Monday, April 14, 2014

REMINDER: April Is Designated National Distracted Driver Awareness Month

Motorists across the state are reminded that April is
National Distracted Driver Awareness month.
 

April is designated National Distracted Driver Awareness month. Troopers across the state (and in all states) will focus their efforts on distracted driving using intense traffic enforcement initiatives.


Maryland State Police will be using a combination of traditional and innovative strategies to target motorists who use cell phones illegally while driving. Extra patrols of troopers will be out specifically looking for distracted drivers.

 This effort is part of a high-visibility enforcement initiative that combines intense enforcement with further educating the public of the dangers of distracted driving.

The ultimate goal is to save lives by convincing motorists to obey the law.

READ MORE....

Sign Up For SUMMER CAMPS At The Delmarva Discovery Center

Keep the kids active and learning through the summer with these two great summer camp opportunities at
 

10 Reasons Why Summer Camp is GREAT for Kids!

1. Spend their day being physically active
 2. Experience success & become more confident
 3. Gain resiliency
 4. Unplug from technology
 5. Develop life-long skills
 6. Grow more independent

 
7. Have free time for unstructured play
 8. Learn social skills
 9. Reconnect with nature
 10. Make true friends

Sunday, April 13, 2014

MARSH FIRE

 
MARSH FIRE
 
 
 
There is a HUGE marsh fire in the Sanford, Virginia area this afternoon.  Fire units and Forestry have been on the scene for quite some time. 
 
PLEASE USE CAUTION when driving Saxis Road through Sanford, Virginia

TIME MACHINE ... 1969, 1973, 1954, 1920, 1907, 1903



(Reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archives material)

 
March, 1969
The Sunday Times (Salisbury)

Annie Oakley, Famous Marksman., Once Lived In Dorchester Town

By ORLANDO WOOTTEN Of The Times Staff

(Excerpt)

CAMBRIDGE — An exhibition of photographs in the Dorchester Historical Museum recalls one of Cambridge's most glamorous residents.

Annie Oakley, the most famous woman rifle shot and gun expert in the world, and for many years the star of "Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show," lived here with her husband for several years.
 
Annie and her husband, Frank Butler — himself a professional gun expert — bought a lot on Hambrooks Ave. in 1913 from Robert Matthews, local realtor, and soon built a substantial home there overlooking the Choptank River. It is now known as the Douglas Sites home on Bellview Ave.

The Butlers had visited Cambridge with a traveling show, and so liked the quiet Dorchester county seat with its tree-lined streets and easy-going ways that they decided after many years on the road, to spend a part of their life there. They lived off and on in Cambridge until 1922.

A few people in Cambridge can still remember Annie and Frank, or at least remember tales their parents told about these famous show people. Milton Hubbard, on High St., said his father, Samuel E. Hubbard, kept a hardware store in those early days, and that this store became a natural hang-out for persons interested in gunning and target shooting — including the Butlers. Sewell Matthews, whose father sold them the lot, remembers tales of the Butlers' kindness to other persons and of Annie's demonstrations with a rifle for local Girl Scouts.

Annie came a long way to Cambridge. From her birth on a lonely Ohio farm, through years with Buffalo Bill on the road, to visits as a guest of many kings and nobles in Europe, and the famous in this country, she came to a quiet middle age and semi-retirement along the banks of the Choptank.

 
September, 1973
Salisbury Times

Meteor Reported Over Delmarva

A bright blue meteor flashed across Maryland skies last night and was visible over a wide area.

The control tower at Friendship International Airport at Baltimore said it got reports from various fliers on the meteor. The pilots said it trailed off into amber sparks after rocketing from east to north. It was visible over the Eastern Shore for abou 20 minutes, starting about 6:30 p.m.

Fliers over Southern Maryland, over the Washington area and over Southern New Jersey reported seeing it.

Maryland State Police said residents in Dorchester County and Queen Anne's also reported the brilliant blue light—some figuring it was a plane crash.


 
April, 1954
Salisbury Times

Big League Baseball Comes To Baltimore

Boring Brownies Become Bright Orioles

(Excerpts)

By Jimmy Breslin

NEA Staff Correspondent

BALTIMORE (NEA) — The cab was taking you along North Charles Street, in the heart of Baltimore, in a city which this year gets its first glimpse of major league baseball In more than 52 years.

