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>Venture Fund Plan Approved

>Legislation to fill a state-run venture capital fund with at least $70 million for investments in small, high-tech companies was one of the final bills approved by the Maryland General Assembly last month.

Governor Martin O’Malley said the venture fund plan, his signature economic proposal known as Invest Maryland, “would be a real shot in the arm” for the state’s economy. The bill is a trimmed-down version of what O’Malley first proposed last summer and made his top economic initiative when the legislature convened in January. Invest Maryland is designed to capitalize on the research done at and around the colleges, universities and government facilities in the state. The bill is not without its critics, including Delegate Wendell Beitzel of Garrett County…

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If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

877-563-5350 Questions about ANY listed property? I can help! Call me!
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>House ready to debate natural gas drilling; ban would close off Marcellus Shale in western Md.

>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: March 21, 2011 – 12:11 am
Last Updated: March 21, 2011 – 12:11 am

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — The Maryland House of Delegates is set to vote this week on an effort to restrict drilling for natural gas in western Maryland.

Democratic Delegate Heather Mizeur of Montgomery County is pushing a bill to severely limit when the state can issue drilling permits.

If the House approves it Tuesday, the bill would still need the approval of the Senate and Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley.

Oil and gas companies are seeking permission from many East Coast governments to access the multi-state Marcellus Shale. The formation holds large supplies of natural gas, but can only be accessed with hydraulic fracturing, a process environmentalists oppose.

A House committee last week rejected an effort by Republican Delegate Wendell Beitzel of Garrett County to require the Maryland Department of Environment to issue drilling permits.

Read the full article here.

If you or someone you know is considering buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues! As member of the Garrett County Board of Realtors, I can assist you with ANY listed property, regardless of the listing broker.

877-563-5350 Questions about ANY listed property? I can help! Call me!
Visit the ‘I Love Deep Creek & Garrett County group’ on Facebook! News, events, photos, real estate, community, info, more! 1,750+ members & growing!

Beitzel’s hunting license suspension measure stalls in Maryland Senate

Kevin Spradlin
Cumberland Times-News

— CUMBERLAND — It’s not often that you see Delegate Wendell Beitzel team up with Delegate Barbara Frush to support the same side of any legislation.

The fact that it happened on a hunting-related bill is nearly astounding. And the fact that House Bill 636, which would have authorized the Maryland Department of Natural Resources to suspend a hunting license for up to five years for a person convicted of a state or federal hunting violation, passed the House unanimously by a vote of 136-0, but failed to get to the floor in the Senate was, by all accounts, disappointing.

Beitzel is a Republican and an avid hunter representing all of Garrett County and western Allegany County. Frush is a Democrat and represents Anne Arundel and Prince George’s counties. Annually, Frush can be counted upon to introduce legislation that would end Western Maryland’s bear hunt. To counter that, Beitzel offers his “share the bear” bill that would authorize wildlife officials to relocate nuisance bears into jurisdictions other than Western Maryland.

DNR supported the bill. Beitzel said that could have been part of the bill’s downfall in the Senate’s Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee, which gave it an unfavorable report on Tuesday.

“I think one senator over there has a problem with giving DNR more authority,” Beitzel said, declining to name the elected official.

Beitzel said the bill even had the reluctant support of the Allegany-Garrett Sportsmen’s Association. The group wasn’t “overly enthused with it” but, Beitzel said, understood the desire to police hunters who couldn’t follow the law. Beitzel also is co-chair of the Maryland Legislative Sportsmen’s Causus, and as a body, “we supported it. Being co-chair, I obviously had to support the bill. It will probably be out again next year.”

In Maryland, officials can suspend a hunter’s license for one year. In other states, Beitzel said, the suspension can last five years.

Frush, Beitzel said, “has always been so anti-hunting and pushing to not allow the bear hunt … We kind of came to a meeting of the minds … This year, she didn’t put the bill in to take away the bear hunt. I didn’t have to put the bill in to share the bear.”

Other legislative updates from the General Assembly’s final full week in session, which adjourns midnight Monday, included:

• Turkey can now be hunted on the last Sunday in April and the first Sunday in May in Allegany County, except in years in which those Sundays fall on Easter. Garrett County was added to HB 245, which passed both chambers.

