Friday, April 8, 2022

Time Machine Preview

 This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:

1961  ..  Watered his private lawn during water emergency; sparred with mayor-


1961  ..   Says flare-up with city employee not a factor-

1830  ..  Fair warning-



1899  ..  Two school boards for Worcester schools-


2012  ..  Accomack tallying Sandy damage-


Plus TV segment with local history author Jim Duffy commenting about the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.

Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Concerns voiced to Worcester Board of Elections

 


(WMDT)

Some Worcester County community members joined in on the Worcester County Board of Elections meeting Wednesday morning to voice their concerns over election integrity.

View news story:

Worcester Board of Elections hear residents concerns over voting in the county - 47abc (wmdt.com)


 

Pocomoke Community Garden - Clarke Ave. & Willow Street

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Carvel Hall transfer agreement

                               

(WMDT)


CRISFIELD, Md. – Crisfield Mayor Barry Dize has announced the settlement of Carvel Hall to Phoenix Real Estate Holdings.

View news story:

Crisfield's Carvel Hall to Phoenix Real Estate Holding - 47abc (wmdt.com)

 At The Pocomoke Fairgrounds

Monday, April 4, 2022

Reminder to Virginia phone users in Area Code 757 areas

 Area Code 757

The date is drawing near, April 9, when phone users in the Area Code 757 region will need to use the 3-digit Area Code plus the 7-digit local number when placing calls.  Failure to do so will result in your call not being connected.

Those seeking new phone service on and after May 9 might be assigned a new Area Code 948.



Sunday, April 3, 2022

Update from State Senator Mary Beth Carozza

 


April 3, 2022

2022 Maryland General Assembly Update

Week Twelve: Record Tax Relief Signed into Law, Shore Budget Highlights, Rushing Bills to the Governor, Redistricting Update

 

Annapolis, MD – We are less than two weeks from the Maryland General Assembly adjourning sine die on April 11th. This week’s highlights include a bill signing with Governor Hogan and legislative leaders enacting the largest tax cut package in state history, Shore budget priorities, the rush to send bills to Governor Hogan by April 1, and a redistricting update.

 

Retiree Tax Relief

Senator Mary Beth Carozza joined Governor Hogan and legislative leaders at a Friday bill signing ceremony as the Governor signed into law the largest tax cut package in state history, including the Retirement Tax Elimination Act (SB 405), which will provide an additional $1.86 billion in long overdue tax relief for Maryland retirees, families and small businesses. This includes a $1.55 billion reduction in taxes for retirees 65 and older who make less than $100,000 in retirement income and $150,000 as a couple.

 

“For the past eight years, Governor Hogan has been pushing and working on retiree tax relief, and I have cosponsored all of his retiree and other tax-relief bills both as a Delegate and Senator. Going back to my early door-to-door visits with constituents back in 2013, I constantly heard from local retirees that they wanted to stay in Maryland but some were leaving for more retiree-friendly states,” said Carozza. “I want to thank Governor Hogan for making retiree tax relief a top priority and for being so persistent in seeing it all the way through into law.”

 

Budget Priories and Shore Highlights

With a record $7 billion Maryland budget surplus, Governor Hogan submitted supplemental budgets for fiscal year ’23 including $350 million for tax relief for retirees, working families and small businesses this year; $2.4 billion in the Rainy Day Fund; $50 million to support tourism; $36 million to support economic development and revitalization, $35 million to restore funding for providers serving victims of crime, and $30 million to serve 1,350 youth on the Autism Waiver waiting list.

 

The Governor’s $2.8 billion supplemental budget submitted on March 28th makes key investments in some of his administration’s core priorities, including support for police and public safety, an expanded cyber readiness and workforce initiative, and critical infrastructure and public health investments. This supplemental budget also funds top priorities for county leaders and local governments.

 

This supplemental budget also includes $1.35 million for safety improvements and renovation of the Ocean Pines Fire Department South Station in Worcester; $550,000 for a 10-unit hangar at Crisfield Airport in Somerset County; and $350,000 for Delmar streetscape upgrades on South Pennsylvania Avenue in Wicomico.

 

“Governor Hogan has always supported priority Shore projects tied to public safety and economic and community development. On behalf of our Shore community, I extend our deep appreciation to the Governor for his strong and steadfast support of these Shore priorities,” said Carozza. 

 

Rushing Bills to the Governor

Several contentious bills that the Governor may veto were rushed through the legislative process to be presented to the Governor by April 1st. By sending the bills to the Governor by this date, the legislature would have time to debate and override his vetoes before adjourning for the session. These include bills on marijuana legalization, paid family and medical leave, climate change, and abortion expansion. Carozza voted against these bills.