Yet, the woman cab driver was talking baseball in a way which made you think you were on Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn.

"Pitching," she said. "If Turlie and Larsen come up with any sort of a year, we'll be right up there.

(Orioles starters are Don Larson, Joe Coleman, Duane Pillette, and Bob Turley)

"There will be a big parade," says Mayor Thomas D'Alesandro, "the night the Orioles come to town for the April 15 opening day. And the parade will top anything we ever had here. There will be 5,000 orchids strewn over the route. This is a big thing to us."

Baltimore residents, all of whom are now baseball fans, purchased 600,000 reserved tickets before the Orioles even had them printed. Attendance in this long-time International League town- and not a good one at that — can come  very close to a million and a half this year. Last year, the minor league Orioles, drew less than 300,000. The Browns, in St, Louis, did even worse.

Footnote: For their 1954 major league debuting season at the new Memorial Stadium, Orioles attendance was 1,060,910.

 
May, 1920
Daily Times-Enterprise (Thomasville, Ga.)

HITS MAN FOR JEERING AT ENLISTMENT, FREED

Princess Anne, Md.—The case against William Whitney was tried before a jury here. The charge was assault and the accused was found not guilty.

Dr. S. Alexander Rosse, formerly a physician of Smith Island, was the prosecuting witness. He testified that in July 1919, Whitney met him in front of a store and struck him in the face.

Whitney admitted that he had struck Dr. Rosse but said that he did so because, while he was a member of Company L. of Crisfleld, and serving in the trenches in France, Dr. Rosse had told his father, John Whitney, that he was a "d___ fool" for enlisting in the army. He said his father told him that Dr. Rosse had made this remark and that three days afterward he met the doctor and struck him.

June, 1907
(Peninsula Enterprise- Accomac Court House)


Mr. William S. Dickinson, the leading merchant of Pocomoke City, and one of the most prominent and successful business men on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, died in a sanatarium in Philadelphia, of organic heart trouble, complicated with other diseases last Monday, in the 46th year of his age. He was also president of the Pocomoke City National Bank and Pocomoke City Building and Loan Association. He is survived by one daughter, Miss Miriam Dickinson.

The deceased was well-known in Accomac and the news of his untimely death is received with sincere sorrow and regret by his numerous friends in every part of thc county.

Footnote: The W. S. Dickinson & Son store in Pocomoke City offered a large stock of dry goods, notions, clothing, furs, and furniture.
 

 
April, 1903 (Time Machine archive)
(The Portsmouth Herald- Portsmouth, NH)

A Wild Goose Farm

What is said to be the only wild goose farm in the world is located on Chincoteague Island, says the Richmond (Va.) Times. The farm is a never ceasing object of interest to the visitor and of joy and profit to the owner. There are now between 300 and 400 in the flock. The progenitors of this remarkable flock were two which were "winged" in shooting, then tamed and used as decoys. The annual shipments from the farm are now about 400 to 600 fowl. Most of these are wild geese, but there are some Japanese ducks, brant and other game. The geese bring about $5 a pair. In summer they feed on the marshes of Chincoteague and Assateague, but as the cold weather comes on they gradually gather together near the owners residence, where food is provided for them. Mingled with the geese are many kinds of bird and fowl and fancy breeds of chickens and ducks and even some swans. Particular care is being taken with the swans, and the experiment of their culture bids fair to be a success in every way.
  

Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Blessing Of The Bikes ~ Tomorrow

Who couldn't use having someone watching over them when no one is watching out for them.
 Open to Motorcycles (on and off road), four wheelers, and bicycles.
 
 


Sunday, April 13, 2014
 2:00 pm. until....

Berea United Methodist Church
 
 30540 Depot Street, New Church Va.
2nd church on left on Depot Street
 
 

EVERYONE IS WELCOME

TIME MACHINE ... This Sunday's Preview.

  
1969.. Recalling Annie Oakley's Eastern Shore connection; 1973.. Reports of meteor streaking over Delmarva; 1954.. When Major League baseball found a Maryland home; 1920.. Veteran admits assault charge to Princess Anne jury. What's their verdict? 1907.. Pocomoke City loses a young leader of its business community; 1903.. Chincoteague Island is home to a one-of-a-kind wildlife farm.

Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye!
 
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!

