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Goings on in Gaithersburg, Maryland

September 4th, 2007

Planning Commission Meeting, 09/05/07

From the City’s website:

Agenda - Planning Commission Meeting, 9/5/2007
Posted 8/27/2007

City of Gaithersburg
31 South Summit Avenue
Gaithersburg, Maryland 20877

Telephone: 301-258-6330

PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA*
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
7:30 P.M.
City Hall Council Chambers

APPROVAL OF MINUTES

August 8, 2007, Planning Commission Meeting
Background Material (pdf format)

RECORD PLATS

CONSENT

AFP-07-030 – Watkins Mill Town Center
MXD Zone
Metropolitan Grove Road
Minor Site Revisions
AMENDMENT TO FINAL PLAN REVIEW
Background Material (pdf format)

PI-B070243 & PI-B070238 — Absolute Mac
C-2 Zone
895 Quince Orchard Road
Icon Signage
ICON SIGN PERMIT REVIEW
Background Material (pdf format)

SITE PLANS

AFP-07-024 – Rolling Stock Park
CBD Zone
5 Summit Avenue

Park Plaza
AMENDMENT TO FINAL PLAN REVIEW
Background Material (pdf format - 3M)

CSP-07-001 – GE Technology Park
I-3 Zone

100 Edison Park Drive
Three Office/Warehouse Buildings
Totaling 202,175 Square Feet
CONCEPT PLAN
Background Material (pdf format)

FROM THE COMMISSION

FROM STAFF

ADJOURNMENT

* THE ITEMS AND PERTINENT INFORMATION ON THIS AGENDA ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME.

August 17th, 2007

08/20/07 Mayor and Council Meeting

The agenda below is from the City’s website. There’s a few potentially interesting items on the agenda. First is a public hearing on changes to the voter registration procedures in the City. What this is about is removing the City’s own voter registration list, which for some time was maintained separately from the master voter registration list used for county, state and federal elections. It has been so long since anyone has registered this way that there now is no one on that list, and they’d like to remove the charter provision that provided for it. This is likely not to change anything in fact. What is more interesting is the fact that this was noted in the process of determining whether there was any procedure in place to exclude non-citizens from registering to vote; as I’ve mentioned previously, the answer appears to be that only the threat of prosecution for perjury stands in the way of an illegal immigrant’s registration.

The second thing I’d call attention to is the latest update on the $25 million swimming pool the City plans to build in the Lakelands. I’ve extracted a few images from the background materials:

The third item of interest is an update to the Casey East SDP. Again, a couple of pictures from the background materials:

Agenda - Mayor and City Council Meeting, 8/20/2007
Posted 8/16/2007

City of Gaithersburg
AGENDA FOR A REGULAR CITY COUNCIL MEETING

MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 2007, 7:30 P.M.

I. CALL TO ORDER

II. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE

III. INVOCATION

Maxine Oliver, Baha’i Faith

IV. APPROVAL OF MINUTES

Minutes of a Regular Meeting of the Mayor and City Council Held August 6, 2007
Background Material (pdf format)

V. CONSENT ITEM
(resolutions for approval by the City Council that do not need discussion)

Resolution of the Mayor and City Council Authorizing the City Manager to Extend a Contract for Cleaning of City Facilities ($67,037)
Background Material (pdf format)

VI. APPOINTMENTS

Resolution of the City Council Confirming Appointments to the Board of Supervisors of Elections
Background Material (pdf format)

VII. OATH OF OFFICE TO BOARD OF SUPEVISORS OF ELECTIONS MEMBERS

VIII. PRESENTATIONS

  1. Habitat for Humanity of Montgomery County MD, Inc.
  2. Gaithersburg Aquatic/Recreation Center Schematic Plan Update
    Background Material (pdf format)

IX. PUBLIC APPEARANCES
(public is invited to speak on any subject that is not a public hearing topic on tonight’s agenda – each speaker three minutes)

X. FROM THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL/ANNOUNCEMENTS

  • Upcoming City Events

XI. FROM THE CITY MANAGER

XII. PUBLIC HEARING

Resolution of the Mayor and City Council to Amend Section 27 of the City Charter to Modify the Procedures for Registering to Vote in City Elections
Background Material (pdf format)

XIII. RECESS MAYOR AND COUNCIL MEETING


HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION

  1. Call to Order

  2. Approval of Minutes

    Minutes of a Historic District Commission Meeting Held June 18, 2007
    TBA - Background Material (pdf format)

  3. Certificates of Approval
  • HAWP-92C - Applicant: Michael Stumborg, 15 Walker Avenue, Removal of Rear Solarium/Replace with Enclosed Porch
    Background Material (pdf format)

  • HAWP-109 - Applicant: Neang Lin, for Hak Srun Lin, 24 Chestnut Street, Expansion of Concrete Driveway
    Background Material (pdf format)
  1. Policy Discussions
  • HAWP-95A - Applicant: Irfan Khan, (Retroactive), 112 Meem Avenue, An Amendment to HAWP-95, Change of Materials/Window Style/Roof

