Category Archives: Uncategorized

GOVERNOR O’MALLEY’S ENTRY INTO THE CONTEST TO FIND THE MOST GERRYMANDERED DISTRICT IN AMERICA

Click here   Dist_3 to see the most gerrymandered district in America.

Dist_3 Contiguous and compact? Not hardly!

Dist_3We invite anyone to find a more Gerrymandered district in America than the third Congressional district in Maryland.  The Governor had one purpose in mind in creating this new map and that was to put in play a congressional seat currently held by a Republican and thus help President Obama, thereby proving his worth to the National Democratic Party.

Submit your entries and we will see if anyone is more Machiavellian in their use of raw political power in furthering their political objectives than the Bully from Baltimore has been in his recent redistricting.

INVEST (IN ALL OF) MARYLAND

The Upper Shore Regional Council, along with the Mid-Shore Regional Council, Tri-County Council for the Lower Eastern Shore, Tri-County Council for Southern Maryland and the Tri-County Council for Western Maryland and the Rural Maryland Council have requested an amendment be made to Senate Bill 180 and House Bill 173, titled, InvestMaryland.

As you are aware, InvestMaryland encourages the development of public-private partnerships to fuel venture capital investment and grow the state’s knowledge-based industries. It is expected to stimulate up to $100 million in venture capital investments and create thousands of jobs.

The Regional Councils and the Rural Maryland Council are concerned that the vast majority of investments resulting from this legislation will be made within the urban and suburban core of the state between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. The Eastern Shore, Western Maryland and Southern Maryland will likely not benefit from this legislation in any appreciable manner. To help ensure that our Maryland communities have the same economic development opportunities that other areas will have through InvestMaryland, we propose that the bill be amended to provide that 12.5% of the revenues raised through InvestMaryland be appropriated to the Rural Maryland Prosperity Investment Fund (RMPIF). The RMPIF was authorized in 2006 after the General Assembly recognized the dire need for more state investment in our uniquely challenged rural areas. The proposed amendment will match the 12.5% set-aside for minority/urban small business financing in the InvestMaryland legislation as introduced.

To date, the RMPIF has never received an appropriation. It was authorized as the economy began to deteriorate and such investment became fiscally impossible. However, rural areas have continued to struggle with low employment, high poverty rates and crumbling infrastructures. As the economy begins to improve and the state begins to create new economic development opportunities like InvestMaryland, it must not forget its rural communities and the tools it already has in place to make targeted investment that will help address these persistent developmental needs.

The overall objective of the Rural Maryland Prosperity Investment Fund is basically the same as that proposed in the InvestMaryland legislation, but targeted to rural areas. It creates an environment for retaining and creating jobs that leads to economic prosperity. RMPIF will expand economic opportunity, build local and regional capacity, leverage or augment development funding from other sources, engender private investment in rural-serving projects and programs, and improve/protect the rural quality of life. It will also promote intergovernmental cooperation in rural regions as well as public/nonprofit collaboration on community projects and service delivery. And it will support entrepreneurial activity, help small or fledgling businesses succeed and develop regional infrastructure.

For these reasons, the state’s five Regional and Tri-County Councils, which represent 15 of the state’s 18 rural counties, respectfully request that InvestMaryland be amended so that 12.5% of the revenues raised through InvestMaryland be appropriated to the Rural Maryland Prosperity Investment Fund (RMPIF). We believe that doing so will ensure that the legislation stimulates economic development across the entire State of Maryland.

Background:
Currently, more than 25% of the state’s population lives in the state’s 18 designated rural counties located in the Western, Southern and Eastern Shore regions. Many of these communities, especially in the more remote regions, have higher rates of poverty and unemployment and lower rates of income and educational attainment than their metropolitan and suburban neighbors. Six rural Maryland counties currently qualify for the state’s distressed jurisdiction economic development assistance program due to especially high unemployment rates. Many rural communities face a host of difficult challenges relating not only to persistent unemployment and poverty, but to an aging population and an out-migration of youth, an inadequate access to quality housing, health care and other services, and a deteriorating or inadequate physical infrastructure. Local governments, educational and health care institutions, and private nonprofit service providers in rural areas are struggling to respond effectively to all these growing challenges.