Watch Moon Turn Red During Total Lunar Eclipse

During the overnight hours of April 14-15, skygazers there will have a front-row seat as the full moon is painted red, creating what many call a "blood moon," as Earth's shadow creeps across the lunar disk.
 
"Lunar eclipses are exciting because nature puts on a free show for everyone to enjoy, and it causes us to look back at the sky and reexamine our place in the solar system and beyond," said astronomer Raminder Singh Samra of the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre in Vancouver, Canada.
 
Lunar eclipses occur only when there is a full moon and the sun, Earth, and moon are precisely aligned for our planet's shadow to turn out the lunar lights. (Related: "Solar Eclipse Myths From Around the World.")

During a lunar eclipse, the moon passes behind our planet so that Earth blocks the sun's rays from striking the moon. Due to the moon's tilted orbit around the Earth, one doesn't occur every month. And total eclipses usually happen once every few years, though there are sometimes more than one in a year.
 
"Since the moon's orbit around the Earth is slightly inclined, it doesn't pass through the shadow every month, therefore every year we get an eclipse twice a year—very rarely we can get up to five," said Samra.
 
Unlike solar eclipses, lunar ones are safely visible to the unaided eye. (A solar eclipse occurs when the moon comes between the Earth and the sun and blocks the disk of the sun.) (Related: "How to Safely Watch a Solar Eclipse.")
 
Lunar eclipses have been considered an awe-inspriring sky event for millenia, and ancient astronomers could do rudimentary but fundamental science with them, says Samra.
 
"Many cultures have mythologies associated with lunar eclipses so there has always been interest in the eclipses," said Samra. "The ancient Greeks were able to use the Earth's shadow cast on the moon to predict the approximate relative sizes of the two bodies."
 
Lunar eclipses make the scene in skies over heavily populated cities and towns, making next week a special event for all sky-watchers.

CONTINUE READING...

Hogan Early Fundraising Outpaces Dem and GOP rivals - Grassroots Support Surges

 
Hogan outpaces Democrat and Republican rivals in early fundraising; $422,000 raised in smaller average donations than Brown, Gansler and GOP challengers.
 
Annapolis, MD – April 11 – In the first reporting period of his campaign for governor, Larry Hogan raised $422,000 in mostly small donations from more than 1,800 individuals.  The sheer amount of money raised puts the Anne Arundel County business owner and grassroots leader on par with where Lt. Governor Anthony Brown was at this stage of his campaign but with nearly twice the number of donors. 
 
The early haul puts Hogan ahead of where Attorney General Doug Gansler was 68 days after his announcement and approaches the combined amount raised by his Republican challengers in the last calendar year.
 
Hogan said, “Thanks to our supporters, volunteers and staff we’ve surpassed our outreach and fundraising goals.  The incredible outpouring of support from middle class voters across our state shows that Marylanders want a governor who’ll put working families and small businesses ahead of Annapolis elites,” Hogan said.
 
 
In a memo detailing the donations, the campaign also reported “surging” grassroots support, a robust social media presence and its first TV and radio ads.  In the first months the campaign, Hogan had visited 20 of Maryland’s 24 counties, had more than 3,000 people attend events, and strengthened its social media presence by an additional 10,500 followers.
 
 

Friday, April 11, 2014

Pocomoke City Police Chief Is Guest Speaker At Coppin State University


Pocomoke City Police Chief Kelvin Sewell, a graduate from Coppin State University,  was a guest speaker at his Alma Mater during  The University's Criminal Justice  Career Day.


The Chief spoke to students, staff and faculty on the subject of Youth Violence in our society today.


Chief Sewell became the Pocomoke City Chief of Police on December 1, 2011 after  working 25 years as a homicide detective with  Baltimore City.

DOWNTOWN POCOMOKE SPRING FESTIVAL

DOWNTOWN POCOMOKE CITY
SATURDAY !!
 
 

DOWNTOWN POCOMOKE CITY ON SATURDAY.....
Delmarva Discovery Center

TOMORROW is Pocomoke City's Downtown Spring Festival from 11 am - 4 pm.
 
  Stop in the Delmarva Discovery Center and get 50% off your admission. 
 
Children can get their passport stamped and also receive a free gift.

Shop the Museum Store ...
for Mother's Day cards from Leanin' Tree, education books and toys for children, and cookbooks, jewelry, sea glass, artwork, and much more by local artists.

