Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Code Red Air Quality Day for Today, Tuesday August 31, 2010

During Code Red air quality days, air pollution levels are considered unhealthy for everyone. The EPA advises everyone to limit strenuous outdoor activity, and advises children, older adults, and anyone with a respiratory or heart condition to avoid prolonged outdoor exertion.

BE PART OF THE SOLUTION TO AIR POLLUTION!

Ground level ozone is formed during hot summer days from the reaction of sunlight with oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). NOx and VOCs come from many sources including vehicle and power plant emissions, lawn mowers and other fuel burning equipment, and vapors from gasoline, paints, and industrial processes.

Take These Steps to Reduce Air Pollution:
  • Carpool, telecommute, or take mass transit to get to work
  • Limit driving and combine errands
  • Refuel after dark
  • Do not use gasoline-powered lawn equipment, including mowers
  • Wait for a cooler day to use oil-based paints or switch to non-solvent or low VOC-based paints
  • Avoid using aerosols and household products that contain solvents
  • Walk to nearby restaurants or bring your lunch to avoid mid-day driving
  • Conserve energy at home, at work, and everywhere to reduce power demand
DID YOU KNOW?

In the Baltimore/Washington region, more than 320,000 adults and 100,000 children have asthma.

On Air Quality Action Days, mowing a typical lawn produces the same amount of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), an ozone forming compound, as driving a car from Montgomery County to Raleigh, NC.

Every summer day, the use of gas-powered lawn and garden equipment releases more than 100 times the VOCs of a typical large industrial plant.

For more information and real time air quality levels, visit the Clean Air Partners website at: http://www.cleanairpartners.net/ or contact Pam Parker, Senior Air Planner at the Department of Environmental Protection, 240.777.7758.

Montgomery Councilmember Duchy Trachtenberg’s Statement Before Maryland Public Service Commission

ROCKVILLE, Md., August 30, 2010—Montgomery County Councilmember Duchy Trachtenberg today testified at a Maryland Public Service Commission public hearing in Rockville that is part of the PSC’s investigation into the reliability of electricity provider Pepco.

The complete text of Councilmember Trachtenberg’s statement:

Good evening.

Earlier this year, Montgomery County experienced one of the most severe winter storms in years. With that storm, Pepco’s emergency plan and preparedness were tested. However, as our homes went without power for days and we were forced to take refuge in hotels of those fortunate areas that had power, we saw that Pepco’s emergency plan was inadequate. After the storms, we, the Council, met with Pepco and discussed their emergency plan. We concluded that improvements needed to be made. As noted then, this was not the first time Pepco’s emergency response was tested and shown to be inadequate.

This past July, several months since the winter, we experienced other severe storms causing major disruptions to our daily lives. During these instances, Pepco had the opportunity to prove to us—its customers and our constituents—that improvements were made and that they could implement an adequate response. It was an opportunity to restore our faith in the utility company. However, as we know, Pepco failed to meet our expectations. Once again, many of us lost power for days.

I am amazed that Pepco did not take any remedial steps to improve system reliability following the devastating winter storms and other disruptions. This was an important opportunity to assess system weaknesses and to enhance energy security for our County. That there were no ‘lessons learned’ and no remedial steps taken is unexplainable and inexcusable.

The frequency, number and duration of the power outages experienced by customers in the Pepco service area—and the apparent breakdown of adequate communication between the company and its customers during these outage events—is unacceptable. It was unacceptable for Pepco to begin a restoration information hotline days after the July storm that told everyone, regardless of where they lived or the severity of their situation, that a power restoration time would be ‘Friday at 11:59 p.m.’ A ghost ‘restoration time’ was neither the solution nor an adequate means of communicating real priority to consumers.

Frequent and extended interruptions in electric service, as we have experienced, undoubtedly have serious consequences for public safety, public health, business operations and our overall quality of life. As public officials, as community leaders and as concerned neighbors, we must be especially mindful of the dangerous impact that these extended outages have on the elderly, those who rely on their medical equipment, parents with infants and children—as well as our hospitals, nursing homes and assisted living facilities. It should not take a tragic event or public health crisis for Pepco administrators to take action and improve both their emergency response and overall service quality. In my mind, our greatest obligation as public servants, and even as utility providers, is to protect the safety and well-being of our Montgomery County residents—the 305,000 who happen to be Pepco customers.

I hope that Pepco understands the responsibility they must honor in the months and years ahead.

