Community takes measures to reduce pollutants in northeast branch of Anacostia River

Stormwater management tools put in place in Edmonston

Several bioretention facilities were constructed over the last three months to reduce runoff and pollutants entering the northeast branch of the Anacostia River in Edmonston.

The work was done by the University of Maryland, College Park’s chapter of Engineers Without Borders, the Anacostia Watershed Restoration Partnership and the city of Edmonston.

Engineers Without Borders primarily works abroad, but this time the group decided to partner with the University of Maryland, College Park’s A. James Clark School of Engineering to work on a problem a little closer to home.

The Anacostia is a highly polluted river, in large part due to urban runoff, the storm water draining from cities into the river, according to the National Resources Defense Council, a not-for-profit environmental protection group. The project team, consisting of students, faculty advisers and various professionals, designed a bioretention system and implemented it in a park owned by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission near Edmonston’s Decatur Street, which will be the first “green,” or fully environmentally responsible, street in Maryland.

The bioretention facilities take runoff water, in this case from parking lots and roads, and naturally treat it, said Kristen Markham, 21, one of the project leaders and recent UM graduate, who is returning in the fall for graduate school. The team designed trenches where the water could travel into the 15 feet by 30 feet bioretention area. There, the storm water goes through several natural filtering systems, including several layers of soil that help the water flow quickly, gravel, rocks and plants. Each technique naturally filters out pollutants.

While the budget for the project has yet to be finalized, the total was close to $8000, Markham said. Most of the cost was covered by the $5,000 grant the team received from the Chesapeake Bay Trust. Engineers Without Borders raised the remaining amount of money through fundraisers and donations to College Park’s chapter by putting on presentations for different departments at the University and corporate sponsors.

The bioretention facility is part of the “green” agenda in Edmonston. It’s “an initiative we have to do town business as sustainably as possible,” said Mayor Adam Ortiz. “To do what we do already in a better way. To be better stewards of our environment.”

Ortiz said the bioretention facility diverts storm water from the parking lot and road near the Edmonston Recreation Building into a natural filtration system.

“It’s a natural, passive way to treat runoff water that has pollutants,” Markham said. “It goes back into the river a lot cleaner than it was before.”

The students worked with Dana Minerva, executive director of the Anacostia Watershed Restoration Partnership, to complete the project. Minerva helped the team contact people and organizations to work with on the project.

The entire project, from deciding to work with the Anacostia to its completion, took only six months, including getting approval for the project, meeting with officials, getting a grant from the Chesapeake Bay Trust and implementing the design.

“This project is important because it shows that we can control storm water,” Minerva said. “We just need to have that great combination of idealism and practical implementation that the students showed in designing and building this bioretention project.”

“It’s a very exciting project,” Minerva said. “It is a model for others.”

Originally published at The Gazette. Thursday, June 11, 2009

Glenn Dale teen reflects on leadership roles at DeMatha

Graduate captained ‘It’s Academic’ team, organized anime convention

Determination and spirit are two things that bring many students to the culmination of their high school careers: graduation. But these traits are especially true of Kyle Jamolin, an 18-year-old who took on a major leadership role throughout his time in school before graduating from DeMatha Catholic High School on Friday.

Jamolin, of Glenn Dale, joined the anime club, for students with an interest in Japanese cartoons, during his freshman year because it was an interest of his. By his sophomore year, he was interested in participating in more activities at the Hyattsville school, including a jazz group, mock trial and quiz bowl.

“I think he did virtually everything you could do at DeMatha,” said Dr. Daniel McMahon, DeMatha’s principal.

Jamolin’s desire to become a lawyer helped him decide to join mock trial in the 2006-2007 school year, when he stood as a witness, and his team made it to the semi-finals in the 7th Judicial Circuit Mock Trial Competition.

“He has determination,” said his mother, Bea Jamolin. “He wanted to be a lawyer since he was a little boy, and that hasn’t changed.”

Jamolin is working toward this goal next year at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he is planning on majoring in government and politics and pre-law.

Jamolin’s goal has been encouraged through his participation on “It’s Academic,” an academic quiz show with high school students.

“It helped me think on my feet,” Jamolin said. “It’s all about timing and coordination and teamwork.”

Over the years, Jamolin has taken on more leadership roles. Not only did he become the captain of the “It’s Academic” team but he also became the president of the anime club and attended a Global Young Leaders Conference in the summer of 2007.

“I think his biggest contribution has been his day-to-day leadership,” McMahon said. “He expanded the reach of what DeMatha does.” In his role as president of the anime club, Jamolin organized DeMaKon, an anime convention hosted by DeMatha that was held for the first time in January.