Information on summer camp and upcoming events will also be available.

Farmer's Market in Downtown Pocomoke

 
Farmer's Market in Downtown Pocomoke
 
Fri, April 11, & Sat, April 12
 7am - 12pm
 
See downtownpocomoke.com or call 410-957-1333 for more information.

Chamber Challenge Voting ~ VOTE Everyday!!

 Voting has been extended to April 15
 
KEEP VOTING.......
 


NEW VOTING  DEADLINE IS APRIL 15!!

Click here and vote daily through March for the Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce to win the Maryland Small Business Week Awards Chamber Challenge.

Soles for Souls at Taylor Bank

The Maryland Banker's Association's Council of Professional Women in Banking and Finance announced that their 2014 philanthropic initiative will be to support Soles4Souls (http://soles4souls.org).  

The website gives you an idea of why this is a worthwhile cause. 

 Taylor Bank is supporting this drive with collection boxes in 
ALL  branches.



The condition of the shoes can be new to very used.  The only shoes not acceptable are those that have mold or mildew on them.


Shoe collection continues up to the end of April. 
 
 NOW is a GREAT time to clean out the closet and make a great donation at the same time. 
 
 PLEASE be sure that shoes with laces are tied together, shoes without be rubber banded together.

Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce- Facebook

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Convicted Accomack Arsonist Tonya Bundick Back In Court For Motions Hearings and More

Bundick's motion for venue change approved, motion for 62 separate trials continued

ACCOMACK COUNTY, Va.-  A judge has approved a change of venue request for convicted Accomack County arsonist Tonya S. Bundick if she goes to trial on the additional 62 charges filed against her.

During a motions hearing held in Accomack County Circuit Court, Bundick's defense appeared before a judge to discuss their a change of venue request, her request to wear makeup in court and her request for 62 separate trials for all 62 additional arson charges she is facing.


During Thursday's action, judge approved Bundick's request for a change of venue to Virginia Beach and also granted her request to wear makeup in court if she ends up going before a jury again.

However, the judge held off on making a ruling on Bundick's request for 62 separate trials on the additional charges. He said he wanted to reread the testimony Bundick and her co-defendant and fiance, Charlie R. Smith III, gave during their last trial. In addition, the judge said he wants to read statements Smith gave police during his recorded confessions.

Bundick was indicted by a grand jury for an arson spree that occurred between November 2012 and April 2013 in Accomack County.

CONTINUE READING...



TIME MACHINE ... This Sunday's Preview.

  
1969.. Recalling Annie Oakley's Eastern Shore connection; 1973.. Reports of meteor streaking over Delmarva; 1954.. When Major League baseball found a Maryland home; 1920.. Veteran admits assault charge to Princess Anne jury. What's their verdict? 1907.. Pocomoke City loses a young leader of its business community; 1903.. Chincoteague Island is home to a one-of-a-kind wildlife farm.

Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye!
 
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Mayor and New District 3 Councilman Sworn In at Monday Night Meeting


POCOMOKE CITY MAYOR AND COUNCIL MEETING
7:30 PM, Monday, April 7, 2014

Pocomoke City Mayor Bruce Morrison ran unopposed in the Pocomoke City election.  This is Mayor Morrison's second term as Mayor of Pocomoke City.


Worcester County Clerk of Court Steve Hales conducts the swearing  in of Mayor Bruce Morrison for a new three-year term with the Mayor's wife Laura by his side. Photo Lori Trotter

The new  voice in Pocomoke City Hall, District 3
Councilman R. Dale Trotter
Mayor Morrison handles the  swearing  in of R. Dale Trotter for a three-year term as District 3 City  Councilmember.  Wife Lori is also beside the Councilman. Photo/Lori Trotter

In a special statement before the election Trotter explained what some of his concerns for District 3 and Pocomoke City were.  This is just part of the his statement:

Photo Lori Trotter

"I am well aware of concerns within our district; and I, like you; realize that our district desires far exceed "downtown revitalization". Although much work is needed to continue in a forward motion, we must not forget what binds this community together, our citizens."


Special recognition was also given to  outgoing City Council member Don Malloy.

