,” Harris said. Costco has been working on gaining approval to build a 16-pump gas station outside its Westfield Wheaton mall store
for several years. In March, the Montgomery County Board of Appeals denied its latest request. Costco filed an appeal April 30 in Montgomery County Circuit Court. Council President George L. Leventhal (D-At Large) of Takoma Park said the board of appeals usually asks the county to pay to defend its position when there is such an appeal, and the council decides whether to cover the costs. “I think it is extremely likely in this case that the county would cover those costs,” Leventhal said. He added that the matter is ongoing due to Costco’s “decision to prolong this matter,” which will likely cost the county money. Harris responded that Costco has a “due process right” to challenge the decision. Residents living near the Wheaton mall said they need greater protection from fumes from idling cars at such large gas stations.
BizBriefs
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provides nonmedical in-home care for adults. The business provides companion care services for seniors, new mothers, those recovering from surgery and others. Services include meal preparation, light housekeeping, shopping, driving to medical appointments and personal care. Besides Gaithersburg, its coverage area is Rockville, Darnestown, Montgomery Village, Derwood and other parts of northern Montgomery County. “When we started caring for my wife’s godmother, it made me think about how I might be able to help other seniors and family members in a similar situation,” Hofmann, a former executive with a U.S. health-
care company in China, said in a news release. FirstLight HomeCare has more than 120 franchises around the country. More information is available at 301-798-7089 or gaithersburg.firstlighthomecare.com.
Four in county win state export grants Four Montgomery County businesses are among the 12 small and mid-sized Maryland companies that have won ExportMD grants to help promote their products and services globally. The ExportMD grant program is administered by the Department of Business and
Including homes in the buffer zone is “an important step” since that is where “vulnerable populations” spend the majority of their time, said Maria Jison, a physician and county resident, She said she has a young child with asthma. “Studies show that negative health effects are greater and more probable the closer you live to the source of pollution,” Jison said. The Costco station would be as near as 118 feet from a single-family home, 375 feet from the Kenmont Swim & Tennis Club and 874 feet from the Stephen Knolls School, according to county documents. The school teaches about 100 specialneeds and disabled children with chronic lung disease, asthma, cerebral palsy and other conditions. Costco’s stations will include newer technology with higher environmental standards than most existing gas stations, said David Sullivan, an environmental consultant for Costco. Representatives of some gas station associations said they
hoped the ordinance would not impact current stations. “We don’t have a lot of problem with this bill,” said Kirk McCauley, director of government affairs and member relations for the Washington, Maryland, Delaware Service Station and Automotive Repair Association. “But we do feel that it needs to be modified and amended to put a grandfather clause for ... existing stations.” Existing large gas stations would not have to satisfy the new setback requirements, if they are approved, according to a memo from county legislative attorney Jeffrey L. Zyontz. Councilman Marc Elrich (DAt Large) of Takoma Park is the lead sponsor of the proposal, which has six co-sponsors, according to Zyontz. The council’s Planning, Housing and Economic Development is scheduled to review the proposal before the full council votes on it.
Economic Development. It’s designed to help businesses with the costs of marketing internationally, including trade show fees, brochures and travel expenses. The program provides matching grants that are capped at $5,000, plus up to 40 hours of marketing consulting from the Office of International Trade and Investment. After being awarded an ExportMD grant in 2012, Golfarb & Associates of Rockville reapplied this year and was accepted. The company is a diesel parts brokerage. “Exhibiting at international trade shows is a vital part of our ability to connect with our international customers and gain exposure to new markets,” Saul Goldfarb, company president, said in an agency news release. The other county recipients are Anna Bags of Gaithersburg, which designs and sells handbags; fashion clothier Miel Tala
of Silver Spring; and Temple Allen Industries of Rockville, which provides pneumatic tools used to make airplanes.
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Supreme Court rules against state in double-taxation case Montgomery County to lose millions in income-tax revenue n
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
States cannot double-tax income earned out of state, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday — a decision that will cost Montgomery County millions. The court was considering whether states should provide taxpayers a full credit for taxes paid to other states on income earned in those states. The case was filed by Howard County residents Brian and Karen Wynne. The Wynnes filed the case after they tried to claim an income tax credit for income paid to other states on their 2006 tax filing. The credit was denied, in part. The state allowed a credit against their Maryland state income tax, but not against their county income tax. On Monday, the Supreme Court struck down the tax system in a splintered 5-4 decision. In the majority opinion, the
court referred to the tax as a double-taxing “scheme” and held that it violates the negative or dormant Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The negative clause “precludes states from discriminating between transactions on the basis of some interstate element,” says a majority opinion by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. “Maryland’s income tax scheme discriminates against interstate commerce,” the opinion says. Alito was joined in the opinion by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and justices Anthony M. Kennedy, Stephen G. Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor. Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Elena Kagan dissented. The decision will affect Montgomery County over many fiscal years, starting as soon as fiscal 2016, Council President George L. Leventhal said Monday morning. Montgomery’s budget will take a hit of between $8 million and $10 million in the coming fiscal year, which starts July 1. In fiscal years 2017 and 2018, the blow will be much bigger — as much as $55 million each of
those two years, said Leventhal (D-At Large) of Takoma Park. The fallout will come when the state withholds additional tax payments to Montgomery County, said County Executive Isiah Leggett. Currently, the state does not grant credits against county income taxes for income earned out of state. “They will deduct based on our people that filed and the time frame they filed in terms of the income tax,” he said. Starting in fiscal year 2019, the county expects to see income-tax revenue decrease about $25 million each year as a direct result of the decision, Leventhal said. “This requires us to be cautious,” he said. “We need to live within available resources.” While $10 million is a small percentage of next year’s $5.07 billion budget, Leggett (D) said, it’s significant. “It’s a devastating decision,” Leggett said. “I can’t overstate the significance to us in terms of our finances and plans going forward. It is not welcome news at all.” Even without the Wynne decision, Leggett has warned that the county likely would need to raise property taxes next year for
the fiscal 2017 budget. “This just adds to it,” he said. “It’s not an insignificant problem.” In the majority opinion, the justices said Maryland taxes the income that residents earn both in and out of state, as well as income that nonresidents earn from sources within Maryland. “But unlike most other States, Maryland does not offer its residents a full credit against the income taxes that they pay to other States,” the justices said. “The effect of this scheme is that some of the income earned by Maryland residents outside the State is taxed twice.” The Supreme Court previously has ruled that states cannot subject corporate income to tax systems like Maryland’s double-tax “and we see no reason why income earned by individuals should be treated less favorably,” Alito wrote. Justices in the minority disputed the use of a doctrine known as the negative or dormant Commerce Clause. In his dissenting opinion — which Thomas partly joined — Scalia wrote that the U.S. Constitution does not contain a
negative or dormant Commerce Clause. It only has the Commerce Clause, which empowers Congress to regulate the commerce with foreign nations, among states and with Native American tribes. “The Clause says nothing about prohibiting state laws that burden commerce,” Scalia said. The so-called negative Commerce Clause is doctrine, and not part of the Constitution, he argued. Scalia also wrote that Maryland’s tax has disadvantages, but it also lets the state collect equal revenue from taxpayers with equal incomes, to avoid the burden of verifying tax payments to other states, and it ensures that every resident pays at least some income tax. “Nothing in the Constitution precludes Maryland from deciding that the benefits of its tax scheme are worth the costs,” he said. Thomas wrote a separate dissenting opinion, which Scalia partly joined. Thomas also disagreed on the use of the so-called negative Commerce Clause, arguing that it has no base in the Constitution, makes little sense and has
proved it doesn’t work when applied and cannot serve as a basis for striking down a state statute. Thomas wrote that the majority opinion would have surprised “those who penned and ratified the Constitution.” In a third dissenting opinion, Ginsburg wrote that the decision veers from a principle the Supreme Court has repeatedly acknowledged: that “a Nation or State may ‘tax all the income of its residents, even income earned outside the taxing jurisdiction.’” Ginsburg was joined by Scalia and Kagan in her minority opinion. “As I see it, nothing in the Constitution or in prior decisions of this Court dictates that one of two States, the domiciliary State or the source State, must recede simply because both have lawful tax regimes reaching the same income,” Ginsburg argued. She continued: “A taxpayer living in one State and working in another gains protection and benefits from both — and so can be called upon to share in the costs of both States’ governments.” kalexander@gazette.net
In battle over supplemental funding, Hogan stands pat at halfway Governor won’t address bill mandating future full funding; it will become law n
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
Gov. Larry Hogan said
Thursday that he will not give school systems all of their supplemental funding for the next fiscal year, leaving Montgomery County nearly $18 million short of what it hoped to get. Hogan (R) said he will provide only half of the funding for a formula, known as the Geo-
Obituary Elza Helena Carvalho, 66, started her eternal life with her LORD Jesus Christ on Saturday, April 18, 2015. Cancer took her too soon, as she was enjoying her retirement years as a newly married bride living in her birth town of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Before retirement, Elza had been a resident of Montgomery County since 1985, and in Gaithersburg since 1987. She loved her church family of First Baptist Church of Gaithersburg, and she was active as a deacon, an Alto in the Choir and as a Music Teacher to preschoolers. Elza loved to travel. After the attack of 9/11, Elza contributed to the protection of her country of citizenship by traveling to many US cities assisting in the hiring of agents for the newly created TSA. Elza’s family, who miss her carefree personality and her candidness, includes her husband, Alfredo Pinna, her sister, Alzira, her brothers Marco and Anthony, her uncle, aunts, nephews, nieces and many, many cousins, in-laws and friends. 1931166
graphic Cost of Education Index, for counties where educations costs are higher. Instead, Hogan said he will put half of the money, about $68 million, into state pensions. “What we will not do is rob the pensions of Maryland citizens at the demand of special interest groups and politicians ...,” Hogan said at a news conference Thursday in Annapolis. Hogan was referring to a budget battle in which the legislature trimmed the amount of money that would have been directed to the pension fund. Montgomery County Councilman Craig L. Rice strongly criticized Hogan for not fully funding the geographic index. “He’s decided to wage war on education institutions throughout the state and we’re going to have to act accordingly,” Rice said. Hogan also said he will neither sign nor veto a bill that will mandate he fully fund the index starting with fiscal 2017. Unless Hogan vetoes the bill, it will go into law. Lawmakers “fenced off,” or earmarked, full funding for the index in the state budget it passed April 13. After battling with Hogan on the index, the General Assembly passed legislation this session that forced Hogan to choose between fully funding the index now or having to fund it in full each year in perpetuity.
Hogan’s decision on the index funding has been anticipated for weeks. About half of the state’s school systems stood to lose money if the governor did not go with full funding. Created under the Thornton Education Plan, the index provides additional money to school systems where the cost of education is higher. It has been fully funded by the state since 2010. For Montgomery County Public Schools, the formula has meant about an additional $35 million each year since 2010 from the state. For fiscal 2016, full funding meant $35.4 million for Montgomery, but Hogan is cutting that to $17.7 million. School board President Patricia O’Neill said in a statement Thursday that Hogan’s decision will require the school district to “make even deeper cuts.” “His decision leaves a $17 million hole in our budget that will require us to take very difficult actions that will impact every school in our district,” O’Neill said in a statement emailed by district spokesman Dana Tofig. “I want to know what the governor is thinking,” said state Sen. Nancy J. King, Montgomery County’s Senate delegation chairwoman. “I think the thing I have to do is get a chance to sit down with him and find out his reasoning.”