    Background Material (pdf format)

  • Historic Significance of 201 East Diamond Avenue, Applicant: Charles Blessing, for Inter-Continental Group, Demolition Permit
    Background Material (pdf format)
  1. Adjournment

XIV. RECONVENE MAYOR AND COUNCIL MEETING

XV. ORDINANCES, RESOLUTIONS, AND REGULATIONS

(ordinances, resolutions, and regulations to be introduced or adopted following appropriate procedures required by the City Code, or resolutions that may require discussion by the Mayor and Council prior to approval)

  1. Resolution of the Mayor and City Council Authorizing the City Manager to Enter into a Contract for Stream Restoration Design Services ($84,065)
    Background Material (pdf format)

  2. Resolution of the Mayor and City Council Authorizing the City Manager to Negotiate and Enter Into an Agreement With the Housing Opportunities Commission to Administer a Residential Redevelopment Homeownership Assistance Program for Residents Displaced by Residential Redevelopment ($400,000)
    Background Material (pdf format)

  3. Resolution of the Mayor and City Council Awarding Matching Grants to Gateway Commons HOA, Kentlands Condominiums II (Town Homes), Kentlands Condominiums IV, Lakelands Ridge HOA, and the Gaithersburg Greater Historic District ($12,703)
    Background Material (pdf format)

  4. Resolution of the Mayor And City Council Changing the Effective Date of Ordinance O-4-07 Adopting Section 15-9, and Providing for Future Changes to the Effective Date by Resolution
    Background Material (pdf format)

XVI. POLICY DISCUSSION AND STAFF GUIDANCE

(discussion by the Mayor and Council about previous public hearing topics and other policy matters)

  1. Resolution of the Mayor and City Council to Amend Section 5 and Section 16 of the City Charter to Increase the Salary of the Mayor and the Members of the City Council and to Create a New Section of 5A of the City Charter to Require the Appointment of the Mayor and City Council Compensation Committee Every Four Years
    Background Material (pdf format)

  2. SDP-07-001, Resolution of the Mayor and City Council of Gaithersburg Granting Approval of an Amendment to Schematic Development Plan, SDP-05-003, Known as Casey East (Parcels 360, 563 and N455) in Gaithersburg, Maryland. The Approved Plan is a Mix of Uses, Including 382 Residential Units, Office, Restaurant, Retail, Service Station, and Public Uses on Approximately 40.10 Acres of Land. The Current Application (SDP-07-001) Requests Approval to Redistribute the Number and Type of Dwelling Units Among the Three Residential Buildings, Reduce the Height of Building C From Seven to Five Stories, Reduce the Mixed Use Retail by 1,700 Square Feet, Increase the Senior Center From 10,000 to 29,500 Square Feet, and Amend the Phasing Plan. The Subject Property is Located Northwest of the Intersection of Maryland Route 355 (North Frederick Avenue) and Watkins Mills Road, Gaithersburg, Maryland
    Background Material (pdf format - 7.5M)

  3. Z-305(o), An Ordinance to Rezone 8,673 Square Feet of Land From the Existing R-A (Low Density Residential) Zone to the R-90 (Medium Density Residential) Zone, Under the Optional Method of Rezoning, in Accordance with Section 24-196 Map Amendments) and Section 24-198 (Optional Method) of the City Code. The Property is Currently Known as Parcel 100, in the Oakmont Subdivision, Located at 100 Central Avenue, in the City of Gaithersburg

    Background Material (pdf format)

XVII. FROM THE ASSISTANT CITY MANAGERS, CITY ATTORNEY AND OTHER STAFF

XVIII. ADJOURNMENT


ANNOUNCEMENT

Notice to the general public is hereby given that the Mayor and City Council of the City of Gaithersburg will NOT conduct a work session on Monday, August 27, 2007.

June 28th, 2007

Gazette: Ask residents if they want a swimming pool

No, the Gazette isn’t referring to Gaithersburg’s plan to spend $25,000,000 of public funds * on a swimming pool. They are referring to an initiative in Sykesville to carve space out of a public park to allow a developer to build and operate a pool. Interesting that they didn’t have similar advice for Gaithersburg, despite the fact that the City is proposing to spend an amount equal to half of the entire annual budget of the City to build a pool — and to take on an annual million-dollar operating loss to run it.

In an editorial in this week’s Carroll County edition of the Gazette, the paper opines:

The Town of Sykesville is considering again building a swimming pool, but this time without public money.

Little says summer more than a day at the pool, so we encourage the analysis, but we caution our elected officials to temper their zeal for the project with resident interest.

We question if enough residents care about the matter for the government to involve itself in it.

If residents have their own pool, why would they pay to go to a public pool? If they belong to one of the clubs in the area, why would they choose to pay to go to Sykeville’s?

Many questions remain over this project, and we do see merit in it. But the town should first ask residents if they have any interest in another swimming pool before spending too much effort on it.

All good advice, I think.