Delegate Mike McDermott's End of Session Letter

 
End of Session Wrap Up
 By Delegate Mike McDermott
 
Dear Fellow Citizen and Patriot of the Eastern Shore,
 
I wish I could report to you that Annapolis had changed its way of thinking this year. I had hoped beyond hope that the majority party that rules the General Assembly would wake up to the economic realities facing our great state and move us in the appropriate direction. Sadly, the days of reckless spending, tax and fee increases, and overly burdensome regulations have not yet ended for Maryland. I truly wanted to report to you that the legislature resisted robbing from teachers’ pensions, the Chesapeake Bay Trust, and the Transportation Trust Fund, but that is not the case. I wanted a health care fix that would work for our people and an energy policy that made sense, but we continue to throw millions down a dark hole and refuse to seek natural gas reserves that would make us energy independent.
 
 
Instead of fiscal restraint and smart initiatives, the General Assembly has left us with:
 
Budgeting Fiasco

Increased spending by $2 Billion over last year’s budget

$4.5 billion robbed from “Trust Funds”

$200 million robbed from Teacher Pensions ($200 million more in 2015)

Rejected efforts to cut spending by hundreds of millions

Bond Bill/Earmark debt that outpaces revenue by  $300 million, leading to higher   Property Tax rates statewide.
 
 
Obamacare Debacle

$150 million spent on a computer system that will never work

Presented the governor with a blank check to pay for medical services for people who simply claim they could not get on the website

Added 400 employees to take calls and then abandoned the whole system!

The governor is now switching to another system, and we just gave him an additional $50 million to start that process with no idea on the total cost to operate the system.
 
 
Transgender Rights

Instead of truly facing the issues surrounding transgender rights, the House passed incoherent legislation that will allow for the following:

 A man can use the women’s restroom if he simply thinks he should be a woman.

A woman’s day spa must allow a man access to their disrobing areas and dressing rooms if the man claims he is really a woman at heart.

A YMCA or local gym will need to provide alternative facilities for a transgender or they must allow a man to use the women’s locker room if he so desires.


These actions will cost businesses and nonprofit organizations money as they seek to preserve the integrity of their establishments from these changes.
 
 
Marijuana Decriminalization

Possession of marijuana is not a crime in Maryland anymore. The Democrats have given a green light and a destructive message to our young people

While we struggle with our students being competitive on a global scale, we will now have  to address increasing drug use among our children

While seeking to deliver people from potential criminal records, they have now ensured a limited future for our young people who get caught in the cycle of drug abuse.
 
Yet again, the actions taken by the Democratic majority have clearly damaged our state and demonstrated a reckless disregard for our  Eastern Shore values.
 

Despite these egregious actions by the General Assembly, I continue to stand and fight for values that matter to you:
 
Victim Rights
 
I was able to see Alex’s Law pass this year. It guarantees the right for any victim or their representative to make a Victim Impact Statement in court. This will provide an outlet for many victims and their families to truly have “their day in court.”
 
This year I offered bills to reduce the state income tax by 10%. I also fought for bills to eliminate the death tax and was happy to see the House finally accept reductions in the estate tax, which will help many Maryland families.
 
Fighting for Open Government
 
Government transparency and allowing our citizens to actively participate should be a top priority. Currently, the Senate, unlike the House of Delegates, has failed to offer online video recordings of their committee proceedings. I believe that citizens deserve to have all of the necessities required to make informed decisions regarding their government, which is why I co-sponsored a bill (HB177) requiring Senate proceedings to be available through online video. Another important issue in this state involves the redistricting process, which is currently controlled solely by the Governor. HB1327, which I also co-sponsored, would make gerrymandering a more open process. Lastly, to help cut down on voter fraud, I also co-sponsored HB1094 which would require proof of identity at polling places.  Although these bills garnered my full support, they did not pass through the legislature this session.
 

 
Striving to Make Maryland “Business Friendly”
 
For the third consecutive year, the Maryland Business for Responsive Government   honored me with an award for my efforts in defending business freedom across the state. My “Truth in Permitting” bill (HB213) would have made the building permit process fair for contractors and carpenters. Other bills, like my “Fiscal Impact Requirement” bill (HB26), would have required an agency to provide a fiscal impact statement before any regulatory changes could be made to the code. My “Corporate Income Tax Rate Reduction” (HB199) bill would have reduced taxes on businesses and made Maryland more competitive with neighboring states.
 
