Daily "Recent Prince George's County News" updates were suspended in early March 2016. They were compiled primarily from retweets of news headlines. Those retweets continue, but in unformatted and unarchived form at PG-Politics-Briefs. To follow such headlines on a current basis, follow @pgpolitics on Twitter.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Recent News about Prince George's County (29 May 2009)



(Posted 29 May 2009)

Thursday, May 28, 2009

2010 Candidates: Mel Franklin, Tamara Davis Brown to run for County Council from District 9

Two attorneys plan run for council seat; nbsp;Marlton; Clinton residents to compete for District 9 in 2010
Gazette, 28 May 2009 (McKeever ).
Marlton resident Mel Franklin, an assistant attorney general for the state of Maryland, and Tamara Davis Brown, a Clinton community activist and lawyer, will both run for the Prince George's County Council's District 9 seat in 2010. . . Both Franklin and Brown announced their candidacy May 14 at a Brandywine Neighborhood Coalition meeting. . . . Both candidates have been active in local politics. Brown is president of both the Windbrook Area Citizens Association and the Surratts-Clinton Democratic Club, and Franklin founded the Greater Marlboro Democratic Club in 2005. . . .
[Full story]
Note: I remain willing to post and forward information from candidates planning to run for county and state offices in 2010, as I did in 2006.  Information in plain text or simple HTML format is preferred.

(Posted 28 May 2009)

Recent News about Prince George's County (28 May 2009)


(Posted 28 May 2009)

Del Davis testifies to grand jury in probe of Sen. Currie (Updated)

Lawmaker testifies in Currie probe; Grand jury continues look at influential state senator
Sun, 28 May 2009 (Smitherman & Dechter).
A top-ranking Maryland delegate testified Wednesday before a grand jury investigating state Sen. Ulysses Currie , a continuation of a federal probe into the senator's work as a consultant for the Shoppers Food and Pharmacy grocery store chain.

Del. Dereck E. Davis, chairman of the Economic Matters Committee, appeared before the federal grand jury in Baltimore, according to a source familiar with the matter. Davis, who had been questioned by the FBI in September, shares a district in Prince George's County with Currie. Both lawmakers are Democrats.

Federal authorities have been examining whether the Lanham-based supermarket company hired Currie to parlay the prestige of his office into favorable legislation and decisions by state agencies. Currie was paid more than $200,000 over a five-year period, according to a search warrant affidavit. The investigation came to light when the FBI raided the senator's home in May 2008.

Currie, chairman of the Budget and Taxation Committee, never disclosed his employment by Shoppers on General Assembly ethics forms.

Prosecutors' interest in Davis appears to stem from his role as chairman of the committee with purview over legislation that authorized the transfer of a liquor license from one Shoppers supermarket to another. The grand jury questions regarded circumstances surrounding that bill and any communication between the legislative offices of Davis and Currie, according to the source.

Reached by phone last night, Currie said he had "no idea" why Davis was called to the grand jury. "I would rather not comment," he said. The U.S. attorney's office also declined to comment.

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller, a Prince George's and Calvert County Democrat, said that Currie, a close friend, indicated in a conversation this week that Currie's lawyer was hopeful about the outcome of the case. "He said his counsel is very confident that it was not as serious as the federal government initially thought it might be," Miller said.

Currie voted in 2005 in favor of the legislation regarding the liquor license transfer, and according to an FBI affidavit, he was in frequent contact with Shoppers representatives and the chief liquor inspector for Prince George's County at a time when local approval of the transfer had drawn strong opposition.

Currie also intervened on Shoppers behalf when the supermarket was negotiating with the owner of West Baltimore's Mondawmin Mall, which received state subsidies as part of a multimillion-dollar redevelopment project. He also contacted transportation officials for traffic light installations, roadside improvements and other projects near the grocery chain's stores.

