“No Walmart now, not ever!”

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Thursday, August 7, 2014
“No Walmart now, not ever!”
Residents stage protest against a Walmart planned to be built at Duvall Village Shopping Center
By Holden Wilen
Managing editor
See the Extra
inside!
INDEX
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . .E-7
Classifieds . . . . . . . . . E-9
Cartoon . . . . . . . . . . . . E-2
Legals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5
Travel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
BOWIE – “We don’t want a
Walmart!” Todd Sharpe yelled into
a megaphone while standing in the
middle of Glenn Dale Road. “We
don’t need a Walmart!”
Sharpe, a Bowie resident,
joined more than 50 other residents
gathered along Glenn Dale Road
and Annapolis Road to protest approval of plans for a Walmart store
in the Duvall Village Shopping Center.
The Prince George’s County
Planning Board approved WalMart’s plan earlier this year, which
includes 77,916 square feet of space
and 513 parking spaces. The District Council elected to review the
Planning Board’s decision, but decided to wait until the fall before
making a decision while appeals
from Wal-Mart and the community
play out in court.
Jennifer Dwyer, 27, who filed
the community’s appeal and has circulated a petition with more than
400 signatures, said she lives 150
feet behind the vacant property.
Dwyer organized the community
protest and has led the charge
against Wal-Mart because she does
not want what she said will be a
“bad neighbor.”
“I just feel it’s a really bad fit
for my neighborhood,” Dwyer said.
“It’s just too close. And on top of
that, Walmarts are a particularly
horrid retailer. They are crime magnets even compared to other bigbox stores. An average Walmart
sees over 200 incidents a year. This
is a well-known phenomenon.”
Residents are concerned not
only about crime, Dwyer said, but
also about increased traffic and a
possible devaluation of their properties.
“For me, there is nothing
blocking [the store] from my property, so when shopping carts come
rolling down the hill and garbage
PHOTO BY HOLDEN WILEN
Jennifer Dwyer, above, leads a protest on Glenn Dale Road against plans
for a Walmart store.
there is nothing to stop it,” Dwyer
said. “If I decide to put my home on
the market, people are going to see
that.”
Amanda Henneberg, a spokeswoman for Wal-Mart, said the safe-
ty is a top priority for the company.
“A biased, flawed and inaccurate union-sponsored study from 10
years ago doesn’t change the facts,”
Please see “Walmart” page 4
News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4
Middle East conflict affects at home
Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . .E-2
Jon Banister
Special to the Sentinel
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15
LANHAM — While Israel and
Hamas continue to wage war with
one another and the death toll continues to climb, local religious leaders and political pundits are weighing on in what they think about the
situation in the Middle East.
According to CNN, the Palestinian Health Ministry reports more
than 1,800 people have lost their
lives since Israel began Operation
Protective Edge about a month ago,
including more than 300 children.
Sixty-seven Israelis have died, most
of them soldiers, according to CNN.
While the war is being waged
thousands of miles from the shores
of Maryland, county residents are
feeling the impact.
Rabbi Steve Weissman of Temple Solel in Bowie said his daughter
had been on a month-long organized
trip in Israel when the violence
broke out. He said he gave his 21year-old daughter the choice to stay
in the volatile region for the remaining two weeks or return home.
“If she had decided to stay and
go off the program and go do something to be supportive of the country
I would have absolutely supported it
— I would have made sure she was
okay,” Weissman said. “The fact that
she had chose to come home I was,
as a parent, relieved when the plane
landed. I was on pins and needles
until it was on the ground here.”
Local religious groups agree
the thousands of Palestinian civilians killed because of the violence is
a tragedy.
“I don't care where you stand on
Israel, the fact that innocent Palestinians are dying because Israel has
felt the need to fight a military exercise against Hamas, that’s not good
for anybody,” Weissman said. “It’s
Please see “Middle East” page 4
2
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
NEWS
Water main break closes down Rhode Island Avenue
By Holden Wilen
Managing editor
HYATTSVILLE – A 12-inch
water main burst late Thursday afternoon left six homes without water
and a section of Rhode Island Avenue to be closed causing heavy traffic delays, but the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission will not
conduct a forensic analysis.
According to Ayoka Blanford,
public affairs unit coordinator for the
Washington Suburban Sanitary
Commission, the 73-year-old pipe
broke at approximately 4:30 p.m. at
4806 Rhode Island Ave./Route 1 in
Hyattsville.
Crews responded immediately,
but according to the WSSC, three
million gallons of water spilled onto
the road in the three hours it took
workers to stem the flow.
As of Friday night, the section
of road remained closed indefinitely.
“We are still in the midst of repairs,” said Lyn Riggins, a spokeswoman for the WSSC.
WSSC completed repairs Saturday and reopened all lanes on
Rhode Island Avenue.
WSSC is attributing the cause
of the pipe to its old age. Short of doing a forensic analysis, Riggins said
officials will not know the exact
cause for the break, but she confirmed an analysis will not be performed.
"No," Riggins said when asked
if WSSC will study the cause of the
break. "The pipe was 73 years old so
we know it was an aging pipe."
The pipe burst left six homes
without water, which have since
been restored, Riggins said.
The repairs required hiring an
outside contractor and will cost
somewhere around $100,000, Riggins said. The break is “one of the
more severe incidents” the WSSC
usually sees, she said. There are between 1,700 and 1,800 water main
breaks annually.
In an official statement, WSSC
officials promised to continue working to repair the agency’s infrastructure.
“WSSC appreciates the patience of our customers and all the
commuters affected by the water
main break and traffic consequences,” according to the statement. “The Commission is committed to infrastructure renewal and is
currently replacing 55 miles per year
of water main.
The repairs required hiring an
outside contractor and will cost somewhere around $100,000, Riggins said.
The break is “one of the more severe
incidents” the WSSC usually sees,
she said. There are between 1,700 and
1,800 water main breaks annually.
Sentinel reporter Kelsey Sutton
contributed to this report.
PHOTO BY SAVANNAH TANBUSCH
Rhode Island Avenue remained closed until Saturday because of a water
main break, pictured above, that WSSC will not investigate.
One dead in three-car wreck that shuts down Beltway
By Jim Davis
Special to the Sentinel
LANHAM – One woman is
dead after a three-car crash involving a Maryland State Police
cadet that closed down all four
lanes of southbound I-495 Friday
morning.
According to the Maryland
State Police, at about 8:30 a.m.,
Cadet Sebastian L. Reyes, 18, lost
control of his 2006 Ford Expedition
on the outer loop after using a
crossover and pulling into the fast
lane.
According to police, Reyes
sideswiped a 2000 Lincoln, causing
the vehicle to hit the jersey wall
while Reyes spun and struck a 2011
Subaru Outback.
Maryland State Police and
Prince George’s County Fire units
responded to the scene, shutting
down all four lanes of the freeway
to conduct an investigation. Traffic
clogged up all the way back to the
Intercounty Connector/MD-200.
Mark Brady, spokesman for
the Prince George’s County Fire
Department, said firefighters
helped free the Lincoln driver, identified as 59-year-old Karen HoltWilliams of Temple Hills, when
they arrived at the scene. Though
they were able to get her out, Brady
said Holt-Williams died on her way
to the hospital.
Reyes, another cadet who was
a passenger in his vehicle, and the
driver of the Outback were all uninjured.
A source close to the accident
investigation said when he arrived
the accident did not appear to be too
bad.
“It looked like another typical
beltway accident,” the source said.
According to the Maryland
State Police, the Prince George’s
County State’s Attorney’s Office
has been notified and will determine if it wants to press charges
once the police have finished their
investigation.
Reyes has been placed on
leave, according to the State Police,
and an administrative investigation
will be conducted.
According to the State Police,
cadets are civilian employees ages
18-21 who work in the police’s ommercial vehicle enforcement divi-
COURTESY PHOTO
The crash pictured above on the Capitol Beltway caused traffic to back up
all the way to the Intercounty Connector.
sion. Reyes had been assigned to
the commercial vehicle weight sta-
Got News? Tell Us About It! Call (301) 306-9500
tion at the I-95/I-495 park and ride
near College Park.
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
3
NEWS
County celebrates falling crime rate with National Night Out events
By Kelsey Sutton
Special to the Sentinel
LANHAM — Nearly 70 locations around Prince George’s County are hosting community events for
the 31st National Night Out in a continued countywide effort to combat
crime.
“We have a lot to celebrate in
terms of our public safety progress
and improvements in every part of
Prince George’s County,” said
County Executive Rushern Baker
III, who planned to attend county
events.
The Prince George’s County
Police Department will unveil a
memorial for police and public safety officers killed in the line of duty at
the District VI police station in
Beltsville. County Police Chief
Mark Magaw will attend along with
command staff, police department
members, county leaders and neighborhood civic groups.
The memorial resulted from an
effort by Beltsville community
members, who spearheaded funding
efforts to thank and memorialize
fallen heroes, according to county
police.
Some community centers, local
businesses and neighborhoods will
begin celebrations at 5 p.m. in locations like the Rolling Crest Community Center, St. Bernard Church,
Beacon Heights Elementary and the
Riverdale Heights Fire Department.
Events will end between 8 and 10
p.m.
At some events, like one held at
Granville Gude Park in Laurel, K-9
teams in action will entertain attendees and emergency response teams
will demonstrate how they do their
jobs. In addition, there will be free
food and games for children.
At another event held at Allen
Pond Park in Bowie, public safety
officials will provide information
about home security and identity
theft, and attendees will receive free
child identification kits. There will
be a moon bounce and other activities for children.
County officials said National
Night Out is a way to continue fighting crime and improving public
safety, which have been points of
emphasis for Baker’s administration
since he took office in 2010.
So far this year, Baker said the
county’s crime rate has dropped by 6
percent compared to 2013. Additionally, the county has seen 6.5 percent fewer property crimes and nearly 33 percent fewer homicides compared to last year, said Scott
Peterson, press secretary for the office of the county executive.
“This progress is due in part to
improved partnerships and cooperation between public safety agencies
and our communities,” Baker said.
“National Night Out exemplifies
this collaboration where neighbors
can spend time with fellow neighbors to promote crime prevention
and build partnerships with public
safety departments.”
National Night Out is a nationwide effort sponsored by the National Association of Town Watch to reduce crime rates by building community relationships.
Last year, during the 30th annual National Night Out, police officers and community members celebrated the lowest county crime rate
in more than 30 years, Baker said.
According to a 2012 FBI Uniform Crime Report, murder and violent crime rates in the county have
dropped 26 percent and 21 percent,
respectively, in the prior three years.
During that time, murder rates
in the county have dropped 26 percent, rape rates have dropped 23 percent and aggravated assaults have
dropped by nearly a quarter. Violent
crime across the county has also
dropped by more than 21 percent.
The event is not all about fighting crime, Baker said. It also provides a way for community members to get to know one another and
the police officers who serve them.
“National Night Out provides a
great opportunity in a casual and fun
setting for residents to meet or become better acquainted with our incredible public safety employees,”
Baker said.
The event also promotes neighbors exchanging contact information and getting to know one another
as ways to encourage neighborhood
communication about suspicious activity.
As part of the event’s tradition,
organizers will encourage attendees
to keep their porch lights and lamp
posts on from dusk until midnight.
The county will be part of the
more than 37.8 million people and
16,124 communities from all 50
states and United States territories
anticipated to partake in the National Night Out.
Statewide, Maryland has seen a
dramatic drop in crime; in 2012 police reported the lowest-ever rates of
homicides, robberies, aggravated assaults and violent crimes.
Maryland, however, still has
one of the highest homicide rates
around the country, with 19.94
homicides per 100,000 people, according to data from a 2012 FBI
Uniform Crime Report.
Robbery rates in Maryland are
also high, with 361 robberies per
100,000 people.
However, Baltimore City accounted for nearly 60 percent of
Maryland’s total crimes, 89 percent
of its total homicides in 2012 and 77
percent of its total robberies in 2012,
according to FBI data.
MD-450 and MD-197 top transportation priorities for Bowie
Jon Banister
Special to the Sentinel
BOWIE – At Monday evening’s
Mayor and City Council meeting,
Planning Director Joseph Meinert
highlighted road development on
MD-450 and MD-197 as the city’s
top transportation priorities, citing a
need for more traffic volume.
The two projects are No. 6 and
No. 4 on the Prince George’s County
priority list, respectively, both moving up two spots from last year’s positions.
The MD-450 project will
stretch from Stony Brook Road to
MD 3. The road currently has a traffic volume of 26,700 vehicles per
day, but that will more than double
by 2030 according to the report’s
projections. The report says the
stretch of road is “crucial to the city's
economic development since it provides principal access to the Bowie
Mainstreet commercial area.”
Meinert said the city has seen a
need to reconstruct the road since
1986, and it has been in the planning
stages since 1988.
“The road was in pretty sad
shape. It was in substandard conditions,” Meinert said. “All of those
things were taken into consideration, documented and that’s why
those resources were committed.”
However, Meinert said funding
is given incrementally, and after
completing planning and design, the
money stopped coming, further
pushing back the construction date.
“The big challenge on the state
issues is funding,” said Bowie Mayor
Frederick Robinson. “They did pass
an increase in gasoline tax last year to
try to rebuild the transportation trust
fund because there’s no money in it
right now. We have moved up a couple notches in the order, which is critical. So we’re making progress, but
right now there’s no state money
available for construction.”
In the city council’s letter last
September to the Maryland Department of Transportation, they praised
the state for its recent $650 million
pledge to transportation improvements in Prince George’s County,
but expressed concern none of
Bowie’s priority items were men-
tioned by Gov. Martin O’Malley.
“The City Council feels strongly that these projects, which will improve vehicular safety conditions
and the quality of life for our residents, should be given at least equal
consideration along with the many
emerging mass transit projects like
the Purple Line,” the letter read.
Meinart said if the funding
comes as soon as he hopes, then it
will still take up to five years before
either project is finished.
The plan for construction of
MD-197 would stretch from US-50
to MD-450, a 1.4 mile stretch with
31,400 vehicles traveling on it each
day. The report projects traffic volume will increase to 57,925 by 2030.
The design plan is to increase the
For all your local news go to www.thesentinel.com
road from a two-lane street to a fourlane street.
Meinert also introduced public
transportation priorities including
new bus routes. The report mentioned bus service between MD-450
and the city of Greenbelt, between
Bowie Town Center and Largo Town
Center, and between Fairwood Parkway and Upper Marlboro.
Bowie resident Rammtita Jones
said she is hopeful about future developments.
“I think it would be a really
good thing for Bowie because we
have a lot of people here and people
want to use the transit system,” she
said. “I know I do instead of driving,
and I think it would be a very good
thing for Bowie.”
4
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
NEWS
Bowie residents: Just say “No” to Walmart
From “Walmart” page 1
Henneberg said. “We proactively
work with communities and local
law enforcement to put the right
safety measures in place so that our
customers can continue to have a
safe and enjoyable shopping experience at Walmart.”
Dwyer said the United Food
and Commercial Workers Union
Local 400 is assisting her in her
fight. The union previously fought
the construction of Walmart stores
in Washington, D.C., and other locations. Dwyer said she approached
the union after reading about its battles on the internet.
Karina Rosado, a community
growth strategies representative for
the union, said Dwyer approached
her in December.
“We’re only helping by helping
them strategize basically,” Rosado
said. “But the big push is coming
from the community. These are
folks coming together, not labor
coming together.”
Rosado and Dwyer both said
the community’s plight should not
be characterized as a union-versusWal-Mart fight.
“Obviously the community and
labor have a common issue with this
big box store,” Rosado said. “So
why not work together to make improvements in the community?”
Henneberg also said Walmart
stores do not hurt property values.
According to a paper published by
the National Bureau of Economic
Research, an analysis of 600,000
homes purchased between 2001 and
2006 showed the value of homes located within a half mile of a Walmart store rose two to three percent
more than homes not near a Walmart.
The property used to house a
Super Fresh grocery store before it
went out of business. Dwyer said
the property has remained vacant
since she moved to Bowie, but it
does not bother her. If a retailer is
going to take over the property, she
said she would prefer it to be a
Whole Foods or a Trader Joes so the
store would offer a different kind of
product for residents and not compete with the surrounding grocery
stores. Additionally, she said, a
Whole Foods or Trader Joes would
not have as large of a traffic impact
as a Walmart.
Angelina Woods, a resident of
the Glensford condominiums, said
she agrees with Dwyer’s views and
is troubled by Wal-Mart’s reputation. When she moved in last year,
Woods said she had no idea WalMart had plans to come to Bowie.
“I was devastated,” Woods
said. “I am recently retired and I’m
thinking about my property value. I
was floored. I don’t think with the
characteristics of this neighborhood
that Wal-Mart fits in here. The surrounding area is rural residential
and some is even designated historical.”
Linda Banks, a resident of Legend Glens in Bowie, said the county’s pending approval of Wal-Mart’s
plans would be devastating for the
community.
“The county executive says he
is all for economic development,”
Banks said. “We want to support
economic development that is appropriate for our community, not
[one] that destroys the equity in our
homes.”
Dwyer said Wal-Mart has met
with the community a couple of
times to hear residents’ concerns.
However, she said Wal-Mart has
been dismissive and unwilling to
consider suggestions from residents, such as not operating 24
hours or building a retaining wall.
“They are unwilling to compromise and that’s fine,” Dwyer
said. “We will protest, so no Walmart. If this is going to be how you
are going to treat us…nobody wants
a bad neighbor.”
Henneberg said there is no
need for a retaining wall because the
building and shopping center have
existed for more than 20 years without needing one. She also noted
Wal-Mart has been involved with
community giving in Maryland, donating more than $6.8 million.
However, Dwyer said donations do not help her — or her
neighbors. When she asked a WalMart representative to tell her a specific way in which the store will
benefit residents, Dwyer said the
representative told her it would provide community shopping.
The residents said if the District Council approves of WalMart’s plans, it will send a message
to them their opinions do not matter.
District Council members
could not comment on this story
while plans are still under approval.
“They are not listening to us,”
Woods said. “You are telling us we
don’t have your ear and we do not
have the power to sway you. That
our vote doesn’t count.”
“We deserve better,” Sharpe
continued to shout through his
megaphone. “This is an upscale residential neighborhood. We are not
going to stand for it. No Walmart
now, not ever.”
Local religious leaders weigh in on Middle East
From “Middle East” page 1
certainly not good for Palestinians
because they’re the ones in the
crossfire.”
Imam Ahmad Azzaari of the
Prince George’s Muslim Association, but speaking for himself and
not the organization, said the heavy
loss of Palestinian life reveals a onesided war.
Azzari criticized the Israeli Defense Forces for the rising death toll.
“You are professional soldiers,
you have a very advanced army with
technology, so why would you target
civilians like this?” he said. “War is
between two regular armies of two
countries. I don’t see a balance of
power between Israel and Hamas.
Irsa Sarkawi, of the University
of Maryland Muslim Students Association, said the crisis is about more
than religion. “It is a humanitarian
crisis,” Sarkawi said.
Local religious leaders say they
need to work together to foster
meaningful bonds between the Jewish and Muslim communities that
will translate into future peaceful relations.
“Engage in friendly and neighborly ways with our Muslim and
Arab counterparts here,” said Temple Oseh Shalom Rabbi Doug
Heifetz. “It’s a lot easier to make
peace between these groups here
than it is over there. The divide between our Muslim and Arab friends
here doesn’t seem all that significant. In Israel it very much is, but if
we create these strong networks and
friendships here, that will have a
very strong impact.”
Heifetz said the conflict should
not be seen as an inevitable clash between religions, but people from
both sides should work to find middle ground.
“Both traditions emphasize the
need for peace, so if you could emphasize that aspect of the religious
traditions, all the better,” Heifetz
said. “But the more you make it
seem like a conflict between ancient
religious civilizations, the worse off
we are, the more intractable and
harder to solve the conflict becomes.”
Edy Kaufman, a professor of
government and politics at the University of Maryland said he thinks
local religious groups can make a
difference by working together.
