gaithersblog.net

Goings on in Gaithersburg, Maryland

September 30th, 2006

Agenda, Historic Preservation Advisory Committee, 10/5/2006 (updated)

In addition to the public hearing for a new Garage at 17 Walker Ave, HPAC will consider:

  • A courtesy review for:

    Applicant: Cheryl and Edward Hoiler
    10 Highland Avenue
    Request for New Garage

  • Historic Preservation Master Plan Element. Discussion with Greg Ossont, Director, Planning and Code Administration, and Long Range Planning Team Members Rob Robinson and Kirk Eby
  • Updates on:
    1. Olde Towne Day
    2. MAHDC Training October 10, 2006
    3. Impact Review Area
    4. GHDC Projects
    5. HAWP-37E

HAWP-37E is the request to demolish the Hair Bar. I have no idea what the “Historic Preservation Master Plan Element” encompasses. I’ve sent email to Greg Ossont to ask if there are any background materails.

Update: Following is a reply from Greg Ossont:

Several month ago HPAC reviewed a draft of the Historic Preservation Element for incorporation into the city Master Plan. Although it received a favorable review, the element was more of and inventory of historic and potentially historic properties. For the purposes of master planning, staff has revised the draft and attempted to prioritize the inventory. The idea of prioritizing will help staff and decisions makers during reviews of future projects. Since this is a change from how we’ve done things in past master plans and from what HPAC saw earlier this year, I wanted to afford some time to discuss the strategy, answer questions and receive suggestions. Attached is a memo I sent to HPAC regarding this issue

Let me know if you have any questions.

Greg Ossont, Director

Planning and Code Administration

September 29th, 2006

Fireworks at the Fairgrounds Saturday Night

I noticed in this week’s myGaithersburg email, the item up at the top:

NOTICE: A special event permit has been issued for a private event at the Montgomery County Agricultural Center on Saturday, Sept. 30. The event will include fireworks starting at 8 p.m. A City fire marshal will be onsite during the display.

Checking with the Fairgounds website, I find they’re listing two events for tomorrow night. One is the City of Gaithersburg Crab Feast & Karaoke event (see the City’s announcement for more information), while the other is Diwali Mela 2006: Festival of Lights (Deepavali), sponsered by the Association of United Hindu & Jain Temples of Metropolitan Washington, DC. It is in fact the latter which mentions fireworks, although I’m guessing you’ll be able to see them from either event. The Hindu festival will be on the Perry Parkway end, while the Crabs & Karaoke will be at the Chestnut Street end.

The City’s description of the Crab Feast says:

The entire community is invited to enjoy crabs and BBQ as the City of Gaithersburg hosts its Crab Feast & Karaoke Night on Saturday, September 30 at the Montgomery County Agricultural Center, 16 Chestnut Street in Gaithersburg.

CrabDoors will open at 5:30 p.m., and the buffet will be available at 6 p.m. Catered by Red Hot & Blue, the buffet features pulled pork and chicken, baked beans, potato salad, and desserts. Crabs will be served from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Music and Karaoke will run from 6 to 10 p.m.

Admission is $35 for City of Gaithersburg residents and $39 for nonresidents. Children 10 and under will be admitted for half price. Groups of 10 or more will receive a discount of $2 per ticket. Beverages will be available for an additional fee. Ticket sales are limited, so early purchase is recommended. Tickets are available now and can be purchased at the Activity Center at Bohrer Park, 506 South Frederick Avenue. For more information please contact 301-258-6350 or parksrec@gaithersburgmd.gov.