The senator has remained in his legislative leadership position despite the cloud of the investigation, playing a key role in difficult negotiations as the state struggled to balance its budget in the face of massive shortfalls. Miller has said the legislative ethics committee might look into the matter, but not until the federal investigation concludes.
Del. Davis Summoned Before Currie Grand Jury.
Maryland Moment, 28 May 2009 (Wagner).
A fellow state lawmaker from Prince George's County testified this week before a grand jury investigating Sen. Ulysses Currie, the latest public sign that a federal probe is continuing into the Democrat's work for a grocery store chain.

Del. Dereck Davis (D-Prince George's) confirmed in an interview that he was summoned to Baltimore on Wednesday for questions that focused on Currie's work for Shoppers Food and Pharmacy, which Currie did not include on financial disclosure forms until this year, after an FBI investigation became public.

Documents and interviews show that the Currie, chairman of the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee, intervened repeatedly with government agencies on issues of interest to Shoppers. Federal investigators have been scrutinizing a a decision by the Prince George's liquor board to allow Shoppers to transfer a beer and wine license from its store near Takoma Park to one in College Park. Currie had voted on legislation in 2005 that allowed the transfer to take place and later attended a lengthy liquor board hearing on the matter.

Davis and Currie represent the same Prince George's district, and Davis chairs the House Economic Matters Committee, which has jurisdiction over legislation affecting liquor licenses.

"Because of the committee's jurisdiction, they wanted to probe that whole situation, but there wasn't much for me to say," said Davis, who said he was also interviewed by the FBI in late September.

Davis's appearance before the grand jury, which he said lasted about an hour, was first reported by the Baltimore Sun.

Dale Kelberman, a lawyer for Currie, did not return a phone call this morning.

The federal investigation became public last May when FBI agents searched Currie's home and the corporate offices of the Lanham-based grocery chain.

According to court documents, Shoppers paid Currie more than $207,000 starting in 2003.

Others known to have testified to the grand jury about Currie include Franklin Jackson, the chairman of the Prince George's Board of Liquor License Commissioners, who appeared in January, and William G. Somerville, a lawyer who advises the General Assembly on ethics issues, who appeared last year.
Earlier:

(Posted 28 May 2009)

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Recent News about Prince George's County (27 May 2009)


(Posted 27 May 2009)

2010 Candidates: More county executive candidate rumors

From the Prince George's Monitor:

(Posted 27 May 2009)

2010 Candidates: Rushern Baker's Campaign site

Rushern Baker's campaign for county executive now has a web site at:
http://www.rushernbaker.com

Flash and graphics may cause it to load slowly if you have a dial-up connection.

Baker, for those who have not followed him closely, was largely responsible for both (1) taking away our right to vote for school board members, and (2) bypassing TRIM to sock us with  a regressive telephone tax--one of the highest such taxes in the nation.

In my opinion, Baker is probably both more honest and more competent than the current county executive, but has demonstrated that he cannot be trusted by those of us who value self-governance and fiscal restraint.

(Posted 27 May 2009)

Recent News about Prince George's County (25 & 26 May 2009)

  • POST: Man Fatally Shot in Hotel Parking Lot, Pr. George's Police Say http://tinyurl.com/ra4tjb 
  • GAZETTE: Man shot in Oxon Hill, flees to DC; Police searching for shooter; victim refuses to cooperate (Garner) http://tinyurl.com/pnn2tu 
  • Maryland Politics Watch: Maryland Blogosphere: Up, Up and Away [Mentions PG-Politics] (Pagnucco) http://tinyurl.com/p67yl8 
  • POST: Shooting Leaves Two Dead in Ft. Washington (Wilgoren) http://tinyurl.com/oaa3mv 
  • RT @wusa9 5 Days After 9NEWS Report PGFD Finds Money For Repairs & Physicals : Despite serious money issues the Prince.. http://tr.im/mrr4 
  • RT @wtop FROM Kate Ryan : New WSSC General Manager...NOT! Months after Montgomery and PG County Execs made their pick? No vote by WSSC ... 
  • RT @wusa9 Double Murder Called "Targeted Assassination" : The murder of a couple in their home early Tuesday may be link.. http://tr.im/msP9 
  • RT @postmetro Group's Web, Facebook Help Fuel Petition Drive by Speed Camera Opponents - effort to halt MD's new.. http://tinyurl.com/ogamcg 
  • WJLA: Two Dead After Double Shooting in Fort Washington Home http://tinyurl.com/qc3lhl 
  • Boondoggle in PG (Post http://tinyurl.com/oo5ko3) Almost all MD "Republicans" voted with the PG Dems. to create this mess--only 2 Rep. nays 
  • Boondoggle in Prince George's: Comment: It is unfortunate that the Post did not name all .. http://tinyurl.com/q9v3q5