The Rural Maryland Prosperity Investment Fund would provide grants and business reinvestment funds to organizations, local governments, and institutions of higher education who are working in support of four specific areas:

(1) Rural regional planning and development assistance, by targeting support to the state’s five rural regional planning and development councils and other multi-county economic efforts. The rural regional councils over the last six years have leveraged a modest state investment totaling about $8.4 million in operating funds to nearly $186 million in other funding sources such as federal and philanthropic funds for economic development projects and programs;

(2) Rural entrepreneurship development, including programs and activities undertaken by nonprofit organizations and institutions of higher education. Many rural economic development professionals are increasingly embracing entrepreneurship as an effective strategy for growing the tax base, expanding economic opportunities, and creating sustainable local economies in communities where citizens are typically poorer, older and more isolated from markets. Unfunded programs such as the Maryland Rural Enterprise Development Center and the Eastern Shore Entrepreneurship Center would be eligible to apply for important rural business development aid;

(3) Regional infrastructure projects that directly involve two or more units of local government, not to exceed 25 percent of the total cost of any particular project. These projects could include multi-jurisdictional water, wastewater, transportation, workforce housing, health care and commercial/ industrial facilities – the big ticket items that small communities often do not have the financial ability to address on their own; and

(4) Rural community development, programmatic assistance, and education, with funds to be divided equally between the existing Maryland Agricultural Education and Rural Development Assistance Fund (MAERDAF), which supports rural-serving agricultural and community development nonprofits, and the Rural Maryland Council, a federally recognized State Rural Development Council which functions as a statewide rural program and policy development coordination entity.

RMPIF would be administered by the Rural Maryland Council, an independent state agency which operates on a nonpartisan, collaborative basis, and consensus-oriented manner in providing assistance to rural communities and industries. RMPIF grants would be awarded on a competitive basis by the existing MAERDAF Interagency Grants Review Board. This Board is made up of representatives from six state agencies, including the Departments of Agriculture, Business and Economic Development, Housing and Community Development, Health and Mental Hygiene, and Natural Resources as well as the Rural Maryland Council. The MAERDAF Interagency Grants Review Board has been successfully awarding grants since 2001.

I will try to reach all of you over the next few days to discuss this proposal and would greatly appreciate your thoughts and suggestions.

Thank you, John

John A. Dillman III
Executive Director
Upper Shore Regional Council
410-810-1375

O’Malley Proposes to Ban Septic Systems

From Right Coast

Marty is just on an absolute roll in the destruction of Maryland’s prosperity.

Gov. Martin O’Malley, borrows a page from President Obama’s State of the Union address, and called on lawmakers Thursday to invest in advancements in education, clean energy and biotechnology to help spur Maryland’s economic future.

Gov. Martin O’Malley stunned environmentalists and builders alike Thursday by calling for a crackdown on housing developments that use septic systems — a bid to curb suburban sprawl and help restore the Chesapeake Bay.

His proposal, part of the annual State of the State address, set the stage for a fierce debate in Annapolis. Developers warned that it could stifle growth and cost jobs in a real estate industry still struggling to climb from the recession.

Speaking to lawmakers, O’Malley said that pollution from homes being built with septic systems is undercutting Maryland’s efforts to clean up the bay.

While the state has moved to curb pollution from farms and sewage treatment plants, the governor said, “there is one area of reducing pollution where so far we have totally failed, and in fact it has gotten much worse … and that is pollution from the proliferation of new septic systems — systems which by their very design are intended to leak sewage into our bay and water tables.”‘

continues on Right Coast

Legislators scoff at septic ban proposal

From Southern Maryland Newspapers Online

Among the hot-button items in Gov. Martin O’Malley’s State of the State address last week was a proposal to ban septic tanks in future subdivisions, which alarmed rural lawmakers concerned about the effect a ban could have on development and business back in their home districts.

Calvert County legislators joined their Annapolis colleagues in questioning the wisdom of O’Malley’s proposal. The administration is still crafting legislation, but expectations are that it will call for a prohibition on septics in new “major subdivisions,” defined as those with five or more homes.

During his speech O’Malley (D) touted state efforts to reduce farm run-off and pollution from sewage treatment plants and urban sources.