• Lawmakers approved HB 246, which authorizes a person in Allegany and Garrett counties to hunt for deer on private property with a bow and arrow during open season on the last three Sundays in October and the second Sunday in November.

• Efforts to plan and design an Oakland Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Museum in Oakland will be supported by bond bills totaling $200,000 equally split between the Senate and the House.

• The Allegany County Museum project in downtown Cumberland will receive a combined $150,000, significantly less than the requested $600,000.

• An effort to reduce the distance from a natural gas drilling wellhead from a neighbor’s property to 500 feet from 1,000 feet failed despite its origination from the Maryland Department of the Environment’s Ed Larrimore and the support of Sen. George Edwards. Beitzel said the initiative “wasn’t supported by the administration.” However, “we’ll come back to that one next year,” Beitzel said.

• HB 733, which passed both chambers unanimously, auth-orizes the creation of an Emergency Services Board to assist in the distribution of funds to local volunteer fire and rescue departments.

• Beitzel’s “Made in America” bill, HB 1465, received unanimous support in the House but Senate action by Sunday morning wasn’t available. The bill, requested by Fechheimer Manufacturing in Grantsville, would require state and county government entities, including school systems, to purchase uniforms, furniture and safety equipment from items made in America.

The fiscal note attached to what Beitzel called an important “jobs bill” would have a “potential significant increase in local government expenditures … beginning in Fiscal Year 2012. Expenditure increases may be at least 15 percent of current costs but will vary based on the extent to which local governments do not already purchase or rent American-made items and on the availability of comparable American-made products. This bill imposes a mandate on a unit of local government.”

At least 20 states, including Maryland, already have some form of Buy American purchasing preference.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

House OKs solar bill, finishes budget

General Assembly wraps up at midnight today
BRIAN WITTE
Associated Press – Cumberland Times

— ANNAPOLIS — Maryland utilities would have to buy more power from solar energy sources under a bill the state’s House of Delegates approved Saturday, but lawmakers still have to work out differences before the bill is final.

House and Senate lawmakers disagree on how much solar energy utilities should be required to buy and the amount of money they would pay for not complying. The House version approved Saturday takes a more modest approach.

Both bills would increase the cost of citizens’ electricity bills — though only by pennies a month in the next few years. The House bill is less expensive for taxpayers. It would increase residential electricity bills by an estimated 5 cents per month next year and 66 cents per month for the average commercial ratepayer. The amount goes up each year, resulting in an increase of 77 cents per month for residents and $9.57 for commercial ratepayers in 2016.

The Senate version would cost more. The cost added to an electric bill would grow from 5 cents per month next year to $1.38 in 2016 for residential ratepayers, compared to 66 cents a month next year to $17.23 in 2016 for commercial ratepayers.

Supporters say the bill, which passed on a vote of 109-31 Saturday, will help create jobs in solar energy while also protecting the environment by encouraging more of a shift to renewable energy.

“It’s a pro-jobs vote, and it certainly falls in line with the many good incentives and initiatives that we have taken, quite honestly, that began at the end of the last administration and throughout this administration that are good for the environment,” said Delegate Brian McHale, D-Baltimore.

But opponents said it would only make already high electric bills even more costly, and they disputed the notion that it would create jobs.

“It makes life harder for U.S. manufacturing companies be-cause it makes our products more expensive than products being made in other countries,” said Delegate Nicholaus Kipke, R-Anne Arundel.

Complying with the bills would cost suppliers $185 million through 2016 under the House bill while the costs under the Senate proposal would be $1.2 billion through 2026.

The debate came on a rare Saturday session for both the House and Senate as the Legislature caught up on work while preparing to adjourn Monday at midnight.

The Maryland General Assembly also wrapped up work on the state’s $13.2 billion operating budget after the House voted 105-34 to approve changes made by House and Senate negotiators in a conference committee. The Senate already has signed off on the changes.

The fiscal year 2011 budget relies on a mix of cuts, one-time spending transfers from reserve accounts and federal stimulus money to close a $2 billion gap.