(Posted 27 May 2009)

Monday, May 25, 2009

Boondoggle in Prince George's

Comment: It is unfortunate that the Post did not name all of the officials responsible so that the public at large would know exactly who to blame for both the waste of money and the additional bad publicity for our county.

Boondoggle in Prince George's; The cost of abandoning a school offices plan.
Post, 25 May 2009 (Editorial).
COMING UP WITH enough money to properly fund education has long been a struggle in Prince George's County, where a tax cap limits revenue. So it's all the more maddening that $11 million was frittered away on a planned school headquarters. This colossal waste of public money should cause school officials and state lawmakers -- all of whom are to blame -- to undertake some serious soul searching.

The Board of Education voted last week to back out of a $36 million lease-purchase agreement for the Washington Plaza office complex in Upper Marlboro. Reneging on the deal will incur a penalty of $4.8 million, bringing the system's total cost in rent and other expenses to $11 million with, as one board member observed, "nothing to show" for it.

The board had no choice: The Maryland General Assembly, prodded by local senators and delegates, passed legislation that would have withheld millions of dollars in state education aid if the board proceeded with the project. Lawmakers argued that the money couldn't be justified because of the hard economic times that were causing layoffs of county workers and other cutbacks.

Perhaps they have a point about the wisdom of undertaking the project at this time, but it's hard to see what they accomplished by their second-guessing. Considering that $11 million is a little less than one-third of the estimated total cost, wouldn't it have been smarter to proceed with the project? No one disputes that the current administrative offices are in poor condition or that there are merit and cost savings in consolidating facilities spread across the county. Will officials look back in 10 years and wish they had acted differently? It's interesting to note that plans by Frederick school officials for a similar project to house administrative offices did not cause the legislature to intervene.

No doubt, though, that's due in part to the way Frederick officials built public support for their project. The Prince George's board, in contrast, ignored advice from then-superintendent John E. Deasy for further study, thumbed its nose at objections from county officials and made no effort to engage the public in its decision. That there was no support for this decision is the board's fault. Too bad county schoolchildren have to pay the price.

(Posted 25 May 2009)

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Recent News about Prince George's County (23 & 24 May 2009)



(Posted 24 May 2009)

Friday, May 22, 2009

Recent News about Prince George's County (22 May 2009)

  • POST: Ready for a Friendly Rivalry; Baker, Ivey Say They'll Be Pals After PG Executive Race (Thomas-Lester) http://tinyurl.com/olhjdq
  • GAZETTE: PG County sticks bill to schools ,, school board will be billed for formerly-free services (Valentine) http://tinyurl.com/ogq6wg 
  • InsideCharmCity: Donna Edwards boycotts Starbucks - stops holding “coffee conversations” at Starbucks (CNS) http://tinyurl.com/or6g69 

(Posted 22 May 2009)

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Recent News about Prince George's County (21 May 2009)


(Posted 21 May 2009)

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Recent News about Prince George's County (19 May 2009)

Note: Posting resumed, no summaries were posted from 16 Apr 2009 - 18 May 2009.  See additional note below.
Note: Continuously updated brief brief titles and links to  messages from the PrinceGeorges_Discussion and PG-Politics mailing lists, as well as items that will be included in this summary, can currently be found at: http://pg-politics-briefs.blogspot.com/ and http://twitter.com/pgpolitics.  There are are automatically generated links to the most recent postings for many Maryland political blogs in the middle column at http://pg-politics.blogspot.com/ .


