(WMDT)
Maryland health officials on what parents should know about RSV
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Maryland health officials on what parents should know about RSV - 47abc (wmdt.com)
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Maryland health officials on what parents should know about RSV - 47abc (wmdt.com)
This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:
(WBOC)
Watch: Burning Down Accomack - 10 Years Later | Latest News | wboc.com
(Shore Daily News)
CRS 18 launches successfully from Wallops - Shore Daily News
(WBOC)
ATLANTIC, Va. - NASA and commercial cargo provider Northrop Grumman were targeting 5:50 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 6, for launch of the company’s 18th resupply mission to the International Space Station but it had to be postponed due to a fire alarm at Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus spacecraft control center in Dulles, Virginia.
The Cygnus spacecraft and Antares rocket remain healthy at the Wallops launch site. The launch is now set to happen Monday, Nov. 7, in a five-minute window that opens at 5:27 a.m.
If my memory is correct it was sometime between 1995 and maybe 2005 when two young men were in the potato chip aisle in the Pocomoke Wal Mart. For some reason they set fire to the corner of a bag of potato chips. Of course the bag burned but when the flames reached the oil-covered chips inside the bag a real conflagration ensued. The fire spread from bag to bag and the amount of smoke released was beyond anyone's imagination. I think Wal Mart had to close for almost a week just so the smoke damage could be cleaned up.
Correction....my better half says it was maybe 2012 or 2013. Time flies when you get old.
(Crisfield-Somerset County Times)
MHT
The former Pocomoke City firehouse, sold by the city in June to Broadband Holdings LLC of Salisbury for $5,000, dates to 1939 with a 1955 addition. Nearly $258,000 in tax credits have been awarded to benefit a proposed $1.2 million renovation. The fire company relocated in 2008 to its current location on Market Street.
CROWNSVILLE — The former firehouse on Fifth Street in Pocomoke City is one of 16 projects statewide sharing more than $19 million in revitalization tax credits leveraging more than $92 million in additional investment to “breathe new life into our communities and towns,” said Gov. Larry Hogan.
The Maryland Historical Trust (MHT), a division of the Maryland Department of Planning, is providing the funds to “allow for refurbishments to revitalize sites in local communities across the state and serve as an effective investment tool for strengthening Maryland’s local economies and redevelopment across Maryland,” the governor added.
The former firehouse, sold in June by Pocomoke City for $5,000 to Broadband Holdings LLC of Salisbury, was built in 1939 and features a main central block, front and rear wings and a rear addition built in 1955. Unique to its design are the tall arched side windows and the inclusion of a large, vaulted meeting room, dining hall, and kitchen on the second floor.
The building acted as both a firehouse and a center for social life in Pocomoke City until 2008 when the fire company outgrew the space and relocated to its current facility on Market Street.
The $1.2 million restoration was awarded nearly $258,000 in tax credits to turn the former fire station into a mixed use building with commercial space on the first floor and housing on the second floor.
Other sites in Worcester County selected include three properties in Berlin: 11 North Main Street, 15-19 North Main Street, and the Powell Building at 7 North Main Street.
In Cambridge, the former F. W. Woolworth Company Building at 420-422 Race Street received a substantial tax credit as well.
The Historic Revitalization Tax Credit, administered by MHT, has invested more than $465 million in Maryland rehabilitation projects since 1996.
“It is an honor to be part of these awards that serve historic revitalization and play an integral part in advancing economic development,” said Planning Secretary Rob McCord. “The preservation of these historic sites enhances our state’s history and encourages projects that support the enjoyment of our state’s history, culture, and scenic beauty.”
Twenty-four applicants had sought $39.3 million in tax credits for construction projects totaling more than $210 million in estimated costs. The 16 projects selected for the 2023 tax credits were based on an established set of criteria, including those outlined by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior for historic building rehabilitations.
This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:
1897 ..
1960 ..
I don't remember the butter fire but I do recall the potato chip fire at WalMart.