Reducing Our Tax Burden   
  
Some of my other bills, like HB75, would have eased the income tax burden on retirees by exempting $50,000 from taxable income; and HB326 which would have reduced income taxes by 10% on all Marylanders. In our economy’s current state, every effort must be made to reduce the financial tax burdens on our families. It is far better for our people to decide where to invest and spend their money than for government to make decisions for them.
 
Standing Up for Shore Values
 
This year I fought to repeal the “Rain Tax” and prevent it from being levied on Eastern Shore citizens. Sadly, some of our local governments have opted to tax their citizens after receiving the state’s blessing. The repeal was not adopted, but it is fast becoming a bipartisan effort. I also co-sponsored bills to address concerns over the new “Common Core” standards being applied in our public schools. While Common Core was not repealed, our concerns were too numerous to simply ignore. As a result, testing is being delayed and a significant overview has not been legislated.
 
Farming and Poultry Operations
 
The Phosphorous Management Tool, as the O’Malley administration would like to see it applied, would be disastrous for our grain and poultry farmers. Although we were able to garner an impact study on the effect these regulations will have on our economy and postpone implementation, I fear the tool will move forward by the end of this year. The damage has already been done as companies and banks are taking a hard look before expanding or loaning money on land that has an uncertain future. This is a devastating hit to our state or local economy. 
 
Choptank Electric Ratepayers
 
A bill that would have resulted in Choptank customers being forced to supplement a questionable “manure to energy” project with higher rates was changed into a study. If the project is successful, it can be revisited, but taxpayers should not be asked to subsidize a venture the private sector considers too risky for investment. Our energy policy should make every effort to deliver cheap, dependable energy to the citizens, businesses and industry of our state.
 
Moving Forward
 
Over last four years, I have fought to represent your values on the floor of the House. I have not kept silent, and I have not held back. There remain many walls that need to fall before our state can thrive again. The “liberal way” has not brought us closer to prosperity, yet I remain ever hopeful that Maryland will rise once again.  The Maryland legislature desperately needs representatives who will truly fight for the concerns and values of the Eastern Shore.
 
We are a state with incredible wealth in natural resources that we refuse to develop. We offer institutions of higher learning where our children receive an education only to seek employment in neighboring states. Our history tells we can do better, and our people still believe if you work hard enough, you can achieve great things.  I still believe in our great country and this blessed state we all call home. With your help, Maryland’s best days lie ahead.
 
Please feel free to visit my website or Facebook page to learn more about the events that took place in Annapolis during the 2014 Session.  It is a privilege to serve as your representative in a legislature that often fails to share our values. I will continue to argue, speak out, and vote on your behalf.  I appreciate and thank you for your support and interest.
 
With Warmest Regards, Godspeed,
   Mike McDermott
 

Crewmember from Royal Canadian Navy Frigate Rescued By Coast Guard

PORTSMOUTH, Va. — The Coast Guard medevaced a 26-year-old crewmember Monday from a 440-foot Royal Canadian Navy frigate approximately 30 miles east of Wachapreague.

Personnel aboard the HMCS Halifax contacted Coast Guard 5th District Command Center watchstanders at approximately 3:40 p.m. Sunday requesting a medevac for a crewmember experiencing abdominal pain.

Since the crewmember's condition was not life threatening, the Coast Guard and the Halifax agreed to conduct the medevac the following morning.

"Working with our partner agencies and the Halifax, we were able to coordinate the frigate altering course toward shore to minimize the crew's flight time and risk involved during the medevac," said Thomas Botzenhart, a search and rescue coordinator in the 5th District Command Center.

District watchstanders dispatched a crew aboard an MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter from Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City, N.C., at approximately 9 a.m. to assist.

The Jayhawk crew arrived on scene, landed on the ship, transferred the crewmember and a nurse into the helicopter and took them to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital in Norfolk.

Worcester County Criminal Enforcement Team Conclude Marijuana Distribution Investigation

On April 4, 2014, members of the Worcester County Criminal Enforcement Team concluded a two month marijuana distribution investigation.

As a result of this investigation, a search and seizure warrant was authored and executed for a residence in the Newark, Maryland.

During the execution of this search and seizure warrant members of the Worcester County Criminal Enforcement Team were assisted by the Worcester County Sheriff’s Office STAR Team and the Ocean City Police Department Narcotics Unit.

 Investigators recovered 7.5 lbs of marijuana.