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Hogan told reporters that the state is making record investment in education and has put more into school construction than the prior administration. Education, he said, is a top priority. But to local leaders and education advocates, Hogan’s words were empty rhetoric. “If education was a top priority for this governor, he would have fully funded GCEI,” said Rice (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown. “We would not have had to play the game we had to play to achieve the right funding for school systems across the state.” County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) said Hogan’s move sends the message that he may not value education. The money, Leggett said, was desperately needed. “I’m very disappointed in the governor’s decision,” he said. Rice and King fear that battle will escalate in the future. Rice chairs the council’s Education Committee, as well as the Education Committee for the Maryland Association of Counties. Sean Johnson, government relations director of the Maryland State Education Association, said Hogan’s administration will spend more dollars on education, but increasing enrollment and budget pressures means Maryland will provide less money per student than the year before. Johnson said he did not have exact figures on how much less per student the final budget and Hogan’s decision on the index provides. Johnson said Hogan’s proposed budget in January — which called for paying half of the index, among other cuts — provided about $85 to $90 less per student than former Gov. Martin J. O’Malley (D) put in the current budget. “We don’t go backwards on our kids. We haven’t gone backwards on our kids. Unfortunately, in the first term of
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Gov. Hogan, we are,” Johnson said. Shortchanging students is shortsighted, said King (D-Dist. 39) of Montgomery Village. “Kids don’t need to be involved in politics,” she said. “They need to be involved in getting a good education.” Rice said Hogan cannot hide behind the state’s growing education spending or take credit for it, because it is a function of higher enrollment, not the governor’s actions. King sponsored the bill mandating full index funding. The bill was a cross-filed version of a bill introduced in the House by Del. Eric Luedtke (DDist. 14) of Burtonsville. The Senate version was amended by the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee to include the provision that makes full funding of GCEI mandatory should Hogan not fully fund it in fiscal 2016. Luedtke introduced the original bill in two prior sessions, but it did not pass. King said discussions early in the session with Hogan left her thinking that if her bill passed, Hogan would fully fund the index for the coming fiscal year to avoid the future mandate. Hogan has been harshly critical of how 81 percent of the state’s budget is mandated spending, leaving him little room to make changes. But by allowing King’s bill to go into law, even more of the budget will be mandated spending. Even though the index funding will be mandated, King said she fears there will be attempts to cut it later. “I can’t imagine that it’s going to be easy,” she said. Staff Writer Lindsay A. Powers contributed to this story. kalexander@gazette.net
The Gazette
New taxes rarely inspire celebration from the public, but a new one in Montgomery County makes sense. The County Council has indicated its intention to impose a tax of 30 percent on the wholesale price of electronic cigarettes. Final approval is expected this week. We support the idea because of health and equity. Perhaps electronic cigarettes are meant to be a safer, filtered-down version of their tobacco brethren. Still, they currently contain nicotine — satisfying a smoker’s craving — but don’t have the tar and carbon monoxide that come from smoking conventional cigarettes. Even if they’re considered less dangerous, though, they aren’t safe. The federal Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. surgeon general say there is great uncertainty about the safety and risks of e-cigarettes. The FDA is pushing for measures to regulate sales and marCOUNTY keting. We do know, COUNCIL though, that eMAKING THE cigarettes often RIGHT CHOICE contain nicotine, IN REGULATING which is highly E-CIGARETTES addictive and can damage heart cells, affect the immune system, alter brain growth and carry other health risks. In addition, studies have found potentially unsafe chemicals in e-cigarette liquid and high levels of formaldehyde, a carcinogen, in e-cigarette vapor. Because of these health concerns, we believe it’s appropriate to tax and regulate e-cigarettes in the same way as tobacco products . At a recent public hearing on the tax proposal, lobbyist Bruce Bereano, representing the Maryland Association of Tobacco & Candy Distributors, asserted that Montgomery County has overstepped its authority. He said the county treats e-cigarettes like tobacco cigarettes by grouping them together in an indoor-smoking ban. Only the state can tax tobacco, so Montgomery’s proposed tax on e-cigarettes is illegal, he alleged. That’s a parsing of words, semantic jiu-jitsu, to protect his clients’ interests. A county attorney responded that e-cigarettes are not subject to the state’s tobacco tax; the distinction already has been made clear. Besides, secondhand vapor could be hazardous, too. Research by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has found that e-cigarette aerosol, commonly called vapor, can contain chemicals, that the nicotine solution can be poisonous through the skin or eyes, and that potentially harmful chemicals have been found in some e-cigarettes — which, as we mentioned, are not regulated. Some might see the council as seizing an opportunity to benefit financially by imposing another sin tax. We hope the tax effort would be tied to public health — in the same way the state’s increases on tobacco products have been directed to health care initiatives. The only danger is that diminishing revenue would mean a smaller pot of money for programs, but that’s an enviable problem. We have heard opponents’ economic arguments that an extra tax on e-cigarettes will drive buyers to other states to avoid that tax. With them, they take their purchases of gas, groceries and other items. Perhaps e-cigarette users will reprogram their lives and shopping habits in much the same way cigarette smokers drive to bordering states for their next carton. But we can’t justify the reasoning that revenue outweighs public health. The pleas from those who say e-cigarettes have helped them kick the cigarette habit carry more weight, but we come back to the idea that e-cigarettes carry harmful health risks. The surgeon general does not recommend e-cigarettes as a cessation technique in the same way it supports nicotine patches, gum or lozenges. Electronic cigarettes are not just a fallback for smoking addicts. They’re also an entry point for the next generation of curious young adults, who are targeted with candylike e-cigarette flavors. The County Council’s efforts to restrict and tax electronic cigarettes are justified.
The Gazette Vanessa Harrington, Senior Editor Nathan Oravec, Managing Editor Glen C. Cullen, Senior Editor, Copy/Design Jessica Loder, Managing Editor, Internet
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LETTERS TOT HE EDITOR
OUROPINION
A smart tax
Forum
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Corridor Cities Transitway could be boon for region As we move forward from a legislative session marked by progress on statewide economic development initiatives and recommendations from the Augustine Commission, it is time for us to take stock of economic growth closer to home. How do we spur economic development and bring jobs to Montgomery County and the state of Maryland? How do we relieve crushing traffic congestion? How do we increase access to affordable transit and create jobs? We strongly believe that the Corridor Cities Transitway (CCT) is the answer to these questions. In terms of affordability, congestion relief and fostering economic development along the Interstate 270 corridor, the CCT should be the top transit option for Maryland. The line would run from the Shady Grove Metro station in Gaithersburg northwest to Clarksburg, across Montgomery County. We can expect many positive impacts from the CCT, but the expansion of the Great Seneca Science Corridor (GSSC) would ensure Maryland is a leader in biotechnology advancements for decades to come. Over the next 20 years, the GSSC will benefit the state of Maryland by generating 100,000 new annual full- and part-time science-related jobs, $13 billion in annual goods and services for businesses, and $322 million in annual state tax revenues. However, as stated in the GSSC Master Plan, a prerequisite for complete development is the full funding of the CCT. Upon completion of the CCT, this transit-oriented applied bioscience research community would stretch across 900 acres, contain 17.5 million square feet of mixed use commercial space, and 9,000 dwelling units. The I-270 corridor in the area around the Shady Grove Life Sciences Center is already the third largest biotech cluster in the country.
2013 FILE PHOTO
Denny Finnerin (center), a consultant with RK&K, and Richard Arkin (left) of Gaithersburg discuss plans for a segment of the planned Corridor Cities Transitway running near the Crown Farm area of Gaithersburg. The direct economic impacts of the GSSC and the CCT are significant, and completion of these projects would be a crowning achievement for Maryland. Beyond future positive economic impacts, the CCT would provide faster, more direct transportation between residential and major employment areas along I-270. This project would also increase capacity of heavily congested roadways while reducing negative environmental effects. CCT planning is on schedule, and design work is 15 percent complete
for the CCT’s first section between the Shady Grove Metrorail station and Metropolitan Grove. Pending funding for construction, work on the CCT could begin as early as spring 2018, with a projected opening in 2021. Support for the CCT is strong. Johns Hopkins, Adventist Hospital and multiple chambers of commerce join us in urging for the development of this critical transit project. The CCT would help ensure Maryland’s regional competitiveness for decades to come. Together,
we can create jobs, strengthen economic development, and ensure Maryland is a leader in biotechnology by building this very efficient and cost-effective transit system. Shane Robinson, Montgomery Village Nancy J. King, Montgomery Village Marilyn Balcombe, Germantown
Robinson is a state delegate and King is a state senator; they represent Montgomery County’s District 39. Balcombe is the president and CEO of the Gaithersburg-Germantown Chamber of Commerce.
Wealthier residents shouldn’t get favorable treatment I am one of the neighbors who is a party to the dispute over the maintenance and control of a shared driveway (“Driveway makes bad neighbors in Chevy Chase,” April 22). It is important for readers to understand that the property that my neighbors bought in 2008 is adjacent to a very narrow shared driveway. At the time they purchased the property, the driveway had a grassy median strip running down the center of it — the same grassy strip that has been the subject of this ongoing controversy. The plans for my neighbors’ new house meant that my neighbors would have a new driving pattern — one that would require them to drive across the grassy strip. It is also important for readers to understand that back in 2008, when the proposal for my neighbors’ new house — much larger than the original house — was still in the planning stage, I objected to those plans, and
made it clear that I would not consent to any changes to the existing shared driveway. My neighbors could have made changes to their plans prior to any construction occurring to address my concerns, but they did not. But just why did this happen? I think The Gazette has missed the more important story behind the dispute between two neighbors, a dispute which I do believe is most unfortunate. The underlying story is that there are builders and developers intent on making a profit by tearing down older homes that have been occupied primarily by residents who are less affluent than some of the newcomers and building much larger homes for those more affluent new homeowners. While no one really wants to talk about it, it really is a kind of class warfare in a relatively affluent suburban community. The builders make their
profit and then leave, with no care about the effect on neighbors to their construction projects, or on neighborhoods, or the environment. Larger houses mean a loss of tree canopy and of green space, less privacy between neighbors and festering issues with respect to storm water management. Underlying these facts is also the reality that while the town of Chevy Chase has a very well-intentioned building code, stormwater ordinance and tree protection ordinance designed to mitigate against these forces, there are loopholes in the town code, which lessen the protections that should be available to neighbors to large construction projects. It would seem that the builders and developers have had these loopholes written into the town code, to protect their interests. We know that the wealthiest individuals in our town pay a larger share
Basis for ridership projection a mystery The letter from Mr. Bennett, president of Purple Line Now (“Purple Line opponents haven’t proposed real alternatives,” May 6), does no credit to him for writing it or to The Gazette for printing it. Instead of arguing the merits of the evidence, he personally attacks a critic with legitimate questions. The mysterious ridership estimates Mr. Bennett fails to defend present a particularly troubling concern about the benefits of the project. The Purple Line record raises many more questions than it answers. For example, the ridership estimates reveal nothing about how the numbers were derived or what assumptions were made in deriving them. This failure was explained as “proprietary information” without further elaboration. While the Federal Transit Administration and
Mr. Bennett may be satisfied with numbers that are neither supported nor capable of replication, there is in truth no evidence that the federal government knew any more than the general public about how the consulting firm Parsons Brinckerhoff derived those numbers on behalf of the Maryland Transit Administration. To attack Mr. Riker because he now lives in the Chevy Chase area is not only rude, but is an implicit admission that the evidence would not help Mr. Bennett succeed in selling the Purple Line. Based on the evidence available, the costs of the Purple Line far outweigh the speculative and uncertain benefits claimed by the proponents of the project.
Dennis Wilston, Corporate Advertising Director Mona Bass, Inside Classifieds Director Anna Joyce, Creative Director, Special Pubs/Internet Ellen Pankake, Director of Creative Services
Put the ‘Smart’ back in ‘Smart Growth’
nounced, I had no idea who Fred Cecere was. I find it ironic he is concerned about “the town government’s lack of transparency.” Barbara Rose, Chevy Chase
Dale Barnhard, Silver Spring
Lewis Leibowitz, Chevy Chase
9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877 | Phone: 301-948-3120 | Fax: 301-670-7183 | Email: opinions@gazette.net More letters appear online at www.gazette.net/opinion
Will C. Franklin, A&E Editor Ken Sain, Sports Editor Dan Gross, Photo Editor Kent Zakour, Web Editor
Deborah A. Vollmer, town of Chevy Chase
In regard to the prediction of the 27,000 new jobs the Purple Line would add to the region (“Purple Line’s anticipated impact grows,” April 22), I can’t help but wonder what crystal ball the “experts” gazed at in this conclusion. A far more logical solution would be to build affordable housing where the jobs are located. A more cost effective and better return of the current estimated cost of building the Purple Line at $2.45 billion would be to apply those funds to building more affordable housing in areas that support jobs. The original concept of “Smart Growth” was to “Live, Work and Play.” We need to put the “Smart” back into “Smart Growth.” Building and maintaining an exceedingly expensive light rail at the cost of destroying neighborhoods and natural habitat would not be needed if the housing options were more readily available.
Ironic ‘transparency’ As a resident of the town of Chevy Chase, I appreciated Tiffany Arnold’s article on the recent town-council elections (“Big issues flare in small election,” May 13). When the election results were initially an-
of the revenues received by the town than individuals who are less wealthy, because the bulk of the revenue comes from the payment of Maryland state income taxes. I think there is a real question, with respect to inequality of treatment, when it comes to enforcement of the town code and with respect to issuing permits for construction in our town. Are the less wealthy residents getting as much consideration from the town as their wealthier counterparts, when it comes to decisions relating to variances and building permits? I don’t believe so. Income inequality leads to unequal treatment in our town — just as is the case in the society at large. This underlying picture is the real story that the media should be focusing on.
Leah Arnold, Information Technology Manager David Varndell, Digital Media Manager Cathy Kim, Director of Marketing and Community Outreach
POST COMMUNITY MEDIA Michael T. McIntyre, Controller Donna Johnson, Vice President of Human Resources Maxine Minar, President, Comprint Military
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SPORTS
GAMES GAZETTE.NET IS STAFFING
Sherwood senior leads All-Gazette boys volleyball team as Player of the Year. B-3
Posted online by 8 a.m. the following day. LACROSSE: State championship, Churchill vs. Howard, 8 tonight at Stevenson University. Louis Dubick (left), state’s all-time leading scorer, plays in his final game. SOFTBALL: State championship game, TBA. BASEBALL: State championship game, TBA. TENNIS: State championships, Saturday at UMD.
GAITHERSBURG | MONTGOMERY VILLAGE
TRACK: State championship, Saturday at Morgan State.
www.gazette.net | Wednesday, May 20, 2015 | Page B-1
Elite no longer need prep sports Editor’s note: Ned Sparks, who has been executive director of the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association since 1981, is retiring effective Aug. 1. This is the last of three columns looking at his tenure and the big issues facing high school sports today. It was 1975 when Ned Sparks began his head coaching tenure in high school sports. Still in his 20s, Sparks was promoted from an assistant role and tasked with leading Howard High School’s football team. The Lions were the defending Class B state champions and had an active winning streak of 36 games when he took KEN SAIN the helm. No pressure SPORTS EDITOR there. “Maybe I was too young to even think too much about it,” Sparks said. Howard, with Sparks in charge, won 11 straight, sending the Lions back to the state title game and extending its state record for consecutive football victories to 47 games. They lost that title game to Paint Branch, ending their streak. Urbana would break that record in 2001, winning 50 consecutive games. “Some things in life ... losing that game really hurt,” Sparks said. “It’s a good experience for a young person to go through, I wouldn’t recommend it, but it stayed with me awhile. That was a bitter, bitter loss.” Back then, high school sports were basically the only option for elite athletes. All the best athletes played prep sports if they wanted to get noticed by colleges and earn a scholarship. One change since Sparks became executive director of the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association in 1981 is that elite athletes no longer need high school sports. In fact, in some cases, they are penalized for playing for their schools. “Those few kids that are at the top of the food chain, well, maybe we’re not for them,” Sparks said. If you’re a tennis player and want to earn a scholarship, you better be competing on the junior circuit because that’s where the college coaches are. They want to know your rank, not how many state titles you’ve won. College basketball coaches rarely come to high school games anymore, unless it’s to seal the deal in recruiting. Most evaluation takes place during Amateur Athletic Union games. The top boys soccer players actually have to choose: Do they play for their Academy team against the best competition, or for their high school team with their friends? Academy rules won’t allow them to play for both. Even in football, where college coaches still pay attention, most of the recruiting today starts off-campus. If you’re not going to college camps, then it will be very hard to get noticed. In sport after sport, for the elite athletes, how you perform outside of high school now matters more than what you do for your high school team. Sparks, who announced he is retiring effective Aug. 1, says that despite that, high school sports still have a value in educating young people. “Unfortunately, [recruiting of elite athletes] gets all the attention,” Sparks said. “Those are just for a few kids. We have 113,000 student athletes who participate in our state this year. How many of those kids are going on to college? How many will make it to the pros? A tiny fraction. “We still got the vast majority of all those kids who are ... going pro in something else. They’re going to be the people who sell insurance, the people who teach school, are [information technology] people, and professionals who become doctors, and lawyers. “Hopefully, we’re nurturing and developing that group of people who become the citizens of tomorrow.” ksain@gazette.net Listen to my interview with Ned Sparks at Gazette.net.
