Monday, October 27, 2014

The Mayor Report – October -- Corrected Report

It has been a busy fast month!  Seems like we were just getting our children back into school and celebrating Labor Day.  Columbus Day has even come and gone.  With all of the time that has passed, your Mayor, Council, and staff have continued to work on behalf of you (our residents), our businesses, and the City of Mount Rainier.  The following is an overview of a few of the things that have happened since last month:

October 1, 2014, former Councilmember, Ivy Thompson officially resigned from the Council and took up residence in College Park.  I know that her constituents as well as the Mayor and Council wish her much success in our sister City, College Park.

With the resignation of former Councilmember Thompson, a vacancy in Ward Two has been created.  Councilmember JBrent Bolin has the onerous job of collecting, reviewing, and submitting to Mayor and Council up to three names to be considered for filling that vacancy.  If you are interested in being considered for this very important job in our community, PLEASE submit your resume to Attention:  Councilmember Brent Bolin, One Municipal Place, Mount Rainier, MD, 20712.

Qualifications for the position are simple:  You must be eighteen (18) or over, registered to vote in the County, and must have lived in the City for one year or more.  The city held positions are nonpartisan (neither Democrat or Republican nor Green Party or Independent).

Hungry Harvest, a food sharing program is now servicing our area!  If you are looking for fresh produce from local farmers at a reasonable price, this is the place.  Hungry Harvest is a local mission-driven business committed to reducing food waste and ending hunger in America.  It was started by University of Maryland students.

They deliver fresh fruits and vegetables from local farms, to your door every week for a fraction of the cost that you could purchase these items at our grocery stores.  Their local farm fresh produce is as much as 50% less than farmers markets and other CSA’s.

For every bag or produce sold, they donate a bag to a local family in need, food bank or homeless shelter.

You can contact:  Kevin Kresloff, Brand Ambassador of Hungry Harvest, LLC, Kevin.kresloff@hungryharvest.net or call him at 301-675-5964 with questions or to sign up for a free trial.  Visit their website at www.hungryharvest.net.

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Pepco is back in the neighborhood trimming and cutting trees.  This work restarted after the Mayor and Council met with PEPCO representatives to make sure that they followed our Tree Ordinance.  Because of some special legislation at the State level, utility companies have the right to take corrective and preventive measures to ensure the safety of their wires, and reliability of their services.  Therefore, they do not have to comply with our Tree Ordinance.  They must get permission to or trim trees on private property.  PLEASE retain your pink copy that should be left with you by the PEPCO representative.

PEPCO also provided nine tree vouchers to the City for replacement trees that were accidentally cut down a few months ago. Please contact City Hall or me should you have questions about PEPCO activities in our community.

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First time home buyers’ workshop was held on November 1 by the Redevelopment Authority (RDA).  If you missed that free workshop, and is still interested in purchasing a home in Prince George’s County, act now by contacting the RDA!  Howard Means, the director of the RDA stated that the RDA has $5,000,000.00 for first-time home buyers.  First-Time Homebuyers Can Access Up to $60,000 in Down Payment and Closing Costs.  For more information, call (301) 883-5456 for assistance in English and (301) 328-3292 for assistance in Spanish.

This informative workshop was held at the Langley Park Community Center, 1500 Merrimac Drive, Hyattsville, MD  20783 at 11:00 am.  The workshop was presented in English and in Spanish to ensure all participants would gain a full understanding of the “My HOME” program. 
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Meeting with Mayor Petrella Robinson to discuss their relationship with Gateway CDC.  Following our meeting, the two of us attended the Gateway CDC Board meeting.  The following was gleaned from the meeting relative to the City of Mount Rainier:

The Gateway CDC is seeking to restructure itself and become more beneficial to the three municipalities that it was created to serve.  As the Gateway CDC takes a sharper look at itself, the three municipalities should examine themselves and determine what it is they want the Gateway CDC to do with and for them.

The Gateway CDC is struggling to keep its doors open.  They are willing to work with the municipalities, but need some help and guidance from each.  The current executive director has been working diligently to make the Gateway CDC responsive to the municipalities, but need some help from each to determine what Gateway CDC can do to help them.

I have agreed to make sure that Mount Rainier is an active partner with the Gateway CDC, and that the City would appoint members to serve on its Board that worked closely with the Mayor and Council to develop and implement projects in the City.  I also agreed to set up and host a meeting with Mayor Jim Cooksey and Mayor Robinson at a later date to discuss our mutual needs and support of the Gateway CDC.

Over the past, members of Mount Rainier volunteered to serve on the Gateway CDC Board to meet the criteria of “five members from each municipality.”  However, those serving from Mount Rainier did not consult with, work with or report to the Mayor and Council.  As a result, they were unable to truly work with the City to raise funds for projects that were critical to the City of Mount Rainier.