“This is a time for them either
to work together as Arabs and Jews
or through interfaith to try to do
whatever they can to export the idea
of coexistence back to the holy
land,” Kaufman said.
Weissman said finding a peaceful ending would require the sides to
give up on their goals of victory.
“Hamas and Israel both have to
acknowledge that ending it and be-
ing dissatisfied with the ending is
better than continuing it,” he said,
“which means somebody’s going to
have to put a lot of pressure on both
of them.”
U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry has made multiple trips to the
region in order to try and broker a
ceasefire. Sarkawi said she does not
agree with U.S. support for Israel.
“The U.S. involvement in the
region is hurting more than helping
the peace effort,” Sarkawi said. “A
large amount of our tax money is going into supplying Israel with arms
and weapons. The fact that these
weapons are being actively used
against the Palestinian people, who
have extremely limited access to resources and are struggling with basic
infrastructure, is abhorrent.”
Kerry announced a 72-hour
ceasefire Thursday to aid humanitarian efforts and foster peace negotiations. Kaufman, who teaches a sum-
mer course titled Conflict Resolution—The Israeli/Palestinian Experiment, said he supports Kerry’s recent actions.
“I admire his commitment,”
Kaufman said. “Most of what he has
done was generally and sincerely
committed to a peace that would be
beneficial to both sides. If there's
been criticism, it has been blown out
of proportion. I think his motives are
pragmatic and noble.”
The University of Maryland
chapter of the United Muslim Relief
has raised more than $30,000 at a
benefit for displaced Palestinian and
Syrian refugees, Sarwaki said.
Weissman said Temple Solel
has an Israel Committee, which focuses on teaching and celebrating
the Jewish state, and also makes
contributions, although he said contributions are relatively “insignificant” due to synagogue’s small congregation.
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
5
LEGAL NOTICES
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE
DEPARTMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENT
AIR AND RADIATION
MANAGEMENT ADMINISTRATION
On July 22, 2014, the Council of the Town of Edmonston
adopted Charter Resolution 2014-CR-01, to amend the Charter
of the Town of Edmonston, by repealing and re-enacting Article
I, “Charter”, §6, “Mayor and Town Council meetings: Vacancies
in office” to prescribe a new schedule for council meetings.
NOTICE OF TENTATIVE DETERMINATION,
OPPORTUNITY TO REQUEST
A PUBLIC HEARING, AND OPPORTUNITY TO SUBMIT
WRITTEN COMMENTS
Further information may be obtained by calling Ms. Shannon
Heafey at 410-537-4433.
George S. Aburn, Jr., Director
Air and Radiation Management Administration
00004034 1t 08/07/14
A complete and exact copy of this Charter Resolution shall be
posted at the Town municipal building, 5005 52nd Avenue, Edmonston, MD 20781, for forty (40) days following its adoption,
until August 31, 2014. A fair summary of the Charter Amendment shall be published in a newspaper having general circulation in the Town not less than (4) times at weekly intervals, also
within forty (40) days following adoption by the Council. The
amendment will take effect on September 10, 2014, unless petitioned to referendum in a manner prescribed by law.
Copy of Charter Resolution 14-CR-01 is available at the Edmonston Town Hall, 5005 52nd Avenue, Edmonston, Maryland 20781
Attest: Tracy Gant, Mayor
00004062 4t 08/28/14
A SUMMARY OF HYATTSVILLE ORDINANCE
2014-06
Notice is hereby given by the City Council of the City of
Hyattsville, a municipal corporation of the State of Maryland, that the Council passed Ordinance 2014-06 (the “Ordinance”) on Monday, August 4, 2014. The title of the Ordinance, which constitutes a fair summary, is as follows:
An Ordinance whereby the City Council updates its
speed monitoring system Ordinance to conform to recent State legislation.
The Ordinance will become effective on August 24, 2014.
The Ordinance is posted and available for inspection
through August 24, 2014, at the City Hall, 4310 Gallatin
Street, Hyattsville, Maryland 20781. Additionally, to obtain Hyattsville Ordinance 2014-06 in its entirety contact
Laura Reams, City Clerk, at (301) 985-5009 or go to
www.hyattsville.org.
The City Council of Hyattsville
00004061 2t 08/14/14
FIRST NOTICE
The Maryland Department of the Environment, Air and Radiation Management Administration (ARMA) has completed its review of an application for a Permit to Construct submitted by
Beall Funeral Home on March 24, 2014 for a IE43-PPII Plus Human Crematory and I EB-16 Pet Crematory. The proposed installation will be located at Beall Funeral Home 6512 NW Crain
Highway, Bowie, MD 20715.
Pursuant to Section 1-604, of the Environment Article, Annotated Code of Maryland, the Department has made a tentative determination that the Permit to Construct can be issued and is now
ready to receive public comment on the application. Copies of
the Department's tentative determination, the application, the
draft permit to construct with conditions, and other supporting
documents are available for public inspection. Ask for Docket #
07-14 at the following locations during normal business hours.
Maryland Department of the Environment
Air and Radiation Management Administration
1800 Washington Boulevard Baltimore, Maryland 21230
Bowie Library
15210 Annapolis Rd Bowie, MD 20715
(301) 262-7000
Interested persons may request a public hearing and/or submit
written comments on the tentative determination. Requests for a
public hearing must be submitted in writing and must be received
by the Department no later than 20 days from the date of this notice. Written comments must be received by the Department no
later than 30 days from the date of this notice.
Interested persons may request an extension to the public comment period. The extension request must be submitted in writing
and must be received by the Department no later than 30 days
from the date of this notice or within 5 days after the hearing (if a
hearing is requested), whichever is later. The public comment period may only be extended one time for a 60-day period.
All requests for a public hearing, requests for an extension to
the public comment period, and all written comments should be
directed to the attention of Ms. Shannon Heafey, Air Quality Permits Program, Air and Radiation Management Administration,
1800 Washington Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21230.
The best place for your local legal ads
The Sentinel
Linda S. Mericle, P.A.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
7600 Hanover Parkway Suite 202
Greenbelt, MD 20770
Telephone 301 474-2044
Mortgage Holders And Other Interested Parties
RE: Brinkley Overlook Condominium
Proposed Bylaw Amendment
Mortgage Holder Notice
This firm represents the Brinkley Overlook Condominium.
Pursuant to Md. REAL PROPERTY Code Ann. §
11-104(e)(2)(ii) Brinkley Overlook Condominium will be voting
on the adoption of an amendment to their Bylaws which will require all owners within Brinkley Overlook Condominium to obtain insurance for his or her home including but not limited to
HO6 insurance. A copy of the proposed Bylaw Amendment is
attached hereto as Exhibit 1.
As a potential party in interest to the real property that is subject to this proposed Amendment and in compliance with Maryland law and the Association's governing documents, you are being provided with this notice of the Association's plans to vote
upon the enclosed proposed Bylaw Amendment. If you fail to
object, in writing, to the proposed Amendment within sixty (60)
days of this notice, you will have deemed to have consented to
the adoption of this Amendment. The Association intends to
hold a meeting, and any adjourned meeting, in an effort to obtain
the votes for this Amendment and this meeting will be scheduled
more than sixty (60) days after the date of this letter. Should you
desire more information with regard to the Amendment; to register any objections; to know the date and time of the Board meeting when this Amendment will be subject to a vote; and or should
you have any other questions, please write to this law firm requesting that information. A copy of the proposed Amendment
is below:
BRINKLEY OVERLOOK CONDOMINIUM
BYLAW AMENDMENT:
CONDOMINIUM UNIT OWNER INSURANCE
THIS AMENDMENT TO BY-LAWS (“Amendment”) is made
this _____ day of ________________, 2014, by Brinkley Overlook Condominium (the “Association”) pursuant to Md. REAL
PROPERTY Code Ann. § 11-104(e)(2)(ii) which states that: The
6
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
MECHANICS LIEN
Bylaws may be amended by the affirmative vote of unit owners
having at least 51% of the votes in the council of unit owners for
the purpose of requiring all unit owners to maintain condominium unit owner insurance policies on their units.
management company or to the Board upon demand. Failure of
the owner to provide current and sufficient proof of said coverage
and renewals thereof shall be a event of default and subject the
owner to charges, fines, and any and all other resulting costs, including but not limited to an assessment of legal fees and collection procedures as allow in the Association's documents any and
all other appropriate legal action. Should any part or portion of
this Amendment be deemed to be invalid or otherwise unenforceable, all remaining parts or portions shall still be enforceable.”
00004028 1t 08/07/14
Lot # 15485, '05 FORD MUSTANG Vin # 1ZVFT80N555144923
Minimum Bid $ 4810.98 A/AMIGO AUTO REPAIR & SALES
HYATTSVILLE MD
Lot # 15487, '00
CHEVROLET
G30 CUTAWAY
Vin #
1GBJG31F1Y1121425 Minimum Bid $ 3178.96 AUTO COLLISIONS
& MECHANICS 3361 FORT MEADE RD LAUREL MD
Lot # 15488, '01 HONDA ACCORD Vin # 1HGCG32511A007216
Minimum Bid $ 3994.11 AUTO COLLISIONS & MECHANICS 3361
FORT MEADE RD LAUREL MD
Lot # 15489, '05 FORD TAURUS Vin # 1FAFP53U35A269442 Minimum Bid $ 2943.76 AUTO COLLISIONS & MECHANICS 3361
FORT MEADE RD LAUREL MD
Lot # 15490, '02 TOYOTA CAMRY Vin # 4T1BE32K82U553335
Minimum Bid $ 7177.29 A/AMIGO AUTO REPAIR & SALES
HYATTSVILLE MD
TERMS OF SALE: CASH OR CASHIER CHECK + 10% BUYER PREMIUM. MINIMUM BID POSTED.
LIENOR RESERVES RIGHT TO BID. ANY PARTIES CLAIMING
INTEREST IN THE ABOVE MAY CONTACT NATIONAL LIEN &
RECOVERY AT 1-800-841-5436. FAX 301-345-1892.
00004043 2t 08/07/14
W I T N E S S E T H:
WHEREAS, the Association is a duly created Condominium by virtue of the recordation of its Declaration on or about
April 18, 1994, among the Land Records of Prince George's
County in Liber 9500, Folio 575 et seq. (the “Declaration”); and
WHEREAS, the Board of Directors has determined that it
is necessary to amend the current Bylaws recorded at Liber 9500,
Folio 597 in order to require all unit owners to maintain condominium unit owner insurance policies on their units; and
WHEREAS, Md. REAL PROPERTY Code Ann. §
11-104(e)(2)(ii) states that: The bylaws may be amended by the
affirmative vote of unit owners having at least 51% of the votes
in the council of unit owners for the purpose of requiring all unit
owners to maintain condominium unit owner insurance policies
on their units; and,
WHEREAS, Article III, Section 12 of the Bylaws provides
that notice of any regular meeting shall be given to each Member
at least ten (10) days in advance of the meeting; and
WHEREAS, written notice of this Amendment to Bylaws
was sent to each Member in accordance with the Bylaws; and,
WHEREAS, written notice of this Amendment was mailed
by US Mail to the record mortgage holders which may have an
interest in the properties subject to Brinkley Overlook Condominium Bylaws and any amendments thereto, after a diligent and
good faith effort was made to locate all current mortgage holders.
Said notice, a copy of which is attached as Exhibit A, was mailed
to all record mortgage holders in accordance with Maryland law
providing the required notice period and time to object; and,
WHEREAS, no mortgage holders filed any objections
within the time period required by Maryland law, thereby all
such mortgage holders are deemed to have consented to the adoption of this Amendment; and
WHEREAS, Members representing 51% or more of the
votes in the Council of Unit Owners in person or by proxy at a
duly constituted meeting have approved this Amendment.
NOW THEREFORE, the Association hereby amends the Bylaws of Brinkley Overlook Condominium. as follows:
1 By deleting the language of Article VIII Section 5 of the Bylaws and re-writing it as follows:
“Each unit owner must, at the owners sole expense, obtain insurance for his or her own Unit and for his or her own benefit and to
obtain insurance coverage upon such Unit Owner's personal
property and for such Unit Owner's personal liability as well as
upon any permitted betterment and improvements made by such
unit Owner to his or her unit. Such insurance shall include but is
not limited to HO6 insurance coverage. Proof, sufficient to the
Board, of said insurance shall be presented to the Condominium's
MECHANICS LIEN
NOTICE OF SALE
National Lien & Recovery will sell at public auction the following vehicles under & by virtue of section 16-202 & 16-207 of the Maryland Statutes for repairs, storage & other lawful charges. Sale to be held at 5411
Berwyn Road #202B, College Park, MD 20740 at 10:00 am on August
13, 2014. Purchaser of vehicle must have it inspected as provided in
Transportation Section 23-107 of the Annotated Code of Maryland.
The following may be inspected during business hours.
Lot # 15429, '96 BOSTON WHALER DAUNTLES Length: 15' Minimum Bid $ 6887.95GINGERVILLE YACHTING CENTER 2802
SOLOMONS ISLAND RD EDGEWATER MD Vessel Documentation
# DL03069T Hull ID # BWCHC083D696
Lot # 15431, '08 CHRYSLER 300C Vin # 2C3LKK63H28H191119
Minimum Bid $ 2067.60 WALDORF DODGE 2450 CRAIN HWY
WALDORF MD
Lot # 15458, '03 BUICK LASABRE Vin # 1G4HP52K034113935
Minimum Bid $ 3095.00 HI- TECH AUTO REPAIR LLC 4100 41ST
STREET BRENTWOOD MD
Lot # 15459, '05 HONDA CIVIC Vin # JHMES96615S001992 Minimum Bid $ 7745.00 PHILLIP GRANT HAUN 404 HARWOOD RD
HARWOOD MD
Lot # 15460, '05
HARLEY
DAVIDSON FXSTS
Vin #
1HD1BLY1X5Y003024 Minimum Bid $ 10638.11 CLARK'S AUTOMOTIVE 1320 EASTERN AVE BALTIMORE MD
Lot # 15461, '98
LANDROVER
RANGE ROVER
Vin #
SALPV1246WA402137 Minimum Bid $ 6613.84 JK II AUTO SERVICE CENTER 9401-C LANHAM SEVERN RD LANHAM SEABROOK MD
Lot # 15471, '96 LEXUS LS400 Vin # JT8BH22FXT0047473 Minimum Bid $ 3012.50 AUTO WORLD 8190 BEECHCRAFT AVENUE
GAITHERSBURG MD
Lot # 15474, '03 LEXUS ES300 Vin # JTHBF30G630102833 Minimum Bid $ 5781.99 BENJAMIN'S AUTO BODY INC. 943 SELIM RD
SILVER SPRING MD
Lot # 15478, '06
MERCEDES
BENZ R350
Vin #
4JGCB65E56A010326 Minimum Bid $ 6080.42 GRAINGER AUTO
CLINIC 9401 BALTIMORE AVE COLLEGE PARK MD
Lot # 15479, '95 TOYOTA TACOMA Vin # 4TAUN41B9SZ064087
Minimum Bid $ 3966.16 PERLA'S AUTO REPAIR 5016 46TH AVE
SUITE A HYATTSVILLE MD
Lot # 15480, '10
TOYOTA
COROLLA LE
Vin #
1NXBU4EE9AZ367901 Minimum Bid $ 1810.00 PERRING AUTO
CENTER 2535 CLEANLEIGH DRIVE BALTIMORE MD
Lot # 15481, '01 FORD TAURUS Vin # 1FAFP53U11A110350 Minimum Bid $ 1928.73 SM BUS. MGMT LLC/BELTWAY PLAZA
SHELL SERVICE CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD
Lot # 15482, '07 HONDA CR V Vin # JHLRE48597C080460 Minimum Bid $ 6787.10 N & S AUTO TECH 5005 46TH AVENUE
HYATTSVILLE MD
Lot # 15483, '77 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLH Vin # 2A32082H7
Minimum Bid $ 3995.00 BRIAN HOSIER 1210 HILLDALE RD BALTIMORE MD
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MARYLAND
FOR PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY
HOLY CROSS PBS CHURCH, INC.
Plaintiff,
v.
HEIRS OF STELLA MACK, et al.
Defendants.
Civil Action: CAE13-15805
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
STATE OF MARYLAND PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, TO
WIT:
TO:
ANTHONY WHITMORE
You are hereby summoned to file a written response by pleading or motion, within 39 days from publication of this notice, in
this court, to the to the Amended Complaint to Quiet Title for the
ownership of the property located at 5121 Cumberland Street,
Capitol Heights, MD 20743, filed by: Holy Cross PBS Church,
Inc., c/o Douglas & Boykin PLLC, 1850 M Street, NW, Suite
640, Washington, DC 20036.
This notice shall be posted at the courthouse door or on a bulletin board within its immediate vicinity and is to be published
once a week in each of three (3) successive weeks in The Sentinel Newspaper and The Washington Post.
FAILURE TO FILE A RESPONSE WITHIN THE TIME ALLOTTED MAY RESULT IN A JUDGMENT BY DEFUALT
OR THE GRANTING OF THE RELIEF SOUGHT AGAINST
YOU
Issue Date: July 28th, 2014
Marilynn M. Bland #447
Post Date: August 22nd, 2014TRUE COPY-TEST
Answer Date: September 30th, 2014 Clerk, Circuit Court for
Prince George’s County,
00004025 3t 08/14/14
Maryland
www.thesentinel.com
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
THIS IS A COURT ORDER. IF YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND WHAT THE ORDER SAYS, BE SURE TO HAVE
SOMEONE EXPLAIN IT TO YOU.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
SITTING AS A JUVENILE COURT
IN RE: ADOPTION OF:
JAMIE T.
JCA 14-0006
CROSS-REFERENCE:
Aka BABY BOY T.
CINA-13-0196
DOB: 12/22/13
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION TO PUTATIVE FATHER
To: John Doe
Relationship: Putative Father
You are hereby notified that an adoption without prior termination of parental rights has been filed in the Circuit Court for
Prince George's County, Maryland, case number JCA 14-0006.
All persons who believe themselves to be the parents of a male
child born on the 22nd day of December, 2013 in Prince
George's County, Maryland, to Patricia Tribbett, natural mother,
date of birth May 19, 1983, shall file a written response. A copy
of the Show Cause Order may be obtained from the Juvenile
Clerk's Office at 14735 Main Street, Room D1033, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772, Telephone Number: 301-952-5087. If
you do not file a written objection by October 6, 2014 you will
have agreed to the permanent loss of your parental rights to this
child.
Larnzell Martin, Jr.
Associate Judge
Seventh Judicial Circuit
TRUE COPY-TESTMarilyn M. Bland
Clerk #117
00004060 1t 08/07/14
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that publication be made
for four (4) consecutive weeks as required by law. The following
notice shall appear:
1. A notice shall appear with the following text:
. WARNING ORDER TO: David Alfredo Hernandez
Landaverde: You are hereby notified that a case has been filed
in the General Sessions Court of Wilson County, Domestic Relations Division, Tennessee located in Lebanon, TN, which may affect your rights. You are hereby warned to appear in this Court
within 30 days and answer the Complaint. Upon failure of the
Defentant to do so, the Complaint filed herein will be deemed to
be admitted. The above mentioned Defendant or any person desiring to be heard concerning this action is hereby notified.
2. The full text of the nonresident notice to appear and make
defense shall be published in the Prince George's Sentinel, 9458
Lanham Severn Rd., Lanham, Maryland.
ENTERED on this, the 7TH day of JULY, 2014.
JOHN GWIN, JUDGE
Approved for entry:
Patty L. Stolinsky (#26617)
517 West Main Street
LINDA NEAL
Lebanon, TN 37087
General Session Court Clerk
(615) 444-8434
WILSON COUNTY, TN
(615) 444-7344
00003999 4t 08/07/14
JUDICIAL PROBATE
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ESTATE OF:
LYDIA A. KELLY
ESTATE 97032
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
7
JUDICIAL PROBATE
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ESTATE OF:
LILLIE M. BATTISTE
ESTATE 97228
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
JEARLEAN JOYNER
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004052 2t 08/14/14
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ESTATE OF:
WILLIAM D. STRIGGLES
ESTATE 91450
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
IN THE GENERAL SESSIONS COURT FOR
WILSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE
AT LEBANON
DIVISION III
ANA LUISA LANDAVERDE
PETITIONER,
vs.