Passing summer away
A change at Watkins Mill n Former Watkins atkins Mill, Damascus standout dout replaces girls basketball all coach BY
ERIC GOLDWEIN LDWEIN
Players can solidify their spot on the depth chart during 7-on-7 play
STAFF WRITER ITER
n
Ivan Hicks was looking ng for a change of scenery. The former professional ofessional football player had spent the previous vious six years running a furniture delivery company in New Jersey, and had bounced d city to city and job to job prior to that. He wanted to be in a new environment; somewhere mewhere he could clear his mind and relax, he said. So in 1997 — a decadee after his brief stint with the Detroit Lions in the 1987 strike season — he moved to Oklahoma, homa, living with his older brother, Albert Hicks, ks, along with Albert’s wife and daughter. It was there, in Woodward, dward, that he discovered his passion for coaching hing and sent his career in a new direction. Hickss started working as a substitute teacher and a volunteer assistant on the Woodward High School ool football team. “I knew then that he was going to end up in coaching,” Albert Hickss said. Hicks only stayed in Oklahoma klahoma for a year, but has remained in education ation and athletics ever since. Soon after leaving ving Woodward, he made his way to Maryland yland where he started working as a substitute stitute teacher at Gaithersburg High School hool and has since taken on variouss coaching positions in Montgomeryy County, one of which — with the Watkins Mill girls basketball team m — he stepped down from earlier er this spring. Hicks, 52, compiled d an 82-78 record in his eightghtseason tenure with the he Montgomery Village ge school, leading the team m to a division title this past st season — its first since ce 1992, he said. Hicks said d he resigned so he could d spend more time with hiss family. In Hicks’ previous coaching stint at Gaithersburg — where he currently works as a paraeducator — he led the girls basketball team BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE to a 98-16 record and a Ivan Hicks is stepstate finals appearance ping down as coach in 2006. He was also an assistant football coach of the Watkins Mill for the Trojans under High School girls the late John Harvill. basketball team. Hicks was hired to
BY
PRINCE J. GRIMES STAFF WRITER
The spring high school sports season ends this weekend, which means football season is not far behind. Monday is Memorial Day to many, but to some, it’s also the final day before teams can begin competing in passing leagues. Not many starting jobs are decided during 7-on-7 games, but players can definitely start to make a case for themselves. Coaches use this time to teach but also to evaluate receivers, defensive backs, linebackers and quarterbacks. The final depth chart for the opening week of the fall begins to take shape during this time. “[Players] can certainly win or lose jobs,” Blair coach Andrew Fields said of the summer tournaments. “That doesn’t mean they won’t win it or lose it again at some point. Everybody’s got a depth chart going into August, and that thing ebbs and flows over the course of the summer time.” All but four Montgomery teams, and a couple from Prince George’s, will kick off the summer on May 30 in Blair’s passing league. “Our league kind of represents the beginning of football season,” Fields said. Sophomore Desmond Colby is penciled in to return as the starting quarterback for Blair in his junior season. “We’re excited. He’s a young guy, very mature, has got good size on him. Hopefully this passing league will speed things along for him and everyone else as well.” Gaithersburg coach Kreg Kephart said there’s some value in 7-on-7 although limited because the big guys up front aren’t involved. During this time, offensive and defensive linemen usually go to camps and do individual workouts. “It has some value. It’s not a cure all. The five most important people in the game aren’t in the game,” he
See SUMMER, Page B-2
See CHANGE, Page B-2
Clarksburg, Northwest win region track titles Track stars make lasting impressions in last local meet of the season
n
BY
ADAM GUTEKUNST STAFF WRITER
As Walt Whitman High School senior Clare Severe approached the final few yards leading up to the finish line in Thursday afternoon’s 4A West Region 1,600-meter final, the red-faced Vikings standout shot a quick look at the time on the Quince Orchard scoreboard off to the left. Her time of 5 minutes, 2.29 seconds was certainly good enough to claim gold, as she easily held off Churchill’s Lucy Srour, who finished second with a time of 5:07.82. But the time still wasn’t close to the gold standard Severe had set for
herself two years ago, when she ran an astounding 4:57 and change. But for having not run the 1,600 meters this season until last Thursday’s county championship meet, the Vikings senior’s first-place finish in another loaded field was enough to bring a smile to her face. “Just to know that I can compete in it is definitely a good feeling and I was surprised,” Severe said. “… It’s taken me some time to figure out exactly how to run it again. If anything I think it helps because I had sort of a mental block against it before and now I can go in with a fresh mind.” While county fans have certainly heard Severe’s name a number of times over her four years at Whitman, a fresh face continued his dominant shortdistance run in the boys 100 meters, as
See TRACK, Page B-2
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Clarksburg High School’s Naja McAdam competes in the high jump at Thursday’s 4A West Region track and field meet at Quince Orchard High School in Gaithersburg.
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CHANGE
Continued from Page B-1 coach the Watkins Mill football team in 2005, and then, in 2007, he took over a girls basketball that was winless in its previous two seasons. He resigned as football coach after three seasons, but stuck with girls basketball, turning the Wolverines into a consistently competitive team. It was tough at first, he said. Sometimes, there were barely enough to players put a full team on the floor. One season, the team was so short on backcourt talent that he used his center as a point guard. “A couple years we had eight players. A couple years we had seven. One year we had six,” Hicks said. “... The girls worked hard. They showed up every day. But we just didn’t have a lot of talent,” Hicks said. Slowly, the team started to improve. Watkins Mill went 4-18 in Hicks’ first year, then hovered around .500 in the proceeding seasons before eventually going 13-7 in 2014-15, winning nine games in the Montgomery 3A/2A division. Senior Danielle Durjan, a Sacred Heart recruit, said that Hicks has a way of connecting with the players. Though he’s vocal and strict, he also has a friendly, funny side, she said. Hicks, a former University of Michigan football standout — whose brother, Dwight Hicks, was a four-time Pro Bowl
TRACK
Continued from Page B-1 TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Blair High School’s Desmond Colby returns next fall to quarterback the Blazers. He’s one of the players scheduled to participate in 7-on-7 passing league games, which begin next week.
SUMMER
Continued from Page B-1 Kephart mentioned timing between the quarterback and receivers as one of the key impacts of passing league. Junior Petey Gaskins took over at quarterback for the Trojans towards the end of the season and will look to progress, but Gaithersburg is not a pass-heavy team. The Trojans will be playing in the Seneca Valley league which also begins the week of Memorial Day. “For a team that’s going to throw the ball 50, 60 times a game, it probably has a lot of value to them.” In Prince George’s County, Wise coach DaLawn Parrish also returns his quarterback from last season, Jabari Laws. The Pumas, similar to Gaithersburg, were known for running the football, but passing league offers a different dynamic. Parrish, who played quarterback in high school, said he always wants to pass more, but his personnel has to convince him they’re capable of handling it.
“I want to throw the ball all the time,” he said. “But if you’re not built toward that, I don’t think you force people to do something that they’re not used to doing.” Most coaches agreed that the main objective of passing tournaments is to make sure players are doing things the right way and progressing toward being ready for the season, not necessarily winning. Essentially, these games are like a shell of a practice. This time of year, teams are only allowed to practice once for each 7-on-7 game they’re scheduled to play. Passing leagues afford players more opportunity to work on coverage techniques, route schemes and anything else involving a pass catcher and a defender. It’s also a good time for players to get familiar with plays and schemes, especially for teams with a new coach. Jason Lomax is the new coach at Springbrook, and he’s known to air the ball out. With a graduating senior at quarterback, this is where the competi-
pgrimes@gazette.net
Jones’ greatest competition all season, Northwest’s Shyheim Wright, finished in third place (15.43) as he too dealt with a lingering lower-body injury. “I just had to stay healthy and stretch a lot and warm up a lot more than usual,” Jones said. “… I’ve been hurdling, but I’ve been doing pretty [badly].” The knee issue didn’t seem to bother the Cougars senior in the field events, where he captured gold in the long jump (21-00.00) and triple jump (4410.25). Other impressive performers from Thursday’s regional meet included Clarksburg’s Alexus Pyles, who was her usual dominant self in the hurdles, easily taking the 100-meter hurdles (14.24) and the 300-meter hurdles (44.34). Later in the afternoon, Severe captured another gold medal, taking the 800-meter with a time of 2:16.17. Magruder sophomore Stephanie Davis continued her reign in the short-distance events, winning the 100 meters (12.05) and 200 meters (24.72), while also propelling the Colonels to wins in the 400-meter relay (49.50) and the 800-meter relay (1:44.81) on Wednesday — an event the Magruder boys also qualified for states in with a time of 1:32.30. On the boys side, Quince
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egoldwein@gazette.net Orchard’s Justin Sorra again edged out Northwest’s Jalen Walker (50.51) in the 400 meters for the second straight week with a time of 50.28. Walker got his gold later in the day though, scratching out a win in the 200 meters (22.21) over Butler (22.32). The team competition was largely par for the course, as the Northwest boys (158) held off Quince Orchard (118) and the Clarksburg girls (164) powered their way past Northwest (94) for the regional crowns. The day’s individual events fittingly ended with perhaps the county’s most recognizable athlete, Northwest’s Diego Zarate, cruising to a first place finish in the 800 meters (1:52.70) — a finish that completed a quadruplet of gold medal finishes that also included wins in the 1,600 meters (4:11.48), the 3,200-meter relay (8:04.11) and 1,600-meter relay (3:25.08). “It’s pretty crazy,” Zarate said. “We wanted to just leave our mark on history here. I believe our whole team did that today. Everyone put it out there … We did great today. I’m so proud of them.” agutekunst@gazette.net
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tion to start begins. “From the kind of offense I run, passing league’s kind of important in terms of getting all your base passing concepts in, then getting the timing of the routes down,” Lomax said. “I’ve tried to simplify it as much as I can so they can have as much success year-one as possible. A lot of people assume first-year coaches coming in, it’s a rebuilding process. I looked all my seniors in the face and said we’re not rebuilding, we’re reloading, because you guys deserve to have the same kind of effort that I would put in any other year.” Teams will be participating in passing leagues until July, in and out of the state, gaining experience and showcasing their abilities for scouts. Players want to get noticed on the trail, but they want to also make sure the guy sitting behind them on the depth chart doesn’t take their place.
Churchill’s Jabari Butler, who moved to Maryland in January from the Las Vegas area, picked up another win, edging out Northwest’s Jalen Walker (10.95) with a time of 10.89. “I’ve pretty much just been working really hard in the offseason,” Butler said. “I knew my times would eventually drop. I actually ran a 10.85 my sophomore year so I’m trying to break that personal record this year.” That sophomore season when Butler set his personal best, he ran for Bishop Gorman — a Nevada high school synonymous with athletic excellence. But according to the Bulldogs senior, the competition on the east coast is as challenging. “It’s real competitive out here too — a lot of fast guys out here on the east coast,” Butler said. “But I’ve just kind of been working hard and progressively getting better.” One of the meet’s most dominant performers was Quince Orchard senior Dorian Jones, who despite a strained ligament in his knee, was able to edge out teammate Bright Ofosu (15.42) with a time of 15.36 in the 100-meter hurdles.
selection and two-time Super Bowl champion with the San Francisco 49ers — routinely took part in scrimmages. Sometimes comedy ensued, like when his pants ripped trying to guard senior Dominique Walker. But other times, his presence would raise the level of competition. “He’s the type that runs the plays with us in practice. If somebody’s not there with us in practice, he’s playing,” Durjan said. “... He’s always blocking my shots.” Hicks will be replaced by Donita Adams, the school announced on May 8. A Germantown native, Adams played for Watkins Mill and Damascus (Class of 2006) and coached the Salem International University women’s basketball team in the 2012-13 season. She’ll have a tough act to follow, with Durjan and Walker (Harford Community College) — the county’s top two scorers — both graduated. Hicks, meanwhile, said he’s not through with coaching. With his daughter, Riana Hicks, heading into her freshman year at Gaithersburg, “it was time to make a change,” he said, but he plans on getting back to the sidelines, sooner rather than later. “Where? I’m not sure, but I’m leaving my options for boys or girls. Where? It doesn’t really matter,” Hicks said.