Groundbreaking! The New Silver Spring Library!

I was thrilled to join County Executive Ike Leggett, Council President Nancy Floreen, Councilmembers Marc Elrich, George Leventhal and Valerie Ervin, and a large group of friends, neighbors, library advocates, business owners, community leaders, and County staff for today’s groundbreaking ceremony for the new Silver Spring Library.


The new library will be located at the intersections of Wayne Avenue, Fenton Street, and Bonifant Street in downtown Silver Spring. The building is designed to create an open, inviting environment, with convenient public access. The library will be part of the mixed-use public facility and transit stop and will serve as a cultural landmark. Designed by The Lukmire Partnership, Inc., the project will be a Silver LEED building. In addition to the library that will occupy three floors, the building will also house a coffee bar and an art store, gallery, offices and classrooms for Pyramid Atlantic, a Silver Spring-based nonprofit dedicated to the creation and appreciation of handmade paper, printmaking, digital arts, and the art of the book. Plans call for the County’s Department of Health and Human Services to also have offices in the building. Large and small public meeting rooms would also occupy one floor. “Green” roofs will be located on the top level and at the entry pavilion roof that will be visible from the children’s floor.

The new library will include print and non-print collections for adults, children, and teens on separate floors, large and small meeting rooms, group study and/or tutor rooms, a computer lab and an early literacy area for parents and young children. The site will also serve as a light rail stop on the future Purple Line. A multi-story, mixed-income rental apartment building developed by a private contractor will be constructed on the Bonifant Street side of the site.

Site construction, including undergrounding and relocation of utility lines will begin immediately and take about 10 months.

For more information, visit the project website here.





Friday, August 27, 2010

Invitation to Speak at Public Hearing on Pepco Operations and Electricity Reliability

INVITATION
Public Hearing on Pepco Operations and Electricity Reliability
Monday, August 30, 2010
Montgomery County Council Office Building
100 Maryland Avenue
Rockville, MD 20852

I share your concerns about the reliability of the electricity system in Montgomery County. Too frequently, Montgomery County residents have had to suffer through extended interruptions in electric service, with serious impacts on public safety, public health, business operations, and their residential quality of life. At a recent Council hearing on these issues, I was astonished to learn that Pepco had not taken any remedial steps to improve system reliability following the devastating winter storms of earlier this year. This was an important opportunity to assess system weaknesses and to enhance energy security for our County. The fact that there were no ‘lessons learned’ and no remedial steps taken is inexcusable and demands investigation by the Maryland Public Service Commission.

On Monday, August 30, 2010, you are invited to attend and to share your concerns about the reliability of PEPCO’s electricity distribution reliability at a Public Hearing that will be held in the Council Office Building in Rockville.

The Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC) is continuing its investigation into “the reliability of Potomac Electric Power Company’s (Pepco) electric distribution system and the quality of electric distribution service that Pepco is providing its customers” by holding a public hearing at the Montgomery County Council’s Stella Werner Office Building in Rockville at 6 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 30.

The public hearing will be held in the third floor hearing room of the Council Office Building at 100 Maryland Ave. Elected officials who wish to speak should contact the PSC’s director of legislative affairs by Aug. 27.

If you wish to speak at the hearing, you must sign in at the hearing room starting at 5:30 p.m. Speakers will be limited to a maximum of five minutes. All attending must bring photo identification to enter the hearing room.

Written comments may be filed by Aug. 31. Originally signed comments on paper may be submitted to Terry J. Romine, Executive Secretary, Maryland Public Service Commission, William Donald Schaefer Tower, 6 St. Paul Street, 16th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21202. Comments must reference “Case No. 9240—Public Comment.” To ensure comments are entered into the PSC docket system, all comments must be mailed or hand-delivered. Comments sent via e-mail or fax will not be entered into the Commission’s docket system.

The public hearing will be televised live by County Cable Montgomery (CCM—Cable Channel 6 on Comcast and RCN, Channel 30 on Verizon). The broadcast also can be viewed via streaming through the County Web site at http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/.

This is an important valuable opportunity for you to express your views and opinions to the County Council about Pepco's operations and reliability. Your attendance and participation will help our efforts immeasurably.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Groundbreaking Ceremony for the New Silver Spring Library!

County Executive Isiah Leggett
and the Montgomery County Council
cordially invite you to attend

the
Groundbreaking Ceremony

for the

New Silver Spring Library Building

Monday, August 30, 2010

10:00 a.m.