While the Hindu Festival’s description says:

Association of United Hindu and Jain Temples of Washington Metro Area
invites you to celebrate the Festival of Lights (Deepavali)
Saturday, September 30, 2006
12:00 Noon - 10:00 PM
Free Admission, Free Parking
Shree Ganesha & Devi Lakshmi Pooja
Grand Cultural Program and Spectacular Fireworks
Gala Festival, Featuring Indian Food, Shops for Fashion Clothing and Jewelry, Audio/Video Cassettes, Cosmetics,
Books and Children’s Entertainment at
Montgomery County Agricultural Center (Fairgrounds)
16 Chestnut Street, Gaithersburg, MD 20877 (301) 926-3100

Indian food or Crabs? That’s a tough choice. Karaoke, I could do without. Maybe the best plan is lunch at the Hindu festival, dinner at the Crab Feast, and then back to the Hindu festival for the best seats for the fireworks…

Of course, I doubt many of the Jains will be using this strategy…

September 28th, 2006

Abrams Enters Council At-Large Race

According to the Gazette,

Adol T. Owen-Williams II withdrew his candidacy on Monday afternoon — the last day candidates were allowed to do so — and was replaced by Stephen N. Abrams, who was nominated by the Republican Central Committee that night to fill the spot.

The change ended a week of speculation and intraparty negotiations to devise a stronger GOP ballot, said Tom Reinheimer, county GOP president and an at-large council candidate.

Abrams ran an unsucessful campaign for the Republican nomination  in the state comptroller race.

September 28th, 2006

Corridor Cities Transitway is a Stupid Idea

I’m just trying to help

‘‘We have no one opposed to us. The only reason we have not pulled together is because there is no opposition, and that’s why the newspapers are not covering it,” state Del. Jean B. Cryor (R-Dist. 15) of Potomac told members of the Upcounty Citizens Advisory Board last week.

‘‘I actually suggested once that we hire some people who opposed us to create some controversy,” she said.

Send me an email, Jean, and we can discuss rates… :-)

Update: as Dan points out in the comments,  BeyondDC has some (I assume) honest criticism of the CCT.

September 28th, 2006

My Comment On Another Blog

Over on The New MoCo Progressive, there was continued discussion of the Post’s Editorial excoriating Gaithersburg for its inaction on building a day labor center. One anonymous commenter, addressing him or herself to another anonymous commenter, said “Your comment just proves that the immigrant-haters do NOT distinguish between U.S. Citizens of Latino heritage, like Gov. Richardson, and Illegal Immigrants. The haters just hate anybody with a Latino background.” This got me kind of annoyed, and I wrote this response,

anon 8:31:

While I have no idea what legal voter’s mindset is, I think that you’re drawing conclusions from awfully thin evidence. Also, “immigrant-hater” is argumentative and inflammatory. There is no proof that anyone posting to this forum “hates” immigrants, legal or otherwise.

I myself am disappointed — and occasionally get angry — with anyone who shows a lack of respect for other people, their culture and their property, and I apply this symmetrically. I’m often disappointed with the Minutemen, for example, especially when they seem to be demonizing entire groups of people in an unfair manner. I’m also often angry with people who feel that they have no obligation to respect local cultural norms when visiting places away from their home. This includes both “Ugly American” tourists (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ugly_American if you don’t understand the reference) as well as Latino immigrants who pee on churches and fail to learn enough conversational English to get by after more than a decade in this foreign land.

Note, please, that my anger is specifically targeted to those who do these things. I actually do patronize several of the Hispanic stores and restaurants in Gaithersburg and it always brings a huge smile to my face when the clerk is so clearly trying his or her best to conduct the transaction in English — to become a real, integral part of the community. But at the same time I really appreciate efforts by the immigrants to share their culture with us in a positive manner.

I don’t know if you’ve ever attended the annual mass-naturalization ceremony at Gaithersburg’s Olde Towne day, but it is a truly inspiring event and I challenge anyone to watch it without getting a little choked up. This is not hate, it is not racism. This is wanting everyone to respect each other, to play by the rules and and to get along. I can usually look the other way when someone breaks a rule here or there; I’m not sure I know anyone who never breaks any rules. But when someone routinely breaks both the rules and the customs, disrespects others and generally makes no attempt to fit in to the community, then I have a problem. And I really do wish you could understand the difference between that and hate.

September 28th, 2006

Gaithersburg Man, Returned from Afghanistan, Dead of Gunshot Wounds (Update 9)

According to the Washington Post,

After three tours in Afghanistan, Army Ranger Michael Anthony McQueen was weeks away from a new life out of the Army, and gearing up to start college.