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Sherwood wins county crown n
BOYS VOLLEYBALL
Warriors win final three sets in boys volleyball BY
FIRST TEAM
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
PRINCE J. GRIMES STAFF WRITER
For the first time all season, the undefeated Sherwood boys volleyball team dropped an opening set, losing 25-23 to Bethesda-Chevy Chase in the Montgomery County boys volleyball championship at Magruder High School on Thursday. Instead of folding however, Sherwood used the adversity as a chance to show its resolve. The Warriors jumped out to big leads in each of the following two sets and finished the Barons in four sets, 3-1, to finish the season undefeated and win the boys volleyball title for the first time since 2010. “I’m speechless right now,” said Sherwood (15-0) coach Benjamin Sanger, who took over the team the year after its last championship. Sanger said he didn’t have to motivate his experienced bunch following the first set. “They do a great job of motivating themselves. We’re just reinforcers. “I’m just so proud of what these guys accomplished all year. Not just to win the championship, but to go undefeated and to face adversity. This is the first time we ever lost the first set, and to come back out of a position we’re not very familiar with, it’s just incredible to see them overcome that. We just have a very relentless team. Serving, six guys can serve the ball tough. We have six guys that can attack the ball. And I think that’s what kind of separates us from a lot of these teams. They have a couple of weak spots. This team doesn’t have any weak spots.” At the start of Thursday’s game, B-CC looked like the team that eliminated undefeated Wheaton from the playoffs in the county semifinals on Tuesday. The height of middle hitter Tom Gilson and good assists to outside hitter CJ Lee helped the Barons pull away and win a back-and-forth first set, 25-23. Each team benefitted from an excessive amount of unearned points though, possibly due to nerves. Sherwood did a better job of tightening its attack the final three sets, winning 25-17, 25-21, 25-21. “I think nerves was part
Ryan Gallagher
Sherwood Senior Outside hitter
BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE
Sherwood High School’s Ali Waseem spikes the ball back to Bethesda-Chevy Chase during Thursday’s boys volleyball county championship game at Magruder High School. of it,” B-CC (13-2) coach Sue McPherson said. The Blue Division champions didn’t pass as well down the stretch the way they had been doing all season. “I think they got a little too intense games 2, 3, and 4, instead of going out and playing and having fun. “We had some things that weren’t quite clicking the way they have the rest of the season. We weren’t able to use Tom in the middle as much because they were shutting him down. I’m just so proud of the guys. They’ve come a long way. Eight years ago, we didn’t even have a boys team.” Setter Keegen Black recorded double-digit assists for the Warriors, consistently finding outside hitters Ryan Gallagher and Ali Waseem who figured out how to get the ball past the size of B-CC’s front line. The trio, along with strong serving, allowed Sherwood to string together big points streaks in the second and third sets. With Andy Miller serving in the second, Sherwood went on an 8-2 run that included five straight points and an ace by Miller. Sherwood began the third set by scoring the first seven points, including three straight by Black. Gallagher and Waseem each recorded double-digit kills. “It’s really exciting. It’s been four years, so we worked really hard for it,” Gallagher said of winning the title. “They had a very big block, so we just had to work around them. Actually, hit off their block. Try and use them.”
Clarksburg wins coed title It looked like a mismatch from the start. The Clarksburg High School co-ed volleyball team had three players on the floor that seemingly could look over the net without jumping. Its opponent in the Montgomery County championship on Thursday at Magruder High School, Churchill, didn’t have one player the size of Clarksburg’s third tallest. That made all the difference when the two undefeated teams clashed. Clarksburg walked away an unscathed 15-0, defeating Churchill 3-0 to win its first county title. “We worked really hard,” Clarksburg coach K.C. Landefield said. “It took us years to get to this point, but this is a special group and this is a group that, if we were ever going to do it, this was the group.” Clarksburg was led by senior Austin Duffy, a 6-foot, 6-inch basketball player who started playing volleyball last season. Landefield recruited Duffy, and although it took time, the team’s leading point scorer put it all together. “I was pretty raw,” Duffy said. “So I didn’t know what to do really. I practiced a lot, and I focused on finding out how to block people more, so I could read their shoulders and tell when they were going to block. Coach fixed my approach on my hits.” Duffy recorded 15 kills in the final two sets alone. Senior football player, 6-2 Craig Jessup, also added another powerful scoring option. pgrimes@gazette.net
SportsBriefs Bullis junior quarterback commits One of the most anticipated commitments in recent memory, Bullis School quarterback Dwayne Haskins Jr. committed to University of Maryland, College Park. Haskins, a four-star recruit on Rivals.com, was one of the top quarterback prospects in the country with offers from Ohio State, Rutgers, Louisiana State, and Penn State among dozens more. “Blessed to have this opportunity,” Haskins tweeted on May 15. He also Haskins held a news conference at Bullis to make his announcement. “I’m verbally committed to University of Maryland. #GoTerps The movement is real,” Haskins tweeted.
— PRINCE J. GRIMES
Paint Branch runners sign LOI Six Paint Branch High School track and field athletes announced their college commitments on Monday. They include: Oliver Lloyd (Clemson), Adassa Phillips (Delaware), Taiwo Adekoya (UMES), Lorenzo Neil (UMBC), Ryun Anderson (Maryland) and Mary Sam (Stevenson). The school held a signing day ceremony for the students at the Burtonsville school’s gymnasium.
— ERIC GOLDWEIN
No national Golden Gloves champions The last of Washington D.C. area boxers remaining in the Golden Gloves national tournament was eliminated on May 14, including Burtonsville’s Tavon Body. He outlasted any other area fighter but was eventually ousted in the quarterfinals by a Detroit boxer. Waldorf’s Jordan White also lost in the quarterfinals. This marks the first time in six years that a boxer from this region failed to win a national championship according to boxingalongthebeltway.blogspot. com.
— PRINCE J. GRIMES
Sandy Spring wins PVAC The Sandy Spring Friends School baseball team capped an undefeated (12-0) conference season by winning the Potomac Valley Athletic Conference on May 14. Sandy Spring, which posted a 14-3 overall
record, defeated Jewish Day 4-0 in the championship game. It was the first title win for Sandy Spring after reaching the PVAC championship in each of the previous two seasons.
— PRINCE J. GRIMES
Former Sherwood swimmer earns honors Rikki Sargent, a 2012 Sherwood High School graduate who recently completed her junior season on the Shippensburg University women’s swim team, was named Thursday to the 2015 Capital One Academic All-District 2 Women’s At-Large Team for Division II athletics, according to a news release sent to The Gazette. The teams are selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America and recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances academically and in the classroom, per the news release. Sargent, a psychology major and disability studies minor, is a member of the university’s honors program and entered the spring semester with a 3.97 grade-point average. In the pool this season, she qualified for the championship ‘A’ finals in all four of her individual events at the 2015 Pennsylvania State Athletics Conference championship meet and earned her first career AllPSAC finish with a third-place finish in the 200-yard breaststroke, sixth in both the 100 breaststroke and 400 individual medley and seven in the 200 individual medley. In three years she has set seven school records and earned 11 PSAC individual place-winning performances and 10 PSAC relay place-winning performances.
— JENNIFER BEEKMAN
Spirit move into second place Francisca Ordega’s goal in the second minute of stoppage time lifted the Washington Spirit women’s professional soccer team over visiting Sky Blue FC, 1-0, Saturday night at the Maryland SoccerPlex in Boyds. The three points earned in the victory bumped Washington (3-2-1) up to second place — of nine teams — in the National Women’s Soccer League standings. The goal, which came off an assist from Crystal Dunn in a play that began with a winning defensive tackle by Tori Huster, was Ordega’s second of the season. Dunn’s four goals lead Washington and are tied for first in the league. Washington is next scheduled to face the Western New York Flash Saturday at Sahlen’s Stadium in Rochester, N.Y.
— JENNIFER BEEKMAN
Four-year player was dominant from the left side. Could put the ball away even if the set wasn’t perfect. Go-to player for the county champions. Led the Warriors to an undefeated 15-0 record and led a deep team in kills. Well-rounded game was consistent from match-to-match.
Keegen Black
Noel Camello
Jeffrey Chang
Captain of the county champs. Led team in assists as the offense runs through him.
One of the team’s leaders, and one of the best defenders in the county.
Offensive and defensive force. Impacts all aspects of the game.
Tom Gilson
Bobin Jijo
CJ Lee
Strong blocker and middle hitter. Regularly recorded over five kills per set.
Dominant. Top hitter, defender, blocker, and server for Coyotes.
Mixes good power with effective offspeed hits. Effective jump serve.
Sherwood Senior Setter
Wheaton Junior Libero
R. Montgomery Junior Opposite hitter
COACH OF THE YEAR
Alex Theoharis
B.-Chevy Chase Senior Middle hitter
Wheaton
Continued building Wheaton into a county force with an 11-0 undefeated regular season. Knights lost to Bethesda-Chevy Chase in the county semifinals and might have reached the title game if not for libero Noel Camello getting injured in the third set of a 1-1 match.
Clarksburg Senior Outside hitter
B.-Chevy Chase Senior Outside hitter
Second Team and Honorable Mentions are online at Gazette.net
Poolesville senior wins tennis title Whitman, Wootton win doubles championships
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BY JOHN
HARRIS III
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE
The majority of final round and third-place matches at Thursday’s Region II tennis championships never reached a third set. Two out of the three title winners, Poolesville High School senior and Yale University bound standout Dennis Wang and Walt Whitman’s boys doubles tandem of Jack Welch and Andrew Leung won in decisive fashion. However, the last
match to conclude was a battle of two Thomas S. Wootton mixed doubles teams. The duo of Kelly Chen and Jake Gordon outlasted Patriots teammates Ruchi Nanda and I-Shiun Kuo; 6-4, 2-6, 7-5. All champions as well as the runner-ups in all three categories earned a berth into next Friday’s state tournament at the University of Maryland. College Park. Play begins at 9:30 a.m. The tournament concludes Saturday in College Park. For Chen and Gordon, Thursday’s victory over their schoolmates served as a bit of retribution. Earlier in the week during a practice session, Nanda
and Kuo handily defeated the eventual champs. “They beat us badly in practice,” Gordon said. “I think a lot of it was based off of communication. There were a lot of times on Monday that it would be my shot and I wouldn’t go for it. Or it would go out. But today, we talked a lot and that allowed us to hit our shots. Wang defeated Bethesda Chevy-Chase sophomore Conor Smyth 6-1, and 3-0 in the singles final, with Smyth retiring in the second set due to an injury he suffered in his semifinal win against eventual third-place finisher William Karpinski of Churchill.
Arts & Entertainment www.gazette.net | Wednesday, May 20, 2015 | Page B-4
‘The Price’ is right
Preparing to dive into deep writing
Arthur Miller classic comes to Montgomery County
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BY
Writer uses personal experience aboard submarines to write books n
ANIKA J. REED
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE
A timeless and relevant piece about family, money and choices, Arthur Miller’s “The Price” debuted May 13 at Olney Theatre Center. “There’s no question that the economic issues do resonate very strongly,” director Michael Bloom said. “It’s just a brilliant character study of these two brothers and how they came to make the choices they did in their lives.” The play was scheduled to premiere in honor of the 100th anniversary of Miller’s birth. Miller is well known for his prolific playwriting, which includes popular works such as “Death of a Salesman,” “A View from the Bridge” and “The Crucible.” “I loved the density of [the play] and the family, the relationships are so interwoven,” said actress Valerie Leonard, who plays Victor’s wife Esther in the show. “It’s just so wonderfully dense and thick and full.” Miller’s 1968 work focuses on the price of family, the price of furniture and the price of our choices. The play is centered around two brothers, Victor and Walter, who meet in a New York apartment to sell the remainder of their deceased father’s belongings. “It really requires actors to dig down deep emotionally to get at just what it means to deal with issues of personal responsibilities and how social context and socioeconomic complex affects your choices,” Bloom said. “And I think nowadays ev-
STAN BAROUH
Sean Harberle (left) as Walter Franz and Charlie Kevin as Victor Franz star in Olney Theatre Center’s production of Arthur Miller’s “The Price.”
‘THE PRICE’ n When: Through June 21 n Where: Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, MD 20832 n Tickets: $35-55 n More information: 301-9243400, olneytheatre.org
erybody can relate to that.” Victor and Walter took very different paths in life after their father lost his fortune due to the Great Depression. Victor chooses to become a police
officer, while Walter struggles through school and becomes a surgeon. “Because it’s about class and about the difficulties of the father’s experience during the Great Depression, I think it resonates tremendously at this time,” Bloom said. “My parents were children of the depression, [and] just on a personal level it resonates with me as well. It’s a play that speaks to everybody [who’s] made certain choices in their lives and you wonder why you’ve made those choices.” When the brothers meet to sell their father’s belongings, they have conflicting views
about what should be done, which results in contention between the two. Leonard described her character, Esther, as a listener who has to reflect on what’s occurring between her spouse and his brother. “As far as I’m concerned, she’s a very difficult role, because ... the two brothers have to hash it out,” Leonard said. “I have to listen and come to my conclusions.” However, Leonard realized she saw some aspects of her own personality in her charac-
See PRICE, Page B-5
Rick Campbell is proud of beating the odds. When the retired U.S. Navy officer considered writing a book, with zero writing classes, training or experience, he “figured a snowball had a better chance in hell than me picking up a pen and beating out hundreds of thousands of writers with years of experience.” Until his 20th class reunion, Campbell felt unable to commit Campbell to investing “the thousands of hours it would take to learn how to write and then write the book, when it would most likely be a wasted effort.” The “futuristic sci-fi story rolling around in my head” for some 20 years was destined to remain there. His perspective changed when a speaker asked the assembled alumni “What would you do if you weren’t afraid?” “I felt like he was talking directly to me, and I decided right then that I’d write my book,” he recalled. “It took a few years to get around to it, but I finally buckled down and wrote it.” That book, which turned out to be a “paranormal military science fiction novel,” has not yet made it to publication. The author refers to it as “Book 0.” After sending the manu-
BOOKS BY ELLYN WEXLER script to more than 40 agents, Campbell realized the futility of writing what you love when no one else loves it. Thus thwarted, he opted to switch gears and write what he knows. The result, “The Trident Deception” (2014), is a “submarine warfare novel at its core. It’s also an intriguing espionage tale,” he said. Booklist called it “the best submarine novel since Tom Clancy’s classic — ‘The Hunt for Red October.’” A sequel, “Empire Rising,” was released in February. To augment his writing skills, Campbell read espionage and military thrillers, even though science fiction and fantasy are his favorite genres. He credits the “major espionage writers” — Daniel Silva, Vince Flynn and Brad Thor as well as writer Andrew Britton — as
See BOOKS, Page B-5
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IN THE ARTS For a free listing, please submit complete information to wfranklin@gazette.net at least 10 days in advance of desired publication date. High-resolution color images (500KB minimum) in jpg format should be submitted when available. MUSIC Arts Barn, Amadou Kouyate Kora and Percussion, June 6, 311 Kent Square Road, 301-258-6394. AMP by Strathmore, Alice Gerrard, May 20; Alice Gerrard, May 21; Amigos Band, May 28; Mark Nadler, May 29; Cravin’ Dogs, May 30; Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, June 3; Jarrod Lawson, June 4; Raul Midon, June 5; call for times, 11810 Grand Park Ave., North Bethesda, ampbystrathmore.com, 301-581-5100. Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club, Michal Urbaniak, May 21;
Muscle Shoals and Stax/Volt, May 22; Joe Clair and Friends, May 23; Clones of Funk, May 24; Ginetta’s Vendetta Jazz Quartet, May 27; Linwood Taylor, May 28; Grainger and the New Pockets, May 29; The Hit Men, May 31; call for prices, times, 7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda. 240-330-4500, bethesdabluesjazz. com. BlackRock Center for the Arts, Suzanne Vega, May 30; Red Baraat, June 27; 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown. 301-528-2260, blackrockcenter.org. Hershey’s At The Grove, Chuggalug, May 22; Poverty Ridge, May 23; Little Bit of Blues, May 29; Crime Stoppers, May 30; call for times, 17030 Oakmont Ave., Gaithersburg. 301-948-9893; hersheysatthegrove.com. Fillmore Silver Spring, Ultimate 80s Prom with The New Romance, May 23; Kingpen Slim hosted by Uncle Yank, May 29; 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring. fillmoresilverspring.com. Strathmore, Maryland Classic Youth Orchestra, May 20; PVYO
Spring Gala 2015, May 22; BSO: Strauss’ Four Last Songs, May 23; Arts & The Mind: Bird Whale Bug, May 28; BSO: A Tribute to John Williams, May 28; National Philharmonic: Faure’s Requiem, May 30; Feria de Seville, May 31; 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, 301-581-5100, strathmore.org.