Project construction site
Downtown Silver Spring
900 Wayne Avenue
(corner of Wayne Avenue and Fenton Street)

Parking available at the Wayne Avenue Garage

or

Take Metro (Red Line) to the Silver Spring Stop,
then walk 4-5 blocks

Please RSVP at
240-777-0033
To request ADA program accommodations
email drcinfo@montgomerycountymd.gov
or call the Silver Spring Library at 240-773-9420

 

Friday, August 20, 2010

Trachtenberg Office Attends Montgomery County Agricultural Fair

Representatives from the Office of Councilmember Duchy Trachtenberg attended the Montgomery County Agricultural Fair this week. The fair, which was started in 1945, is the largest of its kind in the state of Maryland. The objective of the fair is to exhibit livestock and local produce, promote agriculture through education of the community regarding agricultural issues and providing a meeting place for those interested in agriculture to secure growth in future generations. The organizers of the fair are also committed to educating members of urban communities, helping them to acquire an appreciation and understanding of agriculture.

The fair is located at the Montgomery County Fairgrounds in Gaithersburg (16 Chestnut Street) and will be open to the public until Saturday, August 21 from 10 a.m. to 12 midnight. For directions, click here. General admission price is $10 per person and children under 11 enter free! For tickets, click here.

Emily Hoopes from the Trachtenberg office poses at the Personal Ponies booth. Personal Ponies is dedicated to the belief that the life of a child with disabilities can be immeasurably enriched by having a tiny pony to love and care for. The interaction and bonding that occurs between a tiny pony and a child with disabilities is nothing less than magic. Creating magic in children’s lives is Personal Ponies only mission. Personal Ponies is part of the Chasin Dreams Farm located in the heart of the Montgomery County Agricultural Reserve and serve children that are differently able throughout Montgomery County. For more information, click here.

Invitation to Public Hearing on Pepco and Electricity Reliability in Montgomery County - August 30, 2010 at 6 pm

INVITATION
Maryland PSC Public Hearing on Pepco Operations and Electricity Reliability
Monday, August 30, 2010
Montgomery County Council Office Building
100 Maryland Avenue
Rockville, MD 20852

On Monday, August 30, 2010, you are invited to attend and to share your concerns about the reliability of PEPCO’s electricity distribution reliability at a Public Hearing that will be held in the Council Office Building in Rockville.

The Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC) is continuing its investigation into “the reliability of Potomac Electric Power Company’s (Pepco) electric distribution system and the quality of electric distribution service that Pepco is providing its customers” by holding a public hearing at the Montgomery County Council’s Stella Werner Office Building in Rockville at 6 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 30.

The public hearing will be held in the third floor hearing room of the Council Office Building at 100 Maryland Ave. Elected officials who wish to speak should contact the PSC’s director of legislative affairs by Aug. 27.

If you wish to speak at the hearing, you must sign in at the hearing room starting at 5:30 p.m. Speakers will be limited to a maximum of five minutes. All attending must bring photo identification to enter the hearing room.

Written comments may be filed by Aug. 31. Originally signed comments on paper may be submitted to Terry J. Romine, Executive Secretary, Maryland Public Service Commission, William Donald Schaefer Tower, 6 St. Paul Street, 16th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21202. Comments must reference “Case No. 9240—Public Comment.” To ensure comments are entered into the PSC docket system, all comments must be mailed or hand-delivered. Comments sent via e-mail or fax will not be entered into the Commission’s docket system.

The public hearing will be televised live by County Cable Montgomery (CCM—Cable Channel 6 on Comcast and RCN, Channel 30 on Verizon). The broadcast also can be viewed via streaming through the County Web site at http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Trachtenberg Office Tours Department of Technology Services Facilities

On August 11th, the Trachtenberg Office toured several facilities of Montgomery County's Department of Technology Services (DTS). Michael Knuppel, Chief Technology Officer of DTS, was our tour guide and coordinated all aspects of the tour. The first stop on the tour was the Council Office Building (COB) data center. Dieter Klinger, Division Chief of the Enterprise Systems & Operations Division (ESOD) and Max Stucky, Division Chief of the Enterprise Telecommunication Services Division (ETSD) provided information to us regarding maintenance issues. We discussed the need for cooling systems and temperature controls to keep the data center working at its maximum efficiency.