Docket #: 2014-DC-91
DAVID ALFREDO HERNANDEZ LANDAVERDE
RESPONDANT.
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
IT APPEARING TO THE COURT that from the verified matters set forth in the Complaint filed in this cause that service by
publication pursuant to T.C.A. 21-1-203 is appropriate.
J. MICHAEL HOLLOWAY
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 17, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
ORHAN KELLY OMER
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004053 2t 08/14/14
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 17, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
www.thesentinel.com
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004055 2t 08/14/14
8
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
JUDICIAL PROBATE
JUDICIAL PROBATE
JUDICIAL PROBATE
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ESTATE OF:
LOLA M. OLSEN
ESTATE 96616
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
IN THE ESTATE OF:
CHARLES D. WILSON
ESTATE 97211
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
IN THE ESTATE OF:
HELEN E. EVANS
ESTATE 97187
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
SPERRY KRUEGER
RIKKI DRYKERMAN
RIKKI DRYKERMAN
for judicial probate of the will with interlineations dated
07/22/2005 and for the appointment of a personal representative.
A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 9, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004051 2t 08/14/14
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004049 2t 08/14/14
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004054 2t 08/14/14
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
(OR)
BEFORE THE REGISTER OF WILLS FOR
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE ESTATE OF:
LOTTIE C. HENDRICKS
ESTATE 97189
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
IN THE ESTATE OF:
JEFFREY WAYNE HALL
ESTATE 97062
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
IN THE ESTATE OF:
MAMIE LOUISE DORSEY
ESTATE 97191
NOTICE OF JUDICIAL PROBATE
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
To all Persons Interested in the above estate:
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed by
RIKKI DRYKERMAN
ORHAN KELLY OMER
RIKKI DRYKERMAN
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 17, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
for judicial probate for the appointment of a personal representative. A hearing will be held at 14735 MAIN STREET, COURTROOM D4010, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773 on SEPTEMBER 2, 2014 at 9:30 A.M.
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004050 2t 08/14/14
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004056 2t 08/14/14
This hearing may be transferred or postponed to a subsequent
time. Further information may be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills.
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills
00004031 2t 08/07/14
www.thesentinel.com
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
NOTICES
NOTICES
is SEPTEMBER 1, 2014.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE MATTER OF:
TAYAB ALI BUTT
AHMAD AKRAM BUTT
FOR THE CHANGE OF NAME TO:
TAYAB ALI AKRAM
AHMAD AKRAM
CASE ID: CAE14-19387
NOTICE
A Petition has been filed to Change the Name of Minor Children
TAYAB ALI BUTT
AHMAD AKRAM BUTT
to
TAYAB ALI AKRAM
AHMAD AKRAM
The latest day by which an objection to the petition may be filed
is SEPTEMBER 1, 2014.
Marilynn M. Bland #321
Clerk of the Circuit Court for
Prince George’s County, Maryland
00004059 1t 08/07/14
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, MARYLAND
IN THE MATTER OF:
VALERIE SUCELY TABORA-MELENDEZ
FOR THE CHANGE OF NAME TO:
VALERIE SUCELY MES TABORA
Marilynn M. Bland #321
Clerk of the Circuit Court for
Prince George’s County, Maryland
00004058 1t 08/07/14
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, MARYLAND
ALLAN P. FEIGELSON, et al
Substitute Trustee(s)
Plaintiff
V.
Case No.: CAE 13-35406
SONIA M. WALTERS
TREON C. WALTERS
Defendant(s)
NOTICE
Notice, this 28TH day of JULY, 2014, by the Circuit Court for
Prince George’s County, Maryland, that the sale of the property
mentioned in these proceedings, made and reported by Allan P.
Feigelson, Substitute Trustee, be ratified and confirmed unless
cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 28TH day
of AUGUST, 2014, next, provided a copy of this Notice be inserted in some newspaper published in Prince George’s County
once in each of three successive weeks before the 28TH day of
AUGUST, 2014, next.
The report of sale states the amount of sale to be $490,133.49.
The address of the property is: 3404 EVERETT DRIVE,
BOWIE, MARYLAND 20716.
Marilynn M. Bland #369
Clerk, Circuit Court for
Prince George’s County, Maryland
00004035 3t 08/14/14
CASE ID: CAE14-14985
NOTICE
A Petition has been filed to Change the Name of a Minor Child
VALERIE SUCELY TABORA-MELENDEZ
to
VALERIE SUCELY MES TABORA
The latest day by which an objection to the petition may be filed
www.thesentinel.com
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 95880
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
DOREEN DORIS NOULLET
Notice is given that KEVIN BRADY, 768 EASTSHORE TERRACE #156, CHULA VISTA, CA 91913 was on JULY 3, 2014
appointed Personal Representative of the estate of
DOREEN DORIS NOULLET
9
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
who died on FEBRUARY 21, 2014, without a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
from the Register of Wills.
KEVIN BRADY
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004005 3t 08/07/14
JONATHAN W PASTERICK
221 DUKE OF GLOUCESTER STREET
ANNAPOLIS, MD 21401-2550
SMALL ESTATE
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 97042
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
JUANITA SCATES
Notice is given that JONATHAN W PASTERICK, 221 DUKE
OF GLOUCESTER STREET, ANNAPOLIS, MD 21401-2550
was on JULY 17, 2014 appointed Personal Representative of the
small estate of
JUANITA SCATES
who died on MARCH 31, 2014, with a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment shall file
their objections with the Register of Wills within 30 days after
the date of publication of this Notice. All persons having an objection to the probate of the will shall file their objections with
the Register of Wills within six months after the date of publication of this Notice.
All persons having claims against the decedent must serve their
claims on the undersigned personal representative or file them
10
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or
before the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent's death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent's death; or
(2) Thirty days after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claims will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claim within thirty days
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not
served or filed within that time, or any extension provided by
law, is unenforceable thereafter.
STEPHANIE SCATES
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George's County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004047 1t 08/07/14
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004057 3t 08/21/14
SMALL ESTATE
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 97125
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
TAMI L KELLY
Notice is given that JESSICA GARDNER, 8005 ALLENDALE DRIVE, LANDOVER, MD 20785 was on JULY 3, 2014
appointed Personal Representative of the small estate of
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 87321
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
CERISE MONAE HENDRICK
Notice is given that LEANN HENDRICK, 11609 ZAREH
DRIVE, CLINTON, MD 20735 was on JULY 24, 2014 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of
CERISE MONAE HENDRICK
who died on JULY 19, 2010, without a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment shall file
their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 24TH
day of JANUARY, 2015.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
from the Register of Wills.
LEANN HENDRICK
TAMI L KELLY
who died on JUNE 22, 2014, without a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment shall file
their objections with the Register of Wills within 30 days after
the date of publication of this Notice. All persons having an objection to the probate of the will shall file their objections with
the Register of Wills within six months after the date of publication of this Notice.
All persons having claims against the decedent must serve their
claims on the undersigned personal representative or file them
with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or
before the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent's death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent's death; or
(2) Thirty days after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claims will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claim within thirty days
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not
served or filed within that time, or any extension provided by
law, is unenforceable thereafter.
JESSICA GARDNER
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George's County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004048 1t 08/07/14
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
TIMOTHY P. SCHWARTZ, ESQUIRE
BREGMAN BERBERT SCHWARTZ & GILDAY LLC
7315 WISCONSIN AVENUE, SUITE #800 WEST
BETHESDA, MD 20814
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 97288
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
RUTH CATHERINE RICUCCI
Notice is given that MICHAEL RICUCCI, 9190 PAULYN
DRIVE, OWINGS, MD 20736 AND PATRICK RICUCCI,
13932 HEATHERSTONE DRIVE, BOWIE, MD 20720 were on
JULY 22, 2014 appointed Personal Representatives of the estate
of
RUTH CATHERINE RICUCCI
who died on JUNE 3, 2014, with a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment (or to the
probate of the decedent’s will) shall file their objections with the
Register of Wills on or before the 22ND day of JANUARY,
2015.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
from the Register of Wills.
MICHAEL RICUCCI
PATRICK RICUCCI
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004032 3t 08/14/14
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AUGUST 7, 2014
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 97250
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
DANNY BROWN
Notice is given that DANIELLE BROWN, 13100 LARCHDALE ROAD, APT 11, LAUREL, MD 20708 was on JULY 17,
2014 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of
DANNY BROWN
who died on JULY 15, 2014, without a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment shall file
their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 17TH
day of JANUARY, 2015.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
from the Register of Wills.
DANIELLE BROWN
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004033 3t 08/14/14
MARGARET M COMSTOCK, ESQUIRE
7711 BROOKVILLE ROAD
CHEVY CHASE, MD 20815
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 97010
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
RITA POSEY-MOORE
Notice is given that ROBERT F. COMSTOCK, 7711
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
11
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
BROOKVILLE ROAD, CHEVY CHASE, MD 20815 was on
JULY 8, 2014 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY
RITA POSEY-MOORE
who died on FEBRUARY 14, 2014, with a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment (or to the
probate of the decedent’s will) shall file their objections with the
Register of Wills on or before the 8TH day of JANUARY, 2015.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
from the Register of Wills.
ROBERT F. COMSTOCK
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004009 3t 08/07/14
All persons having claims against the decedent must file their
claims with the Register of Wills for Montgomery County with a
copy to the foreign personal representative on or before the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent's death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent's death; or
(2) Two months after the foreign personal representative mails
or delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or other
written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be barred
unless the creditor presents the claim within two months from the
mailing or other delivery of the notice. Claims filed after that
date or after a date extended by law will be barred.
SHERRY D. SOUDER
Foreign Personal Representative(s)
CERETA A. LEE
Register of Wills for Prince George's County
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004013 3t 08/07/14
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 97174
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
LOUMANDA J MOORE
Notice is given that AUDREY M MORRIS, 7802 ANNY
DRIVE, FORESTVILLE, MD 20747 was on JULY 10, 2014 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of
RALPH W POWERS JR
RALPH W POWERS, JR., P.C.
5415 WATER STREET
UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20773
NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF
APPOINTMENT OF FOREIGN PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE
ESTATE NO: 94561
NOTICE IS GIVEN that the CHANCERY COURT, PROBATE DIVISION court of WASHINGTON county, TENNESSEE appointed SHERRY D. SOUDER, 10736 SCAGGSVILLE
ROAD, LAUREL, MD 20723 as the PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE of the Estate of WARREN ELROD who died on SEPTEMBER 1, 2013 domiciled in TENNESSEE, USA
The Maryland resident agent for service of process is N/A
whose address is N/A.
At the time of death, the decedent owned real or leasehold
property in the following Maryland counties:
LOUMANDA J MOORE
who died on MAY 27, 2009, without a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment shall file
their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 10TH
day of JANUARY, 2015.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
12
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
AUGUST 7, 2014
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
from the Register of Wills.
AUDREY M MORRIS
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004012 3t 08/07/14
KEITH S. FRANZ, ESQUIRE
AZAEL, FRANZ, SCHWAB & LIPOWITZ, LLC
101 E. CHESAPEAKE AVENUE, 5TH FLOOR
BALTIMORE, MD 21286
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Estate No. 85077
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
CHARLES DONTEE HARRISON
To
Advertise
in
Estate No. 97240
TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF
DORIS E PRICE
Notice is given that BEVERLY POSTON, 8110 MLK JR
HIGHWAY, #832, LANHAM, MD 20706 was on JUNE 27,
2014 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of
Notice is given that DENISE P BRYANT, 4230 CIMARRON
LANE, FORT WASHINGTON, MD 20744 was on JULY 17,
2014 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of
CHARLES DONTEE HARRISON
DORIS E PRICE
who died on MAY 27, 2014, without a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment shall file
their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 17TH
day of JANUARY, 2015.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
from the Register of Wills.
DENISE P BRYANT
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004011 3t 08/07/14
who died on FEBRUARY 3, 2008, without a will.
Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file
in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal
representative or the attorney.
All persons having any objection to the appointment shall file
their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 27TH
day of DECEMBER, 2014.
Any person having a claim against the decedent must present
the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with
the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before
the earlier of the following dates:
(1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if
the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the
date of the decedent’s death; or
(2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or
other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be
barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months
from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided
by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained
from the Register of Wills.
BEVERLY POSTON
Personal Representative(s)
True Test Copy
Register of Wills for Prince George’s County
CERETA A. LEE
P.O. Box 1729
Upper Marlboro, MD 20773-1729
00004010 3t 08/07/14
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THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
13
STATE NEWS
Gambling revenue only 2 percent of state general fund budget
By Lejla Sarcevic
Capital News Service
Players spend more than $1.5
billion a year on Maryland lottery
tickets and get about $1 billion back
in winnings — on average, a 50cent return for every dollar they
spend.
Here’s where the money they
lose goes:
- $20 million to pay off the Orioles and Ravens stadiums in Baltimore. Lottery revenue covers the
debt service on Camden Yards, built
for $205 million and opened in
1992 and M&T Bank Stadium, built
for $229 million and opened six
years after Camden Yards in 1998.
Camden Yards is set to be paid off in
December 2019 and M&T Bank
Stadium in March of 2026.
- Starting this year, the state
will spend an additional $20 million
a year to finance a $1 billion Baltimore school construction program.
The project will see 30 to 35 renovation and replacement projects
across Baltimore with construction
starting late next year and expected
to take 6 to 7 years.
- Over $100 million to lottery
retailers as sales commissions.
- About $500 million to the budget’s general fund, which pays for
government operations and programs.
State officials say that lottery revenues
are vital for the state’s economic
health and are the fourth-largest
source of general revenue money, after
income, corporate, and sales taxes.
Even so, lottery revenues account for
only 2 percent of the general fund.
But the state has come to count
on that 2 percent to help meet its legal obligation to balance the budget
each year, officials say.
“You could easily say that we’re
supporting education, or you could
proportion it however you like,” said
Warren Deschenaux, director of policy analysis for the Department of
Legislative Services. “But if we took
the lottery out, we couldn’t afford
what we provide now.”
Lower income players driving up lottery sales
By Lejla Sarcevic, Ethan Barton and Lauren McLendon
Capital News Service
BALTIMORE– Boarded-up
homes, crumbling store fronts and
police cameras with blue lights line
the streets of Park Heights. It’s in
one of Baltimore’s poorest ZIP
codes, where the median household
income is about $35,000.
Yet people spent $34 million
on lottery tickets here in calendar
year 2012 — more than any other
ZIP code in the state, a Capital
News Service analysis found.
Evert Chapman, a truck driver
from Park Heights, said he’s not
surprised.
“We play to make some extra
money,” said Chapman, 34, as he
jotted down numbers on the back of
a Keno ticket inside Hoffman’s
Liquors on Park Heights Avenue. “I
want some extra money. We all do.”
The Maryland Lottery has become the fourth largest source of
revenue for the state, contributing
$545 million last fiscal year, according to the lottery agency’s
comprehensive annual financial report.
But a Capital News Service
analysis found that lower-income
ZIP codes contributed a disproportionate share. The analysis also
found more than a third of the revenue came from Prince George’s
County and Baltimore City. Baltimore City led the state in average
dollars spent on lottery tickets per
adult, followed by Charles County
and Prince George’s County.
Lottery officials said they do
not know the reasons for the disproportionate spending from those
communities.
“It’s not something we analyze
or look at,” Jackie Vincent, the director of gaming research and chief
of staff at the gaming agency, said.
Agency officials say that their
job is to raise revenue for the state,
but they don’t set policy. “That’s
sort of where we struggle, too.
We’re a state agency and a business,” Vincent said.
When told about the CNS findings, Gov. Martin O’Malley and
Maryland Senate President Thomas
V. “Mike” Miller declined to comment through their spokespersons.
House Speaker Michael E. Busch
did not respond to interview requests. (Editor’s note: This story
was sent out June 19.)
No surprise who spends on the
lottery
However, the findings are not a
secret to Maryland officials: A 2011
state-funded study found that lowincome residents, African-Americans and people with lower levels
of education are more likely to
gamble weekly on lottery games
and in casinos than other Marylanders.
The study was commissioned
by the Department of Health and
Mental Hygiene and was required
under the law that allowed casinos
to open in Maryland.
The state legalized casino
gambling in 2008. Four casinos
have opened, generating $608 million in state revenue in fiscal 2013,
with two more scheduled to open in
Baltimore and Prince George’s
County. Combined with lottery
sales, gambling now contributes
more than $1 billion annually to the
state.
Vincent said that an agency
program — though not directed
specifically at low-income residents — allows problem gamblers
to sign up for a two-year or lifetime
ban on playing the lottery. They are
blocked from cashing winning tickets when they enter their Social Security numbers to collect.
As of March, she said, 41 people had signed up.
State Sen. Lisa Gladden, DBaltimore, who represents Park
Heights, said that she is a lottery
player and, while she might like
people to spend their money differently, it’s not up to the legislature to
decide for them.
She added the state wouldn’t
need the lottery if lawmakers would
raise taxes enough to pay for state
services.
“It’s a poor trade and we
shouldn’t do it that way, but we
do,” she said.
The state sends about $20 million a year from lottery revenue
back to Baltimore to pay off bonds
on the Orioles’ $205 million ballpark and the Ravens’ $229 million
football stadium, both built in the
1990s. Beginning this year, $20
million a year in lottery money also
will help pay for a Baltimore public
school construction program.
Gladden said that lottery money should benefit the communities
that contribute the most revenue.
“If we have to pay for it, we
ought to get something back,” she
said.
“Pleasant way” to pay taxes
The state entered the lottery
business in 1973, after voters approved a constitutional amendment. In the debate over gambling
that preceded the vote, Del. Joseph
Sachs, an Anne Arundel County
Democrat, called it a “pleasant way
for people to pay taxes.”
But Sen. Margaret Schweinhaut, a Montgomery County Democrat, warned that “it’s the poor person who will be supporting the lottery.”
Four decades after her prediction, CNS examined lottery sales
data to see if she was right.
The news service filed a public
records request to obtain sales data
for calendar year 2012, the most recent full year available at the time.
Players spent $1.69 billion on
lottery tickets in 2012, the data
show. The state paid about $943
million of that in claims.
CNS broke down the gross
sales revenue by county and by ZIP
code. Using census data, the ZIP
codes were ranked by median
household income and then evenly
divided by population into five income groups, or quintiles. Each
quintile represented 20 percent of
the population.
A clear trend emerged: The
lower the income group, the higher
the lottery sales.
The largest share came from
ZIP codes in the lowest fifth, such
as 21215 which includes Park
Heights. They represented 20 percent of the population but contributed 27 percent of the total lottery ticket sales revenue.
The second fifth — ZIP codes
still below the state’s median
household income of $70,000 —
accounted for 25 percent of sales.
ZIP codes in the third and
fourth quintiles generated 19 and
17 percent, respectively. The smallest share of sales, 12 percent, came
from the top fifth of ZIP codes, with
median household incomes of over
$100,000.
The analysis reflects where
tickets are sold, because information on where players live is not
available.
The 2011 state-funded study
surveyed nearly 6,000 residents on
their gambling habits. The study
found that the very poor gamble
more frequently than others. Those
with incomes less than $15,000 are
nearly 50 percent more likely to
gamble on a weekly basis than
those with incomes greater than
$35,000, on average.
A study of fiscal year 2005
Maryland lottery sales data by researchers at the University of
Maryland Baltimore County also
found a disproportionate share
came from socio-economically disadvantaged groups.
14
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
TRAVEL
Ten stops to make in New York’s financial district
Travel Tales
By
Erin Klema
NEW YORK — At the southern tip of Manhattan lies the Financial District — a New York City
neighborhood off the tourist-beaten
path.