ON STAGE Adventure Theatre-MTC, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” through May 25, call for prices, times, Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, 301-634-2270, adventuretheatremtc.org. F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre, 603 Edmonston Drive, Rockville. 240-314-8681 Imagination Stage, “Sinbad: The Untold Tale,” through May 29, call for prices, times, Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, imaginationstage.org. Olney Theatre Center, “Carousel,” through May 24, call for prices, times, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, 301-9243400, olneytheatre.org. The Puppet Co., “Cinderella,” through June 21; Tiny Tots @ 10, select Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays, call for shows and show times, Puppet Co. Playhouse, Glen Echo Park’s North Arcade Building, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., $5, 301-634-5380, thepuppetco.org. Rockville Musical Theatre, “Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,” July 10 through July 26, Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, 301-258-6394, r-m-t.org. Round House Theatre, “NSFW,” May 27 through June 21, call for show times, 4545 EastWest Highway, Bethesda. Tickets range in price from $10 to $45 and seating is reserved. 240-6441100, roundhousetheatre.org. Lumina Studio Theatre, Silver Spring Black Box Theatre, 8641 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, 301-588-8277, luminastudio.org; theatreconsortiumss@gmail.com. Silver Spring Stage, “On The Razzle,” May 29 through June
20, Woodmoor Shopping Center, 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, see Web site for show times, ssstage.org. Randolph Road Theater, 4010 Randolph Road, Silver Spring, belcantanti.com, Cafe Muse, Friendship Heights Village Center, 4433 South Park Ave., Chevy Chase; 301-656-2797.
VISUAL ART Adah Rose Gallery, “Motionless, I Stay and Go: I am a Pause,” through May 24, 3766 Howard Ave., Kensington, 301-922-0162, adahrosegallery.com Glenview Mansion, Rockville Art League, Juried Members’ Show varied media, through May 29; Rockville Civic Center Park, 503 Edmonston Drive, Rockville. rockvillemd.gov. Marin-Price Galleries, Joseph Sheppard, through May 22; 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday, noon to 5 p.m. Sunday, 7022 Wisconsin Ave., 301-7180622, marin-price.com. Montgomery Art Association, Janet Fox, through May 31; Westfield Wheaton Mall, 11160 Viers Mill Road, Wheaton, montgomeryart.org. VisArts, Stephanie Garmey, through May 24; Jowita Wyszomirska and David Brown, through May 24; Gibbs Street Gallery, 155 Gibbs St., Rockville, 301-315-8200, visartsatrockville.org. Kentlands Mansion Art Gallery, 320 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg, 301-258-6425. Gallery B, “The Merry Month,” through May 23; 7700 Wisconsin Ave., Suite E, Bethesda, bethesda. org. Washington Artworks, Project Youth ArtReach’s Anniversary Exhibition, through June 1; 12276 Wilkins Ave., Rockville, washingtonartworks.com, 301-654-1998.
ET CETERA The Writer’s Center, 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, 301-6548664, writer.org.
PRICE
Continued from Page B-4 ter, including Esther’s listening skills and hopeful nature. “One of the things I love about acting is that each character you play you find something new in yourself,” Leonard said. “I think the greatness of this play is that people will come out rooting for different people in the play,” Bloom said. “That is an indication of how wellrounded these characters are. I think you relate to all of them … that’s what makes it a superior piece of writing.” “It’s a really good group that’s been assembled to do this,” cast member Conrad Feininger said. “It’s not all the time you get a balanced group like this with a beautiful play.” It’s Feininger’s third time performing in a production of “The Price,” which he said makes it easier to prepare for. “When it’s the third time, a lot of the work’s already done,” Feininger said. “In terms of preparation, it’s a matter of reading the script and then
BOOKS
Continued from Page B-4 heavy influences on his style. An agent he worked with gave him a reading list of espionage books, although he had written a military thriller. “As a result,” he said, “my books are a blend of military thriller plot written in an espionage style.” For the most part, Campbell bases his books on his first career. “I was a submarine officer for 28 years, and I write military thrillers that have strong submarine plot elements. There are a few actual experiences in the book, but 99 percent is fiction, using my background to get the authentic details correct.” Campbell said it takes him about 1,000 hours to write a book, including about an hour per page for the first draft, several hundred hours of research before starting and interspersed during writing, plus multiple revisions on his end and two by his editor. He writes in an upstairs office in his Germantown home, “where I can close the door and work in silence. Sounds really distract me when I’m writing, and I need complete silence or it breaks my concentration.” As a child, Campbell had no intention of being a writer.
STAN BAROUH
Conrad Feininger stars as Gregory Solomon in Olney Theatre Center’s production of Arthur Miller’s “The Price.” getting into the room with the director. The trick to doing it multiple times has been keeping an open mind to new ideas.” Both Bloom and Leonard hope the audience walks away discussing what they just witnessed in the play. “I want them to talk about
whether or not they felt that the paths that the two brothers took were justified,” Bloom said. “I hope they walk away talking forever and ever and ever about what happened,” Leonard said. “I just want them to talk, whether it’s about their own families or not.”
“Early on,” he said, I wanted to be a doctor, policeman and football player — simultaneously. I figured I could be a doctor during the day, a policeman at night and a football player on the weekends.” Although he was a good student, graduating second in his high school class in Cocoa, Fla., math and science were his strengths. He read fantasy and science fiction “voraciously” but remembers hating English and the liberal arts. The military was always a career option, Campbell said, because his father was retired from the Air Force. “When it came time to go to college, my parents had no money set aside and weren’t making a lot of money — mom was a waitress and dad worked at a regional K-Mart-style department store — so I knew I had to get a scholarship.” He applied and was awarded three ROTC scholarships and was accepted into the Air Force and Naval academies. He “chose the Navy, much to my dad’s chagrin. They had better academics and a great wrestling team, and I was a wrestler in high school.” When Campbell discovered he was prone to seasickness, he “went submarines. I figured I would be miserable as a pilot and also on the surface. But submarines are very stable
when they’re submerged — like sitting in an office except when they’re changing depth, so I applied for submarines and got accepted.” His tours of duty included four nuclearpowered submarines, the Pentagon and the Undersea Weapons Program office. On his final submarine, he said, he was one of two men whose permission was required to launch its 24 nuclear warhead-tipped missiles. St. Martin’s Press, Campbell’s publisher, added a deal for two more books, which are due out in 2016 and 2017. Book three, “Cold Betrayal,” the author said, is almost done, due to his editor at the end of May. “It’s primarily a submarine thriller, which kicks off when the newest American and Russian submarines collide and sink under the Arctic ice cap, setting off a fateful chain of events,” he said. Campbell is optimistic about his second career. “We’ll see what the future holds when I come up for another contract next year. So far, my books have ‘met or exceeded expectations,’ so it’s likely additional contracts will follow, and I figure I’ll be writing military thrillers for the foreseeable future,” he said. “Book 0 will have to wait a few more years.” Hopefully, the odds will be in his favor once more.
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Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Points of light BlackRock Center for the Arts is pleased to present the exhibition “Light: Essence of Color” featuring oil paintings and pastel drawings by the seven member artists of the Maryland Colorists: Melissa Gryder, Sharon Littig, Abigail McBride, Nancy McCarra, Michele del Pilar, Andree Tullier and Sarah Wardell. The exhibit includes landscape, still-life, portraits and figurative subjects and will be on view in the Terrace Gallery through May 30. Light, that which reveals the world around us, is the source that links this group of artists together. Their primary focus is to capture a fleeting light effect observed in the everyday scenes. “Light: Essence of Color” is the first exhibition by the Maryland Colorists, a collective formed in 2013 by seven women with classic academic, studio and plein air training
in color, draftsmanship, portraiture and figurative work. Each of the artists maintains a professional studio practice which includes portrait commissions, exhibiting their work in both fine art galleries and museums, and entering juried exhibitions and plein air painting competitions. Many of the artists live in the Annapolis area. All of the artists have been selected for membership and board positions in professional artist organizations, which include the Mid-Atlantic Plein Air Painters Society, Portrait Society of America, Maryland Society of Portrait Painters, Pastel Society of America, Maryland Pastel Society and Maryland Federation of Art. For more information, visit blackrockcenter.org.
Mix and match
Janet Fox is this month’s featured artist for the Montgomery Art Association. Her work will be on display through May 31. Fox paints with encaustic (heated pigmented bees wax), mixed media and acrylic, often layering in fibrous and colorful papers, fabric, ink and found materials. She carves, scrapes, fills and buffs, building contrasts and textures. Her work is often inspired by vivid sleeptime images or ideas; she also creates from nature and garden themes. Her art blog, including stories about her work, are on her website. Originally from the Midwest, Janet earned a bachelor’s degree in Occupational Safety and Health from Purdue University, worked more than 20 years in the recycling, sustainability and energy-efficiency
BLACKROCK CENTER FOR THE ARTS
An artist demonstrates plein air painting at the BlackRock Center for the Arts in Germantown.
The wonderful things he does
Time is running out to go see the Wizard in the hopes you can go home again. Adventure Theatre MTC’s reimagined journey through Oz, a world premiere play by Jacqueline Lawton, is set to run through May 25. “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” is based on the classic American children’s book by L. Frank Baum starring Helen Hayes-nominated Paige Hernandez as Dorothy. Dorothy and Toto know so many adventures are happening everywhere other than Kansas. One day, a cyclone swoops in and takes them to the wonderful and magical Land of Oz. With her friends the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion, Dorothy
MONTGOMERY ART ASSOCIATION
“Holding It All Together,” a piece by artist Janet Fox, is on display through May 31 at the MAA Gallery.
realms, and managed environmental-themed art exhibits. She is an MAA board member, a member of International Encaustic Artists, as well as a freelance writer, editor, content and project support professional. Admission to the gallery is free. For more information, visit montgomeryart.org or call 301842-7046.
BRUCE DOUGLAS
Dorothy, the Tin Man, the Scarecrow, and the Cowardly Lion all take the stage at Adventure Theatre MTC for “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.” sets off on the adventure of a lifetime down the yellow brick road. Tickets to “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” are $19-19.50 and can be purchased by calling 301-634-2270 or online at adventuretheatre-mtc.org.
RON NEWMYER
A Southern Soul Tribute: The Music of Muscle Shoals and Stax/Volt is set to take place at the Bethesda Blues and Jazz Supper Club on Friday.
Soul of the South
A spectacular collection of 35 soulful performers from the DMV, pay tribute to music legends Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Sam & Dave, The Staples Singers, Carla Thomas and more, will take the stage at the Bethesda Blues and Jazz Supper Club on Friday. A Southern Soul Tribute: The Music of Muscle Shoals & Stax/Volt will include such performers as The Hardway Connection, Little Margie, Tommy Lepson & Soul Crackers, Jon Carroll, Julia Nixon, Patty Reese, Eddie Jones, Daryl Davis, Bob Berberich, Patti Hatchett, the legendary Nighthawks rhythm section Pete Ragusa and Jan Zukowski and more. The 1960s produced a
wealth of great music but perhaps none more important than that produced in a few modest studios in the southern United States. There, an unlikely and diverse collection of musicians, singers, producers and arrangers created some of the grittiest & catchiest hit records ever recorded. The music was inescapably influenced by their surroundings, yet in the homelike atmosphere of the studios, nothing mattered except making the great music that would find its way onto radios and hi-fi’s across the U.S. and the world. Tickets for the show are $30. For more information, visit bethesdabluesjazz.com or call 240-330-4500.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre
603 Edmonston Dr. Rockville, MD 20851
240-314-8690
www.rockvillemd.gov/theatre
The Washington Balalaika Society
SPRING CONCERT
Sunday, May 31 at 2 p.m. Tickets: $25 ADULT; $20 SENIOR; $15 STUDENT; and children under 12 free.