The DTS tour second stop was the Shady Grove tower site, a small and narrow gated facility. The following people guided us through the tower site: Bobby Johnson, Manager of Radio Communication Services; Joe Sabolic, Radio Technician Supervision; Alex Tsai, Senior IT Specialist and Robert Gould, Motorola on-site contractor. We learned about the public safety radio system and how it works throughout our County. The magnitude of radio systems in one small area was impressive. All radio communications in the County flow through the tower site.

Finally, we toured the Public Safety Communication Center (PSCC). Bill Ferretti – MCPD/Deputy Director of 911 Operations provided the tour. We had an opportunity to view the room in which emergency 911 calls are fielded. Mr. Ferretti explained the in-depth and lengthy training for a 911 call-taker. In addition, we visited the “situation room” in which heads of departments gather during an emergency situation such as this winter’s Snowmaggedon.

Alan Bowser, Chief of Staff to Councilmember Trachtenberg, and Laurie Mintzer Edberg, Director of Management and Fiscal Policy for Councilmember Trachtenberg, represented the Trachtenberg office. For more information, please contact Laurie Mintzer Edberg at 240-777-7948 or Laurie.Edberg@montgomerycountymd.gov.

For more information on the County's Department of Technology Services, click here

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Councilmember Trachtenberg Attends Maryland Public Service Commission Hearing on PEPCO Reliability

Duchy Trachtenberg joined her County Council colleagues in Baltimore yesterday as the Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC) initiated “a proceeding to investigate the reliability of Potomac Electric Power Company’s (Pepco) electric distribution system and the quality of electric distribution service that Pepco is providing its customers.” The Public Service Commission ordered Pepco’s chief operating officer and the company’s senior officers responsible for system reliability and construction of maintenance, storm restoration and customer service and communications to appear at a “legislative-type hearing” in the commission’s 16th floor hearing room at the William Donald Schaefer Tower at 6 Saint Paul Street in Baltimore.

“I have ongoing concerns about the reliability of the electricity system in Montgomery County,” said Councilmember Trachtenberg. “Too frequently, Montgomery County residents have had to suffer through extended interruptions in electric service, with serious impacts on public safety, public health, business operations, and their residential quality of life. At our recent hearing on these issues, I was astonished to learn that Pepco had not taken any remedial steps to improve system reliability following the devastating winter storms of earlier this year. This was an important opportunity to assess system weaknesses and to enhance energy security for our County. The fact that there were no ‘lessons learned’ and no remedial steps taken is inexcusable and demands investigation by the Maryland Public Service Commission,” she said.

The Public Service Commission announced on Thursday evening, Aug. 12, that it would begin the investigation after morning and afternoon storms that day left more than 90,000 customers without power. The Commission’s order stated the investigation was being initiated “because of the frequency, number and duration of the power outages experienced by customer in the Pepco service area and the apparent breakdown of adequate communication between the company and its customer during these outage events.” The Commission went on to say that it “finds it necessary to conduct an immediate investigation into the reliability of the Pepco distribution system and the quality of distribution service Pepco is providing its customers, including but not limited to its performance during and following severe storms, and a comprehensive examination of Pepco’s storm preparedness and reliability.”

The County Council’s letter of July 29th to the PSC asking for an investigation cited many of the same concerns the PSC identified in deciding to act. In their letter, Councilmembers wrote: “We are writing to ask the Commission to open an investigation into the reliability of electricity in Pepco’s Montgomery County’s service territory. Our residents and businesses have suffered an unacceptable number and duration of outages for many years, outages that have harmed public health, public safety and the County’s economy. As a distribution-only utility, the quality and reliability of Pepco’s service is exclusively within your authority. We ask you to invoke that authority to ensure our citizens of acceptable levels of reliability.”

Friday, August 13, 2010

SUMMER STORM UPDATE FROM MONTGOMERY COUNTY

* As a result of yesterday’s severe thunderstorms, about 32,000 customers in Montgomery County are without power.

* Approximately 30 traffic signals are without power. Treat all "dark" intersections as four-way stops. Stop - then proceed cautiously. This is critically important to ensuring vehicular and pedestrian safety.

*Ride On bus service

Expect detours and delays due to road closures. Currently, portions of Rtes. 2, 10, 13, 14, 19 and 57 are being detoured due to road closures. Go to www.montgomerycountymd.gov/rideon for Ride On information on bus routes.

*There are still about 23 roads that are closed in Montgomery County, primarily in the downcounty.