It’s known for Wall Street
bankers and stock market exchanges, but this quiet area of the
Big Apple is full of famous sights
and historic districts that any sightseer, history buff or foodie should
add to their New York City trip itinerary.
South Street Seaport
At Fulton and Water streets,
you’ll find a historic district that has
been restored and revamped as a
shopping center. The seaport has
name brand retailers, restaurants, ice
cream shops and stunning views of
the Brooklyn Bridge. A redevelopment at Pier 17 is slated to open in
2016, adding more eateries, alfresco
bars and New York City’s first luxury movie theater.
Brooklyn Bridge
Spanning the East River from
Lower Manhattan to Brooklyn, the
Brooklyn Bridge is one of the oldest
suspension bridges in the United
States and a national landmark.
Pedestrians and cyclists can cross
between the two boroughs via the
promenade.
Wall Street & New York
Stock Exchange
You can’t tour the inside, but
the New York Stock Exchange’s
neoclassical exterior includes six
Corinthian columns and a sculpture
titled “Integrity Protecting the
Works of Man.”
Ground Zero & National
9/11 Memorial and Museum
The site of the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attack on the World Trade
Center features two 30-foot waterfalls, where the Twin Towers once
stood. To view the memorial, you
can make a reservation on
911memorial.org for a small processing fee, or you can attempt to get
a same-day pass for free at 20 Vesey
Street. To visit the museum, which
opened in May, you can purchase
tickets at 911memorial.org.
PHOTO BY ERIN KLEMA
The Eggs Benedict, above, is a delicious brunch option at Stone Street Tavern, located on the cobblestone Stone
Street.
Alexander Hamilton is buried.
Staten Island Ferry
Views of the Financial District’s skyscraper-filled skyline and
the Statue of Liberty are entirely free
on this 5.2-mile ferry ride between
Whitehall Terminal in Lower Manhattan and St. George Terminal on
Staten Island. It’s the cheapest way
to see Lady Liberty!
Trinity Church
Only in New York City will you
find a beautiful Episcopalian church
surrounded by skyscrapers. In addition to the mid-1800s architecture,
including a spire that made the
church the tallest building in New
York upon its completion in 1846, a
real draw to visitors today is one of
the church’s graveyards, where
Battery Park
Located along the waterfront,
Battery Park is a grassy respite from
the concrete jungle. Castle Clinton,
originally erected during the War of
1812, was an immigration center prior to Ellis Island. Today, it’s where
you’ll buy your ferry tickets to Liberty and Ellis islands. From Battery
Park, you can see Lady Liberty, Ellis
Island, Jersey City, Governor’s Island and Staten Island on a clear day.
Statue of Liberty
If you’d like a closer look at this
iconic New York landmark, take Statue Cruises to Liberty Island. Make
reservations at statuecruises.com to
go up to Lady Liberty’s crown and to
visit the museum. It’s only a $3 differential between the ferry ticket with
access only to the island’s grounds
($18) and the reservation to go into
the crown ($21).
Ellis Island
Ellis Island visitors take the
same ferry as Statue of Liberty visitors, so it’s a natural choice to add to
your itinerary. For any American
whose ancestors were European immigrants, Ellis Island is a must-visit
attraction to learn what they experienced in order to find a more prosperous life. Set aside two hours to
explore the informative exhibits using the audio tour, and then check
the wall outside for names of your
relatives who came to America
through Ellis Island.
Stone Street Historic District
Tucked between skyscrapers,
this cobblestone street is filled with
umbrella-covered tables during the
summer months. It’s the perfect spot
for a weekend brunch or a round of
beers on a Friday night. Try the savory Eggs Benedict at Stone Street
Tavern!
PHOTO BY ERIN KLEMA
Above, a free ride on the Staten Island ferry gives tourists a view of the Statue of Liberty and the New York skyline.
15
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
SPORTS
Maryland basketball drops Reed after arrest
By Brandy L. Simms
Sentinel Sports
The University of Maryland
men’s basketball program has parted ways with highly-touted freshman center Trayvon Reed, the
school announced Friday in a news
release.
According to news reports,
Reed was arrested in College Park
and charged with four counts including second-degree assault of a
police officer.
“Trayvon failed to meet the
standards that are required by the
University of Maryland athletics
department,” Maryland head coach
Mark Turgeon said in a statement.
Reed, a 7-footer who verbally
committed to Maryland last August, was the centerpiece of Maryland’s top-10 recruiting class.
The 7-foot-1 Georgia native
was ranked among the nation’s elite
at his position and was a four-star
recruit according to Scout.com and
Rivals.
He spent last season playing at
Life Center Academy in New Jersey but suffered an ankle injury that
kept him out of the Capital Classic
High School All-Star Game in
April. Although Reed was in attendance, he watched the U.S. AllStars beat the Capital All-Stars,
139-134, behind standout performances from fellow Maryland recruits Jared Nickens and Melo
Trimble.
As Maryland enters the Big
Ten Conference, Reed was expected to provide depth in the post
along with 6-foot-10 sophomore
Damonte Dodd and 7-foot freshman Michael Cekovsky.
“I regret that I was unable to
meet the responsibilities that were
expected of me from Coach Turgeon and the University of Maryland,” said Reed.
He has a court date scheduled
for Sept. 15 in Hyattsville and becomes the latest Maryland studentathlete to leave the men’s basketball program since the end of last
season.
“We want to express our gratitude and appreciation to Coach
Turgeon and the Maryland basketball program,” said Daniel
Moore, Reed’s stepfather. “We regret that Trayvon has to leave
Maryland and miss out on this
great opportunity.”
This week in sports: Baysox win, turf fields and more
By Dan Kucin Jr.
Sentinel Sports
PHOTO BY DAN KUCIN JR.
Buck Britton was an offensive powerhouse against the Binghampton Mets
on August 3.
The Bowie Baysox defeated
the Binghampton Mets 8-2 on August 3. Bowie Baysox starting
pitcher Zach Davies earned his
eighth win of the season by pitching
seven and one-thirds of an inning
with eight strikeouts.
Bowie Baysox infielder Buck
Britton was an offensive powerhouse with two hits, two runs, and
one RBI. Outfielder Ronald
Bermudez was equally impressive
with two hits and three RBI to help
lead his team to victory.
stalled.
First turf field in the county
Maryland pitcher named
Player of the Week
Oxon Hill High School will become the first Prince George's
County high school to have an artificial turf field when it unveils its
new 5,000-seat stadium on Sept.6.
Gwynn Park and Wise will
have to wait for their new fields to
become available. They are the next
on the docket to have new turf fields
installed, but Gwynn Park will have
to play all of their home games on
the road until the new turf is in-
University of Maryland righthanded pitcher Bobby Ruse earned a
weekly honor as Ripken League
Playoffs are in progress.
Ruse was named the New England Collegiate Baseball League
Pitcher of the Week on July 28. In
his last four starts Ruse has won two
games with an earned run average of
2.66, and he has struck out 26 batters
during that span.
DeMatha football player chooses Penn State
By Brandy L. Simms
Sentinel Sports
The Penn State football program has landed a verbal pledge
from one of the nation’s top players
in the class of 2016.
DeMatha rising junior defensive end Shane Simmons last week
verbally committed to play college
football for the Nittany Lions during
an ESPN.com webcast.
Simmons chose Penn State over
offers from Alabama, Florida State,
Maryland and Ohio State among others. During the webcast, Simmons
picked up a Penn State baseball cap
and placed it on his head. The table
also included hats from the four other
aforementioned schools.
“The Hat fits! Shane Simmons
is heading to Penn State!
@Shizzeee_ Congrats! Coach
Franklin the #Stags are coming,” Inside DeMatha Football tweeted.
Simmons, rated a five-star
prospect by Scout.com, also announced his decision via Twitter.
“I am 110% committed to the
University of Penn State. #blessed,”
he tweeted.
Simmons became the third DeMatha product to commit to college
ADVERTISE
this offseason. Tyler Green (Ohio
State) and DeAndre Kelly (Temple)
made oral pledges to college earlier
this year.
Former DeMatha assistant
Chris Grier described Simmons as
“physically gifted on a level rarely
seen. [Shane] reminded me of Cyrus
Kouandjio where you could just look
at him and know he was special.
Shane has natural strength, agility
in
Call Lonnie Johnson at 301-306-9500 or e-mail lonnie@thesentinel.com
and speed. He works very hard at his
craft and enjoys the process of getting better.”
The Penn State football program also boasts former DeMatha
running back Mark Allen and former
Wise defensive back Marcus Allen.
The Nittany Lions have also received
a verbal commitment from Bullis
standout and Brandywine resident
Jonathan Holland.
16
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
SPORTS
Bowie State looking for seniors to step up
By Dan Kucin Jr.
Sentinel Sports
Bowie State University is predicted to finish 6th in the CIAA
Conference, and 3rd in the Northern
Division based on the 2014 conference preseason poll.
Bowie State football Head
Coach Damon Wilson enters his 6th
consecutive season at the helm for
the Bulldogs. Wilson will have 42
lettermen at his disposal including
14 returning starters.
Despite finishing the 2013
campaign with only a (.500) record
at 5-5, they won three matches in di-
visional play and hope that senior
leadership will take over in order for
the Bulldogs to get over the hump in
2014.
Bowie State’s senior class is
looking to make a huge impact in
order to win their division this year.
Senior's Khari Lee, Keith
Brown (Temple Hills), Mario DiazAviles, and Anthony McDaniel
(Fort Washington) were recently selected to the 2014 All-CIAA Preseason Team. Lee led his team in receiving among all tight ends with
352 yards, and 34 receptions.
Suitland High School alumnus
Keith Brown rushed for over 1,000
yards last year with 16 touchdowns,
and averaged 113 yards per game.
Former Wise High School
standout defensive lineman Anthony McDaniel is also primed to have
a strong showing next season. McDaniel averaged more than four
tackles a game—amassing 44 total
tackles—had one interception, one
forced fumble, and a fumble recovery as well.
Last but not least, Mario DiazAviles was a clutch kicker for
Bowie State, connecting on six field
goals with a 100 percent accuracy
rating.
Bowie State is gearing up to
Comcast Center now the XFINITY Center
By Brandy L. Simms
Sentinel Sports
The on-campus College Park
arena formerly known as the Comcast Center has been renamed.
The University of Maryland
athletics department last week announced that the venue will be
named the XFINITY Center, effective immediately. The renaming reflects the Xfinity brand’s strong
awareness and resonance with consumers.
“We are excited to place the
name Xfinity on this beloved University of Maryland sports venue,”
said Tom Coughlin, senior vice president of Comcast’s Beltway region.
“Our Xfinity brand represents our
commitment to delivering an unparalleled, innovative entertainment ex-
perience to local consumers, and our
partnership with the University of
Maryland athletics department underscores this promise.”
The XFINITY Center is home
to the University of Maryland men’s
and women’s basketball along with
the gymnastics, volleyball and
wrestling teams. The venue also
houses the athletic department’s administrative offices and student-athlete Academic Support and Career
Development Unit.
Completed in 2002, the main
arena seats up to 17,950 for basketball, and is the site of numerous
campus events, concerts, graduations, and other events including the
MPSSAA boys basketball championships.
The renaming to XFINITY
Center is in accordance with the
original partnership agreement between Comcast and the University
of Maryland that allows Comcast –
with mutual agreement – to utilize
opportunities to extend its brand.
The renaming efforts are taking
place at no cost to the University of
Maryland or Terrapin Athletics and
are expected to be completed by
mid-August.
“We have enjoyed a longstanding and successful partnership with
Comcast for more than a decade, and
are excited to extend this relationship with the renaming of the XFINITY Center,” said Maryland director
of athletics Kevin Anderson. “It is
our goal to continue to provide our
fans with a special gameday experience, and we look forward to unveiling new amenities at the XFINITY
Center in the near future.”
Don’t miss a beat...
C h e c k o u t w w w. t h e s e n t i n e l . c o m f o r y o u r
county news and sports as it happens!
face St. Anselm on Sept. 6 at 1 p.m.
St. Anselm (Manchester N.H.)—a
member of the Northeast-10 Conference—went 2-9 last year.
Bowie State took down the
Hawks last season in their season
opener on the road 42-28.
PHOTO BY DAN KUCIN JR.
Bowie State coach Damon Wilson,
right, is looking to improve from
last seasonʼs 5-5 record.
DeMatha recruit chooses Penn State
By Brandy L. Simms
Sentinel Sports
The Penn State men’s basketball program has landed a verbal
commitment from DeMatha product Joe Hampton.
Hampton, who recently announced he was leaving the Hyattsville private school for Oak Hill
Academy, said he chose the Big Ten
Conference school because he felt
comfortable with the Nittany Lions’
coaching staff.
“It’s like a family you know,”
said Hampton. “I’m very familiar
with the coaching staff and I love
the way [Penn State head coach
Patrick] Chambers coaches and the
basketball team is so close they are
like brothers.”
A 6-foot-7 forward, Hampton
averaged 11.9 points per game last
season and helped lead DeMatha to
a 29-6 record. He chose Penn State
over offers from Xavier, DePaul and
Rhode Island.
Hampton will join former Paul
VI guard and recent Penn State
commit Josh Reaves at Oak Hill
next season. Reaves announced his
transfer to Oak Hill in June.
Known for its high-profile basketball program, Oak Hill has produced scores of NBA and Division I
players including Carmelo Anthony,
Kevin Durant, Ty Lawson and
Michael Beasley among others.
Hampton is the latest area
product that has transferred from a
Washington Catholic Athletic Conference school to Oak Hill. In previous years, other WCAC standouts
have left the conference for the
boarding school in rural Virginia.
Besides Hampton, the list of
DeMatha players transferring to
Oak Hill includes Billy Edelin, Jeff
Allen, Bryon Allen and Quinn
Cook.
A Rivals.com four-star
prospect, Hampton is Penn State’s
first pledge from the 2016 recruiting
class.
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Thursday, August 7, 2014
More Lawsuits For School Board
By Kelsey Sutton
Special to the Sentinel
GREENBELT — The Prince
George’s County Board of Education is facing a slew of lawsuits from
current and former employees
claiming they faced discrimination
from a high school principal.
Last week, a jury for the United
States District Court for the District
of Maryland determined Jon Everhart, a former literature teacher at
Largo High School was fired in re-
taliation for reporting discriminatory
treatment. Judge Peter Messitte
ruled another discrimination and retaliation case can move forward in
Jan. 2015. The jury ruled he should
receive nearly $500,000 in total
compensation.
Dr. Ruth Johnson, a guidance
counselor for Prince George’s County Public Schools, is seeking $5 million in damages, claiming Largo
High School Principal Angelique
Simpson-Marcus retaliated against
her for complaints about discrimina-
tory practices
Johnson claims she heard
Simpson-Marcus, who is AfricanAmerican, call two African-American secretaries derogatory names
like “chicken head,” “hood rat” and
“ghetto” in the presence of students,
teachers and other staff members,
according to court documents.
Johnson also claims students
approached her with reports of
Simpson-Marcus harassing Everhart, who is white, in front of his
class.
In Johnson’s lawsuit, she
claims she contacted former Superintendant Dr. William Hite in regards to the matter, but claims Hite
refused to accept written documentation of the verbal abuses, allegedly
saying “(I) might have to act” if he
accepted the paperwork.
Johnson claims the school system failed to conduct an investigation or take prompt corrective action, as required by law.
Johnson’s case also involves
claims of retaliation for going to the
superintendent. Johnson, who has a
physical disability, claims she was
moved to an office far away from
student records and a bathroom,
which made it difficult for her to perform her job. Later, the school system transferred her to another
school.
According to Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, when entities benefit from federal funds, the
entities’ employees are protected
Please see “Lawsuits” page 4
Hyattsville residents want to save their saucer
By Raecine Williams
Special to the Sentinel
HYATTSVILLE — The County Council’s decision to build a new
$16.1 million Hyattsville Branch Library instead of renovating the existing library is being met with some
opposition.
A group of residents from Hyattsville and the surrounding area
called Save Our Saucer do not want
the county to tear down the building,
instead favoring a plan to renovate
and modernize the existing structure.
The Prince George’s County
Memorial Library System announced the architects responsible
for the design of the new library and
recently held one in a series of community meetings designed to collect
feedback for the new structure,
where Save Our Saucer members,
whose name comes from a saucerlike structure at the front of the old
library, voiced their protestations.
“The concerns are based on the
historical importance of the building,” said T. Carter Ross, a member
of Save Our Saucer. “It was the first
building in the modern Prince
George’s Library system.”
Ross and other members of
Save the Saucer are regular librarygoers and long time patrons. Ross,
who does not want to see the destruction of the old building, said his
children love the library and have
been going there before they could
even read.
“There seems to be a misunderstanding of what can be done with
renovations,” Ross said. “It’s not
just putting on paint and maybe fixing a pipe, it truly could be a complete evaluation and reorganization
of the space with an eye on preserving and maintaining some of the integrity of the old structure.”
Ross said he would like to see a
fair look at the actual costs of a proper restoration and to see what the environmental impact would be for a
PHOTO BY RAECINE WILLIAMS
Residents have started a movement to preserve the saucer at the Hyattsivle Branch Library, pictured above.
new structure.
“You’re going to tear it down,
you have to dispose of everything,
and then you’re building something
entirely new,” Ross said. “We don’t
really feel like the library system or
the county has really made the case
that what they’re doing is the wisest
use of tax dollars and the most environmentally sensitive approach.”
Please see “Saucer” page 4
E-2
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
OPINION
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E-3
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
NEWS
Police arrest man for killing wife and mother-in-law
By Jim Davis
Special to the Sentinel
OXON HILL – Prince
George's County homicide detectives arrested and charged a man
Tuesday night after a double homicide Saturday morning.
Malcom Paul Thomas, 54, is
charged with two counts of first degree murder after he admitted involvement in the deaths of 83-yearold Eunice Brooks and 54-year-old
Janice Marshall-Thomas.
The victims, a mother and
daughter, lived with Thomas in
their home on the 5500 block of
Chloe Drive in Oxon Hill, police
said. Thomas and MarshallThomas were married, according to
police.
On Saturday, patrol units from
Prince George's County Police De-
partment Oxon Hill District responded to the 5500 block of Chloe
Drive in Oxon Hill after receiving a
phone call from an unknown person
who said police needed to check on
the welfare of the two women who
lived in the house.
When officers arrived at the
house, they discovered the bodies
of the two women, said Harry
Bond, a media relations officer for
the Prince George’s County Police
Department.
They were both pronounced
dead on the scene by Prince
George's County Fire Department
paramedics.
The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner identified the two
victims several days later.
Police say detectives quickly
determined Thomas as a suspect and
obtained a warrant for his arrest.
Officers from the Sussex
County Sheriff’s Office apprehended Thomas in Wakefield, Virginia.
Thomas is awaiting extradition
back to Prince George’s County in
the ongoing investigation.
“It can take a few days, a few
weeks or a month to before Thomas
is returned back to the county,” said
John Erzen, a spokesman for the
State’s Attorney’s Office.
Police searching for suspect
in Lanham murder
Just eight hours before the
double homicide in Oxon Hill, police began the search for a person
who shot and killed a man late Friday night.
Shayne Francis Snipes, 26,
died after being shot several times
in the parking lot of Chelsea Woods
Apartment Complex Aug. 1, ac-
cording to police.
Just after 11 p.m., police and
fire units responded to a call from
Chelsea Woods Apartment Complex in the 8600 block of Greenbelt
Road reporting a shooting.
Upon arrival, officials found
Snipes, from Lanham, suffering
from multiple gunshot wounds to
his body.
Responders transported Snipes
to a local trauma center, where he
died a few hours later from his
wounds, Bond said.
According to court records,
Snipes had been released from jail
hours earlier.
Homicide detectives do not believe this was a random shooting,
according to a press release from
Prince George's County Police Department.