“But there is one area of reducing pollution where so far we have totally failed, and in fact it actually has gotten much worse, and that is the pollution from the proliferation of septic systems throughout our state – systems which by their very design are intended to leak sewage ultimately into our Bay and into our water tables,” O’Malley said.

Instead of using septic tanks, the most common method of sewage collection in rural regions of the state, developers would need to tap subdivisions into existing sewer infrastructure. Alternatives where sewer is not available would need to meet strict standards for nutrient removal and could resemble the smaller, community sewer systems that service some old neighborhoods, said Alison Prost, an attorney for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

House Minority Leader Anthony J. O’Donnell (R-Calvert, St. Mary’s) called the proposal a “bombshell” that “will kill jobs in the rural regions of our state” if passed.

“Think of the impact in for instance Calvert County,” O’Donnell said. “If you can’t build a house without a septic system even in some of our town centers, where development is supposed to be, we don’t have sewer in all of the town centers. That means there would be an effective moratorium on all building.”

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D-Calvert, Prince George’s) called the governor’s idea “a laudable goal but impractical” and said a ban would increase housing costs.

continues on Souther Maryland Newspapers Online

Proposed septic ban will harm Shore’s economy

Letter to the Editor, Delmarva Now

Gov. Martin O’Malley recently announced a ban on installation of septic systems in new residential subdivisions containing five or more homes to help clean the bay. This will further hurt the housing industry, reduce jobs and rural land values here on the Shore. 

Based on the Chesapeake Bay 5.3 Community Watershed Model, septic systems represent an estimated 6 percent of the total nitrogen load into the bay in 2000. Information about the loads from these systems is sparse; data is based on assumptions. But the governor’s message in “One Maryland” of Feb. 15 states: “We cannot continue to ignore one of the biggest causes of pollution in the bay — septic systems.”  Really, Gov. O’Malley, is 6 percent of the nutrient load the biggest cause of pollution in the bay?

This ban is nothing more than a power play by the governor and his main environmental friend — The Chesapeake Bay Foundation — to decide via Smart Growth where Marylanders can live and how they use their land outside a planned service area.

letter from John Kotoski, Berlin, continues

O’Malley Pushes Septic System Ban

The Capital

Gov. Martin O’Malley is moving forward on his pledge to make sure that no more housing developments are built with septic systems, which he called an outmoded technology that pollutes the Chesapeake Bay.

O’Malley joined key lawmakers yesterday afternoon to push for a bill requiring all new neighborhoods of five homes or more to be connected to a public sewer system or have a special group septic system.

“This is a common-sense step to stop making it worse,” O’Malley said at the State House.

He said phasing out septic systems is one of many actions needed to restore the health of the bay and its rivers.

O’Malley said that farmers have taken steps to reduce pollution, sewage plants are gradually being upgraded and efforts to combat stormwater pollution are getting off the ground.

Septic systems are “one of the last remaining causes of pollution in the bay about which we’ve done very little,” O’Malley said.

Most existing septic systems at homes are not designed to reduce releases of nitrogen, a nutrient that contributes to the Chesapeake’s oxygen-deprived “dead zones.” Even newer, more expensive septic systems don’t reduce nitrogen as much as sewage plants do.

O’Malley said he doesn’t want to vilify people who have septic systems or builders who have used them.

But he said it’s time to acknowledge that septic systems are not the best technology for treating human waste.

If the number of Maryland homes on septic systems continues to grow, he said, septic systems’ share of bay pollution – 7 percent statewide, 27 percent in Anne Arundel, according to BayStat – will grow as well.

A no-septic-system policy, however, would close off vast stretches of the state to new home construction. Many rural areas are not near sewage plants and local governments have no plans to expand sewer service.

The other option – community septic systems – is not common. When asked for an example, state officials could quickly name only one community, Riddle Farms near Ocean City.

Also, community septic systems can’t be built if they’re not in a county’s master development plan, according to Richard E. Hall, the state’s secretary of planning.

O’Malley acknowledged that the no-septic policy could cause property values to drop. But he said he wasn’t worried.

“One of my colleagues in government said, ‘You know, by your utterance of this challenge, you might have just wiped out a trillion dollars in land values on the Shore?’ ” O’Malley said. “And I told him I choose to look at it more like we have started to greatly improve water values throughout the state.

“What good is a property that sits on a dead river? What value is a town that sits on a river where fish no longer live? How valuable of a state do we have if the bay dies?”