*Libraries:

The Long Branch Library remains closed due to power outages.

*Recreation facilities:

All indoor and outdoor pools are closed.

Wheaton, Coffield and Long Branch community centers are closed.

*The Montgomery County Department of Parks reports the following closures:

Park train cloWheaton Regional sed.

Cabin John Regional Park train closed.

The Park Permit office at 9500 Brunett Avenue in Silver Spring remains closed due to power outages. Check http://www.parkpermits.org/ for updated information.

Park patrons are advised to call ahead to check on status of park facilities.

* For emergencies, call 911.

* To report downed trees in the public right-of-way, call 311, or, if calling from outside Montgomery County, 240-777-0311.

* To report power outages, call Pepco at 877-737-2662, Allegheny Power at 800-255-3443, or Baltimore Gas & Electric at 877-778-2222.

* To report "hot" or sparking wires, especially those across roadways, call 911.

As power is restored in areas, downed wires that were previously dead may become live. Residents are urged to exercise extreme caution around any downed power line.

Food safety tips

Disposal of tree debris in Montgomery County

Disposing of Tree Debris in Montgomery County

Trees or branches may be disposed as follows:

On Private Property:

Tree debris on private property will be collected on a residents’ regular recycling day if it is no more than four-feet in length and four inches in diameter.

Bag, bundle, or containerize tree branches and limbs, keeping bundles less than 45 pounds and less than 30 inches in diameter.

Tree debris that is too large for curbside collection, or cannot be bagged, bundled, or containerized can be recycled at no charge to single family home residents (up to 500 pounds) at the Shady Grove Processing Facility and Transfer Station, located at 16101 Frederick Road, Derwood. Check the County’s website at www.montgomerycountymd.gov/solidwaste for hours of operation.

Another option is to contact a private company, such a tree service, landscaping or lawn service, for assistance in removing and disposing of storm debris.

Residents may want to check with their home insurance company, which may cover storm debris removal and disposal.

In the Public Right-of-Way:

Montgomery County Department of Transportation crews are collecting trees and branches that have fallen into the public right-of-way.

To report tree debris in the public right-of-way, call 3-1-1.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

SUMMER STORM UPDATE FROM MONTGOMERY COUNTY

* As a result of this morning’s severe thunderstorm, about 72,000 customers in Montgomery County are without power.


* About 150 traffic signals are without power. Treat all "dark" intersections as four-way stops. Stop - then proceed cautiously. This is critically important to ensuring vehicular and pedestrian safety.

* Metro Red Line stations at Forest Glen and Cleveland Park are closed due to flooding; Silver Spring and Takoma Park are running on “single track.”

* For emergencies, call 911.

* To report downed trees in the public right-of-way, call 3-1-1, or, if calling from outside Montgomery County, 240-777-0311.

* To report power outages, call Pepco at 877-737-2662, Allegheny Power at 800-255-3443, or Baltimore Gas & Electric at 877-778-2222.

* To report "hot" or sparking wires, especially those across roadways, call 911.

As power is restored in areas, downed wires that were previously dead may become live. Residents are urged to exercise extreme caution around any downed power line.

Alerts and updates are available on the County's Facebook page and through Twitter. Sign up for Alert Montgomery on the County's website at https://alert.montgomerycountymd.gov/.

Check http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/ for updated information on County facilities, programs, and services.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Today: Code Orange Air Quality Action Day in Effect in Montgomery County

Today's a Code Orange Air Quality Action Day, indicating unhealthy air quality. As part of the region’s Air Quality Action Day program, Montgomery County takes voluntary actions to reduce its emissions of smog-forming chemicals, including ozone, and particulate matter. These voluntary actions include refueling County vehicles after dusk and curtailing median strip spraying, mowing and most asphalt paving.

Residents are also urged to take the following steps to reduce harmful air emissions:

• Carpool, telecommute, or take mass transit to work;
• Limit driving and combine errands;
• Refuel after dark;
• Avoid using gasoline-powered lawn equipment, including mowers;
• Wait for a cooler day to use oil-based paints or switch to non-solvent or low VOC-based paints;
• Avoid using aerosols and household products that contain solvents;
• Avoid mid-day driving; or
• Conserve energy at home and work to reduce power demand.