(Posted 19 May  2009)

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Washington Plaza $11,000,000 wasted

Thanks to  Sen. Muse and his interfering, micro-managing, oath-breaking colleagues the school system is now out $11 million with absolutely nothing to show for it--no benefit for the children and no new offices either. $11 million down the drain--completely wasted--thanks to a bunch of posturing politicians who thought it more important to score a cheap political point than to keep their promises to honor the Constitution and their oaths of office.

Also all the Maryland "Republicans" who think legislative courtesy overrides their oaths and the Constitution.

On Tue, May 19, 2009 at 10:20 AM, <jls401@aol.com> wrote:
This is outrageous and exactly why PG County continues to have such a bottom-of-the-toilet reputation in education!!!! 11mil down the drain. How exasperating!!!! On this, the BOE should hang their heads in shame. To put the self-interest of the comfort of administrators and professionals above the needs of students is more than a disservice.
-----Original Message-----
From: marcy_canavan <marcy.canavan@gmail.com>
To: PrinceGeorges_Discussion@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, 18 May 2009 10:36 pm
Subject: [PrinceGeorges_Discussion] Washington Plaza - the finale
Well, folks. The outcome of the legislature's action is that the BOE will wind up paying more than 1/3 of the TOTAL cost of the building and have absolutely nothing to show for it.

And who will ever do business with the BOE will always wonder if a contract has any meaning?

$11 million that could have been spent on education. And thanks to the legislature there is ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to show for the $11 million!

AND since both the legislature and tonight, the BOE, did this as an "emergency," meaning that the public had essentially no chance to comment meaningfully before this happened.

After you read the article in the Post (below) tell me how proud you are of PG County.
----------------------------------------------
Board Retracts Lease for Headquarters
Canceled Deal, Which Will Cost System $11 Million, Succumbed to Legislative Pressure

The Prince George's County Board of Education last night voted to back out of a lease for a new headquarters, in response to the Maryland General Assembly's passage of a bill that would strip the school system of millions of dollars in education aid unless officials killed the project.

But the school board's 5 to 2 vote to terminate the deal will draw a penalty of $4.8 million, officials said, bringing the school system's total cost for the venture in rent and other expenses to $11 million. The move into a new headquarters will be canceled, and the old headquarters will remain operating.

As they debated what to do, board members voiced dismay.

"So it's a total of $11 million, that if the board votes on this, we have nothing to show for?" asked board member Pat Fletcher (District 3).

"This is nothing more than blackmail," said board member Rosalind A. Johnson (District 1). She and Fletcher voted against the lease-termination measure in the meeting at Laurel High School.

Board Chairman Verjeana M. Jacobs (At Large) abstained, and board member R. Owen Johnson Jr. (District 5) was absent.

Board Vice Chairman Ron Watson (At Large), part of the five-member majority in the vote, said his goal was to cut losses. "At this point, it's all about minimizing further exposure to the county," Watson said. "I still think the legislature has overstepped."

The plan to move into an office complex in Upper Marlboro along the Pennsylvania Avenue corridor, near Andrews Air Force Base, became a target of criticism from state lawmakers and county residents soon after the sharply divided school board approved a $36 million lease-purchase deal for the buildings last June.

The buildings were supposed to have consolidated scattered school offices into a central place, saving the system money long-term. The project also was meant to replace the aging, decrepit Sasscer Administration Building in Upper Marlboro with attractive buildings befitting a 128,000-student school system that is the state's second-largest.

But the complex has been nearly vacant for almost a year, even as the school system paid $262,500 a month in rent. The initial $36 million price tag, spread over 10 years, also did not include millions of dollars in moving and renovation costs.

State legislators said spending on the buildings could not be justified when the school system was closing eight schools and eliminating 900 jobs because of the economy. The General Assembly pressed forward with a bill that essentially orders the school system to cancel the headquarters plan, or lose $36 million in education funding. The bill passed in April. As of last night, Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) had not acted on it.

Jacobs and Watson signed the agreement immediately after the meeting. The agreement had already been signed by the building's owner, Dean F. Morehouse, president of MTM Builder/Developer Inc.

Asked about the $11 million cost to the school system for a project that went off the rails, Jacobs said: "It's bothersome. It's very bothersome."