“When you think about DeMatha, you think about sports teams or music programs competing with each other,” Jamolin said. But DeMaKon was about bringing people together to experience as a group something they all like individually.

Jamolin considers the DeMaKon convention his greatest accomplishment. Other local area clubs and former members of the DeMatha club were invited to participate, and a number of panels were set up to discuss various aspects of anime.

In addition to anime, Jamolin loves other comic books, and said he has been inspired by his favorite superhero, Batman.

“He’s not like other superheroes,” Jamolin said. “He’s the most well known who doesn’t have superpowers. He trained himself to be perfect in any way.”

This diligence and self-motivation has manifested itself in Jamolin’s actions, his mother said.

“Once his mind is set, he makes sure he does things well,” said Bea Jamolin.

This is seen, and heard, in Jamolin’s experience with music. When he was just starting to play the piano at around age 7, you didn’t have to tell him to practice, he would just do it on his own, she said

In school, Jamolin played for the jazz ensemble as a keyboardist in a jazz combo, and in a jazz quintet.

“He has self-direction,” she said. “He tries his best to get what he wants, in school and anything that he dreams of.”

McMahon, the principal, found Jamolin to be one of his most memorable students. “I think that [Jamolin] will not only excel as he goes into the world,” he said. “I have a notion he’s going to travel. He has boundless energy and a real appetite for learning other cultures. He’ll get out and do something on an international scope. And whatever he does, it’ll involve drawing people together for common goals.”

 

Originally published at The Gazette.

Clinton youths roll out for park celebration

Funds to add playground, trails to Willow Creek field

More than 30 youths turned out for a recent bicycle competition hosted by the Willow Creek community in Clinton, pedaling through a 50-yard sprint and other races. But residents had more to celebrate than the success of the third annual event.

Fox Run Community Park, the staging ground for the “Tour de Creek” competition June 13, has been allotted $425,000 beginning July 1 under the Capital Improvement Program after residents lobbied for nearly four years.

The money will transform the 21-acre park from a grassy field with a baseball diamond and football field to a park with a playground, paved walking and biking trail, two lighted tennis courts and two covered pavilions.

The funds have been disbursed in two stages, beginning with $100,000 allocated July 1, 2008. The second part of the funding, amounting to $325,000, will become available July 1 and has been approved by the Prince George’s County Council.

“The community is so active,” said Lariena Matthews, meeting planner for the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation and a Clinton resident. “We were adamant. We wouldn’t drop it. We were consistently contacting them.”

The design for the park is headed by Don Herring, senior planner for the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission’s Park Planning and Development Section, said Milton S. Kendall, Willow Creek’s Neighborhood Watch coordinator with his wife, Franchella Kendall. The Neighborhood Watch polled residents to see what they would like in the park.

The improvements are still in the very preliminary stages, and although residents and the M-NCPPC know what they would like in the park, M-NCPPC needs to survey the site, Herring said.

“We’re going to evaluate the existing site to see how the new amenities will complement the park,” Herring said. “We’ll try to sustain the site as much as possible.”

Herring hopes to have the design complete by spring 2010 and construction finished by winter 2012.

Even in its current state, Fox Run Community Park hosts its share of community events.

The improvements to the park, in addition to the youth bicycle competition, are part of a Neighborhood Watch initiative to prevent crime, Kendall said. “It’s a way to get people together to mingle and get to know each other.”

The annual Tour de Creek competition has been a huge success in the community. Children from ages 1 to 18 are eligible to participate. There were about 35 participants in the event June 13 and around 125 adults volunteered to help.

There were four races: the training wheel loop, for bikes with training wheels; the 50-yard sprint; the half-mile race, and the two-mile endurance loop, Kendall said.

County Council Chairwoman Marilynn Bland (D-Dist. 9) of Clinton attended the bicycle competition to encourage children to ride safely and to talk to the community about development plans for the park, according to Bland’s chief of staff, David Billings.

Debbie Tyner, M-NCPPC’s division chief of southern area operations, also updated the community on plans for the new developments.

The bicycle event was supported by the Prince George’s Police Department, the Maryland-National Capital Park Police Prince George’s County Division and the Fairfax County Sheriff’s Office. Police blocked off roads along the cycling courses and provided six police motorcycles from the different stations to ride along with the children.

Organizers tried to make the event as professional as possible for the youths who participated. There were tables with drinks just for the riders, numbers on the youths’ backs identifying them as racers, and support teams in case the riders needed bike repairs.

After each child crossed the finish line, residents stayed to spend time together, Kendall said.

“We have a rule no one can eat until the kids finish riding,” he said. “They have to watch the kids.”