* The $25 million includes City tax revenues, County funds, State funds, Crown Farm developer funds, and land value. The Crown Farm funds were part of the deal with the City to annex the Crown Farm land and approve the development project, but the City is not obligated to spend the funds on a pool. (return)

June 12th, 2007

Fireworks at Last Night’s Mayor and Council Work Session

Quoting Council Member John Schlichting:

I’d just like to put this in perspective here, because we’re talking about a $50 million budget. We’ve agreed on everything in that $50 million budget, except for this one $250,000 suggested line item. There are three of us who believe that this $250,000 line item should be in the budget, there are two of us who don’t. And the Mayor is now threatening to veto the budget — the budget — over a $250,000 line item. I just don’t understand the situation.

The video of this meeting is now available on the City’s website. I highly recommend that anyone who is truly interested in the future of Gaithersburg, and Olde Towne in particular, watch this video. There were several items of discussion, most of which were largely uncontroversial. Sadly, the $25 million dollar swimming pool/perpetual money sink was not a topic of controversy or discussion beyond the incidental, at least among the Mayor and Council. As far as they appear to be concerned, a certain, perpetual, annual million-dollar operating loss for a swimming pool is a perfectly acceptable burden for the City, but — according to the Mayor and council members Alster and Edens — without an offsetting revenue source or detailed analysis of how much would be needed to cover unknowable future projects, a one-time $250,000 set-aside for homeownership assistance is simply too much for the taxpayers to bear.

The one thing that, to my mind, seemed abundantly clear was that this really had next to nothing to do with a quarter of a million dollars. The City has bits of money stashed away in all manner of budget line items, including for other uncertain expenses without dedicated funding such as assistance for school playgrounds. Putting money in this homeownership assistance program is not the same thing as spending it, and if it turns out they don’t need the money they can zero out the line item in the future, transferring the money back to the undesignated balance if that’s appropriate. No, this argument was a proxy for something else. Things are changing in the City. It’s getting ever more expensive to run this City, and projects like the swimming pool are causing the budget to burst at the seams. At the same time, the housing stock in the older parts of town are in serious decline, and it’s no longer the case that the City can count on the steady diet of greenfield developments to distract everyone from this fact. There are major battles ahead, with developers, homeowners, taxpayers, business owners, renters, affordable housing advocates and the County all taking up sides. I expect that we ain’t seen nothing yet.

March 28th, 2007

Gazette this week, part 1

  • Chris Robinson writes: Seniors call for new center to serve upcounty area:

    City leaders and area seniors on Monday night rejected a feasibility study’s proposed $2.5 million in upgrades at the Upcounty Senior Center in Gaithersburg, opting instead for short-term improvements while developing a new facility.

  • Chris Robinson writes: Crown Farm neighborhoods get early nod:

    The outline for two of the five neighborhoods in the proposed Crown Farm Village community were approved last week, paving the way for Gaithersburg’s largest residential project of this century.

  • Sebastian Montes writes: Options for saving pool dry up:

    It appears that two last-ditch options for YMCA members trying to save the 45-year-old pool in Montgomery Village have come up short.

March 7th, 2007

The Gazette This Week

  • Chris Robinson writes, Aquatic center is off the blocks in Gaithersburg:

    Gaithersburg residents glimpsed the first designs of the evolving Aquatic and Recreation Center off Route 28 during a community meeting last week, as the city gears up for nearly a year’s worth of deliberation on the project.

  • Sebastian Montes writes, Policing addressed for day-labor center:

    County police and day-laborer advocates have met to work out a range of issues they see as integral to the success of a new county employment center in Derwood.

    There is worry, however, that if workers stray from the site, the nearby community will consider the center a failure.

    ‘‘We don’t want to give them a reason to say the center isn’t working,” said Diane Tillery, community services officer for the county police’s Sixth District.

    Tillery, who has played a central role in the situation since late 2004, wants to prevent impromptu hiring sites in Derwood like the ones that have tended to pop up near the county’s formal centers in Silver Spring and Wheaton.

  • C. Benjamin Ford writes, Three major transit projects delayed by revision of bad ridership numbers:

    Three major transit projects will be delayed for up to a year so state officials can come up with better studies on projected riders.

    Delayed are the Purple Line between Bethesda and New Carrollton, the Corridor Cities Transitway linking Clarksburg and the Shady Grove Metro station and the Red Line connecting Woodlawn to the Inner Harbor in Baltimore.

  • Sebastian Montes writes, Sixth District officer marks 25 years of service:

    Numerous colorful merit badges donned the brown vests of 17 Brownie Girl Scouts snacking on vanilla wafers and juice bags with county police Officer Diane Tillery at DuFief Elementary School in Gaithersburg on Friday afternoon.

    Tillery’s badge is the one she started pinning to her chest 25 years ago.

March 1st, 2007

City Posts Information on Lakelands Swim Center

Today, the City put up a web page with links to PDFs of two powerpoint presentations that were shown at the workshop the other night. One is a overview of the project prepared by City staff, while the other is a “concept plan” giving a more visual context, and was prepared by architects hired by the City. The first slide below is from the former, the other three are from the latter.