News that affects your neighborhood in upper Montgomery County. * Gaithersburg * Crown * Rio * Montgomery Village * Goshen * Germantown * Clarksburg * Damascus * Boyds * Poolesville * Hyattstown * Laytonsville * Dickerson
Friday, December 30, 2022
Car stolen in Germantown
Montgomery County police are investigating the theft of a vehicle in Germantown. The vehicle was parked in the 11400 block of Brundidge Terrace when it was stolen. It is believed the vehicle was stolen sometime between 9:00 PM Monday night, and 8:00 AM Tuesday morning.
Thursday, December 29, 2022
Clarksburg home broken into
Montgomery County police are investigating a burglary in Clarksburg Tuesday morning, December 27, 2022. The break-in was reported at a home in the 12000 block of Chestnut Glen Road at 7:48 AM. Officers responding to the scene found evidence of forced entry at the home.
Wednesday, December 28, 2022
Purse snatched at Gaithersburg supermarket
Montgomery County police were called to a Gaithersburg grocery store Monday afternoon, after at least one shopper's purse was snatched. The theft was reported at a supermarket in the 600 block of Quince Orchard Road at 5:15 PM on December 26, 2022. There is an Aldi on that block. Remember to never leave your purse unattended in a cart while shopping.
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Assault at 7-Eleven in Germantown
Montgomery County police were called to a 7-Eleven store in Germantown on Christmas, after an individual reported having been the victim of a 2nd-degree assault there. The assault was reported at the 7-Eleven at 12861 Clopper Road at 6:04 PM on Sunday.
Monday, December 26, 2022
Car stolen in Clarksburg
Montgomery County police are investigating the theft of a vehicle from outside of a home in Clarksburg on Friday afternoon, December 23, 2022. The vehicle was parked along the street in the 12100 block of Elm Forest Court. It was reported stolen at 3:30 PM Friday.
Friday, December 23, 2022
Frosty Siberian winds lead to falling trees, power outages across Montgomery County and D.C. area
Darkened apartments along Georgia Avenue near Wheaton Friday night |
It's been a "wild and wooly" day across the Washington, D.C. region and much of the nation, to use the words of the telephone meteorologist of old. Gusty winds that have blown from Siberia and down through Canada joined with a bomb cyclone winter weather event to start Friday with a blast of ice. The winds have stuck around through the evening, leading to many falling limbs and trees, and the resulting power outages.
There are currently 8,459 Pepco customers without power in the D.C. Metro area. Outages are widespread over the entire map of Montgomery County. The most concentrated outages are in the Silver Spring, Wheaton, Calverton, Gaithersburg and Germantown areas. In Rockville, there are significant outages in the King Farm, Twinbrook, West End and College Gardens neighborhoods. Bethesda residents are in the dark in a couple of spots along the Bradley Boulevard corridor, and in Westgate near the D.C. line. Over the border, there are outages in the Palisades and Wesley Heights in Northwest Washington.
The current temperature is 11 degrees. Winds are gusting at 18 MPH, and a wind chill advisory is in effect until 10:00 AM Saturday morning. Be sure to fully cover up if you have to go outside to avoid frostbite. Remember that dark intersections during power outages are to be treated as a four-way stop - but proceed with caution, as many drivers ignore this and will steam through the intersection anyway, or rear-end you if you conscientiously try to stop as the law requires. The best advice is to stay off the roads if you can.
Van Hollen secures funding for NIST, NIH in U.S. Senate omnibus spending package
A massive $1.7 trillion omnibus spending bill for FY-2023 passed by the United States Senate yesterday will include substantial funding for two major federal employers in Montgomery County, the National Institutes of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg and the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda. Maryland Senator Chris Van Hollen pressed for those and other Maryland priorities in the controversial and complicated negotiations and agreement. The deal found some Republican senators joining with the Democratic majority in an attempt to lock in spending before the GOP gains control of the House of Representatives in January.
The Senate deal includes $48 billion for NIH, and $1.7 billion for NIST. It also includes renovation funds for a failing bridge over the Baltimore-Washington Parkway to Goddard Flight Center. Van Hollen and other Democrats lamented they could not get other priorities filled in the agreement, but considered the end run around potential GOP cuts in next year's session to be a success worth compromising for. "While I was deeply disappointed that Republicans refused to support a number of key priorities, it was vital that we pass a new government funding bill instead of kicking the can down the road," Van Hollen said in a statement late yesterday afternoon. "On balance, this package will meaningfully invest in the critical priorities of our state and nation.”