Ozone is a major element of urban smog, and its presence can limit one’s ability to take a deep breath, or cause coughing, throat irritation, and breathing discomfort. There is also evidence that ozone can lower resistance to respiratory disease (such as pneumonia), damage lung tissue, and aggravate chronic lung disease (such as bronchitis). Children and those with pre-existing lung problems (such as asthma) are sensitive to the health effects of ozone. Even healthy adults involved in moderate or strenuous outdoor activities can experience the unhealthy effects of ozone.

Another air pollutant of concern in the Washington Metropolitan area is particulate matter. Particles in the air can cause or aggravate a number of health problems and have been linked with illnesses and deaths from heart or lung disease. At highest risk from particle pollution are people with heart or lung disease, older adults, children whose lungs are still developing, and adults and children who are active outdoors. Particles of concern include both very small, “fine” particles (that can only be seen through an electron microscope) and somewhat larger “coarse” dust particles. Fine particles have been more definitively linked to the most serious health problems.

Unhealthy levels of ground level ozone occur in the summer as intense sunlight interacts with oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) volatile organic compounds. Ozone forming pollutants originate from vehicles, lawn-mowers and boats; emissions from power plants and other fuel burning equipment; and vapors from gasoline, paints and industrial processes. Particulate matter can either be directly emitted into the air or formed in the atmosphere by reactions of fuel combustion gases. Any measures taken to reduce ozone forming emissions will also reduce particulate matter.

Vehicles account for 30 to 40 percent of the pollutants that cause ozone in the Baltimore/Washington area and every summer day, gas-powered lawn and garden equipment release more than 100 times the VOC’s of a typical large industrial plant. For every person who postpones lawn mowing on Air Quality Action Days, potential VOC reductions equal the amount generated by a car driving from Montgomery County to Raleigh, North Carolina.

The Washington region is in violation of Federal air quality standards established under the Clean Air Act for ozone. In addition to concerns about public health effects caused by poor air quality, the region could also lose federal funds for highway projects if Federal standards are not met. This could ultimately lead to even worse levels of congestion and air quality.

The region has successfully lowered overall pollution and reduced the number of Code Red days each summer. However, adding to the region’s challenge, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, recognizing the serious health impacts from ozone and particulate matter, established tougher air quality standards. While an air quality forecast of Code Red historically indicated poor air quality that did not meet Federal health based standards, now a Code Orange air quality forecast indicates air quality that fails to meet the strengthened Federal standards.

For more information visit the County’s Department of Environmental Protection’s website at www.montgomerycountymd.gov/dep, or call 240-777-7700. For information on Ride On bus schedules, call the Transit Information Center at 311 (within Montgomery County) or 240-777-0311, or check the County’s web site at http://www.rideonbus.com/.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Congratulations to the Bethesda Big Train

The Trachtenberg office extends hardy congratulations to the Bethesda Big Train for capturing their second consecutive Cal Ripken Collegiate League Championship (CRCBL) last Saturday night at Povich Field before a crowd of 600, winning with a score of 8-4 over the Baltimore Redbirds!

Big Train entered the Championship Series as the #3 seed and knocked off the #1 seed, Youse’s Orioles and then went on to prevail over the #2 seed Baltimore Redbirds becoming the first team to repeat as outright CRCBL champs!!

Thanks for another terrific summer of the best family entertainment value in Montgomery County! We look forward to another great series next summer!

For more information about the Bethesda Big Train, please visit http://www.bigtrain.org/

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Trachtenberg Office Attends Countywide National Night Out Celebrations

I was pleased to join in Montgomery County’s annual “National Night Out” (NNO) celebration. I attended the Olney’s popular NNO parade and celebration, while members of my staff fanned out across the County to support the community’s efforts to promote public safety and crime awareness. In addition to Olney, we visited with neighbors in the Indian Spring neighborhood at the Indian Spring Terrace Recreation Center, the Lyttonsville-Rosemary Hills community at the Coffield Recreation Center, in South Four Corners at the Forest Glen-Dallas Avenue Neighborhood Park, in Northwood and North Four Corners at the Forest Knolls Pool, and in the Park Hills neighborhood in East Silver Spring. We were pleased to see County Executive Ike Leggett, Police Chief Tom Manger, State’s Attorney John McCarthy, and Congressman Chris Van Hollen visiting our communities as well.

National Night Out is an annual event sponsored by the National Association of Town Watch (NATW). It is designed to generate neighborhood support and participation in crime prevention efforts and to enhance police and community relations.

Check out the following National Night Out photos from around the County:












Right move on disability payments

Editorial, Gazette, Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Two-tiered system would save money, create equity.