Though the proposal is supported by environmentalists, it likely will face fierce opposition from builders, developers and rural lawmakers.

Sen. E.J. Pipkin, an Eastern Shore Republican whose district includes Queen Anne’s County, sat in on the governor’s news conference. Afterward, he was livid.

Pipkin said the ban on septics would make economic growth nearly impossible in his rural district. Without new homes, he said, employers and commercial developments won’t be drawn to the Eastern Shore.

continues on Capital

Proposed septic ban worries installers, housing industry

Baltimore Sun

Business has been slow lately for Earl E. “Gene” Preston Jr. In better times, the Fallston-based contractor said, he had about 15 workers servicing and installing septic systems for homes and businesses beyond the reach of public sewer in the Baltimore metropolitan area.

Lately, though, with the real estate slump dragging on and harsh winter weather hindering what little construction there is, Preston said, he has had to lay off five of his employees. He is worried he may have to let more go if legislation backed by Gov. Martin O’Malley passes that would either bar or raise the cost of building new homes on septic systems across Maryland.

The governor has called for a ban on new developments of five homes or more on septic systems. For single homes or smaller developments built off public sewers, he’s also pushing for the use of more costly but less-polluting septic systems. The changes are needed, O’Malley says, to help restore the Chesapeake Bay and to slow the loss of the state’s farmland.

But to Preston and others involved in building and selling homes in rural areas — and even in the outskirts of metropolitan areas like Baltimore — the push by the governor to clamp down on septic systems represents a threat to their livelihoods.

“It appears they want to just stop building,” Preston said this week as he watched his workers filling in the trenches they’d dug for a new septic system to serve a five-bedroom home being built in northern Baltimore County. “We’re a long way from the bay here.”

continues on Baltimore Sun

Del Mike McDermott Legislative Update: Governor’s Press Conference on Rural Septic Ban

Click here to read Delegate McDermott’s post on Governor O’Malley’s press conference on the Pocomoke Public Eye.

WFMD: Farmers Concerned About Anti-Septic Bill

They say it could impinge on their rights to subdivide their properties.

There’s a concern among farmers regarding a bill proposed by the Governor to ban septic systems in new subdivisions in Maryland. One provision would affect how farmers subdivide their properties.  If farmers divide up their properties so that their children can build homes, and continue the family tradition of farming, they could only do that once. “After that, they can no longer ever again in perpetuity, they could never subdivide their land,” says Frederick County Delegate Patrick Hogan, whose a member of the House Environmental Matters Committee which first received the bill on Tuesday. “For many farmers, this is their nest egg. This is their retirement. And this is basically taking away that value of their land,” he says.

Continues on WFMD Frederick

The Dagger: Sen. Glassman: Governor’s Septic Proposal Would Set Harford County Planning Back “40 Plus Years”

From the office of Sen. Barry Glassman:

Senator Barry Glassman, R – 35, said this week that Governor O’Malley’s recent septic proposal would throw out forty plus years of planning by Harford County.

The proposal would give the State veto authority over any housing development of five units or more that does not connect to a government run sewer system or have its own waste-water treatment which is not even permitted in Harford County.

Harford County was one of the first suburban counties to direct concentrated housing into a designated growth area, known as the development envelope which in later years became known as “Smart Growth.” Additionally, Senator Glassman said, “When we created the Rural Plan during my time on the County Council, we set a course for one of the most successful agricultural preservation programs in the United States.”

“This proposal turns local control and authority to the Maryland Department of Planning and the Maryland Department of the Environment,” added Glassman.

Harford County has approximately 31,053 septic systems. Most experts say that septic systems contribute 6 to 7 percentage of nitrogen into the Chesapeake Bay. Glassman reported that counties are already enforcing new storm water regulations and designing Watershed Improvement Plans to make ready for the EPA’s mandated reduction in total maximum daily loads (TMDL) of pollutants that work their way to the Bay.

Senator Glassman said, “Beyond its impact on local planning, the Bill will potentially devastate property values in Northern Harford County and further weaken the local home building industry and all the services related from nursery growers to well drillers and septic installers. I plan to unite our rural counties to fight this poorly conceived proposal and power grab,” concluded the Senator.

From the Dagger