With the restructuring, it is hoped that the City would be able to appoint or reappoint five residents to serve on the Gateway CDC Board, and that the City would become an active and supportive member of Gateway CDC.  If you are currently serving as one of the five members of the Gateway CDC Board as the Mount Rainier Representative, PLEASE call City Hall (301-985-658)  and provide your contact information as well as a couple of good dates that you would be willing and able to meet with the Mayor.

If you are interested in serving on the Gateway CDC Board, and can spare up to five hours a month to work with the Mayor and Council, and Gateway CDC to help kick start our projects (3200 Rhode Island Avenue, the Civic Center, and other projects in the City), PLEASE call City Hall and provide your contact information as well as a couple of good dates that you would be willing and able to meet with the Mayor.
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Mount Rainier has endorsed a number of green and healthy initiatives over the past several years, and those initiatives were well intended.  Now, we need to act on them as part of helping to move our next generation forward.  Those initiatives include:

Let’s Move! Is a comprehensive initiative, launched by the First Lady, dedicated to solving the challenge of childhood obesity within a generation, so that children born today will grow up healthier and able to pursue their dreams. Combining comprehensive strategies with common sense, Let's Move! is about putting children on the path to a healthy future during their earliest months and years. Giving parents helpful information and fostering environments that support healthy choices. Providing healthier foods in our schools. Ensuring that every family has access to healthy, affordable food. And, helping kids become more physically active.

Everyone has a role to play in reducing childhood obesity, including parents, elected officials from all levels of government, schools, health care professionals, faith-based and community-based organizations, and private sector companies. Your involvement is key to ensuring a healthy future for our children.  Want more information, visit http://www.letsmove.gov/learn-facts/epidemic-childhood-obesity.
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Complete Streets--The Mayor and Council passed this initiative as part of what we believe is a new day for using our streets, alleys and bike trails.  When our streets were built, they were built for cars.  Now, we are encouraging residents to consider walking within the neighborhood, ride their bikes to short destinations, and use zip cars or other ways to move around the metropolitan area.  That means our streets must become more user friendly for all types of mobility. 

Complete Streets are streets for everyone. They are designed and operated to enable safe access for all users, including pedestrians, bicyclists, motorists and transit riders of all ages and abilities. Complete Streets make it easy to cross the street, walk to shops, and bicycle to work. They allow buses to run on time and make it safe for people to walk to and from train stations.

Creating Complete Streets means transportation agencies must change their approach to community roads. By adopting a Complete Streets policy, communities direct their transportation planners and engineers to routinely design and operate the entire right of way to enable safe access for all users, regardless of age, ability, or mode of transportation. This means that every transportation project will make the street network better and safer for drivers, transit users, pedestrians, and bicyclists – making your town a better place to live.

For more information on Complete Streets and the Maryland State Highway Administration's plan for this, please visit https://marylandassociationofcounties.files.wordpress.com/2013/09/presentation-2013-09-26-mdot-planmd-strategies.pdf

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Kids to the Park Day -- National Kids to Parks Day is always the third Saturday in May.  Mayors, town councils, kids, teachers, and families across the our Country, and 18 national collaborators, including the NFL Players Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics come together for a day of outdoor play on the third Saturday in May each year! However, obesity is a year round disease that is fueled by televisions, fast food restaurants, and manufactures who filled their food with sugar.

If you have not done so already, please consider signing up now to take your child (ren), a neighbor’s child or your nieces and nephews to the park regularly.  If we are to reduce obesity in our community, then we must get our children active.   This is a terrific way to showcase our local parks and to get to know our neighborhood and our neighbors.  There are lots of fun things to do in our parks, and I encourage you to become active and part of our community.

Kids to Parks Day is officially in support of the First Lady's Let's Move! initiative. Last year, more than 260 mayors from 45 states participated in this national event.  We can and should make this a year round goal for our community and our children. 

President Barack Obama has launched a program, My Brother’s Keeper, to help reduce crime in our community, to provide opportunity for young Black males to become better equipped to survive in our society, and to ensure that all children receive a good quality education.  As your Mayor, I signed on to this program in light of the number of teen deaths over the past few years, and the number of young Black teens incarcerated from Mount Rainier.  I had this on the agenda for discussion at our last work session, but we did not get to it during the work session.  I will be bringing this initiative and all of the others back to the table for discussion and action over the next few meetings.

If any or all of these initiatives appeal to you, and you want to get involved, PLEASE contact me at mayormiles@gmail.com.  For more information and facts on this initiative, please visit http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/30/fact-sheet-white-house-launches-my-brother-s-keeper-community-challenge.

By the time that our next newsletter is printed and distributed, our own Councilmember, Jimmy Tarlau will be officially elected as the next State Delegate representing the 47th Legislative District.  Therefore, I am taking the liberty here to wish him a wonderful bon voyage, and much success in Annapolis as he represents us here in the great City of Mount Rainier, Maryland.

Jimmy, thank you for your service to the City, and for placing you and your family under such public scrutiny to serve our community.  We wish nothing but the best for you as you take this giant step in your career.