Given the sobering statistics about disability benefits for police officers brought to light in multiple reports from Montgomery's Office of the Inspector General, the County Council is long overdue for action to reform the payment system.
 
In 2008, the inspector general reported that more than 60 percent of the 93 police officers who retired between July 1, 2004 and March 1, 2008, qualified for disability benefits, which pay at least two-thirds of an officer's salary. In the report, the inspector general wrote that the payment process exhibited "behavior that we believe a prudent person would consider abusive."

To help curb any abuses, council members Phil Andrews, Duchy Trachtenberg, Valerie Ervin and Roger Berliner are pushing for a bill to create a two-tiered system — currently in place for the county's firefighters — that would grant lesser benefits for officers with less severe injuries.

According to the proposal, a total incapacity benefit would be awarded if the disability would prevent the employee from working for at least one year. Partial incapacity would be awarded for employees who are unable to perform at least one essential function of his or her current job, but who could be employed elsewhere.

A partial incapacity benefit would be at least 52.5 percent of final earnings annually; a total incapacity benefit of at least 70 percent of final earnings annually. The bill is prospective, meaning that officers now receiving benefits would continue with their current payments.

In all, the changes could save the county about $1.5 million in police disability payments.

But this bill is about more than financial savings. It's a matter of just and proper treatment for employees who have been injured, based on their ability to function in the workplace. The idea that an officer who loses use of a trigger finger should receive the same treatment as one who is wholly paralyzed conflicts with accepted principles of equity.

The County Council has been moving in a positive direction in changing some of the practices that bleed dollars bit by bit, like the repeal of pension benefits based on cost of living increases that were never given and the elimination of misused tuition assistance programs. Creating a tiered disability payment system for police would be another step.

Click here to read the article on the Gazette.

Montgomery's hobbled police

Editorial, Washington Post, Monday, August 2, 2010

MONTGOMERY COUNTY'S police force includes many dedicated and excellent officers. To the naked eye, most seem to be in fine physical condition. This must be an illusion, however, since so many of them continue to retire with full disability benefits, imposing a heavy cost on the county.

Between 2004 and 2008, about three in five county police officers were granted disability status upon retirement, meaning they receive two-thirds of their salary for life, tax-free. These numbers are without equal in other police departments around the region, including Prince George's County, where large majorities of officers manage to make it to retirement in good health despite a crime rate much higher than Montgomery's.

After this racket was exposed in the media two years ago, the numbers fell off, but only by a little. In the most recent fiscal year, which ended June 30, 18 of the 44 Montgomery police employees who retired were granted disability status -- in some instances for injuries, including relatively minor ones, that took place many years earlier. Keep in mind that in the past, some of these disabled retirees have gone on to land full-time employment, sometimes with other law enforcement agencies and often in roles that are physically demanding.

Of course, this scam gouges taxpayers -- just one of a number run by police officers under the protection of a union that jealously guards the perks of its dues-paying members. In a report released almost two years ago, the county's inspector general, Thomas J. Dagley, found police conduct in claiming disabilities that a "prudent person would consider abusive."

Still, it has continued. Last year, the Montgomery County Council, in thrall as usual to public employee unions, shied away from legislation to address it. And this year, the Fraternal Order of Police refused to relinquish the benefit in contract negotiations despite the disgrace it has earned the department.

Now the county has another chance to correct this abuse. Two council members, Duchy Trachtenberg (At Large) and Phil Andrews (Gaithersburg-Rockville), both Democrats, are introducing legislation that sensibly distinguishes between serious and minor disabilities, so that an officer with an injured finger is not treated in the same way as one paralyzed from the neck down.

The bill also prohibits officers guilty of firing offenses from claiming disability retirements, as they can now. (One such officer, Sgt. Jacqueline Davey, was granted a disability pension last month despite facing trial on charges that she stole more than $10,000 by billing the county for hours she didn't work. Sgt. Davey has denied the charges.)

The legislation will not come up for a vote before the fall, but already a majority of council members have expressed support for it. We urge every member of the council to sign on as a co-sponsor.

Click here to read the article on the Washington Post.

AVOID LINES ON ELECTION DAY – VOTE EARLY

For the first time the State of Maryland is implementing Early Voting for the Gubernatorial Primary Election. Montgomery County will open 5 Early Voting Centers from September 3 – 9, excluding Sunday, from 10 a.m. – 8 p.m. Voters are able to vote on the same voting equipment used on Election Day, but at a time that is more convenient.

