CUMBERLAND — The Cumberland/Allegany County Industrial Foundation, Inc. (CACIF) and the Garrett County Development Corporation proudly host PACE. The 2012 theme is “Come to Play ~ Plan to Stay.”
There are two PACE events. The reception is Thursday, January 26, from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and the breakfast is Friday, January 27, from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Both events are held at the Loews Annapolis Hotel.
Overall, the reception and the breakfast are business-social in style and atmosphere. The reception features classic hors d’oeuvres and an open bar and the breakfast has country-style buffet offerings and features a keynote speaker.
The general public is warmly invited to PACE 2012. This is NOT an invitation only event. PACE is open to all!
There is one all inclusive ticket to attend both PACE events (reception and breakfast). The cost is $150 per person.
Tickets are not available at the door. Ticket sales end on Wednesday, January 18. Checks should be made payable to “Annapolis Reception Committee” and mailed to Mountain Maryland PACE, P.O. Box 3273, LaVale, MD 21504-3273. PACE questions should be directed to Keli Mason, Allegany County Department of Economic Development: Keli Mason, 301-777-5967, kmason@allconet.org
More here.
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!
Category: PACE
Greater Cumberland Committee hears discussion on Mineral County Day, PACE
By Barbara High
News-Tribune
Posted Jan 06, 2012 @ 04:26 PM
Print Comment
CUMBERLAND, Md. —
By Barbara High
Tribune Correspondent
CUMBERLAND – The Greater Cumberland Committee membership meeting held Thursday at the Cumberland Country Club included a panel discussion on the importance of participating in the upcoming Mineral County Day and PACE.
The panel consisted of Maryland Sen. George Edwards, Del. LeRoy Myers, Garrett County Commissioner Jim Raley and West Virginia Sen. David Sypolt, Del. Gary Howell and Mineral County Commission president Cynthia Pyles.
Mineral County Day is Jan. 11-13 in Charleston. and will consist of a State of the State address, meetings with department heads, staff and legislators, a luncheon at the Capital and an evening reception at Embassy Suites.
The discussion will focus on specific issues relating to Mineral County in the areas of transportation and economic development as well as recognizing advances within it’s region.
According to Pyles, they will also recognize a Mineral County resident and this year that will be Walter E. “Jack” Rollins. A popular songwriter, Rollins wrote the hit “Frosty The Snowman,” along with other classics like “Peter Cottontail” and “Smokey the Bear.” Rollins was a Keyser native who died in 1973 and is buried in his hometown.
More here.
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!
Mtn. Md. PACE Slated Jan. 26–27; Tickets Available
Dec. 29, 2011
The Garrett County Development Corporation and Cumberland/Allegany County Industrial Foundation Inc. will host the 2012 Mountain Maryland PACE (positive attitudes change everything) events at the Loews Annapolis Hotel in Annapolis next month. Tickets are now available.
The reception is scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 26, from 6 to 8:30 p.m., with the breakfast slated for Friday, Jan. 27, from 8 to 9:30 a.m.
Overall, the reception and breakfast are business/social in style and atmosphere. The reception features classic hors d’oeuvres and an open bar. The breakfast has country-style buffet offerings and features a keynote speaker.
The theme for this year’s events is “Come to Play – Plan to Stay.”
PACE 2012 is not by invitation only. The general public is invited to attend, and anyone may purchase tickets. There is one all-inclusive ticket to attend both the reception and breakfast. Two-tiered pricing is in effect: $130 per person if payment is received on or before Wednesday, Jan. 4, and $150 per person if payment is received on or after Thursday, Jan. 5. Tickets will not be available at the door.
Ticket sales end on Wednesday, Jan. 18. Checks should be made payable to “Annapolis Reception Committee” and mailed to Mountain Maryland PACE, P.O. Box 3273, LaVale, MD 21504-3273.
PACE questions may be directed to Keli Mason, Allegany County Department of Economic Development, at 301-777-5967, 800-555-4080, or kmason@allconet.org.
More here.
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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!
PACE to tackle highway funding needs
Cumberland Times-News Thu Sep 23, 2010, 08:00 AM EDT
— Municipal and county governments are picking up an ally in their quest to have the state restore some of the highway user revenue that has been taken away over the last couple of years.
Organizers of the annual Mountain Maryland PACE reception and legislative breakfast will use the loss of road funding as a major talking point when the event is held in Annapolis this coming January.
As the state has coped with budget shortfalls, cuts to local government funding have been common. Among the hardest hit funding sector has been highway funding.
David Moe, PACE committee co-chairman, said the No. 1 priority for elected officials and business professionals in Western Maryland should be to convince lawmakers to restore highway user revenue funds. “The cut in highway user funds has been devastating for all municipalities,” Moe said. “It just cannot continue.”
For 35 years, a PACE reception (the acronym stands for Positive Attitudes Change Everything) has been held in Maryland’s capital to draw attention to the far western part of the state and to generate ideas on how to help improve economic development and quality of life here.
The 2011 reception will be held Jan. 27 and 28 and again will be a combined effort of Allegany and Garrett county leaders. The event is sponsored by the Cumberland-Allegany County Industrial Foundation and the Garrett County Development Corp.
PACE features a number of exhibits by local businesses and organizations and is attended by numerous many General Assembly members, aides, state government officials and lobbyists each year. “The idea is to get state government to remember Western Maryland doesn’t end at Frederick,” Moe commented.
Redirected highway user revenue funds focus of PACE committee
Kevin Spradlin
Cumberland Times-News Wed Sep 22, 2010, 10:04 AM EDT
9/22 — CUMBERLAND — Perhaps for the first time in a long time, organizers of the annual Mountain Maryland PACE reception and legislative breakfast in Annapolis have latched on to a talking point on which jurisdictions across Maryland can agree.
The No. 1 priority for elected officials and business professionals alike, said PACE committee co-chairman David Moe, is to convince lawmakers to restore highway user revenue funds, which have been taken by Gov. Martin O’Malley to shore up the state’s budget.
Moe said the message of the 35th annual event, scheduled for Jan. 27 and 28, will convey in part how leaders in Garrett and Allegany counties have struggled to cope with the state budget cuts to local governments.
“The cut in highway user funds has been devastating for all municipalities,” Moe said. “It just cannot continue.”
More than a dozen PACE Committee members met Sept. 15 at Penn Alps Restaurant in Grantsville to begin planning for the 2011 event.
Other talking points are likely to include ensuring that funding of teacher pensions remains a state obligation — and is not shifted to Maryland counties — as well as Garrett County’s new strategic plan that is about to be published.
At the committee’s Sept. 29 meeting at the same location, Moe said this year’s theme should be finalized.
In January 2010, the theme was “Think Green, Think Mountain Maryland.” So far, 21 possible themes are being considered for the next PACE. Options include “The Summit of Success,” “Back to the Future,” A Place to Do Business” and “Getting There From Here.”
“It’s always a challenge to come up with something that’s unique,” Moe said. “The idea is to get state government to remember Western Maryland doesn’t end at Frederick.”
He said the theme does not necessarily have to incorporate the services and offerings of displayers, which often range from utility companies, defense contractors, tourism-related operations and higher education.
Attendance in 2010 was down by a little more than one-third, Moe said. However, the number of displayers and sponsorship dollars both were up.
PACE is a joint effort between the Cumberland-Allegany County Industrial Foundation and the Garrett Development Corp.
Kevin Spradlin can be reached at kspradlin@times-news.com