1951923
Tickets available by calling 301-840-8400 or online at rockvillemd.gov/theatre
1931263
1930923
Spring Cleaning, Downsizing, Simplifying? Let us help you sell your items and turn your
Clutter into Cash! Place your advertisement today
CALL TODAY 301-670-7100 *Merchandise for sell only, excludes real estate, rentals and autos
1931480
2 weeks, $20*
1930916
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
THE GAZETTE
Page B-7
Page B-8
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
C CLASSIFIEDS LASSIFIEDS BUY IT, SELL IT, FIND IT
SELL YOUR VEHICLE
As Low $ As
• Furniture • Pets • Auctions Houses for Sale Frederick County
Lots/ Acreage
MIDDLETOWN- 4 BD PUBLIC NOTICE 5 BA SFH Traditional SPRING LAND elegance & your own LIQUIDATION priv bckyd oasis 1.26 79,900; 5+ACRE, acres Granite Viking LOG SIDED appls 301-401-9772 CABIN New cabin $1,050,000.
Houses for Sale Montgomery County
LEISURE
WORLD-
Best Deal in Mont Co! 1600 sq ft TH,2 BR, 2 ½ Ba, 148K, Agents ok ! Call 240-372-7997
shell close to 2300 Acre State Land, 200 Acre Lake, Perc Approved, perfect mix of open And wooded gently laying land Utilities on site. CALL OWNER 800-8881262
Waterfront Property
Houses for Rent Frederick/Washington Co.
E N J O Y LAKEFRONT LIVING: at 20148 Tim-
BUCKEYSTOWN:
ber Oak Lane, Germantown at Little Seneca Lake/Black Hill Park. $398, 850. 3BD, 3.5BA EU TH. Wrap around water view from all levels. Mature, professional landscaping. Adjacent to steps leading down to waters edge and paved biking/jogging path. Eat in Kit w/bay window, lg lower level fam room (walkout) with floor to cealing brick FP. For appointment call: 301-540-5328
SPECTACULAR 3 TO 22 ACRE LOTS WITH DEEPWATER ACCESS- Lo-
Restored Carriage House, 1Br, 1Ba, LR/DR, lrg kit, No dogs/NS w/d $900/mo + utils 717-264-9076
NEW
MARKET:
4Br, 2.5Ba, FR w/frplc, Lrg kit, jacz bath, new carpet, $2150 + utils Call: 301-602-7922
Houses for Rent Montgomery County
BARNESVILLE:
2Br/1Ba, small sfh on farm, 4WD needed, 07/01, $800, POB 102 Barnesville MD 20838
GAITH: 3Br,Den,2.5 Ba 3 Lvl TH, balcony, patio, off st parking, nr Metro $1650 NS/NP 301-537-5175
cated in an exclusive development on Virginia’s Eastern Shore , south of Ocean City. GAITH: 4Br 3Ba, 3lvl Amenities include TH, Spacious, Bsmt, community pier, boat Deck, W/D nr Mid Cty ramp, paved roads & ICC. $1695 + utils and private sandy Call: 240-780-1770 beach. Great climate, boating, fishing, clamming and National GAITHERSBURG: Seashore beaches 3br 2.5ba TH, $1850 nearby. Absolute buy full fin bsmt, NEW of a lifetime, recent Apps, Hd wd flrs Avail FDIC bank failure now! 202-445-6030 makes these 25 lots available at a fraction GAITHERSBURG: of their original price. 4BR, 3BA SFH. FinPriced at only $55,000 ished basement, FP, to $124,000. For info wet bar, garage. 1 call (757) 442-2171, e- acres. $2,250. 240mail: 506-9469 oceanlandtrust@yaho o.com, pictures on GE RMA NT OWN : website: http://Wibiti.com/5KQN 3Br, 1.5Ba, HOC ok, $1500/mo + utils & SD AMAZING WATER- Call: 301-273-3426 or FRONT GETAWAY 240-888-5054 4.6 acres, 275 ft of shoreline, sweeping GERMANTOWN: water views. Access 3Br, 2Fb, 2Hb, eat-in Choptank River and kit, fin bsmt, new Bay! Dock installed carpet, fncd yrd, and ready. ONLY NS/NP $1575 + utils $69,900 Call 443-225- 301-467-6352 4679
Apartments
Apartments
CLASSIFIED DEADLINE Monday 4pm
3999
• Domestic Cars • Motorcycles • Trucks for Sale Houses for Rent Montgomery County
• Homes for Sale • Condos for Rent • Shared Housing Shared Housing
Shared Housing
GAITHERSBURG:
WHEATON: Male
Unfurnished Apartments Unfurnished Apartments Frederick/Washington Co. Frederick/Washington Co.
GE RMA NT OWN :
TH 4BR, 2FB, 2HB, 2100 sqft, walkout bsmt, deck, hrdwd flr, lrg ktch, fenced yrd, next to bus, shopping, hwy. $1750. Please call: 240-354-8072, view@usa.com, http://rent.like.to
Call 301-670-7100 or email class@gazette.net
Best priced in Frederick!
1, 2 & 3 bedroom apartments 3 & 4 bedroom townhomes FREE amenities, FREE water, FREE trash removal & MORE! www.frederickmdapts.com
Vacation Property for Rent
Basement in TH with priv BA & priv entr. Couple ok. $850 + 1/3 of utils. 240-398-6552
NS, 1BR, shr BA, nr metro, employ verify $525/mnth util incl SD Call 301-933-6804
GAITHERSBURG:
WHEATON: Male NS Bsmt Apt in SFH, Pvt BA, sep ent, deck, $800 incl utils & Cable SD/Credit check reqd. Call 301-946-0195
Ground lvl FBA & kit Pvt. entr Nr Kentlands. Call Charles 301-2948785/240-401-0676
• Career Training • Full Time Employment • Part Time Employment Furniture For Sale
Miscellaneous Services
OC: 140 St. 3bd, 2fba F A I R M O U N T LEAP INTO ground floor steps to HEIGHTSAll in SPRING with the use
beach. Sleeps 8. $1200. Owner. 240507-6957. Weeks only. Pictures at: ite con co rp. com/o ccondo.html
Good Condition. Solid Oakwood Twin Bunk Bed Set w/Bunkie Boards for $300.00; Oakwood Full Size Bookshelf Bed Frame for $100.00; Colorful Kids Bookcase for $35.00. Call 202-716-5891.
of our full-service furniture upholstery cleaning team! Call Upholstery Care USA today-410-622-8759Baltimore or 202-5347768- DC & MD. As industry leaders, we can make your spring cleaning a breeze. Visit us at www.upholsterycareus a.com
OC: 2br/2ba 2 pools, VILLAGE: 107th St. Quay 4 wks EU TH, renovated Lrg Unfurnished Apartments Unfurnished Apartments GAITHERSBURGleft 06/20-06/27 08/08Vacation Property 3Br, 2.5Ba, nice & Montgomery County Prince George’s County RM shared ba &ktich 15,08/15-22 & 08/22for Sale kid friendly, new appl, $450 utils incl near 29 (301)252-0200 fin bsmt, Fncd yrd, N . P O T O M A C metro & Shops. Avail Farm and prkng, nr bus & met- ROCKVILLE: 1 BR OCEAN CITY, Garden Equipment now! 240-386-9587 NEED ro, NS, $1,650/mo + Apt. $1150 incl utils & MARYLAND. Best OCEAN CITY G E N E R A T O R - INTERIOR/EXTERI util & SD. (sep. SD for CATV, Free Parking 1br in selection of affordable GAITH/MV: 1Br OR STAIRLIFTS! small dogs) Credit Avail 06/01. NS/NP GREENBELT: North 129th Street 2br Apt $600/mo rentals. Generac 6500 Watt 1Ba Bsmt Apt in SFH. Raymond Maule & check. Available June 301-424-9205 share utils. Nr Bus, Full/ partial weeks. 2BR, 1BA, AC, large Generator, Purchased Renovated, $750/mo Son offers STRAIGHT 1st. 301-330-4828 Schls & Lake Frst Call for FREE bro- Porch, Ocean Block, in 2012 after the dereutils incl + SD Pls call: or Curved ACORN Sleeps Family of 6. linkenn@verizon.net. SILVER SPRING: Mall. 301-640-0988 chure. Open daily. cho, used less than 2 240-848-5697 Stairlifts; Call Angel & 2Br Bsmt w/pvt ent/Ba Holiday Resort Serv$857/week or 240-779-5275 hours since.$750 Call MONT. VILLAGE: full kit $930 utils incl, Kathy TODAY 888ices. 1-800-638-2102. 301-946-8593 TH, 3Br, 2FBa, 2 HBa, NS/NP Nr Metro/Bus 353-8878; Also availaGERMANTOWN- 1 Online reservations: 301-774-7621 bsmnt,HOC OK nr bus Call 240-370-5191 ble Exterior Porchlifts; Rm shrd BA cable/utils www.holidayoc.com & shop $1800 301-787Avoid Unsightly Long incl.1-2 yr lease. $500 7583 Ramps; Save Commercial Commercial Moving/ Moving/ Sec Dep Req!Great loPets $200.00. Property Property Estate Sales Estate Sales cation! 240-418-4876 ROCKVILLE: SFH 3Br, 1.5Ba, NS/NP, nr HAVANESE PUPPIES GE RMA NT OWN : metro, w/d, $1750/mo Domestic Home raised, AKC, Rm w/priv bath in TH Help Wanted RETAIL OPPORTUNITY + util Call: Indra 301best health guarantee nr bus & shops 325-2467 or Kanu Space for small gift shop or café in 5/21, 5/22, 5/23 & 5/24, 10-5, noahslittleark.com $550/mo util incl NP/ 301-670-6844 DAMASCUS- Exp. Call: 262-993-0460 NS 240-715-5147 Silver Spring. 503 Dennis cultural arts facility. @ 200 sf plus Caretaker for autistic SILVER SPRING: teen $14/hr 25 flex Avenue, HUGE Landscape seating area if desired. Sandy GERM: Bsmt Apt., 3Br, 1.5Ba, SFH, walkhours per week. HS w/prvt entr. 1br, 1ba, Eqpt, Tools, Hoop Houses, out bsmt, rec room, grad. (301)368-3335 Spring-Olney area. Business kitch, Living/Dining updated kit, W/D, Wreath Making Eqpt., Opportunities Call 301-774-0022 area. $1,000 utils incl. fenced yrd, deck, HOU SE KEE PE R: Furnishings, Cash and Carry. 301-785-2354 NP/NS $1700/mo + 20-25 hrs/ week. AfterM H I C utils 301-253-1646 Condominiums Condominiums No Checks EstateMAX.net C O N T R A C T O R noons pref. Cleaning, GERM: R o o m in For Rent For Rent LICENSING - exam laundry & ironing. FiliSFH, Private Ent & BA WHEATON: 1 Lrg Br guaranteed, after 8 pino cooking pref for Yard/Garage Sale Yard/Garage Sale w/kitchenette; NS/NP. in SFH, shrd Ba, CLARKSBURG- 3 GERMANTOWN: hour class 2 locations - couple in Potomac. Montgomery County NS/NP $600/month BR 2.5 BA fitness, 2 Br, 2 Ba, Exquisitely $650/mo utils incld. Montgomery County Silver Spring and Must have car & green 301-300-3763 w/util incl, nr metro, pool, $1650 + utils, Remodeled, Across Tysons. Cost: $295 card. Call 301-529Call 240-271-3901 Avail Now! Sec Dept from Shoppers Food (exam book incl.) Pay 6999 LAYTONSVL: bsmt BIG CHURCH YARD SALE!!!!! Req (240)418-6071 on Great Seneca Hwy online www.contract Apt,1br/fba/pvt ent,w/d Fundraiser !!! Some Util Incl 17701 Houses for Rent VA.com or call LIVE-IN CARE GIlg kit, $1000 + half Kilmarnock Ter 20874 FURNITURE, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS, Prince George’s County (703)298-5789 VER: Needed for elelec, free cbl Avail GE RMA NT OWN : Call: Rose Creasey CLOTHING, TOYS, GAMES Ace Tech Millennium derly care in Potomac, June 1st. 301-368LAUREL : 4br, 2fba, 3BR, 2BA, pkg, Near 240-439-9147 MD. Call (240)5063496 TONS of things to choose from! 2hba TH fin bsmt, 270/shops New Car7719 Saturday, May 23rd, 8am-1pm Avail 05/15 $1800 pet, Fully reno, Pool ROCKVILLE: 2Br, ROCKVILLE: Large AVIATION GRADS plus sec dep nr 495/95 $1,650+utils 240-899- 1Ba, nr Metro, shops, Newly 101 Center St. Washington Grove Remodeled WORK WITH LIVE IN COMPANP, renovated $1800 1694 Call 301-592-7430 20880 Room in SFH near JETBLUE , Boeing, NION NEEDED TO per month + utils & SD Metro & shopping Delta and others- start CARE FOR ELCall: 410-800-5005 www.washgroveumc.org $575/mo utils included here with hands on DERLY PERSON: Call 240-444-7986 training for FAA certifi- References required. 301-520Shared cation. Financial aid if Mon-Fri. Yard/Garage Sale Housing SILVER SPRING : Prince George’s County qualified. Call Aviation 9521 2 Rooms Nr Metro, KENTLANDS: Sat Institute of MainteGAITHERSBURG: Bus, Shops, Incl utils, 5/23, Sun 5/24 & Mon COLLEGE PARK- nance 866-823-6729 NANNY IN 1BD in Apartment. laundry, phone, cable. 5/25; 9am-1pm. 226 Sat May 23rd 8a-3p BETHESDA: for Share Bath & Kitchen. Call 703-994-3501 baby & cleaning, PT, Kent Oaks Way, Gai- Community Yard Sale, $540 + util. Wifi avail. references required thersburg. Furn, cater- KOFC COUNCIL 2809 MEDICAL BILLING 240-406-6694 SILVER SPRING / ing supplies & more! Call: 301-529-4887 9450 Cherry Hill Rd. TRAINEES NEEDCOLESVILLE: BR Space $15 Sp+table ED! Train at Home to GAITHERSBURG: w/private Ba, Lrg SFH, $25 Reserve @240- become a Medical Of- P R O F E S S I O N A L 1 Br nr Metro/Shops NS/NP, $700 includes 688-267 fice Assistant! NO EX- HOUSEKEEPER: No Pets, No Smoking utils/int, nr ICC, 495 & KENSINGTON: Sat located in Annapolis, 2 PERIENCE NEEDED! $385 Avail Now. Call: Metro! Deposit Re- May 23rd 10am-4pm, Merchandise yrs work exp Duty Online training at CTI 301-219-1066 quired! 301-861-9981 For Sale will accept offers, gets you job ready! HS incld: laundry, ironing, Ethan Allen furn, & meal preparations, Diploma/GED & GAITHERSBURG: SS / ASPEN HILL: more, hh items, etc BOWIE- Green leather Computer/Internet deep cleaning & some 1BR w/priv BA in 2BR Fully Furn Bsmt w/ 3105 Fayette Road sectional, chair & otto- needed. child care live in 410Condo. Shrd kit. $675 priv bath, kitch & entr man, wingback chair, 1-877-649-2671 570-5239 Eng spkg + utils. Near metro. W/D $950 close to bus DR set, a lot HH items! www.AskCTI.com req! & metro 301-922-9508 NS/NP. 240-396-7576 OBO!! 301-526-5868
MONT
ESTATE SALE
Apartments
GAITHERSBURG
Extended Hours! Wed & Thurs until 7pm
• Minutes away from I-270, Metro, and MARC Train
301-948-8898
Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
ROCKVILLE
SSTREAMSIDE TREAMSIDE A APARTMENTS PA R T M E N T S
• Huge Floor Plans • Large Walkin Closets • Private Balcony/Patio • Fully Equipped Kitchen w/Breakfast Bar
Apartments
DON’T WAIT APPLY TODAY!
Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
SILVER SPRING CALL FOR SPECIALS
STRATHMORE HOUSE APARTMENTS kSwimming Pool kNewly Updated Units
Senior Living 62+
• Emergency Response System • 24 Hour Maintenance • Transportation Via Community Van • Pet Friendly • Full Size Washer & Dryer
www.PinnacleAMS.com/GardensOfTraville
X
kSpacious Floor Plans kSmall Pets Welcome
14431 Traville Garden Circle Rockville, Maryland 20850
301-762-5224
Office Hours: M-F 9:00am - 6:00pm
kBalcony Patio
Room (301) 460-1647 kFamily kFull Size W/D
3004 Bel Pre Rd., Apt. 204, Silver Spring, MD 20906
in every unit
Advertise Your Apartment Community Here! Contact: Ashby Rice (301) 670-2667 for pricing and ad deadlines.
G558101
and reach over 350,000 readers!
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z Career Training
Page B-9 Career Training
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
NURSING ASSISTANT
TRAINING IN JUST 4 WEEKS
Dental/ Medical Assistant Trainees Needed Now
Now Enrolling for May 22nd & June 1st 2015 Classes:
Now Offering Medication Technician Classes In Just 4 Days, Call for Details! GAITHERSBURG CAMPUS MORNING STAR ACADEMY 101 Lakeforest Blvd, Suite 402 Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Call: 301-977-7393 www.mstarna.com
SILVER SPRING CAMPUS
Full Time Help Wanted
GC3248
CARE XPERT ACADEMY 13321 New Hampshire Ave, Suite 205 Silver Spring, MD 20904 Call: 301-384-6011 www.cxana.com
Dental/Medical Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available 1-888-818-7802 CTO SCHEV
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Clerical
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Perform specialized clerical work at the advanced level assisting the judge in courtroom procedures and dockets. Prepare/generate paperwork for the judge s and/or defendant’s signatures. Responsible for assisting the judge in the maintenance, operation, and organization of the courtroom. Work is performed with considerable independence and is evaluated for efficiency, effectiveness, timeliness and compliance with procedures. Resolve a variety of unprecedented or unusual problems. Ability to work overtime, as needed without prior notice. Maybe called in during emergencies, e.g. inclement weather conditions and staff shortages. For full details and instructions on how to apply, visit the court’s website http://www.courts.state.md.us/jobs/ EOE.
Recruiting is now Simple!
CLEANING
Earn $400+ per week. MondayFriday OR Tuesday-Saturday. No nights. Must have own car & valid. Drivers lic. Se Habla Espanol.
Merry Maids
Get Connected
Gazette.Net GC3545
Gaithersburg 301-869-6243 Silver Spring 301-587-5594
Commercial HVACR Technician
Busy surgeons office in Gaithersburg area seeks hard working, detail oriented person to make appointments for multiple offices and route all incoming calls. Medical background preferred. Must be bilingual (English/Spanish). Benefits available. Fax resume to 301-258-0491
For Congregate Housing Service building in the Aspen Hill area of Silver Spring. Must be CPR certified. FT position as well as PRN. Please submit resume to: dtucker@homecresthouse.org
Healthcare
Search Jobs
Property Management
Shuttle Bus Driver
Senior Community in Germantown looking for a part time energetic team player duties include driving bus to grocery stores, doctor’s appointments, daily trips, and outings. Must have valid driver’s license. Great salary! EOE Fax resume to 301-528-7276 Licensed Daycare
Licensed Daycare
Licensed Daycare
Daycare Directory
Children’s Center Of Damascus Starburst Child Care Learn And Play Daycare Fogle Daycare Pre-school Cheerful Tots Daycare Kimberly Villella Childcare Miriam’s Loving Care
Lic#: 31453 Lic#: 159882 Lic#: 250177 Lic#: 25979 Lic#: 250403 Lic #: 27579 Lic# 155622
301-253-6864 301-674-4173 240-408-6532 301-972-2903 301-875-2972 301-774-1163 240-246-0789
DEADLINE: JUNE 1st, 2015
20872 20855 20876 20874 20878 20832 20877
GP2199A GP2199A
Licensed Daycare
Find Career Resources
to advertise call 301.670.7100 or email class@gazette.net
Send resume to diane@harveyhottel.com
Licensed Medication Technician
M-F - Wheaton Plaza - Bilingual English/Spanish a must. Email resume to: medical.linda@yahoo.com
Full time for pest control company in Montgomery Co. Experienced Preferred. Must be reliable with clean driving & criminal record. Send resume pest.tech.needed@gmail.com
Immediate openings for Residential SVC Techs and Installers
DMR Associates, Inc. a HVAC Manufacturers Representative in Gaithersburg, MD serving the Washington area since 1969, is looking to add a Commercial HVACR technician. The qualified candidate will have at least 5 years of experience with installation, start up and/or troubleshooting of Commercial HVAC Equipment (rooftop units, chillers, AHU’s, etc.) Candidate must possess a solid work history and clean driving record. Excellent salary, benefits, company vehicle, phone, & gas card. To be considered please send resume and salary requirements to hr@dmr-hvac.com
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer EOE/AA/F/M/VET/ DISABILITY
HVAC
CALL CENTER RECEPTIONIST
Get Connected
Hilton Rockville 1750 Rockville Pike Rockville MD 20852
A local furniture restoration company is now accepting applications for multiple positions in furniture restoration. Experience req. & must have drivers lic. 301-424-5011
Healthcare
Local companies, Local candidates
Line Cook Dishwasher Banquet Cook Buffet Runner Servers/ Room Service Banquet Server/House Person Guest Room Attendant F&B Supervisor
Multiple Positions
The Hampton Inn & Suites Gaithersburg is currently hiring for the housekeeping department. Please apply with in - 960 N Frederick Ave
Wanted CDL Drivers For local work No overnight Call 301-865-8844 for additional info Monday - Friday from 9am -4pm.
∂ ∂ ∂ ∂ ∂ ∂ ∂ ∂
Pest Control / Termite Tech
Plumbers 3yrs exp. & Helpers 1yr exp. No Exceptions. Valid Clean DL required. Signing Bonuses for qualified Journeyman Plumbers. Top pay annual bonuses, paid holidays, vacations, sick days, life. Health and dental offered. Opportunities for advancement. Call 301-990-2891
Housekeeper
Full Time Help Wanted
All interested applicants, please come to the hotel to apply on line.
District Court for Montgomery County Rockville, Maryland
CDL DRIVERS
Full Time Help Wanted
NOW HIRING!!!
Courtroom Clerk
COMMERCIAL SERVICE PLUMBERS & HELPERS
GC3510
Full Time Help Wanted
Psychologist FT position under Behavior Support Services through the Arc of Southern Maryland. REQUIREMENTS: -Ph. D or BCBA-D or a related field with emphasis in Behavior Analysis with a minimum of two years’ exp with Behavior Management required. For details and to apply go to: www.gazette.net/careers
Sales Representative
Resp: prospecting businesses to sell shredding services. Must be: driven & self-motivated, have a min 1 + yrs exp. in business to business sales. Industry exp. in copy sales, office products, payroll & shredding a plus. Base + comm. on new account sales. Fax resume to: 205-743-0128 or email: ShreddingCompanyDC@gmail.com Any questions pls call : 301-325-5561.
Page B-10 Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Outstanding opportunity to help military couples build their families. Join a prominent government contractor serving military families in Bethesda, Maryland. Experience or strong interest in women’s health required/work includes both admin and clinical duties. Candidates must be able to pass government required security clearance and exhibit proof of U.S citizenship. Weekend rotation req. Excellent benefits & competitive salary package! New grads welcome to apply. .
Email resume & salary reqs: Darshana.naik.ctr@mail.mil or fax to 301/400-1800.
Wholesale HVAC Customer Service/ Warehouse/Driver
Prior experience in the HVAC trade or previous experience in warehouse work is highly desired. Clean driving record and pre-employment screening required. For details go to gazette.net. Email resume to bryan.richardson@remichel.com
Healthcare
NOW HIRING CNA’S
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Work with the BEST!
Full Time Help Wanted
r lve g Si prin S
Registered Nurse (R.N.)
Full Time Help Wanted
Es Rea ta l te
Full Time Help Wanted
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Call Bill Hennessy Be trained individually by Realtor Emeritus one of the area’s top offices & one of the area’s best salesman with over 40 years experience. 3 301-388-2626 01-388-2626 New & experienced salespeople welcomed. Bill.Hennessy@LNF.com EOE
Full Time Help Wanted
Recruiting is now Simple! Get Connected
GC3514 GC3647 LNF_HENNESSEY
Part Time Help Wanted
Part Time Help Wanted
Janitorial
Private school in Rockville seeks PT janitorial worker. Must have prior experience. Please e-mail rodriguezf@mjbha.org or call Building Services at 301-962-9400 x5101
Career Training Need to re-start your career?
Call Rafiq at: 301-922-0615 6000 Granby Road Derwood, MD 20855
Career building
• search for jobs locally, regionally, nationally • upload your resume • get latest career information • connect with local resources
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Page B-11
Domestic Sports Utility Vehicles
YOU ALWAYS GET YOUR WAY AT OURISMAN EVERYDAY
2002 FORD EXPLORER LIMITED: 176,900 miles. Fully loaded. Runs great! $3,400 obo. 240-7517263
RAIN OR SHINE!
Cars Wanted
Since 1989
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
www.CapitalAutoAuction.com WE HAVE VEHICLES FOR EVERY BUDGET AND NEED!
AUCTIONS EVERY SATURDAY
Temple Hills, MD
5001 Beech Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 9:00a.m.
1905 Brentwood Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 10:00a.m.
Call 301-640-5987
Domestic Cars
2003 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE: 42K miles. 50th anniv. 6 speed. Fully loaded. Excel condition. $21k 301-221-1535
Washington, DC
or email dc@capitalautoauction.com
OPEN TO PUBLIC • ALL DEALERS WELCOME G560929
BUY BELOW KBB VALUE
CA H
FOR CAR !
MEMORIAL DAY 48” LED HDTV SALES EVENT with car purchase
INSTANT CASH OFFER
G560928
(301)288-6009
*While supplies last
OURISMAN VW
2015 GOLF 2D HB LAUNCH EDITION
#3025420, Bluetooth, I Yr. Car Care Maintenance, Auto, Keyless Entry
MSRP 18,815 $
16,599
$
2015 JETTA S
2015 PASSAT LIMITED EDITION
#7271256, Front/Side Airbags, Aluminum Wheels, Keyless Entry, Auto, Stability Control
#9088106, Automatic, Keyless Entry, Leather Seats, Backup Camera, Front/Side Airbags, ABS Brakes
MSRP 19,245 $
BUY FOR
16,995
$
MSRP $25,135 BUY FOR
21,999
$
OR $229/MO for 72 MONTHS
OR $319/MO for 72 MONTHS
2015 JETTA SEDAN TDI S
2015 BEETLE 1.8L
2015 GOLF GTI 2D HB S
#7262051, Bluetooth, 1 Yr. car Care Maintenance, Loaner Car For Life
#1647049, Bluetooth, Keyless Entry, Auto, Touch Screen Radio, iPad Adapter, I Yr. Car Care Maintenance
