The holidays have been a time of celebration and information gathering. Blog Arundel will be back on-line on January 5. Happy New Year!
Labels: Greeting
A weblog dedicated to exploring political, social, and environmental issues in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
The holidays have been a time of celebration and information gathering. Blog Arundel will be back on-line on January 5. Happy New Year!
Labels: Greeting
Open Space Preserved
Labels: Fort Smallwood
Janet, Stop Horsing Around
Labels: Janet Owens
Moving Violations
Labels: Leopold, Transportation
Mismanaging Impact
Labels: Impact Fees
Arresting Runoff
Labels: Green Building
Citizens fighting overdevelopment, poorly conceived development, and environmentally-harmful projects in the Baltimore metropolitan suburbs are often so deeply involved in piecemeal battles against developers or the County government in their own communities that they lack the time or energy to wage battle on fronts outside their immediate vicinity. This can make it difficult not only to build broad coalitions, but also to see the bigger picture of growth and development in the region.
Labels: Baltimore City, Green Building
Looking for ways to get involved in local community service over the holidays? The Volunteer Center for Anne Arundel County has a Holiday Volunteer Guide on their website listing volunteer opportunities available throughout the month of December.
Labels: Event
Today's Capital reports on what has to be one of the most preposterous giveaways of state money in this writer's recent memory. Lee Airport, owned by the Lee family of Edgewater was the recipent of a state grant from the Maryland Aviation Administration in the amount of $170,000 to help design and carry out changes to the airpark and runway. To my mind, if the state's going to be handing out $170k in corporate welfare, there had better be a pretty substantial reason. There isn't.
Labels: Development, Government Waste, Lee Farm
Superintendent Smith’s School Woes
Labels: Education
Local zealot and pious pol, Don Dwyer, has decided to throw in with non-local zealot, and former Alabama Judge, Roy Moore, in the fight to protect us from the Constitution. Mr. Dwyer, a member of the Maryland General Assembly, representing Glen Burnie, has drafted a resolution that “would call on Congress to pass a law preventing the federal judiciary from hearing cases involving the public display of the Ten Commandments and the pledge of allegiance,” called the "Maryland Religious Independence from Federal Courts Act." The bill, also derisively referred to as the “Maryland Independence from the First Amendment Act” by some of its opponents (me) would, if passed, bring embarrassment to the State, akin to that lavished upon Kansas after its School Board was infiltrated by anti-intellectual, religious fundamentalists. Taking it upon himself to speak for the guy and gal on the street, Dwyer sputtered, "The average citizen is outraged … Without God and moral law, there is nothing left to determine right from wrong other than the fallible decisions of man."1 I don’t know about Dwyer, but this “average citizen” is able to navigate the modern world’s sometimes uneasy seas just fine with my own moral compass. I certainly don’t need bluenoses, like Dwyer, trying to abridge my rights and hamstring the courts on the public dime. But, should Delegate Dwyer feel the need for additional biblical instruction, let me direct him to the following passage:
Labels: Dwyer
Concerned about the fact that Anne Arundel County has some of the worst air quality in the nation? Attend the Clean Energy Town Hall Meeting at the Anne Arundel Community College, Florestano Building, Room 101 on December 10, from 7:00-8:30pm. Check out Chesapeake Climate Action Network for more details.
Speaking of taxes, in this time of tight budgets and lean economic times, one would hope that we could all pull together and pay our fair share. Unfortunately, some of the corporations doing business in Maryland, including Toys R Us, have cheated Maryland out of some $70 million in back taxes by setting up shell "holding companies" in Delaware. This scandal harkens back to Enron's tax games in the Cayman Islands. These mega-corporations spend millions of dollars to avoid the taxes they are legally required to pay, putting locally-owned businesses at a disadvantage, and depriving Marylanders of revenue desperately needed to run the State.
Labels: Taxes
Enjoy the snow folks! It's a great opportunity to get out and meet neighbors and to help those who might not be able to shovel their driveways or sidewalks or get out to the grocery store.
Labels: Greeting
Selling the Future
Tomorrow, December 6, there will be a great opportunity to get out and see some of the South County wilderness. Jug Bay Wetlands Sanctuary will hold a bird walk for beginners from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. at 1361 Wrighton Road in Lothian. Participants will learn how to identify birds by sight and sound. Binoculars and field guides will be available to borrow. The event is not appropriate for children under 12. For more information, call 410-741-9330 or visit www.jugbay.org. The sanctuary is a real local treasure.
Labels: Event
County Waste
Labels: Government Waste
Last night, December 3, there was a public hearing for the Lower Western Shore Tributary Team, an organization whose mission is ostensibly to "reduce nutrient and sediment inputs and to restore habitat in the Lower Western Shore Watershed through community participation." What became clear, relatively shortly after an informative presentation on the Team's goals was given by Jamie Baxter of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, was that without significant innovations in dealing with increasing loads of nitrogen and phosphorous, and without a ton of money to implement those innovations (the Trib. Team estimates $3 billion through some rather archane formula), we're going to be up the Bay without a paddle. And that's the good news. As of right now, the Team has neither the creative solutions to bring down nitrogen and phosphorus loads to the level required by the Clean Water Act, nor the money to put them into place if they did. That's where you come in.
Labels: Wastewater
Well, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation has finally "lost patience" and decided to petition the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for failing to make states comply with provisions of the Clean Water Act, particularly those concerned with the emission of nitrogen from wastewater treatment plants. We can be sure the folks at EPA are shaking in their boots (they aren't even required to reply). Those concerned about the environment have repeatedly settled for suggestions rather than regulations (see: Chesapeake 2000 Agreement), petitions rather than lawsuits (see: CBF v. EPA, 2003), and yet some wonder why the Bay Index keeps dropping faster than a State Delegate at the sight of a slots lobbyist.
Labels: CBF
Franklin Point Park
Labels: Franklin Point, Preservation
Last Monday, November 24, I attended an informative and well-conceived workshop on sediment and erosion control put together by Anne Pearson, Director of the Alliance for Sustainable Communities, and members of the Anne Arundel Watershed Network. The event brought together County representatives, such as Ron Bowen, Director of Public Works, Spurge Eismeier, Director of Inspections and Permits, and Jeff Opel, Manager for the Anne Arundel Soil Conservation District , with community activists and other county bureaucrats. Also speaking at the event was Brant Keller, Director of Public Works and Stormwater Utilities for the City of Griffin, GA. Keller was dynamic and informative in describing how Griffin, a city of 24,000 (Annapolis is a city of about 35,000), has managed to implement a stormwater utility, and raise millions of dollars to address the problems caused by stormwater runoff, and disincentivize the promulgation of impervious surface.
Labels: Pollution, Stormwater
Those concerned about preserving quality of life in Anne Arundel County need to make their voices heard, in letters to the local papers, at public hearings, and in their political and activist clubs. Two important events coming up this week could use your attendance.
Labels: Franklin Point
Welcome to Blog Arundel, this is the first post of what will, hopefully, be an ongoing effort to explore and comment, from a progressive perspective, on many of the issues affecting Anne Arundel County that aren't covered or fully addressed in the local press.
Labels: Greeting