Early Voting Centers are located at:
  • Bauer Drive Community Recreation Center, 14625 Bauer Drive, Rockville 20853
  • Germantown Recreation Center, 18905 Kingsview Road, Germantown 20874
  • Marilyn J. Praisner Community Recreation Center, 14906 Old Columbia Pike, Burtonsville 20866
  • Montgomery County Executive Office Building, 101 Monroe Street, Rockville 20850
  • Silver Spring Civic Building, 8525 Fenton Street, Silver Spring 20910
Voters are encouraged to visit our website – http://www.777vote.org/ – to view additional information on the Early Voting Centers. During Early Voting hours, the website will display a scroll bar which will provide wait times of each of the five Centers, updated hourly.

For more information on Early Voting, please call 240-777-VOTE (8683).

Monday, August 2, 2010

Montgomery Council Asks Maryland Public Service Commission to Investigate Pepco’s ‘Reliability of Electricity’

County’s Letter to MPSC Chair Asks ‘Whether or Not Pepco Has Sufficient In-house Staff to Maintain its Infrastructure

ROCKVILLE, Md., July 29, 2010—The Montgomery County Council today unanimously signed a letter to the Maryland Public Service Commission asking for “an investigation into the reliability of electricity in Pepco’s Montgomery County’s service territory.” More than 200,000 County homes were left without electricity for various periods following a sudden storm on Sunday, July 25. Many homes were still without power as the Council signed the letter five days later.

“Our residents and businesses have suffered an unacceptable number and duration of outages for many years, outages that have harmed public health, public safety and the County’s economy,” reads the letter addressed to Douglas R.M. Nazarian, Chairman of the Maryland Public Service Commission. “As a distribution-only utility, the quality and reliability of Pepco’s service is exclusively within your authority. We ask you to invoke that authority to ensure our citizens of acceptable levels of reliability.”

The letter also cites that Montgomery County suffers isolated power outages even when major winter or other storms are not the cause. “And this happens all too often,” the letter states, “leading us to ask whether or not Pepco has sufficient in-house staff to maintain its infrastructure.”

Trachtenberg, Andrews launch effort to reform disability retirement for Montgomery County police - Gazette

Bill would create two-tiered benefits system based on severity of injury

by Erin Cunningham, Gazette Staff Writer

Should a Montgomery County police officer with a broken trigger finger receive the same disability retirement benefits as a fellow officer who is paralyzed?

County Council members Philip Andrews and Duchy Trachtenberg say no.

They introduced a bill Tuesday to create a two-tiered system — currently in place for the county's firefighters — that would grant a lesser benefit for officers with less severe injuries.

Council members Valerie Ervin and Roger Berliner are co-sponsors of the legislation.

"There is a real difference between a broken finger and a paralyzed spine," Trachtenberg said. "You can't give the same benefit to someone who has a broken finger and someone who is in a wheelchair for life."

But that is what the county has been doing.

The bill stems from concerns over the number officers receiving a disability benefit for injuries suffered on the job — about 60 percent of those who retired in 2008, according to an inspector general's report.

More recent data show that 18 of 44 police officers who retired between July 2009 and June 2010 received disability benefits, county spokesman Patrick K. Lacefield said.

Inspector General Thomas Dagley reported that in fiscal 2008, 837 county employees received disability benefits, totaling $32 million. Of those employees, 264 were former police officers who received a combined $13 million.

Under the bill introduced by Trachtenberg (D-At large) of North Bethesda and Andrews (D-Dist. 3) of Gaithersburg, a county employee who retires due to service-connected disability would receive either a partial incapacity benefit of at least 52.5 percent of final earnings annually, or a total incapacity benefit of at least 70 percent of final earnings annually. Chief Administrative Officer Timothy Firestine ultimately sets the benefit amount.

Click here to read the entire Gazette article

Read my Latest Newsletter

July 2010

Click here to read my latest newsletter.

In this issue you will find information about the following:

Summer Storm Update

Disability Retirement Reform Bill
Triple-A Bond Rating
Mental Health Court
Sligo Creek Golf Course
Restaurant Menu Labeling
Silver Spring Civic Building
Weed & Seed Program
Purple Line Functional Plan
Health Care Reform
Aunt Hattie's Place
Montgomery Heritage Days
Jean Cryor
MFP Updates
Duchy's Recipe