#5501562, Manual, ABS Brakes, Audio Streaming, Keyless Entry
BUY FOR
OR $219/MO for 72 MONTHS
MSRP $23,880
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MSRP 21,105
MSRP $23,315
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20,599
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OR $299/MO for 72 MONTHS
OR $245/MO for 72 MONTHS
OR $289/MO for 72 MONTHS
2015 GOLF SPORTWAGEN S
2015 TIGUAN S 2WD
2014 CC SPORT LAST 2014 AVAILABLE!
#5500964, Automactic. I Yr. Car Care Maintenance, Bluetooth, Keyless Entry, Backup Camera
#13096839, Automatic, ABS Brakes, Power Locks, Keyless Entry, Backup Camera
#9539247, Navigation, Backup Camera Front/Side Airbags, 2.0 Turbo, Bluetooth
ANY CAR ANY CONDITION
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR-FAST FREE PICKUP! SELL YOUR CAR TODAY! CALL NOW FOR AN
*Expires 5/25/15
MSRP 23,995 $
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20,995
$
OR $299/MO for 72 MONTHS
MSRP $27,120
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24,999
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MSRP $35,060
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26,999
$
OR $431/MO for 72 MONTHS
OURISMAN VW WORLD AUTO CERTIFIED PRE OWNED 24 Available...Rates Starting at 1.64% up to 72 months
2007 Rabbit...............................#V033452A, Black, 117,967 Miles..............$5,991
2013 Passat SE.......................#V080993A, White, 29,626 Miles...............$17,391
2008 Dodge Caliber...............#V293674A, Silver, 130,404 Miles................$5,999
2012 CC.....................................#V820490A, Black, 47,400 Miles...............$17,491
2006 Touareg...........................#V001597A, Black, 78,489 Miles.................$8,991
2013 Jetta TDI..........................V320148A, Black, 31,444 Miles.................$17,492
2011 Toyota Prius...................V283821B, Red, 112,390 Miles.................$11,593
2013 GTI Conv..........................V297056A, White, 31,734 Miles.................$17,993
2011 Nissan Sentra...............#V298174B, Silver, 83,127 Miles................$11,791
2014 Jeep Patriot...................VP0134, Black, 9,454 Miles........................$18,692
2011 Toyota Camry SE..........V0125A, Black, 61,476 Miles.....................$11,995
2013 Beetle..............................#V591026A, Black, 35,857 Miles...............$18,791
2014 Nissan Versa.................V309714A, Gray, 7,485 Miles.....................$13,772
2013 Passat TDI SE................V033935A, Gray,28,762 Miles...................$19,955
2013 Passat..............................#VPR0138, Maroon, 44,978 Miles..............$14,991
2004 Honda S2000 Roadster..V255772A, Gray, 36,661 Miles...................$19,792
2014 Chrysler 200 LX............#VPR0139, Grey, 33,534 Miles...................$14,991
2013 Jetta Sportswagen TDI..V055283A, Black, 30,101 Miles.................$20,992
2013 Nissan Altima...............V303606A, Silver, 49,926 Miles..................$15,871
2012 Chevrolet Equinox AWD...#V099935A, Blue, 38,419 Miles.................$21,991
2013 VW Beetle.......................V801398, Yellow, 16,020 Miles...................$16,293
2014 Routan SEL.....................VP0130, Blue, 18,268 Miles.......................$25,993
2011 Jetta TDI..........................#V005099A, Black, 71,951 Miles...............$16,991
2013 CC VR6 4Motion............VP0131, Black, 33,105 Miles.....................$25,993
All prices & payments exclude tax, tags, title, freight and $300 processing fee. Cannot be combined with any previous advertised or internet special. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only. Special APR financing cannot be combined with sale prices. Ends 05/31/15.
Search Gazette.Net/Autos
3371 Fort Meade Road, Laurel
1.855.881.9197 • www.ourismanvw.com
Online Chat Available...24 Hour Website • Hours Mon-Fri 9 am-9 pm • Sat 9 am-8 pm
G560902
Looking for a new convertible?
Ourisman VW of Laurel
Page B-12
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
Page B-13
DARCARS NISSAN
DARCARS VOLVO OF ROCKVILLE 2002 Honda Civic EX
2007 Mitsubishi Eclipse GT
2011 GMC Terrain SLE-1
2001 Nissan Quest GXE
6,995
#P9279A, Automatic, Clean Inside and Out
$
13,995
#P9232A, 6 spd Manual 3.8 V6 Convertible, Only 35K Miles, Fun Car!!!
$
2010 Camry Hybrid
2007 XC90
5,977
#442076A, Automatic, Gently Driven $ and Priced to Move!
14,995
$
#P9276A, Auto, Locally Owned and Well Maintained,
2010 Nissan Rogue SL
14,995
#G0063,ONLY 54K mi, 2.4L 4cyl,Auto
$
15,995
$
2010 Volvo XC60 3.0 Turbo AWD 2013 KIA Optima SX Turbo
#P9371, 1-OWNER, Heated Front Seats, Bluetooth, Alloys
13,977
$
$16,995
2008 Nissan Xterra S 4WD
19,950
$
#526571C, 1-Owner, Leather, HEATED SEATS, Panoramic roof, Alloys, Beautifully Kept!
2012 Honda CRV EX-L AWD
19,995
$
2012 Volvo S60 T6 R Design
14,977
$
23,950
#P9308, CERTIFIED, Turbo, AWD, Leather, Sunroof
24,980
$
2012 Nissan Leaf SL NAV Hatchback
#P9327, ONLY 12K MILES!! Certified, Auto, Looks New!
15,977
$
23,980
2011 Volvo XC90 AWD Platinum
2010 Chevy Equinox LTZ $
14,777
$
#P9311, CERTIFIED!!, Only 26K Miles,Nav,Rear Camera, Leather, $ Sunroof, Premium Sound
#532188C, Nav, Leather, Sunroof, Loaded #P9369, 1-Owner, Leather, Sunroof, Alloys , Only 32K Miles!
2012 Hyundai Veloster #E0647A,Nav, Panoramic Roof, Leather, Loaded, Fun to drive
2011 Volvo S80 3.2L
#541214A, 1-OWNER, Only 74K Miles, Well kept!! #G0061, Only 62K mi!!,Leather, Panoramic moonroof, Alloys
12,977
$
2013 Hyundai Sonata SE
#541149A, Auto, Sunroof, Alloys 525586B, ONLY 77k Miles!! 6 cyl, clean inside & out!
2014 Chevrolet Sonic LS
#442078A, Only 5K Miles!!!, Automatic, Why Buy New?
#P9384,CERTIFIED!! Only 23K Miles,Nav, Rear Camera, Leather, Sunroof, Premium Sound,
15,977
$
2011 Hyundai Sonata Limited
16,977
$
#548040A, 1-Owner, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Clean!!
29,980
$
2011 Volvo C30 Turbo Coupe.............................. $11,995 2012 Acura TSX Wagon............................................... $21,950 #526588B, Black, Fun to drive, Well maintained inside & out!
# 527003A, 1-Owner, Only 27K Miles! Leather, Sunroof, Bluetooth, Alloys
2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee.................................... $11,995 2010 Volvo XC60 3.2L...........................$18,950 #P9310A, 1-Owner, Super Low Miles 61K, V8, SNRF, Alloys, Gray
2010 Mercury Mariner Hybrid
#P9277, 1-Owner, Leather, Moonroof, Bluetooth
#541161A, Hard-to-Find, 1-Owner, Loaded, Leather, Sunroof
2011 Mini Cooper S........................................................... $14,995 2012 Volvo S60 T5 Turbo......................$19,980 #P9243B, 1-Owner, Turbo, Auto, Leather, Well Maintained
16,777
$
2011 Mazda CX-7 #547519A, 1-Owner, Beautiful Inside & Out, Well Maintained
15,977
$
#P9315, CERTIFIED!! Only 30K Miles, Leather, Sunroof, Homelink
2010 Volvo XC60 3.2L..................................................... $17,950 2012 Volvo XC90 Premier Plus...........$25,980 #P9263, 1-Owner, Only 52K Miles! Panormic Moonroof, Well prices and clean!
DARCARS
#429033A, 1-OWNER, CERTIFIED Leather, 3RD Row seat, Moonroof, Well Maintained
VOLVO
G560934
2011 Kia Sorento SX
#587010B, Auto, Navigation, Panoramic Roof, AWD
15401 Frederick Rd, Rockville, MD
www.darcarsvolvo.com
YOUR GOOD CREDIT RESTORED HERE
G560898
DARCARS
2008 Nissan 350 Z Touring #548505A, Low Miles!!, V6, Auto, Leather, Alloys
16,977
$
www.DARCARSnissan.com
1.888.824.9165 See what it’s like to love car buying.
17,977
$
DARCARS NISSAN of ROCKVILLE 15911 Indianola Drive • Rockville, MD (at Rt. 355 across from King Farm)
888.805.8235 • www.DARCARSNISSAN.com
BAD CREDIT - NO CREDIT - CALL TODAY!
Page B-14
Wednesday, May 20, 2015 z
DARCARS NISSAN TWO LOCATIONS
Rockville
College Park
15911 Indianola Drive Rockville, MD 20855 888-797-1831 2015 NISSAN
2015 NISSAN
Versa S Sedan
MSRP: $14,685 Nissan Rebate $400 Sale Price: $11,395
$ 4
automatic transmission MODEL #11115
AT THIS PRICE
$
0
ALTIMA 2.5 S
$
39 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
16,995
OR
AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #13115 4 at this price
$
$
159/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
0
2015 NISSAN
LEAF S
MSRP: $32,000 Sale Price: $27, 995 NMAC Bonus Cash: $3,500
$ with charger package MODEL #17015
AT THIS PRICE
AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #11615
$
$
13,995 OR
4
$
169/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
0
$
0
$
149
$
OR
4
AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #12115
0
$
NV200
/MO 36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
AVAILABLE ON BRAND NEW: 2015 ALTIMAS, 2015 SENTRAS, 2015 ARMADAS, 2015 TITANS, 2015 LEAFS! 2015 NISSAN
MSRP: $32,455 Sale Price: $27,995 Nissan Rebate: $1,500 NMAC Bonus Cash: $500
PATHFINDER 4X4 S
$ 4
AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #25015
$
0
AT THIS PRICE
$
269/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
17,495 279
$
OR
4
MODEL #67115
0
$
/MO 36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
2015 NISSAN
MURANO S AWD MSRP: $33,045 Sale Price: $28,495
25,995
OR
MSRP: $22,045 Sale Price: $18,245 Nissan Customer Cash: $750
$
0% APR X 72 MONTHS
229/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
14,495
2015 NISSAN
24,495 OR
4
169/MO
$
MSRP: $19,305 Sale Price: $15,745 Nissan Rebate $1,000 NMAC Bonus Cash: $250
SENTRA SV
MSRP: $23,935 Sale Price: $19,495 Nissan Customer Cash: -$1,000 Altima Bonus Cash: -$500 NMAC Bonus Cash: -$1000
2015 NISSAN
4
$
OR
2015 NISSAN
MSRP: $17,600 Sale Price: $14,895 Nissan Customer Cash: $400 NMAC Bonus Cash: $500
VERSA NOTE SV
10,995
9330 Baltimore Ave College Park, MD 20740 888-693-8037
$
OR
4
AT THIS PRICE
28,495
MODEL #23015
0
$
339
$
/MO 36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
SEE WHAT IT’S LIKE TO LOVE CAR BUYING
DARCARS NISSAN OF ROCKVILLE
DARCARS NISSAN OF COLLEGE PARK
www.DARCARSnissan.com
www.DARCARSnissanofcollegepark.com
Prices include all rebates and incentives. DARCARS Nissan DOES NOT Include college grad or military rebates in price! NMAC Bonus Cash require financing through NMAC with approved credit. Prices exclude tax, tags, freight (Cars $810, SUVs and Trucks $860-$1000) and $300 processing charge, Lease payments are calculated with tax, tags, freight, $300 processing charge and first payment due at signing, and are valid with tier one approval through NMAC. Prices and payments valid only at listed VINS. See dealer for details. Offer expires 05/25/2015. G560932
NEW 2015 HIGHLANDER LE 1 AVAILABLE: #563287
28,390
$
4 CYL., AUTO, 4 DR
NEW22015 RAV4 4X2 LE AVAILABLE: #564399, 564398
20,890
$
4 CYL., AUTOMATIC
2015 PRIUS C II
355 TOYOTA
2 AVAILABLE: #577511, 577476
MEMORIAL DAY 149/MO** $
SPECIALS
DARCARS
See what it’s like to love car buying
NEW 2015 CAMRY LE
3 AVAILABLE: #572183, 572187, 572081
$
159/
MO**
18,990
NEW 2015 TACOMA 4X2 XTRACAB 2 AVAILABLE: #567184, 567181
$0 DOWN
$
AUTO, 4 CYL., 4 DR
18,890
3 DR. H/BK, MANUAL TRANS
AFTER TOYOTA $1,000 REBATE
NEW 2015 COROLLA L 2 AVAILABLE: #570717, 570731
14,590
$
4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL. INCL.
AFTER $750 REBATE
MONTHS+ % 0 FOR 60 On 10 Toyota Models
1-888-831-9671
$0 DOWN
$
149/MO**
2015 COROLLA LE
15625 Frederick Rd (Rte 355) • Rockville, MD OPEN SUNDAY VISIT US ON THE WEB AT www.355Toyota.com PRICES AND PAYMENTS INCLUDE ANY APPLICABLE MANUFACTURE’S REBATES AND EXCLUDE MILITARY ($500) AND COLLEGE GRAD ($500) REBATES, TAX, TAGS, DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE ($300) AND FREIGHT: CARS $795 OR $810, TRUCKS, SPORT UTILITY AND SIENNAS $810, $845 AND $995. *0.0% APR & 0% APR FINANCING UP TO 60 MONTHS TO QUALIFIED BUYERS THRU TOYOTA FINANCIAL SERVICES. TOTAL FINANCED CANNOT EXCEED MSRP PLUS OPTIONS, TAX, AND LICENSE FEES. 0% APR MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $16.67 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. 0.9% APR 60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $17.05 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. APR OFFERS ARE NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER CASH BACK LEASE OFFER. NOT ALL BUYERS WILL QUALIFY.**LEASE PAYMENTS BASED ON 36 MONTHS, 12,000 MILES PER YEAR WITH $995 DOWN PLUS $650 ACQUISITION FEE, NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. LEASES FOR COROLLA AND CAMRY ARE 24 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN PLUS TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT, PROCESSING AND $650 ACQUISITION FEE. SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. EXPIRES 5/26/2015.
4 CYL., 4 DR., AUTO
2 AVAILABLE: #570375, 570343
$0 DOWN G560907
13,590
MANUAL, 4 CYL
2014 SCION XB 2 AVAILABLE: #455033, 455044
NEW 2015 YARIS #577009
$
4 CYL., AUTO
AFTER TOYOTA $750 REBATE
NEW 2015 CAMRY LE
$
4 CYL., AUTO, 4 DR
AFTER TOYOTA $750 REBATE
AFTER $750 REBATE
2 AVAILABLE: #572152, 572074
$0 DOWN
$
139/MO**
4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL