News that affects your neighborhood in upper Montgomery County. * Gaithersburg * Crown * Rio * Montgomery Village * Goshen * Germantown * Clarksburg * Damascus * Boyds * Poolesville * Hyattstown * Laytonsville * Dickerson
Monday, February 5, 2024
The UPS Store to open at Montgomery Village Center
The UPS Store is "coming soon" to the Montgomery Village Center, according to signage posted at its future storefront. It will be at 19226 Montgomery Village Avenue. There is an existing Montgomery Village UPS Store location at the Goshen Oaks shopping center. The UPS Store offers shipping, printing, mailbox and shredding services.
Friday, February 2, 2024
Fiesta Laundromat opens in Montgomery Village
Fiesta Laundromat is now open at the Montgomery Village Center. It can handle any size load you have. There are machines for Double Load, Triple Load, Giant Load and Mega Load. As you can see, it looks super-clean and well-lit inside. This location of Fiesta Laundromat is so new that there is no website, and no reviews posted online that I can find.
Thursday, February 1, 2024
Jessa Medical Supply relocates in Gaithersburg

New location
Jessa Medical Supply has relocated its Gaithersburg store - but not far. It has moved from 112 Market Street to 235 Kentlands Boulevard. That is the former Loyal Companion space, next to Supertooth. The new location is scheduled to open for business today, Thursday, February 1, 2024.
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| Old location cleared out Wednesday ahead of today's opening in the new storefront |
Another attempt to restore Office of the People's Counsel in Montgomery County
Montgomery County's government bodies - Board of Education, Montgomery Parks, the Montgomery County Planning Board, to name three recent examples - are in disarray, and have been embroiled in scandals. Incredibly, while holding oversight power, the County Council has actively chosen to not restore funding for a position that can help hold the County's planning authorities (including the Council itself) more accountable to residents and taxpayers: The Office of the People's Counsel. Never a popular position among the developers who have funded most or all of the councilmembers' campaigns this century, depending upon which Council term is under discussion, the OPC was axed in 2010 when the Council finally had an excuse to do so: a budget crisis of their own making. But in 2023, more than a decade after the "Great Recession" ended, the current Council still voted against restoring funding for the OPC.
Fed-up residents and responsible growth advocates are launching a new attempt to persuade councilmembers - some of whom vowed to fund the OPC, but then betrayed the voters and organizations they made the vow to, once in office - to restore the OPC in the FY-2025 budget. The Montgomery Countryside Alliance, which works to protect rural areas, open space and streams from impacts of overdevelopment, is taking a leadership role by creating an easy form to send a brief message to the County Council in support of funding for the OPC.
For those not familiar, the OPC is (or was!) a land-use attorney who provides free advice and technical information to residents regarding development and land-use issues. Residents, most of whom cannot afford the kind of powerhouse legal representation that developers and the County itself have at their disposal, can therefore be better prepared to defend their interests before the Planning Board, County Council and hearing examiners. The OPC can also point out when the Board or Council is in violation of the rules or breaking the law, which non-land-use-attorney citizens may not be able to recognize their own. Perhaps most importantly, the People's Counsel can represent residents' interests in administrative hearings.
Boosting hopes for the return of this critical County government position is Bill PG/MC 112-24 at the Maryland General Assembly in Annapolis, which is sponsored by Senator Ben Kramer of Montgomery County. Senator Kramer has also been a leading voice to make the planning process in the County more directly accountable to residents, such as considering proposals to move some aspects of planning under the executive branch of County government. Kramer's bill would fully fund the Office of the People's Counsel in Montgomery County, just as other jurisdictions like Prince George's County have. In other words, Kramer is saying to the Council, "if you won't do it, we will." But, if you don't use this form to send a message to the Council and the full Montgomery County delegation to Annapolis in favor of funding the OPC, they might not!
Wednesday, January 31, 2024
The Container Store opening in March at Downtown Crown in Gaithersburg
The Container Store is opening a new location at Downtown Crown in Gaithersburg in March 2024. It is one of five new "small format" stores the chain expects to open nationwide this year. The company says it will house a Custom Spaces Studio featuring the Preston, Avera and Elfa lines, as well as a curated selection of merchandise. The store will also market the brand's in-home services to customers. Look for The Container Store when it opens at 201 Ellington Boulevard.
Tuesday, January 30, 2024
Montgomery County police chief announces retirement
Montgomery County Police Chief Marcus Jones abruptly announced his retirement this morning, January 30, 2024. He has served the public for 38 years, the last four of them as chief. His retirement will be effective Monday, July 1.
“It has been an honor to lead such a dedicated and talented department of officers and professional staff. I am immensely proud of what we have accomplished together, and I am confident in the department’s continued success,” Chief Jones said in a statement. “Now is the right time to retire. I am grateful for the support I have received throughout my career. While I may be stepping down a few months earlier than originally planned, I won’t be far. You will still see me around, actively engaging in and contributing to the well-being of Montgomery County.”
A department press release states that the search for a new police chief will begin immediately. Chief Jones did not cite a specific reason for his retirement, nor for moving his retirement date up to July 1.
Monday, January 29, 2024
Paranormal Cirque to return to Gaithersburg this spring
The ominous Clown Castle big top tent will rise again in Gaithersburg this spring. Paranormal Cirque experienced such unnatural success with its premiere stop in the city last year that the attraction will drive stakes into the Montgomery County Fairgrounds this spring from April 4 through April 7, 2024. A combination of a circus, theatre and cabaret, Paranormal Cirque brings acrobats, illusionists, "freaks," and "mysterious creatures" together under one tent.