Court records indicate Snipes
For all your local news go to: www.thesentinel.com
has a history of arrests, including
first and second degree assault, a
number of hand gun charges, resisting arrest, theft and assaulting law
enforcement. In July, Snipes was arrested three times for drug charges.
Detectives are working to establish a motive and identify the
suspect or suspects in this case. As
of Tuesday, police had not made
any arrests and had no further updates on the progress of the case.
Police urge anyone with information on either case to call the
Prince George’s County Police Department’s Homicide Unit at 301772-4925. Callers wishing to remain anonymous may call Crime
Solvers at 1-866-411-TIPS.
Police are offering a maximum
reward of $25,000 to anyone who
provides information leading to an
arrest and indictment in either case.
E-4
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
NEWS
School board deals with more discrimination lawsuits
From “Lawsuits” page 1
against discriminatory practices.
Employees are also protected from
retaliation for reporting discriminatory behavior.
The Board of Education argued
it did not receive funds during Johnson’s employment at Largo High
School, so it should not be held accountable under the Civil Rights
Act. In late July Judge Messitte did
not accept the Board’s motion to
dismiss, so a jury trial will proceed
next year.
Tracy Allison, a 38-year-old
secretary for Prince George’s County Public Schools, is pursuing another case involving Simpson-Marcus. She claims she was a victim of
racially-charged harassment while
working for Simpson-Marcus, according to court documents.
The three cases involving
Everhart, Johnson and Allison are
related and were originally filed together before moving to separate
cases.
The Prince George’s County
Board of Education will not comment on ongoing legal matters, said
Max Pugh, public information officer for the Board of Education.
Simpson-Marcus remains as
the principal at Largo High School.
Hyattsville’s saucer receives community support
From “Saucer” page 1
He said the old building has
problems due to neglect over time,
but that none of its flaws were fatal.
The county has had a library
renovation in its improvement plan
since 1988, but the project was delayed time and time again. The reason for the delays varied and included other construction projects, like
South Bowie and some other projects phased into the capital projects
budget before Hyattsville, said
Thomas Himler, the Deputy Chief
Administrative Officer for Budget,
Finance, and Administration.
There were also debates and
disagreement about the new library
plans, which delayed its progress,
said Catherine Hollerbach, West
Area Manager for the Prince
George’s County Memorial Library
System.
“As far as what they’re doing
for library construction, they’re doing a fantastic job,” Hollerbach said.
“The number of new libraries and
renovations we’re doing in this system is wonderful. We have so many
projects going on right now.”
Hollberbach pointed to the new
Fairmount Heights branch, the reopening of the Beltsville branch, the
New Carrollton branch breaking
ground next March and the construction of the new Laurel branch
library as some of the county li-
brary’s successes.
The New Carrollton branch
renovations are expected to cost
nearly $9 million, and the Laurel Library replacement project has a budget of around $22.5 million, according to the 2015 Capital Improvement Plan.
In total, the Capital Improvement Plan allocated more than $123
million to library projects in total.
Hollerbach said there were
many reasons the county and Library System favored a new construction, and despite the vocal Save
Our Saucers group interested in the
building’s preservation, the majority of residents are in favor of a new
building.
Hollerbach said a new building
would be built to silver LEED standards, using recycled materials and
installing a green roof, to appeal to
environmental concerns.
LEED certification is recognized worldwide as the premier
mark of achievement for green
buildings. Points are used to determine the level of certification building receives and span 4 levels –
LEED certified, silver, gold and
platinum.
If the project moves forward,
the architects would conduct a feasibility study to compare the old
building to what the new building
will have, Hollerbach said.
Ross criticized the LEED stan-
dards plan, because while the new
library will be built to LEED silver
standards, the city has not announced if it would seek LEED certification.
“To say your building meets
the standards is one thing, but to
certify it is a different thing,” he
said. “That’s great PR to say, we’re
going to build it LEED-like.”
He said LEED has a program
for building restoration and renovations, so LEED ratings could still be
achieved with renovation and
restoration.
As for Ross’ 10-year-old
daughter, her main concern is
whether the new library will have
more books, he said.
“Four Cities” officials wary of FBI headquarters battle
By Yevgeniy Trapeznikov
Special to the Sentinel
BERWYN HEIGHTS — City
officials from Greenbelt, Berwyn
Heights, College Park and New
Carrollton are planning their next
move to make the GSA consider
Greenbelt as the new location of the
FBI headquarters.
The General Services Administration announced last week the city
was one of three in the running for
the location of a new FBI headquarters, which means the city has to
fight against Landover and Springfield, Va., to make the best case for
their location.
At a Monday meeting, a quarterly deliberative session representing neighboring municipalities,
Greenbelt Mayor Emmett Jordan
emphasized the importance of the
four cities working together to ensure the FBI would move to Greenbelt because all four cities would
reap the benefits of the relocation.
If the city makes the cut, the
FBI would occupy a section of the
Greenbelt Metro Station and could
be a critical move in development
and economic opportunities in the
area.
Relocating the FBI to Greenbelt would allow employees to take
advantage of the amenities in the
four cities, as well as give them access to the Amtrak train and Metro
trains and give them close access to
the University of Maryland, among
other things, Jordan said.
If the GSA chose Landover, the
new FBI headquarters would occupy the former Landover Mall, locat-
ed near the intersection of I-495 and
MD-202, and if Springfield wins the
bid, the FBI will relocate to the
GSA Franconia Warehouse Complex near the intersection of I-95
and Franconia Road.
“I was taken aback by Landover’s inclusion in the list,” said
Berwyn Heights Mayor Cheye Calvo.
Bill Gardiner, assistant city
manager for the city of College
Park, suggested the GSA had added
a second city in Maryland in order
to get a better deal.
“If I were GSA and if I thought
Greenbelt was the best site, I’d also
include Landover to make Greenbelt negotiate against each other to
get a cheaper price,” Gardiner said.
Dannielle Glaros, chief of staff
for County Councilman Eric Olson,
said the county was excited about
having two sites running because it
increased Prince George’s County’s
odds, but said County Executive
Rushern Baker III and the county
team ultimately believed Greenbelt
provided the best site.
Greenbelt Councilman Edward
Putens said he feared competition
between the two county sites could
benefit Springfield more than it
would help Maryland’s chances.
“What happens when you have
two candidates from one state?
They start fighting each other,” he
said. “And we have already started.”
Glaros said Lerner Enterprises,
a real estate firm of the Washington
Nationals owner Theodore Lerner
that owns the Landover property,
was powerful, which could be a
blow to the Greenbelt site’s
chances.
“That entity knows a lot of people, has a lot of access and opens a
lot of doors,” Glaros said.
Greenbelt Mayor Pro Tem Judith Davis said the uncertainty increased her concerns about the possibility of Greenbelt getting shorthanded by the GSA.
“The fact that the city is located
in the north of the Prince George’s
may eventually make federal officials think that we do not need much
development associated with the relocation,” Davis said.
Calvo said the biggest issue for
him was securing support of U.S.
Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.),
chairwoman of the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee, who, he
said, initially signed for Greenbelt
and then seemed to back off.
E-5
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
NEWS
Construction begins on Westphalia
Community Center
By Savannah Tanbusch
Special to the Sentinel
UPPER MARLBORO – Delegates and community members broke
ground Saturday on the Westphalia
Community Center scheduled to
open in early 2016.
The Prince George’s County
Planning Board partnered with the
Department of Parks and Recreation
staff to host the groundbreaking ceremony and designate an area for the
new community center.
The 16,223 square foot community center is a $5.8 million project
located on 8900 Westphalia Rd. The
area currently holds tennis courts and
a small playground.
According to Prince George’s
County Planning Board Chairman
Elizabeth Hewlett, the plans for the
Westphalia Community Center have
been in the planning board’s budget
for seven years and are just now coming to fruition.
“Sometimes [people] don’t un-
derstand when an item gets put into
the budget, it takes a while for it to become acted upon,” Hewlett said.
“Everyone naturally gets anxious.”
Although the process has taken a
while, Hewlett said, the community
has remained supportive as the planning board and the Department of
Parks and Recreation worked collaboratively to make the community
center a reality.
“The community has been outstanding,” Hewlett said. “They’re excited to see something come together
that represents their visions.”
“The community is ecstatic
[about the new community center],”
said Angela Angel, who is running
unopposed as delegate for District 25.
“The delays and issues have only
helped galvanize people and helped
us move forward to a goal.”
Redell Duke, from the Westphalia Civic Association, said he is
elated to see the groundbreaking finally coming into view after more
than forty years of advocating for it.
“A lot of the folks who aspired to
have this community center built
have died,” said Duke. “We still want
to make this happen in their memory
and for the future generation. I have
no regrets of the time spent, I’m just
thankful it has come.”
Duke also said he was proud of
the community effort put into working with the delegates and Prince
George’s County representatives to
make the community center possible.
“It’s not a single community effort,” said Duke. “The entire community within Westphalia has been extremely supportive. They’ve been
very excited and very, very enthusiastic.”
The community center will feature a gymnasium, a large fitness
room, a multi-purpose room and
pantry, a teen lounge, a concourse
area, storage space and staff offices,
according to the pamphlet. The old
play equipment will be replaced with
new play equipment and the parking
lot will be expanded.
On the web. All the time.
PHOTO BY SAVANNAH TANBUSCH
Above, officials broke ground Saturday on the new Westphalia Community Center.
www.thesentinel.com
E-6
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
NEWS
Zumba, face painting and more with Mel Franklin
By Savannah Tanbusch
Special to the Sentinel
UPPER MARLBORO – Despite forecasts for bad weather, District 9 Prince George’s County
Councilman Mel Franklin’s 4th annual Family Fun Day continued
Sunday without any major hurdles.
More than 1,000 people attended the event and there were more
than 100 businesses and booths set
up on the Show Place Arena
grounds, Franklin said.
“We’ve had the biggest business turnout yet,” said Franklin. “It
really brings the community together and lets people look at the local
businesses that we’ve been trying to
grow.”
Several elected officials, including Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown
and District 9 Board of Education
member Sonya Williams, spoke at
the event encouraging people to vote
on Nov. 4. Brown is the Democratic
nominee for governor, while
Williams seeks reelection.
“Prince George’s County has an
opportunity to move this election in
the right direction,” Brown said. “It
has an opportunity to elect people
who are going to partner with our
county executive and our county
council, to partner with our delegation and to make sure that Prince
George’s County has a strong part-
ner in Annapolis.”
Senator Doug Peters (D-23)
said he looks forward to seeing Democrats “sweep the election” on
Nov. 4.
“[Franklin] came and helped
every single one of us [Democrats],”
said Peters. “He didn’t have to do
that. He could’ve sat back in the
county chair […], but he reached
out, he helped us campaign and he
helped us get across that finish line.”
The festival focused on more
than politics. Several performers entertained visitors throughout the day,
and there were booths offering free
food and free face painting spread
out across the grounds.
Eniyah Vaughn, 7, said getting
her face painted was her favorite part
of the event.
“I also really liked all the candy
things [they were giving away],”
said Eniyah, showing off her Hello
Kitty face paint.
Larry Johnson and Daniel Hall,
from Novacayne Music, were
among the performers at the festival.
Novacayne Music entertained the
crowd twice, singing songs about
the community and bringing people
together. According to Hall and
Johnson, their church asked them to
perform.
“It was amazing [to perform],”
said Johnson. “We’re all about giving back to the community through
the gift of music.”
“I was trying to get the electric
slide going on [our first song],” said
Hall, laughing.
Deanna Stealth, a 19-year-old
rapper who has performed twice on
Black Entertainment Television,
also took the stage.
“Mel Franklin has always been
very supportive of me and what I
do,” Stealth said. “I think the audience response was very good, too.”
Stealth started her own business
at 13-years-old, My Sweet Tooth,
LLC, which she said focused on
meeting the desires of adults and
children with dietary restrictions.
Stealth said she approved of the
food available at the event.
“The turkey burgers were
great,” said Stealth. “Turkey burgers
are always so dry, but somehow
these weren’t and the seasoning was
perfect.”
Wanda Thompson, a Zumba instructor, said she received a call two
days before the event because another act had cancelled. Thompson and
her Zumba class danced on stage to
hit songs such as “Turn Down for
What” and “The Bikers Shuffle.”
Thompson said she and her
class often participate in cancer drives and volunteer work for the community.
“[Franklin] is getting my vote,”
Thompson said. “I think he’s doing a
ADVERTISE
PHOTO BY SAVANNAH TANBUSCH
Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown speaks to the crowd at County Councilman Mel
Franklinʼs “District 9 Day.”
great job at getting people involved,
and this event just goes to show how
well he’s done getting people in the
community involved.”
in
Call Lonnie Johnson at 301-306-9500
or e-mail lonnie@thesentinel.com
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
E-7
C
ALENDAR
Whatʼs happening this week in Prince Georgeʼs County
THURS 7
TRANSCENDENT MAN
Glenarden Library, 8724 Glenarden Parkway, Glenarden. Transcendent Man explores
the theories of inventor, futurist, and best-selling author Ray Kurzweil, who predicts that in
the not-so-distant future, the science fiction
behind The Terminator, Blade Runner, Total
Recall, The Matrix, and I, Robot will become
science fact. 4 p.m. For information: 301-7725477.
NIGHT OF THE ARTS
Billingsley House, 6900 Green Landing
Road, Upper Marlboro. Enjoy an amazing view
of the Patuxent River while listening to soothing live music and sipping a glass of wine on
the patio! Light refreshments will be served.
6:30-8 p.m. Resident: $10; Non-Resident: $12.
Ages 21 & up. For information: 301-627-0730;
TTY 301-446-6802.
FREE QUESTERS TOUR
Darnallʼs Chance House Museum, 14800
Governor Oden Bowie Dr., Upper Marlboro.
Groups participating in the Archdiocese of
Washingtonʼs Faith Quest program can re-
ceive a free tour of Darnallʼs Chance House
Museum. Just show your stamped passports
for free admission to the museum on the select
days. Through August 31, 2014 (WednesdaysFridays only). Noon-3 p.m. FREE. All ages
welcome. For information: 301-952-8010; TTY
301-699-2544.
FIELD CROPS RESEARCH FARM TOUR,
BARBECUE & ICE CREAM SOCIAL
Central Maryland Research & Education
Center, 2005 Largo Road, Upper Marlboro.
You are invited to see University of Maryland
Extension Educators and Specialists showcase their field crop, vegetable, and fruit research plots. 4:30-9 p.m. A bbq dinner will be
served at 4:30 p.m. followed by homemade ice
cream. Please arrive on-time as the tour will
start promptly at 6 p.m. This event is free.
However, a reserved meal ticket is required. To
register: 410-222-3900.
CONCERTS IN THE PARK: GROOVE STU
Watkins Regional Park, 301 Watkins Park
Dr., Upper Marlboro. Enjoy cool tunes at twilight. Family and friends can enjoy a variety of
music under the setting sun. 7-8:30 p.m.
FREE. For information: 301-218-6700.
WIND DOWN THURSDAYS SUMMER
CONCERT SERIES: EARL CARTER
The Blvd. at the Cap Centre, 800 Shoppers Way, Largo. Join us on Thursdays as
you wind down your work week! Live music
from some the areaʼs top bands. 6:30-8:30
p.m. FREE. For information: www.shopcapcentre.com.
COURTESY PHOTO
COME AND ENJOY A FREE
OUTDOOR MOVIE – CLOUDY WITH
A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2
Watkins Regional Park, 301
Watkins Park Dr., Upper Marlboro.
Weather permitting. Please bring a
blanket or lawn chair to sit and
enjoy the movie. All ages. 8:30-10
p.m. See Friday listing for parking
and other details.
August 7, 2014 - August 13, 2014
BLAST-IN-THE-PAST: A HANDS-ON
HISTORY PLAYGROUND
Montpelier Mansion/Historic Site, 9650
Muirkirk Road, Laurel. The Montpelier
grounds will once again be transformed into
a history playground! Be a tradesperson,
town crier, frontiersman or woman, a farmer,
and more! Come for an hour or stay for the
day. Story times weekly. Wednesdays-Saturdays through August 9, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Resident $2/day; Non-Resident $3/day. All ages.
For information: 301-377-7817; TTY 301699-2544.
LA REINE HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 1975
The La Reine High School Class of 75 is
planning its 40th reunion for 2015. The reunion committee is looking for ideas, planning
committee members, and your interest in attending the reunion and planning session.
For information: 202-681-4345 or lrhs75@hotmail.com. A meet and greet/planning meeting
is scheduled for August 9 at 2 p.m.. at the National Harbor.
COURTESY PHOTO
CONCERTS IN THE PARK: GROOVE STU
Thursday at Watkins Regional Park, 301 Watkins Park Dr., Upper Marlboro. Enjoy cool tunes at twilight. Family
and friends can enjoy a variety of music under the setting sun. 7-8:30 p.m. FREE. For information: 301-218-6700.
RIVERDALE PARK FARMERS MARKET
Queensbury Road (MARC station parking
lot). 3-7 p.m., Thursdays until November 20.
For information: 301-586-5973.
CDA MEETING
Village Baptist Church, 1950 Mitchellville
Road, Bowie. Do you have a problem with
drugs or alcohol and find that you canʼt stop or
stay stopped? We meet every Thursday night
@ 8 p.m. & Saturday night @ 7 p.m. Call
Chemically Dependent Anonymous, a fellowship of recovering addicts and alcoholics at 1888-CDA-HOPE or visit www.cdaweb.org.
BLUE STAR MUSEUMS SALUTE TO THE
MILITARY
Surratt House Museum, 9118 Brandywine
Road, Clinton. Surratt House Museum is offering free tours to active and retired service
members through Labor Day. Tours are given
Wednesday-Friday from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. and on
Saturdays and Sundays from noon-4 p.m. Up
to five immediate dependents admitted free
with a service member. For information:
http://arts.gov/national/blue-star-museums.
SHOES & SNEAKERS DRIVE
Harmony Hall Regional Center, 10701 Livingston Road, Fort Washington. Make a difference and donate your gently used shoes! Join
us as we partner with Soles4Souls to supply
people in need within the United States and
around the world with shoes. Drop off your
gently used shoes or sneakers at Harmony
Hall Regional Center. Through August 8, 2014
from 9 a.m.-9 p.m. For information: 301-2036040; TTY 301-203-6030.
CHILDREN’S AUTHOR VISIT: QUENTIN
CUPP JR.
New Carrollton Library, 7414 Riverdale
Road, New Carrollton. Imagine if you could
stay a kid forever. Imagine if you could control
how old you got and how fast. Impossible? Not
if you live on Tiger Island. Not if youʼre a
Kidling. The author will read excerpts from his
book and participate in a Q&A session. 2 p.m.
Ages 6-12. For information: 301-459-6900,
TTY: 301-808-2061.
FRI 8
FREE OUTDOOR MOVIE – CLOUDY
WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2
Watkins Regional Park, 301 Watkins Park
Dr., Upper Marlboro. Come and enjoy a FREE
Outdoor Movie! Please bring a blanket or lawn
chair to sit and enjoy the movie. Parking is located at the Central Area Office. The movie is
to the right of the parking area (Field #5).
Weather permitting. Please note direct supervision/assistance is not provided for this event.
8:30-10 p.m. FREE. All Ages. For information:
301-446-3400; TTY 301-446-3402.
SUMMER KNIGHTS HOTROD BAND
Montpelier Mansion Grounds, 9652
Muirkirk Road, Laurel. M-NCPPC and The
South Laurel Recreation Council invite you to
bring a friend, picnic, blanket and/or chair to
enjoy a variety of FREE performances on the
west lawn of the mansion grounds. 7:30-9:30
p.m. FREE. All ages. For information: 301-7762805; 301-953-7882.
