News that affects your neighborhood in upper Montgomery County. * Gaithersburg * Crown * Rio * Montgomery Village * Goshen * Germantown * Clarksburg * Damascus * Boyds * Poolesville * Hyattstown * Laytonsville * Dickerson
Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Gaithersburg Board of Appeals approves Lakeforest Mall May carnival despite coronavirus pandemic
The Gaithersburg Board of Appeals, meeting by internet teleconference, approved a May carnival for Lakeforest Mall Tuesday. Both the board and the carnival's operator acknowledged the looming reality of the coronavirus pandemic, and the social distancing policies the county and state have implemented as a result of it. Operator Jolly Shows is willing to postpone the carnival to June if necessary. But the decision by the board still raised eyebrows, as there is no indication as of now that the pandemic will be over even by June.
Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Montgomery County Council proposes property tax hike
A 4.5% property tax increase has been proposed. The Council recently criticized County Executive Marc Elrich for proposing a tax increase, but now are proposing one themselves. A public hearing on the tax increase has been scheduled for 1:30 PM on April 21, 2020.
Despite the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation's guidelines to allow residents to testify live by telephone, the Council is currently not allowing residents to do so, despite the Council having used videoconferencing to promote themselves this week. Residents may only send written or emailed comments on the tax increase, or recorded audio/video statements, and have been banned from entering the Council Office Building since the coronavirus outbreak began in the county.
No one can yet predict the full economic impact of the coronavirus shutdown, but it certainly will be significant. Raising everyone's tax bills is certainly a bold move amidst a worldwide pandemic and economic collapse.
The Council has raised property taxes every year this past decade except in 2014, when they gave a paltry $12 average tax cut during an election year. In 2016, the Council raised property taxes a whopping 9%, which translated to 10 or 11% for a large number of residents, due to rising assessments. But the tax hike failed to generate the expected revenue. In fact, revenue is now declining, after many wealthy residents fled to lower-tax jurisdictions in the region.
Earlier this year, the Council sought new taxing powers from the Maryland General Assembly. They hope to be able to raise income taxes beyond the current limit allowed, and to add additional property taxes based on what category of property you own.
Montgomery County Republican Party Chair Alexander A. Bush called the proposed tax increase "obscene," noting the flood of unemployment claims being filed by County residents, and the many coronavirus-related business closures. Bush strongly urged the Council to allow testimony by telephone at the public hearing.
Monday, April 6, 2020
Amid coronavirus uncertainty, Gaithersburg set to approve May carnival at Lakeforest Mall
The most powerful people in America, at all levels of government, are unable to tell us with certainty when the current coronavirus Stay-at-Home lockdown and social distancing practices will end. That's because the full nature and potential impact of the Covid-19 virus remain largely unknown. Amidst this uncertainty, the Gaithersburg Board of Appeals is poised to approve a May carnival at Lakeforest Mall at its April 7, 2020 meeting.
Jolly Shows plans to operate the carnival in the mall parking lot bearfrom May 13-25, 2020. The company has extensive experience in operating carnivals at similar sites around the country. Rides will include Area 51, the traditional favorite Tilt-A-Whirl, a Wiggle Worm and Bear Affair. There will also be games of chance on the fair's midway, including the old-fashioned sledgehammer-slamming High Striker, Duck Pond, and the water pistol-packing Racers Edge Water Race.
Concessions will include hot dogs, pizza, sausages, cheesesteaks, ice cream, funnel cakes, candy apples, and Deep Fried Oreos and Twinkies. Lakeforest Mall approved the carnival's application back on February 3, long before the panic over coronavirus began.
Jolly Shows plans to operate the carnival in the mall parking lot bearfrom May 13-25, 2020. The company has extensive experience in operating carnivals at similar sites around the country. Rides will include Area 51, the traditional favorite Tilt-A-Whirl, a Wiggle Worm and Bear Affair. There will also be games of chance on the fair's midway, including the old-fashioned sledgehammer-slamming High Striker, Duck Pond, and the water pistol-packing Racers Edge Water Race.
Concessions will include hot dogs, pizza, sausages, cheesesteaks, ice cream, funnel cakes, candy apples, and Deep Fried Oreos and Twinkies. Lakeforest Mall approved the carnival's application back on February 3, long before the panic over coronavirus began.
Friday, April 3, 2020
Rape reported in Gaithersburg
A rape was reported to the City of Gaithersburg police on Wednesday morning at 4:30 AM. According to crime data, a forcible strong-arm rape was reported from a townhome on Cornerwood Court.