An individual identified as Jerome McKay, Age 26, of Newark, Maryland was located at the residence. McKay was the focus of this investigation and was subsequently charged with possession of marijuana, possession with the intent to distribute marijuana, and possession of paraphernalia.

McKay was subsequently committed to the Worcester County Jail on a $7,000.00 bond.

Worcester County Sheriff's Office

Snow Hill This Weekend !


Hogan Details Shortcomings of O'Malley-Brown Era Following Final General Assembly


Wed. April 9, 2014 

Final General Assembly of O’Malley-Brown Administration marks seven-year legacy of squandered opportunities and broken promises at the expense of Maryland families and employers.

Annapolis, MD - April 9 - The final General Assembly of the O’Malley-Brown era adjourned and according to gubernatorial candidate Larry Hogan, it couldn’t have come soon enough.  Hogan, a business leader and founder of Maryland’s largest non-partisan grassroots organization, says despite spending nearly $10 billion more in FY2014 than in FY2008, Martin O’Malley and Anthony Brown achieved not only fewer but worse results in the key areas of cost of living, health insurance, job creation, business retention, education, poverty and energy.

Hogan said, “In nearly every quality of life measurement our state is worse off than it was seven years ago.  And even areas that showed modest improvement came at a horrendous financial cost due Martin O’Malley and Anthony Brown’s mismanagement and one-party rule in Annapolis.
 
Among the failures and shortcomings of the O’Malley-Brown era:
 
 
             They broke promises to state workers’ by diverting $200,000,000 from pension funds to plug their budget gap.
 
        They’ve eviscerated local arts funding to hike the film tax credit for Hollywood millionaires.
 
        They raided the Transportation Trust Fund then raised gas taxes to pay for mass transit.
 
        They hiked income taxes on families, small business and large employers.
 
        They blew $125,000,000 of our tax dollars on a health exchange website that still doesn’t work and was never needed in the first place; today, more Marylanders lack health insurance than when O’Malley-Brown took office. 
 
        More than 73,000 residents have had their health insurance policies cancelled and tens of thousands more have seen massive increases in their premiums and deductibles.
 
        They put the teacher union bosses that bankroll their political machine ahead of students, parents and classroom teachers. 
 
        They’ve badly mismanaged the education budget, as a result inner city schools are falling farther behind, state SAT scores are down and elementary school reading aptitude is flat.  And, even the teacher union said their rollout of Common Core was a mismanaged “train wreck.”   
 
 
        Their job-destroying tax hikes on the so-called rich and small businesses - those individuals earning $100k or more - backfired, missing revenue projections.
 
        Some entry level jobs will pay a little more but there will be fewer of them.
 
        There’s a federal investigation into the Anthony Brown Health Exchange but state lawmakers aren’t issuing their findings until well after the primaries.
 
        Thousands of employers are now “paying their fair share” in taxes albeit to Virginia and the Carolinas; about 6,500 companies have left Maryland taking with them more than 100,000 jobs.
 
        Likewise, more than 31,000 Maryland residents left for more affordable states, taking $1.7 billion each year out of our economy; among these were thousands of seniors on fixed incomes who can no longer afford to retire near their families.
 
        It costs you more when it rains and more again when you drive to the beach.
 
In sum, Martin O’Malley, Anthony Brown and their allies in Annapolis have made it more expensive to be born, work, hire, shop, drive, fill up your tank, fish, hunt, shoot, buy a house, sell a house, buy a car or sell a car or heat your home.  On the plus side, thanks to an election year reduction in the Estate Tax it will be a little less expensive when we die.
 
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Authority: Larry Hogan for Governor. John C. Wobensmith, Treasurer
 
 

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

NASA's Wallops Flight Facility ~ "Cosmic Highlights"

NASA's Wallops Flight Facility

Plenty of cosmic highlights over the next several days: tonight, the Sun, Earth, and Mars are in alignment, which occurs about every 26 months.

April 14—Mars makes its closest approach toward Earth.

 April 15—lunar eclipse across the United States (set your clocks early—first views start around 1:20 a.m. on the East Coast).

 And, here's a bonus for those in the Wallops area: the International Space Station will fly overhead tonight starting at 7:51 p.m. EDT—visible for 6 minutes.

Look for a very bright dot speeding across the sky appearing southwest and disappearing northeast with a max height of 88 degrees.