SENIOR MOVIE AT THE HEIGHTS
Marlow Heights Community Center, 2800
St. Clair Dr., Marlow Heights. Come enjoy popcorn and watch the award-winning movie
“Fruitvale Station.” Oscar Grant, a 22-year-old
Bay Area resident, wakes up on the morning of
December 31, 2008 and feels something in
the air. Not sure what it is, he takes it as a sign
to get a head start on his resolutions. 11 a.m.1:30 p.m. Free for Residents/$3 Non-Residents. Ages 55 & up. For information: 301-4230505; TTY: 301-203-6030.
OUTBACK STEAKHOUSE SUMMER
JAM
City Municipal Building, 4310 Gallatin St.,
Hyattsville. Join us for live entertainment fea-
Continued on page E-8
E-8
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
C
ALENDAR
Whatʼs happening this week in Prince Georgeʼs County
Continued from page E-7
turing music by N2N. Sponsored by Outback
Steakhouse and The City of Hyattsville. 6:308:30 p.m. FREE. For information: 301-9855000 or www.hyattsville.org.
FABULOUS FRIDAYS
Watkins Regional Park, 301 Watkins Park
Dr., Upper Marlboro. Enjoy unlimited rides on
Watkins Regional Parkʼs train and carousel,
and rounds of miniature golf for one price per
person. Fridays in August. 5:30-8:30 p.m. For
information: 301-218-6700.
FRIDAY NIGHT LIVE CONCERT SERIES
National Harbor, 137 National Plaza, National Harbor. Looking for a fresh new way to
step out on Friday nights? Find your groove at
Friday Night Live, National Harborʼs summer
music series. Join us as D.C.ʼs most celebrated power bands play your favorites. Fridays,
July through September. FREE. For information: 1-877-NATL-HBR or www.nationalharbor.com.
AFTERNOON AVIATORS
College Park Aviation Museum, 1985 Cpl.
Frank Scott Dr., College Park. Join us for fun,
hands-on aviation-themed activities. A weekly
series for children ages five and up. To schedule a group larger than 10, please call the museum to make a private group reservation. Fridays, 2-4 p.m. FREE with museum admission.
Ages 5 & up. For information: 301-864-6029;
TTY 301-699-2544.
SAT 9
ANTIQUE AND VINTAGE DOLL SHOW
Marietta House Museum, 5626 Bell Station
Road, Glenn Dale. Join other doll enthusiasts,
as you view antique and vintage dolls, including African-American doll collections, international dolls and collectible dolls, all owned by
local residents and on display in Mariettaʼs
historic rooms. Please feel free to bring your
dolls to show and discuss. You are also welcome to sell. Tours of the home are included.
10 a.m.-4 p.m. Admission is $2 per person.
Come early and visit our Glenn Dale Farmerʼs
Market on the grounds from 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
COURTESY PHOTO
MASTER GARDENER PROGRAM: DEER
RESISTANT PLANTS
Greenbelt Library, 11 Crescent Road,
Greenbelt. Learn about plants that deer prefer
not to eat or eat as a last resort. 10 a.m. For information: 301-345-5800, TTY: 301-808-2061.
SISTER SOLDIERS OF THE CIVIL WAR
Surratt House Museum, 9118 Brandywine
Road, Clinton. Although women were forbidden by social custom and army regulations to
enter military service, a surprising number of
women disguised themselves as young men
and “went for a soldier.” Join Audrey ScanlanTeller as she enlightens us on an unusual and
courageous group of soldiers seldom discussed in Civil War history. Arrive early; limited
seating. 4-5 p.m.
COURTESY PHOTO
TEEN AFTERNOON AT THE
MOVIES: WARM BODIES
Wednesday at Bowie Library,
15210 Annapolis Road, Bowie.
Relax in air-conditioned comfort
while watching an exciting movie.
Grab your friends, your
complimentary snacks, and chill
out with the movie Warm Bodies
(rated PG-13). 3 p.m. Teens. FREE.
For information: 301-262-7000, TTY:
301-808-2061.
August 7, 2014 - August 13, 2014
CRUISIN’ ON THE RIVER CAR SHOW
National Harbor, 137 National Plaza, National Harbor. Join us for this one of a kind
event, featuring classic cars and live entertainment along the Potomac River. FREE. For information: 1877-NTL-HBR or www.nationalharbor.com.
“THE ENEMY NEARLY ALL ROUND US”
Belair Mansion, 17207 Tulip Grove Dr.,
Bowie. This exhibit features Annapolis and the
surrounding area during the War of 1812, including the Ogle Family from Belair. July 19September 20. Noon-4 p.m. FREE. For information: 301-809-3089 or
www.cityofbowie.org.
UNITED STATES ARMY BLUES IN CONCERT
Sunday at Robert V. Setera Amphitheater, Allen Pond Park, 3330 Northview Dr., Bowie. 7-8 p.m. FREE.
For information: 301-809-3078 or www.cityofbowie.org.
AMERICAN MARKET
National Harbor. Every Saturday through
October, National Harbor will host the American Market. Stroll along the outdoor promenade and choose from a vast offering of producer-only merchandise including farm fresh
produce and meats, specialty foods, handmade crafts, jewelry and more. For information: 1-877-NATL-HBR or www.nationalharbor.com.
ROUTE 1 FARMERS MARKET &
BAZAAR
4100 Rhode Island Ave., Brentwood. The
market will provide access to fresh produce,
family activities for all ages, and handmade
products from regional crafters and artists.
Through Saturday, September 27. Twilight
Market: First Fridays of the month, 4-8 p.m.
Every Saturday: 8 a.m.-2 p.m. For information:
http://rt1farmersmarket.wordpress.com/.
COLLEGE PARK FARMERS MARKET
M-NCPPC, Wells-Linson Complex (parking
lot), 5211 Paint Branch Parkway, College Park.
Saturdays, 7 a.m.-noon. FMNP Checks (WIC
& Senior) & FVC accepted. For information:
301-399-5485.
GLENN DALE FARMERS MARKET
Marietta Mansion, 5626 Bell Station Road.
9 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Saturdays through November 22. For information: 301-806-0111.
CDA MEETING
Village Baptist Church, 1950 Mitchellville
Road, Bowie. Do you have a problem with
drugs or alcohol and find that you canʼt stop
or stay stopped? We meet every Thursday
night @ 8 p.m. & Saturday night @ 7 p.m.
Call Chemically Dependent Anonymous, a
fellowship of recovering addicts and alcoholics at 1-888-CDA-HOPE or visit
www.cdaweb.org.
SUN 10
GOSPEL CONCERT
Upper Marlboro Community Center, 5400
Marlboro Race Track Road, Upper Marlboro. Enjoy the music of local gospel entertainers. 4–6 p.m. FREE. All ages. For information: 301-203-6000; TTY 301-203-6030.
ANTIQUE AND VINTAGE DOLL SHOW
AND SALE
Marietta House Museum, 5626 Bell Station
Road, Glenn Dale. Come out for this show for
doll collectors! View antique and vintage dolls
owned by local residents. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. For
information: 301-464-5291.
UNITED STATES ARMY BLUES
IN CONCERT
Robert V. Setera Amphitheater, Allen Pond
Park, 3330 Northview Dr., Bowie. 7-8 p.m.
FREE. For information: 301-809-3078 or
www.cityofbowie.org.
CHAPEL IN THE WOODS
8500 Springfield Road, Glenn Dale. Glenn
Dale United Methodist Church will hold its outdoor worship service, “Chapel in the Woods,”
every Sunday through August 24 from 8:30-9
a.m. Parishioners will lead these informal services of singing, prayers, and a short homily. In
the event of inclement weather, services will be
held in the church. All are welcome. The regular worship service will be held at 10:30 a.m. in
the church.
GREENBELT FARMERS MARKET
Greenbelt Aquatic & Fitness Center, 101
Center Way. 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Sundays through
November 23. For information: www.greenbeltfarmersmarket.org.
AUGUST 7, 2014
C
Automotive
1035 - Antiques & Classics
1039 - Domestics
1040 - Imports
1041 - Sports Utility Vehicle
1043 - Pickups, Trucks & Vans
1045 - Motorcycles/Mopeds
1046 - Auto Services
1047 - Parts/Accessories
1051 - Vehicles Wanted
RVʼs
1059 - Airplanes
1065 - Boats
1067 - RVs
Announcements
2001 - Adoptions
2003 - Carpools
2004 - Happy Ads
2005 - Camp Directory
2006 - Classes/Seminars
2008 - Found
2031 - Lost
2033 - General Announcements
E-9
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
2037 - Personal Ads
2039 - In Memoriam
Services
3000 - Accounting Services
3017 - Business services
3021 - Carpet services
3030 - Ceramic Tile
3031 - Child care services
3033 - Chimney cleaning
3035 - Cleaning services
3039 - Computer Services
3041 - Concrete
3045 - Decorating/Home
Interior
3052 - Editing/Writing
3053 - Elder Care
3055 - Electrical Services
3057 - Entertainment/Parties
3062 - Financial
3066 - General Services
3071 - Gutters
3072 - Hauling
3073 - Health & Fitness
3075 - Home Improvement
LASSIFIEDS
3085 - Instruction/Tutoring
3086 - Insurance Services
3089 - Landscaping
3093 - Lawn & Garden
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3101 - Masonry
3102 - Medical/Health
3103 - Moving & Storage
3104 - Painting
3105 - Paving/Seal Coating
3107 - Pet Services
3109 - Photography
3115 - Plumbing
3118 - Pressure Cleaning
3123 - Roofing
3125 - Sewing/Alterations
3129 - Snow Removal
3130 - Tax Preparation
3133 - Tree Services
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3141 - Wedding/Parties
3143 - Window Cleaning
3145 - Windows
Employment
4107 - Resumes/Word
Processing
4109 - Positions Wanted
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Merchandise
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To Advertise in The Sentinel:
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Phone: 1-800-884-8797
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FIVE STAR HOME SERVICE
443-506-9222
410-661-4050
410-744-7799
Contact Mike
mdrconcrete27@gmail.com
Lic. #88812
Chris & Mike Levero
Bonded & Insured
Free Estimates
MHIC# 10138
www.fivestarmaryland.com
Fully Licensed & Insured
Specializing in:
Brick & Stone Repair
Sidewalks, Porches & Steps
Chimney/Fireplace Repair
Brick Re-pointing
Small Home Improvements
www.custom-contractor.com
MHIC#79665
www.handsonpainters.com 410-242-1737
PA I N T I N G S E R V I C E
THE BEST QUALITY PAINTING
Interior/Exterior Starting at:
Rooms - $175 • Windows - $35
Work Done by Owners
Licensed in MD for 30 years
CUSTOM CONTRACTOR
UNLIMITED
From a small yard to an entire complex, we
can do it all. One free cut with yearly service.
Year round:
Lawn Care * Garden Care
Maintenance * Landscaping Design
Spread Mulch * Fertilizer Application
Retaining Walls * Patio and Walkway
Pavers * Driveway Coating
Leaf Removal * Garden Pools
Tree Removal * Tree Trimming
Call now for Free Quote
443-895-1176 * MHIC # 64323
410.356.6202
E-10
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
LEGAL
SERVICES
LEGAL
SERVICES
LEGAL
SERVICES
HELP WANTED,
GENERAL
DPRIVATE
5
RESOLUTION OF DISPUTES
3 X 2.50 i
Judge NANCY
B. SHUGER
served for 18 years as an Associate Judge on the
22095
Legal
Services
District Court of Maryland for Baltimore City, handling various civil and criminal
MANUAL_SOURCE
matters. Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) offers a creative, positive alterna-
tive tot the cost and uncertainty of litigation for individuals, businesses, organizations and families. As a former judge, she can assist disputing parties to achieve
reasonable results. ADR offers a way for her to help people discover common interests which can allow them to shape their own resolution to their disputes.
As a mediator, she acts as a private neutral. She emphasizes that mediation can be effective wether the parties desire to address differences in an
ongoing relationship, or to reach a mutually agreeable solution to a single
dispute, without trial. She uses mediation, arbitration and settlement conferences successfully for conflict involving personal injury (including auto
torts and premises liability), employment, workplace conflict, child access,
elder law, ethics, collections, contracts and other civil matters.
Nancy B. Shuger • Baltimore, MD
410-903-7813 • nancy.shuger@gmail.com
VEHICLES
WANTED
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top
$$$$$ PAID! Running or Not,
All Makes!. Free Towing!
We’re Local! 7 Days/Week.
Call 1-800-959-8518
CASH FOR CARS! Any Make,
Model or Year. We Pay MORE!
Running or Not. Sell Your Car
or Truck TODAY. Free Towing!
Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647
ADOPTIONS
*ADOPTION*
Adoring Financially
Secure Family,
LOVE, Laughter, Art,
Music awaits 1st baby.
Expenses paid.
Rose 1-800-561-9323
CLASSES/
SEMINARS
AIRLINES JOBS Start Here - Get
trained as FAA certified Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement
assistance. Call Aviation
Institute of Maintenance
877-818-0783
WILL PAY TOP DOLLAR!
WANTED RV or
T R AV E L Tr a i l e r ! C a r s,
Trucks, SUV’s. Any condition. Cash Buyer, No hass l e . W I L L P AY M O R E
THAN ANYBODY ELSE!
Call JR at
443-414-4145
V E T E R A N S ! Ta k e f u l l
advantage of your Educational
training benefits! GI Bill covers
COMPUTER & MEDICAL
TRAINING! Call CTI for Free
Benefit Analysis today!
1-888-407-7173
D The
1 Sentinel Newspaper has an immediate
2 X 2.00 i
opening
forWanted,
a sales representative
to sell
47135
Help
Ge
47135 print and online advertising.
MANUAL_SOURCE
The successful candidate must have advertising
sales experience, preferably in the newspaper
industry and online. Applicant will conduct sales
and service calls on existing accounts and new
accounts to grow revenue. The successful candidate
must have strong people skills, be self-motivated
with good organizational skills, computer skills and
have reliable transportation. A college degree is
preferred. Interested persons should send cover
letter, resume and references to:
Lynn Kapiloff - 5307 N. Charles St. Baltimore,
MD 21210 or email: lynn@thesentinel.com
HAULING
1AAA ABC Attics, Bsmt, Garage, Yards. 25 yrs of honest
hauling. Same Day. Call Mike:
410-446-1163.
BUSINESS
SERVICES
Place your ad today in the area’s premier newspapers, The
Baltimore Sun and The Washington Post newspapers,
along with 10 other daily
newspapers five days per
week. Reach 2.5 million readers with your ad placement in
every daily newspaper in Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia. For just
pennies on the dollar reach
2.5 million readers through
the MDDC’s Daily Classified
Connection Network. CALL 1855-721-6332 x 6; SPACE is
VERY LIMITED; email
wsmith@mddcpress.com or
visit our website at
www.mddcpress.com.
PLACE YOUR 2X4 AD IN THIS
NETWORK IN 82 NEWSPAPERS
IN MARYLAND, DELAWARE
AND DC FOR JUST $2900.00.
REACH 3.6 MILLION READERS
EVERY WEEK WITH JUST ONE
CALL, ONE BILL AND ONE AD.
CALL 1-855-721-6336 X 6 TO
PLACE YOUR AD OR EMAIL
WSMITH@MDDCPRESS.COM.
GET THE REACH, THE
RESULTS...MAXIMIZE YOUR
ADVERTISING DOLLARS
TODAY!
HELP WANTED,
GENERAL
ABM’S HAULING
Clean Houses
Basements, Yards & Attics
Haul free unwanted cars
Match Any Price!!!!
443-250-6703
MIKE’S HAULING SERVICES
ALL TYPES TRASH REMOVED
From your home. No job too
big or small. Reas. rates, free
est. Call Mike 410-294-8404
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
ALL THINGS BASEMENT Y!
Basement Systems Inc. Call us
for all of your basement
needs! Waterproofing ? Finishing ? Structural Repairs ?
Humidity and Mold Control
FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1-888698-8150
TAX
PREPARATION
HELP WANTED,
GENERAL
HELP WANTED,
GENERAL
WEBMASTER
D 3
2 X 3.00 i
Webmaster
needed
to manage
website for two
47135 Help
Wanted,
Ge
MANUAL_SOURCE
weekly
newspapers. Responsibilities include,
but not limited to: Preparing the electronic
version of the publications, designing ads and
overseeing the website. Call 301-728-7949 to
apply.
Detailed Job Description
• Placing the PDFs online via FTP site (includes
Display Ads, Classified Ads, and Obituaries)
• Designing/Placing Ads online
• Overseeing website (working the back-end
of the website)
• Creating a new website
PROBLEMS WITH THE IRS OR
STATE TAXES? Settle for a
fraction of what you owe!
Free face to face consultations with offices in your area.
Call 855-970-2032
The two publications are tabloid size and the
P.G. Sentinel runs about 24 pages weekly, the
Montgomery Sentinel runs about 64 pages
weekly.
HELP WANTED,
GENERAL
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
AVON-Earn extra income with
a new career! Sell from home,
work,, online. $15 startup.
For information call:
888-423-1792 (M-F 9-7 & Sat
9-1 Central)
DRIVE TRAFFIC TO YOUR BUSINESS AND REACH 4.1 MILLION
READERS WITH JUST ONE
PHONE CALL & ONE BILL. SEE
YOUR BUSINESS AD IN 104
NEWSPAPERS IN MARYLAND,
DELAWARE AND THE DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA FOR JUST
$495.00 PER AD PLACEMENT.
THE VALUE OF NEWSPAPERS
ADVERTISING HAS NEVER
BEEN STRONGER....CALL 1855-721-6332 X 6 OR 301-8528933 TODAY TO PLACE YOUR
AD BEFORE 4.1 MILLION
R E A D E R S. E M A I L WA N DA
SMITH @ WSMITH@MDDCPRESS.COM OR VISIT OUR
W E B S I T E A T
WWW.MDDCPRESS.COM.
GREEN COMPANY HAS
POSITIONS AVAILABLE NOW
Entry Level Openings
Rapid Advancement
Opportunity
Customer Service Experience
a Plus NOT a Requirement
We Train the Right Candidates
$17/hr avg
Call to Schedule an Interview
410-616-0615
HELP WANTED!! Make up to
$1000 A Week Mailing
Brochures From Home!
Helping Home Workers since
2001! Genuine Opportunity!
NO Experience Required!
www.needmailers.com VOID
IN WI
HOME WORKERS WANTED: Up
to $3,650 to $12,410 a month
or more possible processing
our mail to non-profit groups.
No selling. Call 866-344-0274
Referral# 1727
D R I V E T R A F F I C TO YO U R
BUSINESS AND REACH 4.1
MILLION READERS WITH JUST
ONE PHONE CALL & ONE BILL.
SEE YOUR BUSINESS AD IN
1 0 4 N E W S PA P E R S I N
MARYLAND, DELAWARE AND
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
FOR JUST $495.00 PER AD
PLACEMENT. THE VALUE OF
NEWSPAPERS ADVERTISING
H A S N E V E R B E E N
STRONGER....CALL
1-855-721-6332 X 6 TODAY TO
PLACE YOUR AD BEFORE 4.1
MILLION READERS. EMAIL
W A N D A S M I T H @
WSMITH@MDDCPRESS.COM
OR VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT
WWW.MDDCPRESS.COM.
FUNDRAISING : RESIDUAL
INCOME MAILING POSTCARDS
TO NON-PROFIT GROUPS.
Make Money While Doing
Good. Huge Profit Potential.
Exciting Recorded Message
R e v e a l s D e t a i l s :
866-344-0274. Referral #713
We'll bring you
a brand new audience.
Ask about classified zone buys
301-317-1946
HELP WANTED,
GENERAL
DRIVERS
D 2
Money
& Miles… New
1 X 1.00 i
Excellent
PayWanted,
Package.
G
47135 Help
MANUAL_SOURCE
100% Hands OFF
Freight + E-Logs. Great
Home time/Monthly
Bonus. 1 yr. OTR
exp./No Hazmat
877-704-3773
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
GET CASH NOW for your Annuity or Structured Settlement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast,
No Hassle Service! 877-6930934 (M-F 9:35am-7pm ET)
GUARANTEED INCOME For
Your Retirement Avoid market
risk & get guaranteed income
in retirement! CALL for FREE
copy of our SAFE MONEY
GUIDE Plus Annuity Quotes
from A-Rated companies!
800-669-5471
MAKE UP TO $2,000.00+ Per
Week! New Credit Card Ready
Drink-Snack Vending Mac h i n e s. M i n i m u m $ 4 K t o
$40K+ Investment Required.
Locations Available. BBB Accredited Business. (800) 9629189
PLACE YOUR AD TODAY IN
BOTH THE BALTIMORE SUN
AND THE WASHINGTON POST
NEWSPAPERS, ALONG WITH
10 OTHER DAILY NEWSPAPERS
FIVE DAYS PER WEEK. FOR
JUST PENNIES ON THE DOLLAR REACH 2.5 MILLION
READERS THROUGH THE DAILY CLASSIFIED CONNECTION
NETWORK IN 3 STATES: CALL
TODAY; SPACE IS VERY LIMITED; CALL 1-855-721-6332 X 6
OR 301-852-8933 EMAIL
WSMITH@MDDCPRESS.COM
OR VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT
WWW.MDDCPRESS.COM
AUGUST 7, 2014
INDUSTRIAL/
WAREHOUSE
INDUSTRIAL/
WAREHOUSE
Warehouse Space
Available
D 6
2 X 2.00 i
57047 Industrial & Wa
MANUAL_SOURCE
5,000 to 192,000 Square Feet with
• Executive Offices • Loading Docks
• Sprinklers • M1, M2 or M3 Zoning
• Near Expressways
Cut Your Own Deal!
No Reasonable Offer Refused!
Call 301-728-7949
AUCTION &
ESTATE SALES
HEALTH
& FITNESS
FORECLOSURE *SHENANDOAH CO., VA 77±AC COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ON I-81
RETAIL/BUSINESS PARK DEVELOPMENT SALE HELD: RAMADA INN, 35 BRANDY CT.,
STRASBURG, VA AUGUST 21 @
3 PM WWW.MOTLEYS.COM O
1-877-MOTLEYS VA16 EHO.
CASH for unexpired DIABETIC
TEST STRIPS and STOP SMOKING ITEMS! Free Shipping,
Friendly Service, BEST prices
and 24hr payment! Call today
877 588 8500 or visit
www.TestStripSearch.com
Espanol 888-440-4001
WANTED TO PURCHASE ANTIQUES & FINE ART, 1 ITEM OR
ENTIRE ESTATE OR COLLECTION, GOLD, SILVER, COINS,
JEWELRY, TOYS, ORIENTAL
GLASS, CHINA, LAMPS, TEXTILES, PAINTINGS, PRINTS ALMOST ANYTHING OLD EVERGREEN AUCTIONS 973-8181100. EMAIL EVERGREENAUCTION@HOTMAIL.COM
GARAGE/
YARD SALES
HOWARD County Fairgrds
Kids Nearly New Fall Sales
Sat’s - SEPT 6 & 20. 8a-1p
140 family booths selling
NB-teen clothes, toy, book
furniture, equpment, etc
booth info: KNNsale.com
HEALTH
& FITNESS
CANADA DRUG CENTER is
your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with
savings of up to 90% on all
your medication needs. Call
Today 1-800-418-8975 for
$10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.
E-11
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
MEDICAL GUARDIAN Toprated medical alarm and 24/7
medical alert monitoring. For
a limited time, get free equipment, no activation fees, no
commitment, a 2nd waterproof alert button for free and
more - only $29.95 per month.
800-617-2809
P E LV I C / VA G I N A L M E S H
L A W S U I T S : Yo u m a y b e
entitled to compensation if
you experienced transvaginal
mesh implant surgery
complications. Call attorney
Ja m e s C. J o h n s o n a t
1-855-484-4075 or
www.jamescjohnsonlaw.com
SAFE, EASY WEIGHTLOSS!
Phentrazine 37.5, a once daily
appetite suppressant, boosts
energy and burns fat. 60 day
supply - only $59.95! To order,
call 888-628-6051
VIAGRA AND CIALIS USERS
50 Pills SPECIAL - $99.00.
FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 855-4094132
MISCELLANEOUS
AIRLINE CAREERS BEGIN
HERE - GET FAA APPROVED
AV I AT I O N M A I N T E N A N C E
TRAINING. HOUSING AND FINANCIAL AID FOR QUALIFIED
STUDENTS. JOB PLACEMENT
ASSISTANCE. CALL AVIATION
INSTITUTE OF MAINTENANCE
800-481-8974
DIRECTTV. 2 Year Savings
Event! Over 140 channels only
$29.99 a month. Only DirecTV
gives you 2 YEARS of savings
and a FREE Genie upgrade!
Call 1-800-279-3018
D I R E C T V S TA R T I N G AT
$24.95/MO. Free 3-Months of
HBO, star z, SHOWTIME &
CINEMA X FREE RECEIVER
Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday
Ticket Included with Select
Packages. Some exclusions
apply - Call for details
1-800-897-4169
DISH TV. Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME
DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1800-278-1401
FREE BAHAMA CRUISE.
3 DAYS/2 NIGHTS FROM FT.
LAUDERDALE, FL. PAY ONLY
$59 PORT CHARGE! UPGRADES AVAILABLE! CALL
NOW! 877-916-3235
FREE GOLD IRA KIT. With the
demise of the dollar now is
the time to invest in gold.
AAA Rated! For free consultation: 1-866-683-566
FREE $50 WALMAR T GIFT
CARD & 3 FREE ISSUES OF
YOUR FAVORITE MAGAZINES!
TO CLAIM THIS FREE OFFER,
CALL 855-954-3224
GET A COMPLETE SATELLITE
S YS T E M i n s t a l l e d a t N O
COST! FREE HD/DVR Upgrade.
As low as $19.99/mo. Call for
details 877-388-8575
KILL BED BUGS & THEIR
EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online:
homedepot.com
MISCELLANEOUS
KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris
R o a c h Ta b l e t s. E l i m i n a t e
R o a c h e s - G u a ra n t e e d . N o
Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting.
Available at ACE Hardware,
and The Home Depot.
ADVERTISE YOUR PRODUCT
or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North America’s best
suburbs! Place your classified
ad in over 570 suburban
newspapers just like this one.
Call Classified Avenue at 888486-2466
MY COMPUTER WORKS
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
bad internet connections - FIT
IT NOW Professional, U.S.based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help.
1-800-681-3250
AUCTION/ESTATE
REAL
ESTATE SALE
AUCTION/ESTATE
REAL
ESTATE SALE
AUCTION/ESTATE
REAL
ESTATE SALE
Secured Creditor Sale
D 7 Certain Assets of LookZ Full Service Salon, LLC
3 X 1.60
located @ i
9141 Alaking Ct Capitol Heights, MD 20743
14, 2014 @11:00AM
52123 Real August
Estate
- C
MANUAL_SOURCE
(16) Styling Chairs, (2) Heavy Duty Barber chairs, (19) Metal & Folding chairs, (12)
Belvedere 900c Hair Dryer Stations, (4) Shampoo chairs, Plus more. Payment in full
day of sale immediate removal, Subject to additions & deletions. Subject to all senior
liens. As is where is, in its present condition without warranty, Expressed or Implied,
Including without Warranty of Merchantability Or Of Fitness For a Particular Purposes.
Go to our web site for full terms & conditions. www.Americanaai.com.
AUCTION
D 5
2 X 3.40 i
52123 Real Estate - C
00005
MANUAL_SOURCE
Buy in Bulk and Save!
The Salvation Army
5205 Monroe Place
Bladensburg, MD 20710
Monday-Friday – 10AM
NEW (Used) ITEMS EVERY DAY!
Shoes, Purses, Toys, Appliances,
Furniture, Books, Tools, AND
MUCH MORE!
Good Source for Flea Market
and Second Hand Sales
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
Your Purchase Helps Us Help Others!
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS
PLACE A BUSINESS CARD AD
IN THE STATEWIDE DISPLAY
2X2 ADVERTISING NETWORK REACH 3.6 MILLION READERS
WITH JUST ONE CALL, ONE
BILL AND ONE AD PLACEMENT
IN 82 NEWSPAPERS IN MARYLAND, DELAWARE AND DC TODAY! FOR JUST $1450.00, GET
THE REACH, GET THE RESULTS
AND FOR JUST PENNIES ON
THE DOLLARS NOW...CALL 1855-721-6332 X 6 OR EMAIL
WSMITH@MDDCPRESS.COM
PROTECT YOUR HOME ADT
Authorized Dealer: Burglary,
Fire, and Emergency Alerts 24
hours a day, 7 days a week!
CALL TODAY, INSTALLED TOMORROW! 888-858-9457 (M-F
9am-9pm ET)
MISCELLANEOUS
WANT A LARGER FOOTPRINT
IN THE MARKETPLACE CONSIDER ADVERTISING IN THE
MDDC DISPLAY 2X2 OR 2X4
ADVERTISING NETWORK. REACH 3.6 MILLION READERS
EVERY WEEK BY PLACING
YOUR AD IN 82 NEWSPAPERS
IN MARYLAND, DELAWARE
AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. WITH JUST ONE PHONE
CALL, YOUR BUSINESS AND/
OR PRODUCT WILL BE SEEN
BY 3.6 MILLION READERS
HURRY....SPACE IS LIMITED,
CALL TODAY!! CALL 1-855721-6332 X 6 OR 301 8528933 EMAIL WSMITH@MDDCPRESS.COM OR VISIT OUR
PETS
& SUPPLIES
ALL NEW! HAPPY JACK DUR A S P O T: K I L L S & R E P E L S
FLEAS, TICKS & LARVAE. REPELS MITES, LICE & MOSQUITOES. CONTAINS NYLAR IGR.
AT S O U T H E R N S TAT E S.
WWW.HAPPYJACKINC.COM
WANTED TO BUY
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!
TOP $$$$$ PAID!Running or
Not, All Makes!. Free Towing!
We’re Local! 7 Days/Week.
Call 1-800-905-8332
TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD
GUITARS! 1920’s thru 1980’s.
G i b s o n , M a r t i n , F e n d e r,
Gretsc h, Epiphon e, Guild,
Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie
State, D’Angelico, Stromberg,
and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos.
1-800-401-0440
VACATION RENTAL
The Sentinel
Newspaper
OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND.
Best selection of affordable
rentals. Full/ partial weeks.
Call for FREE brochure. Open
daily. Holiday Real Estate.
1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com
We'll bring you
a brand new audience.
Ask about classified zone buys 301-317-1946
LOTS & ACREAGE
REAL ESTATE
LAND AND HOME BARGAIN
3 BEDROOM HOME 2+ACRES.
$149,900, 6.5 ACRES, $64,900
OPEN AND WOODED. CLOSE
TO MARC AND TOWN, EZ FINANCING. CALL 800/888-1262
LAKE PROPERTY FOR SALE
Brand New Lake Cottage only
$119,900. Sale Saturday, 8/16
Gorgeous, ready-to-finish cottage on beautifully wooded
lake access homesite, nestled
amid the Mid-Atlantic’s only
year-round 4 star resort destination! Huge savings! Call
877-888-7581, x60 Weathertight cottage package.
GLS Realty, LLC.
WATERFRONT LOTS- Virginia’s Eastern Shore Was $325K
Now from $65,000 - Community Center/Pool. 1 acre+ lots,
Bay & Ocean Access, Great
Fishing, Crabbing, Kayaking.
Custom Homes www.oldemillpointe.com 757-824-0808
REAL ESTATE
BRAND NEW LAKE COTTAGE* ONLY $119,900. SALE
SATURDAY, 8/16. GORGEOUS,
READY- TO- FINISH COTTAGE
ON BEAUTIFULLY WOODED
LAKE ACCESS HOMESIT ENESTLED AMID THE MID-ATLANTIC’S ONLY YEAR-ROUND
4 STAR RESORT DESTINATION!
HUGE SAVINGS! CALL 877888-7581, X 58. WEATHERTIGHT COTTAGE PACKAGE.
GLS REALTY, LLC
DELAWARE’S RESORT LIVING
WITHOUT RESORT PRICING!
LOW TAXES! GATED COMMUNITY, CLOSE TO BEACHES,
AMAZING AMENITIES, OLYMPIC POOL. NEW HOMES FROM
$80’S! BROCHURES AVAILABLE 1-866-629-0770 OR
WWW.COOLBRANCH.COM
EQUAL
HOUSING
All Real Estate advertised
herein is subject to the
Federal Fair Housing Act
which makes it illegal to indicate any preference, limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination. We will not knowingly
accept any advertising for
Real Estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed
that all dwellings advertised are available on an
equal opportunity basis.
If you believe that you may
have been discriminated
against in connection with
the sale, rental or financing
of housing, call The United
States Department of
Housing and Urban
Development
(HUD)
1-800-669-9777
E-12
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
COUNTY COUNCIL
COUNTY COUNCIL
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
http://ethics.gov.state.md.us/pages/local%20government.htm
THE PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY COUNCIL,
SITTING AS THE DISTRICT COUNCIL FOR THAT PORTION OF THE
MARYLAND-WASHINGTON REGIONAL DISTRICT
IN PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND,
HEREBY GIVES NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING
CONCERNING THE
ADOPTED COLLEGE PARK-RIVERDALE PARK
TRANSIT DISTRICT DEVELOPMENT PLAN
Pursuant to provisions of the Land Use Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland and the
Zoning Ordinance of Prince George's County, Maryland, being also Subtitle 27 of the Prince
George's County Code, the Prince George's County Council, sitting as the District Council hereby
gives notice of a public hearing to receive testimony regarding the Adopted College Park-Riverdale
Park Transit District Development Plan.
The College Park - Riverdale Park Transit District area is composed of approximately 293 acres
of land in the northwestern portion of Prince George's County along and east of the Washington
Metropolitan Area Transit Authority's METRO Green Line. The College Park/U of MD Metro
Station is the first inbound station from the northern Green Line terminus at Greenbelt and serves
the University of Maryland, College Park campus, which is the largest university in the Washington
Metropolitan Region. Land within the transit district area is classified in the M-X-T (Mixed Use Transportation Oriented), I-3 (Planned Industrial/Employment Park), R-R (Rural Residential), O-S
(Open Space), and R-O-S (Reserved Open Space) Zones. The transit district includes the College
Park/U of MD Metro Green Line station and a MARC station, and is the site of 2 of 11 proposed
Purple Line stations within Prince George's County, Maryland (College Park/U of MD, and M
Square). This process also includes a Transit District Overlay Zoning Map Amendment that will
rezone property to ensure compatibility with the recommendations of the adopted Transit District
Development Plan.
PUBLIC HEARING DATE/TIME:
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
7:00 p.m.
Doors will open at 6:00 pm for participants to view exhibits.
Planning staff will be available to answer questions until 7:00 p.m.
PUBLIC HEARING LOCATION:
Council Hearing Room
First Floor, County Administration Building
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772
This public hearing is part of a process leading to the approval of a new Transit District
Development Plan that will amend the portions of the 1989/1990 Approved Master Plan for
Langley Park-College Park-Greenbelt and Vicinity and the 1994 Approved Master Plan and
Sectional Map Amendment for Planning Area 68 located within the transit district boundaries.
Upon approval by the District Council, the Transit District Development Plan will also implement
and amend the 2014 Plan Prince George's 2035 Approved General Plan. The purpose of the public
hearing is to give all interested persons the opportunity to express their views concerning the
Adopted Transit District Development Plan and associated Transit District Overlay Zoning Map
Amendment.
If you intend to participate in the planning process by providing in-person testimony at the public
hearing, filing a statement in the official record, or submitting other similar communication to a
member of the District Council, and your intention is to request or support intensifying the zone or
land use classification applicable to your property, you must complete and return an affidavit in
accordance with Maryland Annotated Code, State Government Article §15-829 through 15-835,
prior to the close of business on August 15, 2014. Failure to timely file an affidavit(s) may delay
or prohibit consideration of your zoning or land use request. Affidavit forms are available online at:
The Adopted Transit District Development Plan can be viewed online at
http://www.pgplanning.org/CPRP-TDDP.htm and a limited number of copies will be available at
no cost at the following locations by Friday, August 1, 2014:
The Maryland-National Capital Park and
Planning Commission
Planning Information Services, Lower Level
County Administration Building
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, MD 20772
College Park City Hall
4500 Knox Road
College Park, MD 20740
Office of the Clerk of the County Council
County Administration Building
Second Floor
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772
301-952-3208
Riverdale Park Town Hall
5008 Queensbury Road
Riverdale Park, MD 20737
(8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.)
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO RESIDENTS, BUSINESS AND PROPERTY OWNERS:
This public hearing is important to persons owning land in the area, because the Transit District
Development Plan establishes policies that will help define the type, amount, character, and location
of future development. Approval of a new Transit District Development Plan and included Transit
District Overlay Zoning Map Amendment could result in the rezoning of property, which could then
affect property values and tax liability.
• Individual speakers and representatives from a group or groups will be limited to three (3)
minutes. Persons desiring to speak may register in advance or fill out a registration card available at
the hearing.
• Written testimony and/or exhibits will be accepted in lieu of, or in addition to, oral testimony.
E-mails or faxes will not be considered unless followed by an original mailed to the Clerk of the
Council at the address indicated below.
• The record of public hearing testimony will close on Wednesday, September 17, 2014, at the
close of business. Written comments may be submitted to: Office of the Clerk of the Council,
County Administration Building, Room 2198, 14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772. However, if you intend to request or support a zone intensification
for your property, you must file the required affidavit by the August 15, 2014 due date.
TO REGISTER TO SPEAK IN ADVANCE OF THE HEARING, CONTACT THE
CLERK OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL'S OFFICE AT 301-952-3600.
For further information, please contact Chad Williams, Project Manager, M-NCPPC, Community
Planning Division, at 301-952-3171 or e-mail chad.williams@ppd.mncppc.org.Visit the project
website at: www.pgplanning.org/CPRP-TDDP.htm
BY ORDER OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL,
SITTING AS THE DISTRICT COUNCIL,
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
Mel Franklin, Chairman
ATTEST:
Redis C. Floyd
Clerk of the Council
00004040 2t 08/07/14
Advertise in The Sentinel
legal classifieds!
Call Sherry Sanderson at 301-838-0788
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
COUNTY COUNCIL
COUNTY COUNCIL
COUNTY COUNCIL HEARINGS
CB-16-2014 (DR-2) - AN ORDINANCE CONCERNING
M-X-T ZONE for the purpose of amending the Mixed Use Zone
Tables of Uses to permit a vehicle parts store including minor installation services with no outdoor storage as a permitted use in
the Mixed Use - Transportation Oriented (M-X-T) Zone, and prohibiting the use in the Mixed Use Community (M-X-C) Zone.
ENACTED: 7/8/2014; EFFECTIVE: 7/8/2014
COUNTY COUNCIL OF PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY,
MARYLAND
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2014
COUNCIL HEARING ROOM
COUNTY ADMINISTRATION BUILDING
14741 GOVERNOR ODEN BOWIE DRIVE
UPPER MARLBORO, MARYLAND
1:30 P.M.
Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, September 9, 2014,
the County Council of Prince George's County, Maryland,
will hold the following public hearings:
CB-39-2014 (DR-2) (SUBDIVISION BILL) - AN ACT CONCERNING PRIVATE ROADS AND EASEMENTS for the
purpose of permitting the Planning Board to approve private
roads and alleys in the C-O Zone under certain circumstances.
Those wishing to testify at these hearings and comment, or to receive copies are urged to telephone the office of the Clerk of the
Council, County Administration Building, Upper Marlboro,
Maryland. Telephone (301) 952-3600. Free parking and shuttle
bus service is available at the Prince George's Equestrian Center
parking lots. In the event of inclement weather, please call
301-952-4810 to confirm the status of County Business.