Thursday, April 2, 2020
Montgomery County urgently seeking PPE donations for medical, public safety personnel
Montgomery County issued a statement early this morning asking for donations of personal protective equipment (PPE) for medical professionals and public safety employees. Items needed for the coronavirus crisis include
- Respirators (N95 or KN95)
- Masks (surgical or procedural)
- Gowns (medical, isolation, or surgical)
- Face Shields (medical goggles or safety glasses)
- Gloves
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Rape reported in Germantown
A forcible strong-arm rape was reported to Montgomery County police in Germantown shortly after 10:00 PM Monday night. According to crime data, the rape was reported in a parking lot in the 18400 block of Black Stone Hollow Drive, right off Mateny Road near Clopper Road.
Montgomery County policy on coronavirus contact tracing: Do ask, don't tell
Most Montgomery County residents who live through the coronavirus pandemic will likely never forget the dramatic announcement of the jurisdiction's Patient Zero, Patient One and Patient Two - three travelers who brought the Covid-19 virus back to the county with them. The news meant the dreaded and deadly virus was now officially here. State and County officials said they would not reveal those patients' identities, and no one actually wanted or expected them to. But the public did want to know where those three people had gone while contagious, the general vicinity of MoCo in which they were located, and who had been exposed. Officials assured us that extensive interviews would take place to map out this information.
They never released it.
It's too late now. The three patients, thankfully, recovered. But aside from a single event at a Rockville retirement community, Montgomery County residents were never told which stores, restaurants, gyms, or other business and public facilities these people went to while contagious.
Whomever they exposed to the virus - and it's not credible to claim they contacted no human beings since returning from their travels - has either contracted it or fought it off, recovered or died. So it would be pointless to demand this information at this late date.
But the policy of "Do ask, don't tell" continues. Out of 388 known cases of coronavirus in Montgomery County, only a handful of exposure points have been made public, with the County liquor store on Hampden Lane in Bethesda being the only memorable one recently. The County has primarily announced when its own employees have tested positive, but it has not made public the public places those few dozen people went while contagious.
Is contact tracing being performed? If so, where are the results being recorded, and why have they not been released in a timely fashion while still relevant for each case? The local media hasn't pressed for these answers. While some countries have made the controversial move to track all citizens via their cell phones to provide the most-thorough contract tracing possible, and then alerted those exposed, here we are getting no answers from the honor-system interviews we were assured would take place when the first cases were confirmed on March 5(!!).
The failure to contact trace, or to make the results public (without identifying the patients, of course), has put all of us at risk. Along with the federal government's farcically-weak travel restrictions (a cruise ship loaded with infected Americans was allowed to dock, and the passengers disperse nationwide on commercial flights, only about 10 days ago - even after all federal officials knew at that point), the lack of information prevented potentially contaminated facilities from being cleaned according to coronavirus protocols, and those exposed from self-quarantining away from vulnerable family and community members.
Along with the deliberate failure at the federal, state and county levels to ensure sufficient hospital beds, masks, PPE, ventilators and other supplies would be available for a pandemic everyone has known was coming since SARS in 2002, a policy of "You can ask, but we won't tell you" has made the coronavirus outbreak even more dangerous for Montgomery County residents than it had to be.
Image courtesy CDC
They never released it.
It's too late now. The three patients, thankfully, recovered. But aside from a single event at a Rockville retirement community, Montgomery County residents were never told which stores, restaurants, gyms, or other business and public facilities these people went to while contagious.
Whomever they exposed to the virus - and it's not credible to claim they contacted no human beings since returning from their travels - has either contracted it or fought it off, recovered or died. So it would be pointless to demand this information at this late date.
But the policy of "Do ask, don't tell" continues. Out of 388 known cases of coronavirus in Montgomery County, only a handful of exposure points have been made public, with the County liquor store on Hampden Lane in Bethesda being the only memorable one recently. The County has primarily announced when its own employees have tested positive, but it has not made public the public places those few dozen people went while contagious.
Is contact tracing being performed? If so, where are the results being recorded, and why have they not been released in a timely fashion while still relevant for each case? The local media hasn't pressed for these answers. While some countries have made the controversial move to track all citizens via their cell phones to provide the most-thorough contract tracing possible, and then alerted those exposed, here we are getting no answers from the honor-system interviews we were assured would take place when the first cases were confirmed on March 5(!!).
The failure to contact trace, or to make the results public (without identifying the patients, of course), has put all of us at risk. Along with the federal government's farcically-weak travel restrictions (a cruise ship loaded with infected Americans was allowed to dock, and the passengers disperse nationwide on commercial flights, only about 10 days ago - even after all federal officials knew at that point), the lack of information prevented potentially contaminated facilities from being cleaned according to coronavirus protocols, and those exposed from self-quarantining away from vulnerable family and community members.
Along with the deliberate failure at the federal, state and county levels to ensure sufficient hospital beds, masks, PPE, ventilators and other supplies would be available for a pandemic everyone has known was coming since SARS in 2002, a policy of "You can ask, but we won't tell you" has made the coronavirus outbreak even more dangerous for Montgomery County residents than it had to be.
Image courtesy CDC
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