“He was a great young man,” a vigorous athlete who had matured enormously during his stints in war zones, said his father, Mike. “He had a bright future.”

McQueen, 22, was found dead of gunshot wounds Tuesday morning in his Gaithersburg apartment, according to a law enforcement source.

[…]

Ray Moon, 42, who lives in the building, said he heard doors being slammed at McQueen’s unit early Tuesday, and then he saw McQueen’s roommate race from the building. “He comes out here with his cellphone, crying in hysterics,” Moon said. “He was talking about some Army buddy of his.”

Police arrived quickly, entered the apartment and interviewed the roommate, Moon said. Officers stayed at the apartment building for several hours.

Mike McQueen, who visited the apartment yesterday afternoon with homicide detectives, said his son’s roommate had been the young man’s sergeant. McQueen declined to comment further, saying detectives have asked him not to discuss details of the case.

[…]

Update: Another article on this tragic story, this one in the Miami Herald:

McQueen had recently returned to the United States from overseas and was making plans for life as a civilian, his parents said. He was to leave the Army next month after serving as a specialist with the 75th Ranger Regiment based at Fort Benning, Ga., assigned as an intelligence analyst.

‘’He was excited about the next phase in his life; he was going to start school and was hoping his high-security clearance would help him get a part-time job with the military or a contractor,'’ said Mike McQueen, a former editor at The Miami Herald.

McQueen was also a one-time chair of Florida International University’s Department of Journalism and Broadcasting, an assistant city editor at the Sun-Sentinel and managing editor of the Macon (Ga.) Telegraph. He is currently The Associated Press’ bureau chief in New Orleans.

[…]

The circumstances surrounding Michael McQueen’s death remain under investigation, according to Montgomery County, Md., police. The cause of the shooting is undetermined, authorities said Thursday.

Investigators were trying to determine whether McQueen shot himself intentionally or by accident or if his death is a homicide. His roommate, a fellow soldier who served with him in Afghanistan, was in the apartment at the time of the shooting and has been questioned by police.

Update 2: Jaime Ciavarra writes in the Gazette:

Michael Anthony McQueen, a 22-year-old Army Ranger who returned in August from his third tour in Afghanistan, was found dead last week in his Gaithersburg apartment with apparent gunshot wounds.

[…]

Karen and Ray Moon, who live in the Streamside Apartments on the 400 block of North Summit Avenue where McQueen was found, say they heard a door slam four or five times in the early morning.

The Moons then heard McQueen’s roommate — who police have not identified — hysterical, yelling, ‘‘My roommate’s dead” as police arrived, they said.

Other neighbors on the second floor of the apartment, where McQueen’s unit is now roped off with police tape, say they didn’t hear anything that early morning — no struggle, gunshots, or screams.

Update 3: The St. Augustine Record has an obituary and a photo:

Sgt. Michael A. McQueen II, a U.S. Army Ranger, passed away Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2006, in Gaithersburg, Md. Sgt. McQueen is a descendant of the Eubanks family of Lincolnville and Collier Heights in St. Augustine, Florida.

Sgt. McQueen had just returned from his third tour of duty in Afghanistan, where he had worked as a military intelligence analyst with the 75th Ranger Regiment. While in the States, Sgt. McQueen had been based at Fort Benning, Georgia.

This was Sgt. McQueenís last tour of duty overseas and he was in Maryland preparing to enroll in January in the University of the District of Columbia, where he intended to study for a bachelor’s degree. He is a 2002 graduate of North Miami Beach High School.

Update 4: A reader of this blog has learned from the Gaithersburg Police Department that, as of October 16, 2006, this case remains under investigation by Montgomery County Homicide Investigators.

Update 5: I’ve received another update saying that as of October 31, 2006, Montgomery County Police still have nothing to release on this ongoing investigation.