BY ORDER OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
Mel Franklin, Chairman
ATTEST:
Redis C. Floyd
Clerk of the Council
00004044 1t 08/07/14
ENACTED BILLS
COUNTY COUNCIL OF PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY
MARYLAND
CB-12-2014 (DR-2) - AN ORDINANCE CONCERNING RURAL RESIDENTIAL (R-R) ZONE for the purpose of permitting commercial uses in the Rural Residential (R-R) Zone, under
certain circumstances.
ENACTED: 7/8/2014; EFFECTIVE: 8/22/2014
CB-15-2014 (DR-3) - AN ORDINANCE CONCERNING
TRANSIT DISTRICT OVERLAY ZONE for the purpose of
amending the Transit District Overlay Zoning Map Amendment
provisions concerning authority to regulate underlying zones,
clarifying certain applicability and procedural requirements, and
authorizing Transit District Development Plans to amend certain
design regulations and standards.
ENACTED: 7/8/2014; EFFECTIVE: 7/8/2014
CB-23-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING THE ISSUANCE
AND SALE OF GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS for the
purpose of authorizing and empowering Prince George's County,
Maryland to issue and sell an amount not to exceed Two Hundred Thirty-Five Million Three Hundred Seven Thousand
($235,307,000) in aggregate principal amount of general obligation bonds with serial maturities, including mandatory sinking
fund installments in lieu of serial maturities, for the purpose of
providing funds for financing in whole or in part costs of the
planning, construction, reconstruction, establishment, extension,
enlargement, demolition, improvement or acquisition of certain
capital projects set forth in the capital budget of the County for
the fiscal year ending June 30, 2014, or usable portions thereof,
including describing the capital projects to be financed in whole
or in part from the proceeds of the bonds hereby authorized and
the estimated costs and probable useful lives thereof; prescribing
or providing for the procedures for the issuance and sale of such
bonds at public sale; declaring the County's official intent to reimburse itself for certain expenditures paid before the issuance of
the bonds authorized hereby in accordance with applicable Income Tax Regulations; authorizing the consolidation of such
bonds with other bonds for purposes of such sale; showing compliance with the power of the County to incur indebtedness; directing the application of the proceeds of such bonds; pledging
the full faith and credit and taxing power of the County to the
payment of such bonds and providing for the levy and collection
of taxes necessary for the payment of the principal of and interest
on such bonds when due; authorizing and empowering the
County to issue and sell an amount not to exceed Two Hundred
Thirty-Five Million Three Hundred Seven Thousand
($235,307,000) in general obligation bond anticipation notes in
anticipation of the issuance and sale of the bonds authorized
hereby; . . .
ENACTED: 7/15/2014; SIGNED: 7/22/2014; EFFECTIVE: 9/5/2014
CB-24-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING THE ISSUANCE
AND SALE OF GENERAL OBLIGATION STORMWATER MANAGEMENT BONDS for the purpose of authorizing
and empowering Prince George's County, Maryland to issue and
sell an amount not to exceed Fifty-Seven Million Nine Hundred
Seventy-Eight Thousand Dollars ($57,978,000) in aggregate
principal amount of general obligation stormwater management
bonds for the purpose of providing funds for financing in whole
or in part costs of the planning, acquisition, construction, reconstruction, establishment, extension, enlargement, demolition or
purchase of certain capital projects set forth in the capital budget
of the County for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2014, constituting facilities (including without limitation any land, interest in
land or equipment) for the control and disposition of storm and
surface waters, including floodproofing, flood control or navigation programs and other stormwater programs and systems, environmental restoration and/or wetlands construction, and the protection, conservation, creation and acquisition of certain property
w w w . t h e s e n t i n e l . c o m
E-13
COUNTY COUNCIL
described in the Maryland Annotated Code Environment Article
consistent with federal and Maryland laws and regulations on the
subject of nontidal and private wetlands, as applicable, including
describing the capital projects to be financed in whole or in part
from the proceeds of the bonds hereby authorized and the estimated costs thereof; prescribing or providing for the procedures
for the issuance and sale of such bonds, including at private (negotiated) sale or public sale; declaring the County's official intent
to reimburse itself for certain expenditures paid before the issuance of the bonds authorized hereby in accordance with applicable Income Tax Regulations; authorizing the consolidation of
such bonds with other bonds for purposes of such sale; directing
the application of the proceeds of such bonds; providing for the
levy and collection of taxes necessary for the payment of the
principal of and interest on such bonds when due; authorizing
and empowering the County to issue and sell an amount not to
exceed Fifty-Seven Million Nine Hundred Seventy-Eight Thousand Dollars ($57,978,000) in general obligation stormwater
management bond anticipation notes in anticipation of the issuance and sale of the bonds authorized hereby; . . . ENACTED:
7/15/2014; SIGNED: 7/22/2014; EFFECTIVE: 9/5/2014
CB-44-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING BORROWING TO
FINANCE CAPITAL PROJECTS FOR PUBLIC SAFETY
FACILITIES for the purpose of authorizing Prince George's
County, Maryland, to borrow money upon its full faith and credit
at any time and from time to time, in an aggregate principal
amount not exceeding $240,839,000 to finance the design, construction, reconstruction, extension, acquisition, improvement,
enlargement, alteration, renovation, relocation, rehabilitation, or
repair of Public Safety Facilities (including Fire/EMS Department Facilities), including the acquisition of sites therefor; prescribing terms and conditions upon which bonds issued pursuant
to this Act shall be issued and sold and other incidental details
with respect thereto; providing generally for the issuance of such
bonds and providing for such borrowing to be submitted to a referendum of the legal voters of the County.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
CB-45-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING BORROWING TO
FINANCE CAPITAL PROJECTS FOR LIBRARY FACILITIES for the purpose of authorizing Prince George's County,
Maryland, to borrow money upon its full faith and credit at any
time and from time to time, in an aggregate principal amount not
exceeding $32,243,000 to finance the design, construction, reconstruction, extension, acquisition, improvement, enlargement,
alteration, renovation, relocation, rehabilitation, or repair of Library Facilities including the acquisition of sites therefor; prescribing terms and conditions upon which bonds issued pursuant
to this Act shall be issued and sold and other incidental details
with respect thereto; providing generally for the issuance of such
bonds and providing for such borrowing to be submitted to a referendum of the legal voters of the County.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
CB-46-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING BORROWING TO
E-14
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
COUNTY COUNCIL
COUNTY COUNCIL
COUNTY COUNCIL
FINANCE
CAPITAL
PROJECTS
FOR
PRINCE
GEORGE'S COMMUNITY COLLEGE FACILITIES for the
purpose of authorizing Prince George's County, Maryland, to
borrow money upon its full faith and credit at any time and from
time to time, in an aggregate principal amount not exceeding
$93,617,000 to finance the design, construction, reconstruction,
extension, acquisition, improvement, enlargement, alteration,
renovation, relocation, rehabilitation, or repair of Community
College Facilities, including the acquisition of sites therefor; prescribing terms and conditions upon which bonds issued pursuant
to this Act shall be issued and sold and other incidental details
with respect thereto; providing generally for the issuance of such
bonds and providing for such borrowing to be submitted to a referendum of the legal voters of the County.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
the Clerk of the Council, County Administration Building, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland. Telephone (301) 952 3600.
00004046 1t 08/07/14
CB-47-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING BORROWING TO
FINANCE CAPITAL PROJECTS FOR COUNTY BUILDINGS for the purpose of authorizing Prince George's County,
Maryland, to borrow money upon its full faith and credit at any
time and from time to time, in an aggregate principal amount not
exceeding $238,182,000 to finance the design, construction, reconstruction, extension, acquisition, improvement, enlargement,
alteration, renovation, relocation, rehabilitation, or repair of
County Buildings including the acquisition of sites therefor; prescribing terms and conditions upon which bonds issued pursuant
to this Act shall be issued and sold and other incidental details
with respect thereto; providing generally for the issuance of such
bonds and providing for such borrowing to be submitted to a referendum of the legal voters of the County.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
CB-48-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING BORROWING TO
FINANCE CAPITAL PROJECTS FOR PUBLIC WORKS
AND TRANSPORTATION FACILITIES for the purpose of
authorizing Prince George's County, Maryland, to borrow money
upon its full faith and credit at any time and from time to time, in
an aggregate principal amount not exceeding $122,385,000 to finance the design, construction, reconstruction, extension, acquisition, improvement, enlargement, alteration, renovation, relocation, rehabilitation, or repair of Public Works and Transportation
Facilities, including the acquisition of sites therefor; prescribing
terms and conditions upon which bonds issued pursuant to this
Act shall be issued and sold and other incidental details with respect thereto; providing generally for the issuance of such bonds
and providing for such borrowing to be submitted to a referendum of the legal voters of the County.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
CB-50-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING AMENDMENT OF
SECTION 822, CHARTER OF PRINCE GEORGE'S
COUNTY for the purpose of proposing an amendment to Section 822 of the Charter of Prince George's County to clarify that
general obligation bonds shall be in serial and/or term form.
CB-51-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING AMENDMENT OF
SECTION 407, CHARTER OF PRINCE GEORGE'S
COUNTY for the purpose of proposing an amendment to Section 407 of the Charter of Prince George's County to provide that
immediately upon a vacancy in the Office of the County Executive, the Chief Administrative Officer shall become the Acting
County Executive until a County Executive is chosen by the
methods established in this Section of the Charter.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
CB-52-2014 (DR-2) - AN ACT CONCERNING AMENDMENT OF SECTIONS 317, 809, 1008, AND 1105, CHARTER OF PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY for the purpose of
proposing amendments to Sections 317, 809, 1008, and 1105 of
the Charter of Prince George's County to change the number of
designated newspapers of record from three to one or more; and
to designate two or more primary sources of County maintained
electronic media available to the public for publication and transmission of official County notices.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
CB-53-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING AMENDMENT OF
SECTION 901, CHARTER OF PRINCE GEORGE'S
COUNTY for the purpose of proposing an amendment to Section 901 of the Charter of Prince George's County to include disability and sexual orientation as additional bases of prohibited
discrimination in the County personnel system.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
CB-54-2014 - AN ACT CONCERNING AMENDMENT OF
SECTION 307A, CHARTER OF PRINCE GEORGE'S
COUNTY for the purpose of proposing an amendment to Section 307A of the Charter of Prince George's County to increase
the number of consecutive terms that a person may serve on the
County Council or as County Executive from two terms to three
terms.
Enacted on July 23, 2014. This Act shall be submitted to the
legal voters of the County for their approval or disapproval
at the General Election to be held in the County on Tuesday,
November 4, 2014.
BY ORDER OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
Mel Franklin, Chairman
ATTEST:
Redis C. Floyd
Clerk of the Council
Copies of these documents may be obtained from the Office of
w w w . t h e s e n t i n e l . c o m
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
THE PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY COUNCIL,
SITTING AS THE DISTRICT COUNCIL FOR THAT
PORTION OF THE MARYLAND-WASHINGTON
REGIONAL DISTRICT
IN PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND,
HEREBY GIVES NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING
CONCERNING
THE CHESAPEAKE BAY CRITICAL AREA
OVERLAY ZONE
SECTIONAL MAP AMENDMENT
Pursuant to Sections 21-105 and 21-216 of the Land Use Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland, and the provisions of
Subdivision 6, Division 2, Part 3 of the Zoning Ordinance of
Prince George's County, Maryland, being also Subtitle 27 of the
Prince George's County Code, the Prince George's County Council, sitting as the District Council, hereby gives notice of a public
hearing to receive testimony regarding the Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Sectional Map Amendment. The Critical Area encompasses land within 1,000 feet of the mean high tide along the
shores of the Anacostia, Potomac and Patuxent Rivers.
Individuals and representatives of community organizations who
wish to speak at the public hearing may register in advance by
calling 301-952-3600.
PUBLIC HEARING DATE/TIME:
Monday, September 8, 2014
7:00 p.m. (Doors will open at 6:00 p.m. for viewing of exhibits.)
PUBLIC HEARING LOCATION:
Council Hearing Room
First Floor, County Administration Building
14741 Governor Oden Bowie Drive
Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772
PURPOSE OF PUBLIC HEARING:
To give all interested persons the opportunity to express their
views concerning the proposed sectional map amendment.
The Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Sectional Map Amendment
information is provided on the Planning Department's website at
http://www.pgplanning.org/Projects/CBCAUpdate2014.htm
and the maps can be viewed on the Chesapeake and Atlantic
Coastal
Bays'
mapping
project
website
at
http://webmaps.esrgc.org/cbca/desktop/index. Paper copies of
the maps are not available because the files are large and the
maps cover expansive areas of the county. The best way to view
the changes is to go on the mapping website and search by street
address.
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO RESIDENTS, BUSINESS AND
PROPERTY OWNERS:
AUGUST 7, 2014
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
COUNTY COUNCIL
The hearing may be important to persons owning land within
the Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Sectional Map Amendment because the boundaries of the Critical Area are changing. Approval
of the sectional map amendment could result in more or less of a
property being within the Critical Area, or a property may be
within the Critical Area for the first time. These changes may affect how much of a property can be built upon.
• Individual speakers and representatives from a group or
groups will be limited to three (3) minutes. Persons desiring to
speak may register in advance or fill out a registration card available at the hearing.
• Written testimony and/or exhibits will be accepted in lieu of,
or in addition to, oral testimony.
E-mails or faxes will not be considered, unless followed by an
original mailed to the Clerk of the Council.
Place your
legal ads in
• Until the close of the record, at least fifteen days after the
public hearing, or close of business September 23, 2014, written
comments may be submitted to: Clerk of the Council, County
Administration Building, Room 2198, 14741 Governor Oden
Bowie Drive, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772.
For further information, please contact CJ Lammers, Project
Manager, M-NCPPC, Countywide Planning Division at
301-952-3026 or by email at CJ.Lammers @ppd.mncppc.org.
ATTEST:
Redis C. Floyd
Clerk of the County Council
BY ORDER OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL,
SITTING AS THE DISTRICT COUNCIL,
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, MARYLAND
Mel Franklin, Chair
ATTEST:
Joe Zimmerman
Secretary-Treasurer
THE MARYLAND-NATIONAL
CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING
COMMISSION
By: Patricia Colihan Barney
Executive Director
00004041 1t 08/07/14
To
Advertise
in
The Sentinel
Legal
Classifieds!
Call Sherry Sanderson
301-838-0788
The
Sentinel
Call Sherry Sanderson
at 301-838-0788
E-15
E-16
THE PRINCE GEORGE’S SENTINEL
AUGUST 7, 2014
SPORTS
Maryland football looks to relish in underdog role
By Dan Kucin Jr.
Sentinel Sports
University of Maryland Head
Coach Randy Edsall recently spoke
with the media in Chicago about
the state of his team as a new member the Big Ten Conference. As he
looks forward to working with his
players in an upcoming preseason
camp, Edsall seems optimistic
about the Terrapins’ chances going
forward despite being the underdog.
Edsall will be working with a
young team, but it is a squad that
has one of the best playmakers in
the country—Stefon Diggs.
Despite missing most of the
2013-2014 campaign due to injury,
Diggs put up some impressive
numbers with the help of senior
starting quarterback C.J. Brown.
“C.J. Brown, our professional
student, who is back for his sixth
year, leader of our team as a quarterback, outstanding young man
from Pittsburgh who hopefully has
all the injuries behind him now,”
Edsall said. “He had a good year
last year, and we expect big things
out of him this year as we look forward to this season…Stefon Diggs,
our wide receiver, a junior wide receiver who has come back off his
injury, and ready to go this year and
fully recovered and really has done
a good job this offseason.”
Having two solid starters is a
good start, but Maryland will need
to rely on depth as well if it expects
to make waves in the Big Ten. In a
conference dominated by perennial
powerhouses such as Ohio State,
Michigan and Wisconsin, Edsall
understands the challenges that lie
ahead. Edsall said the biggest thing
his team has to focus on is what other teams are studying and what they
do on both sides of the ball.
“We're very thrilled to be a part
of the Big Ten Conference and
everything that it represents and
stands for,” said Edsall. “We know
we have a tremendous challenge
that's ahead of us this year as we enter the Big Ten, but one that we're
really looking forward to.”
The University of Maryland
will not have a cupcake schedule to
work with. They face an up-andcoming team in James Madison on
August 30, and will face Ohio State
at home on October 4. Maryland
will also face a former ACC foe
against West Virginia in their third
match-up of the season. Maryland
dominated the Mountaineers last
year 37-0 in a neutral site match at
M&T Bank Stadium.
“Well, I think it will be electric,” said Edsall when asked about
their upcoming schedule. “I think it
will be a sold-out crowd. It will be
something that I know our fans are
looking forward to. Ohio State is a
program with great tradition and
history and one that has done very,
very well…And it will be something that I think everybody that's in
attendance and everybody that gets
a chance to watch on TV wished
that they were there, because I think
it will be a ton of excitement, one
that I know we're looking forward
to as well as all the other games
we're going to play.”
Local boxer signs deal with Top Rank
By Brandy L. Simms
Sentinel Sports
Light welterweight boxer
Mike “Yes Indeed” Reed has
signed a promotional deal with Las
Vegas-based Top Rank.
Reed, who trains at Dream
Team Boxing Gym in Clinton, is
undefeated in ten professional
fights.
“I am delighted to sign with
Top Rank,” said Reed. “They’ve
been successful for a long time,
and have promoted the biggest
names in boxing from Muhammad
Ali to Manny Pacquiao. I am excited to have the same opportunities
as the legends that came before me.
Top Rank clearly has an understanding of how to market their
fighters and they know how to
build pay-per-view superstars.
Team Reed is looking forward to
having a long, successful relationship with one of the most prestigious promotional companies in
boxing.”
The Dream Team Boxing Gym
is owned and operated by Reed’s
father, trainer and manager,
Michael “Buck” Pinson.
“We wanted to join a company
that does a great job of moving
their fighters and Top Rank is
known for getting their fighters
world championship opportunities,” said Pinson. “Many of their
current fighters are world champions. We recently fought on one of
their shows. They treated us well
and were very professional.”
Reed enjoyed a stellar amateur
career, compiling an impressive
90-13 record and has been matched
competitively during his first ten
professional fights. In his most recent bout in June, Reed won a
unanimous decision over Alberto
Morales.
“I’m grateful to everyone that
has played a part in helping me
reach this level, but I’m just getting
started,” said Reed. “I’m looking
forward to representing the elite
class of fighters from the DMV and
the Beltway region.”
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PHOTO BY DAN KUCIN JR.
Senior quarterback C.J. Brown hopes Maryland makes a successful debut
in the Big 10 Conference.
Baysox pitcher hopes to end slump
By Dan Kucin Jr.
Sentinel Sports
Bowie Baysox starting pitcher
Tim Berry has been on a slide as of
late. He has dropped his last two
consecutive starts, and the Baysox
need him to produce in the latter part
of the regular season if they wish to
reach the postseason. Even though
Berry is considered to be Bowie's
top ace in the rotation, it wasn't an
easy journey for him to be put into
position that his is in now.
Berry joined the Orioles 40man roster after only being selected
as the 50th pick in the 2009 FirstYear Player Draft out of San Marcos
High School in California. The 2013
Arizona Fall League rising star is a
budding young prospect who was
chosen as a 2014 All-Star team selection earlier this year. Despite having his credentials, Berry has been
struggling to make adjustments to
his game after the All-Star break.
Berry has gone 5-7 this season
with an era of 3.71. These might not
seem like mind-blowing numbers,
but he has been a staple in the present rotation, and he has contributed
to Bowie's fifth-best pitching staff in
the Eastern League Division. In
Berry's last start against the Akron
Aeros, he struggled, surrendering
two earned runs, five hits, and three
walks in five innings pitched in a
shutout loss 4-0.
Consistency has been a bit of an
issue for Berry, but he is known for
being an aggressive strikeout pitcher. He is ranked as the eighth best
pitcher in the Eastern League and he
is closing in on 100 strikeouts for the
year. Coming into this season, Berry
was ranked by Baseball America as
the Orioles sixth-best prospect within the organization.
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