Senate Republicans who voted for the bill were Roy Blunt (Missouri), John Boozman (Arkansas), Shelley Capito (West Virginia), Susan Collins (Maine), John Cornyn (Texas), Tom Cotton (Arkansas), Lindsey Graham (South Carolina), Jim Inhofe (Oklahoma), Mitch McConnell (Kentucky), Jerry Moran (Kansas), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), Rob Portman (Ohio), Mitt Romney (Utah), Mike Rounds (South Dakota), Richard Shelby (Alabama), John Thune (South Dakota), Roger Wicker (Mississippi) and Todd Young (Indiana). The majority of them have already publicly distanced themselves from President Donald Trump in varying degrees.
Thursday, December 22, 2022
Pickpocket strikes at Rio Lakefront in Gaithersburg
Montgomery County police were called to a restaurant at Rio Lakefront in Gaithersburg yesterday morning, after a pickpocket incident occurred there. The theft was reported at a restaurant in the unit block of Grand Corner Avenue at 9:30 AM on Wednesday. An attempt was later made to use one of the stolen credit cards at a retail store.
Wednesday, December 21, 2022
Auntie Anne's and Cinnabon to open at Rio Lakefront in Gaithersburg
Auntie Anne's and Cinnabon are almost mandatory tenants at any credible indoor mall. Now they are to make an unusual pair for an outdoor mall property at Rio Lakefront in Gaithersburg. They will share the space previously home to Lilly Magilly's Cupcakery, which is relocating to a new space at Rio.
Tuesday, December 20, 2022
Daytime Eats for sale in Gaithersburg
Daytime Eats, a fast-casual deli and restaurant at 7889 Cessna Avenue in Gaithersburg, is for sale. It remains open for business. The asking price is $160,000, according to the sale listing.
While the location is a bit out of the way in an industrial park setting, it is absolutely surrounded by businesses whose workers provide high traffic at breakfast and lunch. Daytime Eats is very highly-rated on Yelp, Google and Facebook, another selling point for the restauranteur seeking a turnkey location with an existing following.
Monday, December 19, 2022
Rise Southern Biscuits & Righteous Chicken opening soon in Gaithersburg
Rise Southern Biscuits & Righteous Chicken is opening soon at 16248 Frederick Road in Gaithersburg, in the new Rock Grove shopping center. Signage was just installed over the future restaurant's storefront. Rise was founded in Durham, North Carolina in 2012. It has since expanded to 17 restaurants in North Carolina, Kansas, Maryland, Virginia, Georgia, Tennessee and Oklahoma.
It sounds like Rise will check many boxes for diners. They have tenderized, buttermilk-brined fried chicken sandwiches, and creative donuts. Their buttermilk cheddar biscuits should appeal to Red Lobster fans, but with the bonus of fillings that range from bacon or sausage to fried green tomatoes or fried chicken. Rise has a signature side dish of Cheddar Tots. And who could resist a Cheerwine donut?
There is no waitstaff at Rise, just a "swift service line," their website notes. The chain was named one of the Top 100 Movers and Shakers last year by FastCasual.com. Rockville diners will even be able to judge who has the better donut at Rock Grove on the premises, Rise or Dunkin'?
Friday, December 16, 2022
First look: Taco Bamba in Gaithersburg (Photos)
The window coverings were removed at the new Taco Bamba, opening today, December 16, 2022 at 9:00 AM at 670 Quince Orchard Road in Gaithersburg. Last night, the restaurant's team was making final preparations for today's opening. As I reported last week, they have menu items and cocktails you can only get at this Taco Bamba location. Remember, if you are one of the first 50 through the doors today, you get a free Taco Bamba coffee mug. Here's a sneak peek at the completed interior:
Thursday, December 15, 2022
MOD Pizza reopens at Kentlands Square in Gaithersburg
MOD Pizza has reopened at 145 Commerce Square at Kentlands Square in Gaithersburg. The pizzeria temporarily closed a couple of weeks ago for "restaurant maintenance." Wednesday evening, they were back open for business.
Wednesday, December 14, 2022
Royal Farms finally gets permanent sign in Gaithersburg (Photos)
Royal Farms has been open for nearly a year at 690 Watkins Mill Road in Gaithersburg. But it is only now getting its permanent roadside sign installed. A parked pickup truck with an electronic sign showing current gas prices (yikes!) has been handling the job until now.
Tuesday, December 13, 2022
Montgomery County Council has forfeited its privilege to "power" over land-use and zoning authority structure
Montgomery County Councilmembers who call the attempt to examine the county's current structure of land-use authority "a power grab" are implicitly acknowledging they have been wielding that power through the current Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission structure. The disastrous results of the Council's exercise of that power speak for themselves. Their hand-picked five members of the Montgomery County Planning Board were forced to resign this fall, under accusations of consuming alcohol in their County office building and pressuring others to do so, creating a "toxic misogynistic and hostile workplace," repeated violations of the Open Meetings act, letting individual commissioners' grievances implode the board, and engaging in staff firings as retribution. Those five people, in the Council's judgement, were the five best who had applied. That says as much about the Council as about the disgraced commissioners themselves.