Democratic supporters of the plan say the budget responsibly reduces spending while protecting critical investments in education, and they point out that the economy appears to be stabilizing. Republican critics say lawmakers didn’t cut enough and are paving the way for tax increases next year when federal stimulus money runs out.

Also on Saturday the Senate passed legislation that would add special coding to sex offenders’ driver’s licenses, something lawmakers say will help officials keep tabs on them. Sen. Richard Colburn, R-Dorchester, who sponsored the amendment, says it would alert police to ask more questions if they stop a registered sex offender with a child. The House still has to approve the legislation. Maryland senators also voted to legalize medical marijuana, but the measure is not expected to pass the House of Delegates.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

House of Delegates Passes MAR Septic Legislation

Jay’s note: This is great legislation for us here in Garrett County, as very few areas are serviced by public sewer.

House of Delegates Passes MAR Septic Legislation

HB 62 will ensure that property owners living in Maryland’s Critical Areas will receive a grant to fund the cost difference between a conventional septic system and one using nitrogen reduction technology when replacing a failing septic system. The legislation will override the current means test now being used by the Maryland Department of Environment. The legislation take effect on October 1, 2010.

The Senate will hold a hearing on the legislation on March 23.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Stanton says he’ll challenge Beitzel

Stanton says he’ll challenge Beitzel

Oakland resident will seek District 1A delegate seat

Kevin Spradlin
Cumberland Times-News

MCHENRY — It’s not yet official, but Democrat James “Smokey” Stanton said he’s committed to challenging incumbent Wendell Beitzel for the District 1A seat in the House of Delegates.

Stanton, 62, said he could bring “a unique blend” of skills to the position, which he believes has not effectively been used to represent district residents in Garrett County and along Georges Creek in Allegany County. Stanton said his experience in small business and large corporations, as well as existing contacts in state and local governments, would ensure “the learning curve is fairly flat.”

“Yes, it would be a new job for me,” said Stanton, a Garrett County native and a resident of Oakland, but “I’ve worked within the Maryland legislature for a total of 17 years. I understand how to write legislation. I understand how to work within the legislative process in order to effectively advocate (for) our area.”

Beitzel confirmed Wednesday he will seek a second term in office. He defended his ability to effectively represent District 1A.

“I think, for a first-term delegate … that I have been a very effective legislator,” Beitzel said, “and I think if anyone looks at some of the bills that I’ve passed and issues I’ve defended … I have absolutely no problem defending my record.”

Stanton said he intends to file with the Garrett County Board of Elections shortly after Jan. 1. He has spent the last few months distributing literature at events across the district, from the Garrett County Fair in August to the District 1 delegation meeting with the public this month at Garrett College.

Deadline for candidates to file for local and state offices is 9 p.m. July 6. The primary election is set for Sept. 14. The general election is slated for Nov. 2.

Many people seem to understand that people living in Garrett and Allegany counties share a different set of concerns than people living in most other parts of the state. But understanding that is not good enough, he said.

“I don’t believe it’s enough to simply understand the problems,” Stanton said. “We must have representation that can state the nature of our issues and the impact of those to people who have never been to our area. It demands that we have representation that can work with those other jurisdictions and to advocate for our corner of the world.

“I think there are a lot of areas where we need improvement in the effectiveness of our representation,” Stanton said.

Stanton said the person who holds the District 1A seat needs to better communicate to the rest of the General Assembly how adversely more rural counties, towns and communities are impacted by state budget cuts. The legislator needs to file amendments to bills with statewide ramifications instead of allowing the “cookie-cutter” bill to sail through the legislative process. Those amendments could make certain bills more palatable to Mountain Marylanders’ diets.

Second, Stanton said, new legislation is needed that “protects our culture, our way of life, our economic situation, in comparison to the rest of the state.”

Stanton said a third area of improvement required for District 1A is better constituent service.

Officials in both counties sometimes “encounter a situation with a state agency that sometimes the state agency is not as responsive as it could be,” he said. “Effective representation means working with those agencies in order to solve the problem … and solve it appropriately.”

Stanton is a former three-term Oakland Town Council member and was elected by his fellow council members five times to the position of council president. In 2006, he was elected chairman of the Garrett County Democratic Central Committee.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Long & Foster Real Estate for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350