Update 6: MCPD has made an arrest in this case:

Update - September Undetermined Death in Gaithersburg Classified as Homicide

Detectives from the Montgomery County Police Major Crimes Division – Homicide/Sex Section have been investigating the undetermined death that occurred in Gaithersburg, on Tuesday, September 26. The victim, Michael Anthony McQueen, age 22, of the 400 block of North Summit Avenue, was found deceased in the residence.

On September 26, at 12:56 a.m., 6th District and Gaithersburg City Police officers responded to the report of a suspicious situation in the 400 block of North Summit Avenue.
Upon arrival, they found McQueen. He appeared to be suffering from a gunshot wound, but no gun was found at the scene.

Today, Gary James Smith, age 24, formerly of the 400 block of North Summit Avenue, was arrested and charged with first-degree murder.

Through the course of the investigation and after forensic testing and evaluation, probable cause for developed to charge Smith, McQueen’s roommate. The motive for the shooting is not known.

Smith was taken to the Montgomery County Detention Center. Bond information is not available at this time.

Update 7: Ernesto Londoño writes in the Washington Post,

According to a charging document, Smith gave police conflicting stories about the shooting. He initially told detectives that he found McQueen sitting in the living room of the apartment, suffering from a gunshot wound.

He then told detectives that he had dropped McQueen off at home after they had drinks at local bars, then left home to run some errands and returned, finding McQueen dead with a gun in his hand.

Smith told detectives he panicked and drove to a nearby lake — the apartment is near Lake Needwood — to discard the gun.

In a third version of events, Smith told detectives that McQueen shot himself while Smith was in the bathroom. He again said he threw the gun in a lake.

Update 8: Ernesto Londoño writes in the Washington Post:

A former U.S. Army Ranger accused of fatally shooting his roommate, who also was his subordinate, says the younger soldier committed suicide in their Gaithersburg apartment and that he initially lied to detectives because he “freaked out,” his lawyers said yesterday.

Investigators say they found bloodstains on one of Smith’s sneakers and a pant leg and gunshot residue on his hands.

Andrew V. Jezic, Smith’s attorney, said McQueen, 22, was distraught over a recent breakup with his girlfriend and described the two roommates as close friends who had no reason to fight.

McQueen said his son was not distressed over the split and disputed the defense lawyer’s characterization of the soldiers’ relationship.

“He had never been in Michael’s circle of friends,” McQueen said yesterday in a phone interview. “The first time I ever saw Gary Smith’s face was in a mug shot.”

Update 9: From the Gazette, Soldier was killed by his roommate, police say, by Jaime Ciavarra

District Court Judge Barry Hamilton ruled that Smith was not a flight risk and set bond at $250,000 provided he stayed with his parents in Rockville. Smith posted bond and was released Saturday.

McQueen’s father called the bond decision ‘‘unfair.”

‘‘I can’t recall, in 30 years of covering trials, a person being released on bond in first-degree murder,” Michael McQueen, bureau chief of the Associated Press in New Orleans, said by phone Monday.

McQueen and his wife learned of Smith’s arrest shortly after it happened Thursday. They did not have time to fly to Maryland to be at Friday’s hearing, and he said his absence was likely noticeable.

Several supporters of Smith came to the hearing, and a friend of the family spoke.

‘‘We had no opportunity to respond to this in any way, shape or form,” McQueen said.

September 27th, 2006

Gaithersburg using Biodiesel In its Truck Fleet

According to this announcement,

Gaithersburg is now using B20 biodiesel, which is 20% vegetable oil and 80% diesel fuel. In this area, that vegetable oil comes primarily from soy beans. There are currently 98 vehicles in the City’s diesel fleet, including trucks, buses and other heavy equipment. Those vehicles consumed just over 50,000 gallons of diesel fuel last year. Under the new initiative, diesel fuel consumption will be reduced by 10,000 gallons.

The switch to biodiesel did not require any modifications to the vehicles. However, the City’s fuel storage tank was cleaned and improved filters were installed on the pumps prior to changing to biodiesel. In addition to reducing reliance on diesel fuel, the City is also helping with ongoing plans to reduce overall fuel consumption and emissions by including two hybrid passenger vehicles in its fleet, with plans to add more in the future.