Those issues that led to a regional embarrassment for the County this fall were hardly the only ones to stain the Planning Board and County Council. The Board and Council have routinely passed master and sector plans over the outspoken objections of the communities the plans will guide growth policy and zoning in.
Thrive 2050 was only the most recent example, a "blow-up-single-family-home neighborhoods" plan and developer fever dream the Council rubber-stamped into law mere days after declaring that it had "no confidence" in the five commissioners who drafted and approved every word of it. Virtually all of the support for Thrive 2050 came from people who do not actually live in the single-family home neighborhoods the plan would bulldoze, developers, and Astro-turf "YIMBY" activists. The plan itself was neither novel nor innovative, but a hodgepodge document plagiarized from the few other jurisdictions around the country corrupt and crazy enough to end the single-family home zoning most consider to be the American Dream. Other than generating more developer profits, those earlier Thrive-style efforts elsewhere have failed to realize any of the false promises their advocates had touted.
M-NCPPC, the Planning Department and Planning Board have a horrific record on racial bias, particularly with the African-American community. The most prominent examples of this have been the Farm Road scandal, the desecration and attempted cover-up of the Moses African Cemetery in Bethesda, and the repeated calling of multiple armed police officers to silence or remove African-American protesters at Planning Board meetings. The Council had full knowledge of those events, and never exercised their self-proclaimed "power" to criticize, investigate or remove any employee, commissioner or chair involved in those well-documented racist actions. Not even after the summer of Black Lives Matter in 2020 did the Council revisit these transgressions.
Now that County Executive Marc Elrich and State Senator Ben Kramer are attempting to formulate a process to examine a reform or replacement of the current land-use authority structure, the Council is attempting to end the discussion before it starts. It's too late for that, because residents affected by the land-use decisions made over the last two decades have already been discussing it. That discussion has led to increasing calls to rein in M-NCPPC and the Montgomery County Housing Opportunities Commission. It's time to have this conversation, and explore the options.
Much like the County's outdated government monopoly on the sale of alcohol, the M-NCPPC is a highly-unusual arrangement for a land-use authority. It includes Montgomery and Prince George's County, two jurisdictions that just happen to have had many development-related scandals and outsized developer influence over the years. Those scandals - topped off last week by new questions about the ousted Planning Board's 2021 purchase of parcels in downtown Bethesda for $9.6 million for a park that now won't be built - have led us to the point that we need to look at how to make land-use decisions more accountable to all stakeholders, not just to those with the most money and power.
The proposed commission, representing cooperation between county and state leaders, is a good starting point for this discussion. It's clear that those who have wielded the "power" in land-use and zoning decisions have abused that power, shown major errors in judgement, and failed to exercise their oversight role responsibly. They've lost their unearned privilege to continue to hold that power.
Reforming the land-use authority structure could well mean transferring that power to others. It could also mean pulling Montgomery County out of the M-NCPPC. It should also mean restoring the Office of the People's Council and sector plan committees, and the creation of Advisory Neighborhood Commissions as Washington, D.C. has, to strengthen accountability to residents. We can't achieve reform until we take a hard look at the situation, through efforts such as the proposed commission.
A first step in being stripped of power is admitting you hold that power through a corrupt, antiquated and - on many occasions - racist structure of authority. The Council has made that admission loud and clear. Now is the time for adults in the room to chart a new way forward. If you openly state you have had the "power," you must also accept full responsibility for the wreckage that power is on the record as having caused, and not block the path to fixing it.
Monday, December 12, 2022
Sheetz would like to open a second Gaithersburg location
It seemed to take forever for Montgomery County to get its first Sheetz, Wawa and Royal Farms. Now the mega gas stations are arriving fast and furious, and they all favor Gaithersburg as their launching point in the county. With the first Sheetz not yet completed at Matan's Progress Way development at MD 355 and Montgomery Village Avenue, word has surfaced of a second one in the works. This would be at the Walnut Hill Shopping Center at 16529 S. Frederick Avenue.
That is a very high-visibility location, and taking more of the Wawa approach than Royal Farms and Sheetz have with their I-270 exit positioning so far. Walnut Hill's owner, Granite Canyon Partners, has informed the City of Gaithersburg that it would like to be annexed into the city, which it views as being more business-friendly than Montgomery County. Not much to argue with there!
Granite Canyon suggests that approval of a Sheetz will be easier through the City than Montgomery County, perhaps giving us a clue as to why Gaithersburg has become the choice for these popular mega gas station chains. For Sheetz fans, all we want to know is, will there be a drive-thru?