Note:  Councilmember Jesse Christopherson will be seeking volunteers to replace Councilmember Jimmy Tarlau in Ward One.  If you are interested, please do not hesitate to let Councilmember Christopherson know of your interest.  The process for Ward One has not been determine since Councilmember Tarlau is still sitting on the Council, and his official notice to vacate the seat has not yet been submitted.

The holiday season is here.  Many of those in our community are facing the season with dread and trepidation.  You and I can make this season a good one for all of our residents.  If you are shopping for the holidays, consider getting that bargain of buy one get one free or half price.  Then donate it to the Mount Rainier Food Bank.

This year, I am encouraging the Mount Rainier Food Bank to take the lead on collecting perishables and non-perishables to be distributed to our families in need at Mount Rainier Elementary and Thomas Stone Elementary for Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays.  I am also asking Captain James Stoots to once again head the turkey collection for the two schools during the Christmas Holidays.  In addition, I am asking a former resident, Kyhyam Cooper to deliver turkeys to the City from his Turkey Run.

If you are a family in need or you know a family in need, PLEASE submit your name or theirs to Ms. Janis Lomax at City Hall.  I am also asking the principals at each school to once again submit names of families in need to Ms. Janis Lomas.  The names should be submitted no later than November 21 for Thanksgiving, and December 12 for Christmas.

Speed humps/bumps at stop signs --Mayor and Council discussed the issue of safety in the City, and unanimously agreed to look into placing speed calming devices at all of our stop signs over the next few years.  We strongly believe that this measure will help to slow traffic through our neighborhoods, but will also force most motorists to stop at our stop signs. 

In addition, the Mayor and Council agreed to revisit the type and model of speed hump and/or bumps that are used in the City on City streets.  This discussion is still ongoing.  If you have suggestions, please contact me or your Councilmember.

Trash collection snafu.  In an effort to get residents to comply with the trash code, Mayor and Council authorized Public Works to issue citations for non-compliance and to leave the trash.  During the week of October 20, Public Works implemented the directive given by the Mayor and Council.  As you can imagine, this resulted in some real hardships and difficulties for many residents who have been out of compliance for years (including yours truly).

Based on the response, and a review of the matter, Mayor and Council has decided to revisit the issue, and to phase in the more strictly enforced Trash Code.  Therefore, with this newsletter, residents are reminded that trash receptacles may not be larger than 33 gallons, and must have a lid placed on them prior to being placed in the tree boxes for pick up.  Trash receptacles that exceed the 33 gallon limit and/or do not have a lid on them will receive a notice of violation for the first offense, and will not be picked up for the second offense, and will be fined in accordance with the ordinance for each infraction thereafter.

In addition, every effort will be made to make sure that new residents to the area are provided with information about the City’s codes within 90 days of their becoming a resident.  Welcome packages are available at City Hall.  (NOTE:  The Welcome Package is being updated to be more user friendly and comprehensive.)  Residents should also be aware that information about the City’s Codes and Ordinances may be found on the City’s website, www.mountrainiermd.org, the two City cable/FIOS channels (21 and 71), and in the City’s newsletter from time-to-time.  When everything else fails, please do not hesitate to call City Hall and/or Public Works.  They are there to make sure that this information is disseminated to all residents.

WIFI for the City.  Another initiative that I have been working on, and is still in its infant stage is WIFI for our City.  I believe in this day and age, WIFI should be available to everyone in the City, especially our children whose families are unable to provide access to the internet.  In some communities, school age children are provided with laptops to take home to do their school work.  I am pushing hard to make that a reality in Mount Rainier, and WIFI will be necessary because many of our children do not have access to the internet and/or cannot get to the library to use the computers there.

Social Media is becoming more and more a part of our everyday life.  At our last work session, I provided the Council with a proposed social media policy based on several presentations at the Maryland Municipal League’s (MML) Convention and Conferences over the past three years.  Currently, there are a few Mount Rainier sites on Facebook, there is the Mount Rainier ListServ, and that may only be the tip of the iceberg of social networks that carry the name Mount Rainier, MD or the City of Mount Rainier.

MML strongly recommends that municipalities have policies regarding social media as well as the use of the City’s logo.  At the current time, the City has neither.  Our attorney and MML have reviewed the proposed policies.  Both have weighed in on it, however, our attorney is proposing a more strict policy than that used by many other municipalities. 

Over the next few meetings, the City will develop, approve, and issue policies around its use of social media.  If you have ideas, comments and/or suggestions, please send them to our Assistant City Manager, Ms. Veronica Owens.

Veteran’s Day Celebration – We will be celebrating our veterans again this year.  Last year was the first time that the City took a moment to recognize its veterans, and those who attended were very pleased to receive this recognition in their own home town.

The celebration will be held in Potts Hall, November 8, 2014, 2:00pm until 4:00pm, 3405 Rhode Island Avenue, Mount Rainier, MD 20712.  A late lunch will be served.  Please come out and support our VETERANS, and bring your neighbor.

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