It’s unclear if they’re getting it from Willie Nelson, and if the vegetable oil is post-consumer recycled oil or virgin oil manufactured just for this purpose.

September 27th, 2006

Oktoberfest at the Kentlands - Sun., Oct. 8

The City has an announcement up for the Kentlands Oktoberfest.

The City of Gaithersburg and the Kentlands Citizens Assembly present the 15 th Annual Oktoberfest at the Kentlands, Sunday, October 8, 2006 , from noon to 4 p.m. at Kentlands Village Green. Admission and parking are free. Wheelchair accessible shuttle service will be available from the Global Exchange Services (GXS) Building at the corner of Main Street and Route 28.

Amidst horse-drawn hayrides and scarecrow making, festival goers can enjoy authentic Bavarian fare and lively performances by Alte Kameraden German Band and the Alt-Washingtonia Bavarian dancers. Lederhosen is optional as Alt-Washingtonia instructs and encourages participation in some of their dances. Throughout the festival you’ll find booths representing local merchants, organizations, artists and craftspersons. The Arts Barn Museum Shop adjacent to the Village Green will showcase one-of-a-kind pieces by more than 100 local artists.

The outdoor Family Stage will feature delightful children’s musician Uncle Pete’s “Up With Kids” and the slapstick silliness of MR Jones. “Upbeat Unlimited,” an energetic musical youth theater group, and Ballet Petite will perform indoors at the Arts Barn. Magician Marc Phillips will be performing his amazing magic outside the Art Barn.

Kids will also enjoy a full day of pony rides, moonbounces, face painting and many other activities. Note that a small fee will be charged for some activities.

The announcment doesn’t say anything one way or another about beer, but this page on about.com does say “family friendly,” which usually is a euphemism for “no beer”.

September 27th, 2006

O’Malley Visits CASA de Maryland

As reported in the Examiner,

O’Malley, the Democrat who hopes to unseat Maryland Republican Gov. Robert Ehrlich in November, visited a Latino community center with his running mate, Del. Anthony Brown, and Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico. The leaders urged Latino residents gathered at Casa de Maryland to register to vote and to vote for candidates who will represent their concerns for better, affordable health care and more access to education.

Richardson told the audience O’Malley’s record showed his support for Latinos and other ethnic communities.

[…]

But the initiative that garnered the most applause by far was O’Malley’s promise to make the buses run on time.

I’m all for more reliable buses.

As reported in the Albuquerque Tribune,

Richardson, who has criticized the Bush administration for not deploying more Border Patrol agents in New Mexico, commented on the fence plan after speaking at a get-out-the-Latino-vote rally for Maryland’s Democratic candidate for governor, Baltimore Mayor Martin O’Malley.

About 200 people, many of them newly registered voters, attended the rally at a CASA of Maryland services center in a Washington suburb.

“He cares about our people,” Richardson, who is Hispanic, said of O’Malley. “He cares about a sensible immigration policy, a policy that recognizes protecting our laws and border security, but also to make America a melting pot for all people.”

About 2 percent of Maryland’s voters are estimated to be Hispanic. In the Washington area, more Hispanics come from El Salvador than Mexico.

As reported in the Washington Times,

The event was sponsored by CASA of Maryland, an immigrant advocacy group, to encourage foreign-born voters to go to the polls in November.

September 27th, 2006

Chief Mary Ann Viverette Speaks

Chief Viverette of the Gaithersburg Police Department is quoted in the Washington Post:

“In the Montgomery County area, we’ve taken more the track that we celebrate diversity,” said Gaithersburg Police Chief Mary Ann Viverette, who is also the president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police. Immigration is “not an issue we want to enforce.”

Given my personal experiences with the Post, I’m not going to immediately assume that this reflects the meaning of her full, original statement. However, I would very much like to know what she thought that she was saying, and how she feels about the selective enforcement of laws. Are all Federal crimes off limits for the Gaithersburg Police?

The New MoCo Progressive has some thoughts on Ms. Viverette’s statement.