New Fashion Hair Salon opens in Montgomery Village
New Fashion Hair Salon has opened at 20217 Goshen Road in Montgomery Village. A ribbon-cutting was held on Saturday. Owner Cynthia Marianna studied at the Vidal Sassoon Academy, is a Master Hair Colorist, and a member of the American Board of Certified Hair Colorists. She was previously at Hair Design Zone at Rockville Town Square. Appointments can be booked online.
Photos courtesy New Fashion Hair Salon
Friday, December 9, 2022
Okey Poke for sale in Gaithersburg
Okey Poke at 501 N. Frederick Avenue in Gaithersburg is for sale. The poke bowl and hibachi restaurant remains open for business at this time. Okey Poke opened in 2020. The asking price for the business is $155,000, according to the sale listing.
Thursday, December 8, 2022
Taco Bamba sets opening date in Gaithersburg
Signage is up at Taco Bamba, and now the tacqueria has an opening date for its newest location at 670 Quince Orchard Road in Gaithersburg. The restaurant will open on Friday, December 16, 2022 at 9:00 AM. If you are one of the first 50 guests in the door, you will get a free Taco Bamba coffee mug, and free coffee in it with your order. Of course, coffee will be free every day here with an order, until mid-afternoon, at their complimentary coffee station.
The Quince Orchard Shopping Center location will have some exclusive menu items not available at other Taco Bamba locations. These will initially include Mr. Zadir, with ground lamb and beef kafta in a flour tortilla with chipotle yogurt and chili-spiced feta slaw, and the McLovin It, which consists of crispy chicken nuggets with a chipotle barbecue sauce, hot mustard, Fresno slaw, pickled onion, and cornbread crumble.
Taco Bamba Gaithersburg will also regularly offer Montalbán Mondays, a Monday-only special that includes a tasting flight of three Del Maguey mezcals, alongside a mixed grill platter piled featuring carne asada, chorizo, mushrooms, grilled onion, jalapeño, cotija cheese, arbol peanut salsa, and chipotle charred eggplant salsa served with a stack of warm tortillas. Cocktails exclusive to this location will be the Battle of Puebla, which blends mezcal, Lillet Blanc, absinthe and green grape puree; and the Figetaboutit, with Barr Hill gin, fig, white balsamic vinegar and hazelnut salt.
Hours of operation at this location will be Sunday - Thursday 9:00 AM - 9:00 PM, and Friday - Saturday 9:00 AM - 10:00 PM. Happy hour will be held every weekday from 3:00 - 6:00 PM.
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Gaithersburg proposal would replace single family homes with 2 apartment buildings
A developer has proposed replacing single-family homes at 201 Brookes Avenue and 9, 11 and 15 Park Avenue in Gaithersburg with two apartment buildings. Four-story-tall Building 1 would be at the corner of Brookes and Park, and have 70 units and a surface parking lot. Five-story-tall Building 2 would be on Park Avenue, and hold 110 units. Building 2 will have a parking garage. The completed buildings would be adjacent to the remaining single-family homes in the neighborhood.
The Gaithersburg Historic District Commission had advised rejecting the proposal, recommending historic designation for the existing homes. That recommendation was rejected by the City Council on October 3, 2022. The Gaithersburg Planning Commission will now review the apartment buildings proposal at its December 7, 2022 meeting at 7:30 PM. Planning staff are recommending approval of the proposal with two conditions: 1) that the windows around the building entrances be changed to comply with Olde Towne District Design Guidelines, and 2) that the applicant successfully receive a waiver for the fifth story of Building 2 from the Mayor and Council, or else reduce that building to four stories.
Tuesday, December 6, 2022
Booboo Pho, Hangry Joe's Hot Chicken opening at Montgomery Village Center
Booboo Pho and Hangry Joe's Hot Chicken are coming soon to the Montgomery Village Center. Booboo Pho's permanent sign was up and lit last night at 19230 Montgomery Village Avenue. The Vietnamese restaurant is hoping to open around New Year's Day. It's certainly great timing because there is Pho weather ahead.
Hangry Joe's Hot Chicken will be located in the space next to the new Starbucks at the center, according to the property map. A Rockville Pike location of Hangry Joe's just opened last week, as the Nashville Hot Chicken chain continues its rapid expansion in Montgomery County.
Monday, December 5, 2022
Kentlands Shake Shack update (Photos)
Here's a look at the construction site of the future Shake Shack in the Kentlands area of Gaithersburg. It is located at 150 Kentlands Square Place, on a pad site in front of Lowes. No drive-thru is planned here, but there will be a walk-up pickup window.