 

Legalizing Recreational Marijuana

“It makes no sense to legalize the recreational use of marijuana when we are in the middle of an opioid crisis, especially when overdose deaths have significantly increased during the pandemic, and we certainly don’t need a constitutional amendment to put legalizing marijuana on the November ballot,” said Carozza. (Senate Bill 833 and House Bill 1)

 

Paid Family and Medical Leave

Carozza said the legislature also jammed through a paid family and medical leave bill, Senate Bill 275, without proper vetting. “This mandate, imposed on both employers and workers, would give up to 24 weeks of paid family and medical leave. It’s a payroll tax, and the bill proponents couldn’t even tell us the cost. During the Senate Finance Committee voting session, even some of the Democrats who voted for it called it a ‘hot mess’, said Carozza. “There were so many basic, unanswered questions like just figuring out the cost share that it simply was irresponsible to vote for a major new government program without knowing the impact on employers and workers alike.” .

 

Other legislation that already has been sent to the Governor includes the omnibus climate change bill, Senate Bill 528 and the abortion bill, House Bill 937 that would have devastating impacts on Maryland businesses and consumers, and on women's  health respectively. The abortion bill expands abortion providers beyond physicians to include other healthcare occupations, including nurses and physician assistants, even though they do have similar educational or practical experience and do not perform surgical procedures under their scope of practice. Additionally, taxpayers would pay $3.5 million a year on abortion training plus the several millions dollars a year that Maryland taxpayers already pay each year for 4,000 abortions under Maryland’s Medicaid program. The Climate Change bill “would have far reaching and devastating impacts on fossil fuel suppliers, many which are small businesses, sharply increase the costs for businesses required to retrofit, result in rent increases for those living in apartments and condos, and drive up overall energy costs by limiting options for consumers,” said Carozza.

 

Redistricting Update

The Maryland General Assembly passed a new version of a congressional map on March 30th to replace the one that was thrown out by Anne Arundel County Senior Judge Lynne A. Battaglia. Not only did she call the congressional map an “extreme partisan gerrymander,” but she also claimed that the map violated the state constitution’s equal protection, free speech and free elections clauses. A new version of the map was quickly drafted by the Maryland Senate and House, despite Republican objections, to meet the judge’s March 30 deadline. In addition, the Maryland Attorney General has filed a notice to appeal the decision by Judge Battaglia.

 

“I voted against the 8-0 (8 Democrats to 0 Republicans) Congressional map back in December, and I voted against the new 7-1 March 30h Congressional map as it’s pretty close to the same status quo gerrymandered map that we’ve had for the past 10 years,” said Carozza. 


Time Machine: 2003, 1937, 1896, 1973, 1912.


September, 2003


Baltimore Sun


(Ultrarunning history.com)

"The original walkathons were not the relatively tame fundraising walks of the 1970s for causes. Instead these walkathons were brutal endurance events that had their heyday in the mid-1930s. These walkathons were not ultrarunning events. They were rather twisted walking events, if it could even be called walking. They were mostly a crazy test of enduring sleep deprivation."

Salisbury Times

View history of the so-called Walkathon:

The Walkathon of the 1930s | Ultrarunning History


May, 1896

Democratic Messenger


November, 1973


Worcester County Messenger 


The Winter Of 1912    

                         
https://www.wboc.com/archive/throwback-thursday-w-jim-duffy---the-winter-of-1912/video_1546484e-d4d3-5c77-9647-4a6ea2ee1660.html





Friday, April 1, 2022

 






Time Machine Preview

This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:

2003  ..  


1937  ..  Not what it might sound like, but a test of enduring sleep deprivation-

1896  ..  In Pocomoke City water and electric improvements are the winners- 


1973  .. PHS girls going to All State Chorus-

Plus TV segment with local history author Jim Duffy commenting on The Winter Of 1912.


Thursday, March 31, 2022

Black Eyed Susan woes

 (Salisbury Daily Times)











PPE Reader Comment:
Anonymous Anonymous said...

For anyone who cares to recall, I warned about this turkey and its unknown expense way back when Tom Perlozzo's girlfriend first tried to pawn it off on the taxpayers. Pocomoke residents can be thankful that Susan Marshall Harrison was smart enough to avoid this money pit.

I can't believe the Worcester County and the Town of Snow Hill would spend that much money on a vessel of this size without a proper marine survey.