This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:
1994 .. 1907 .. (Ad) Helping the Pocomoke housewife-
Plus local history author Jim Duffy's TV segment about The Ice Cream Heist of 1908.
Family friendly and striving to be a worthy choice for your Internet browsing. Comments and material submissions welcome: tkforppe@yahoo.com . Pocomoke City-- an All American City And The Friendliest Town On The Eastern Shore.
This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:
Rocket Lab's Electron launch vehicle arrives at the Company's Integration and Control Facility in Virginia ahead of the inaugural mission from Launch Complex 2 at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (Photo: Business Wire)
“We are looking forward to seeing Electron take to Virginia skies for the first time very soon”
(View news story:)
CALLING ALL ARTS AND CRAFTS VENDORS!!!
The Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce is now seeking handmade arts and crafts for their annual Christmas festival taking place on November 12, 2022 in Pocomoke City at the Pocomoke Community Center.
Interested vendors can visit the chamber website at Our Christmas Arts & Crafts Festival (pocomokechamber.com) for more information about the festival and a vendor application.
Applications are honored on a first come, first served basis and must include payment in full.
For questions or concerns, please call the Chamber of Commerce at 410-957-1919.
(WBOC)
POCOMOKE CITY, Md. - Worcester County authorities say a Pocomoke City home was burglarized and set ablaze early Monday morning.
The Worcester County Fire Marshal's Office said the Pocomoke City Police Department were investigating a burglary that occurred at around 4:45 a.m. at a home at 601 Young St. Upon arrival, the officers saw the rear of the single-story home on fire, and spreading fast.
The Pocomoke Volunteer Fire Company, along with firefighters from Stockton, Snow Hill and New Church, Va., worked together to quickly extinguish the flames. Fire investigators from the Worcester County Fire Marshal’s Office determined the fire was intentionally set.
Anyone with information relating to the fire is asked to contact the Fire Marshal’s office at 410-632-5666 or the Maryland Arson Hotline at 800-492-7529. Anyone with information relating to the burglary is asked to contact the Pocomoke Police Department at 410-957-1600. You can remain anonymous.
(WTOP)
A small earthquake shook parts of Maryland late Tuesday evening.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the magnitude 2.0 earthquake occurred near Sykesville, in Central Maryland, at around 11:49 p.m. Tuesday with a depth of around 3.1 miles.
According to the agency’s Did You Feel It site — which gathers user-submitted reports of earthquake intensity — more than 200 people felt the earthquake, with most reporting weak to light shaking.
The quake was most widely felt in Carroll, Howard and Anne Arundel counties, but reports of weak shaking were received from as far away as Frederick, Gaithersburg and Silver Spring.
A spokesperson for the Howard County Police Department told WTOP that 911 operators received a few calls from residents who had “heard a boom or felt a rumble.”
The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office and the Maryland State Police’s Westminster barrack had not received any reports of injuries or damage in their area as of Wednesday morning.
Last year, a small 2.1-magnitude earthquake shook parts of Clarksville.
(WMDT)
BERLIN, Md. – It’s been 91 days since the death of 14-year-old Gavin Knupp. 91 days without a named suspect or arrest.
(View news story:)
91 days with no answers: Police respond to teen's hit-and-run - 47abc (wmdt.com)
(Eastern Shore Post)
(3 items)
December, 2001
Baltimore Sun
June, 1935
The Evening Star (Washington, DC)
April, 1950
Salisbury Times
Old Camp Meetings
Throwback Thursday w/ Jim Duffy - Camp Meetings | DelmarvaLife | wboc.com
This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:
"Say it isn't so" might by what many students are thinking.
A final decision may be made during a Somerset County Board of Education meeting on October 18th on a plan for virtual learning on days when schools otherwise would be closed due to adverse weather conditions.
(Crisfield-Somerset County Times)
(excerpt)
Days off from doing school work because of inclement weather may become a thing of the past for students after the Somerset County Board of Education moved through first reader a virtual instruction plan that would allow teaching to occur online when students are not in school.
Lessons and/or assignments through a device provided by the schools would be for a minimum of four hours for up to eight total inclement weather days this school year. Secondary school students would attend from 8 a.m. to noon and elementary students from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
(WMDT)
SNOW HILL, Md. – Tuesday, members of the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) and Motor Vehicle Administration (MVA) stopped in Worcester County to highlight priorities for Fiscal Year 2023.
(View news story:)
MDOT shares FY23 Consolidated Transportation Program with Worcester Co. officials - 47abc (wmdt.com)
(WBOC)
CHINCOTEAGUE, Va. - The Town of Chincoteague announced Tuesday morning that it has rescinded its storm-related local state of emergency and is returning to normal operations.
Winds will remain breezy through Wednesday. Expect rain showers with an occasional period of heavy rain. Tides are forecast to be elevated at or below minor levels through the Wednesday afternoon high tide cycle.
Go to www.chincoteague-va.gov for updated information.
Maryland State Police Reminding Motorists Move Over Law Expands To All Vehicles Beginning Oct. 1
(PIKESVILLE, MD) – The Maryland State Police are reminding motorists that beginning October 1, 2022, the Move Over Law in Maryland expands to require motorists to make a lane change or slow down when approaching any stopped, standing, or parked vehicle displaying warning signals – including hazard warning lights, road flares, or other caution signals including traffic cones, caution signs, or non-vehicular warning signs.
The intent of the Move Over law is to provide an extra barrier of safety for motorists, along with police officers, fire fighters, emergency medical service personnel and utility workers working on Maryland roads. It is hoped that drivers will become more aware of police and emergency workers and others stopped along the road and move away from them or slow down as they pass by the traffic stop or incident scene.
This movement should only be done if another lane in the same direction is available and the move can be made safely and without impeding other traffic. If moving to another lane away from the stopped vehicle is not possible, the law requires drivers to slow to a reasonable and prudent speed that is safe for existing weather, road, and vehicular or pedestrian traffic conditions.
Violating the law is a misdemeanor carrying a $110 fine and one point on your license. If the violation causes a crash, the fine is $150 and three points. If there is a death or serious injury, the fine is $750 and three points.
The original move over law went into effect in 2010. In 2014, the law was expanded to not only include police cars but also tow trucks, fire trucks and medical and rescue trucks as well. On Oct. 1, 2018, the law expanded again to transportation, service and utility vehicles, as well as waste and recycling trucks, with yellow or amber flashing lights or signal devices. Maryland is now the eighth state in the U.S. to expand its move over law to include any vehicle on the side of the road with its hazard lights on or road flares displayed.
Traffic-related incidents, including vehicle crashes, are one of the leading causes of death for law enforcement officers. From 2007 to 2017, 39 percent of law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty were lost in traffic-related incidents, the U.S. Department of Transportation said. In Maryland, more than 4,000 people were injured and 53 people were killed in work zone crashes between 2014 and 2019.
Motorists appear to have received the message, which is appreciated. Since the law initially expanded in 2014, troopers went from issuing 5,408 citations and 12,179 warnings that year to 886 citations and 4,030 warnings in 2021 for move over violations. Through Sept. 27, 2022, troopers have issued 622 citations and 3,215 warnings for similar violations this year.
The Town of Chincoteague’s Emergency Management Team continues to monitor the impending nor’easter.