 

Originally published at The Gazette.

Police search for witnesses after teen dies in mall lot shooting

18-year-old Clinton resident discovered in car in Forestville

With Megan McKeever

Police are asking witnesses to come forward after a Clinton teen was fatally shot in a car in a busy Forestville mall parking lot Saturday.

“You would think we would have more information from witnesses being that this incident occurred in daylight hours at six in the afternoon,” Officer Henry Tippett, a Prince George’s County Police Department spokesman, said Wednesday.

Police responded to a call from a mall security guard reporting gunfire at around 6 p.m. in the Forest Village Park Mall in the 3300 block of Donnell Drive. A mall security supervisor could not be reached by press time.

Shawn Antonio Perry, 18, was found suffering from a single gunshot wound to the torso in the driver’s seat of a Buick Rivera, which had struck a tree in the parking lot.

Though unconfirmed, police believe Perry was driving when he was shot, said Sgt. Michelle Reedy, a police spokeswoman.

Perry, of the 6000 block of Spell Road, was rushed to Prince George’s Hospital Center in Cheverly, where he was pronounced dead at around 7 p.m.

Police have received information from witnesses, Tippett said, but most people at the scene seemed to notice the “aftermath” of Perry’s car striking a tree.

“I don’t think we had too many reports coming in of people hearing gunshots,” he said. “There had to be witnesses in a busy shopping center.”

He said police are working to find a motive.

“We have had some tips come in, but we don’t have a suspect narrowed down,” he said Wednesday.

Anyone with information regarding the shooting should call the Prince George’s County Police Department’s Homicide Unit at 301-772-4925 or Crime Solvers at 866-411-8477.

Police are offering up to $25,000 for information that leads to an arrest and indictment.

 

Originally published at The Gazette.

Foul play suspected in disappearance

Upper Marlboro woman, 45, reported missing June 27 in ‘highly unusual’ case

Prince George’s County police are asking for the community’s help in locating a 45-year-old woman who was reported missing from her Upper Marlboro home June 27. Police have called Maris Wilkerson’s disappearance “highly unusual” and said investigators suspect foul play.

Wilkerson was last seen leaving her home in the 9600 block of Meadow Lark Avenue around 11:30 p.m. June 25, police said.

Officer Evan Baxter, a department spokesman, said a friend of Wilkerson’s told police Wilkerson “is very responsible and never late,” and that her disappearance is “very out of character.”

Wilkerson was last seen wearing a black and white flowered shirt and blue jeans, according to police.

Police said Tuesday they have no leads in the case, but a District 5 detective is investigating the disappearance.

Anyone with information regarding Wilkerson is asked to contact Prince George’s County Police Department’s District 5 Investigative Section at 301-856-3130 or Crime Solvers at 1-866-441-8477.

Originally published at The Gazette.

Bowie schools see mixed MSA results

After two years in which every public elementary and middle school in the Bowie area achieved annual improvement benchmarks on the Maryland School Assessments, four schools — Benjamin Tasker and Samuel Ogle middle schools and High Bridge and Yorktown elementary schools — hit stumbling blocks this year.

However, three area elementary schools — Tulip Grove, Heather Hills and Whitehall — saw entire grade levels score 100 percent proficiency on one or both of the tests.

Maryland school officials require public school students in third through eighth grades to take the standardized tests annually. The tests gauge students’ basic proficiency in math and reading. Schools are required to make gains in proficiency toward 100 percent by 2014 as required by the federal No Child Left Behind Act.

At Benjamin Tasker and Samuel Ogle middle schools, and at High Bridge and Yorktown elementary schools, students in some subgroups did not meet adequate yearly progress levels, according to test results released Tuesday by the Maryland State Department of Education.

At Tasker, students who are in special education and who have limited English proficiency did not make adequate progress in reading, while those in special education and the free and reduced meal program did not make the yearly progress target in math.

Overall at Tasker, the percentage of students passing the math tests dropped from 64.8 percent in 2008 to 64.3 percent in 2009. On the other hand, the percentage of Tasker students who passed reading tests improved from 77.1 percent in 2008 to 81 percent in 2009.

Tasker principal Karen Coley said she would not comment on the scores until she met with teachers to review them.

At Ogle Middle, students in special education did not make adequate yearly progress in reading or math. Overall, students at Ogle improved their pass rate in reading from 83.1 percent in 2008 to 84 percent this year. However, the overall pass rate in math dropped from 76.8 percent in 2008 to 74.2 percent this year.

Principal Kathleen Brady could not be reached for comment by deadline.

At High Bridge Elementary School, not enough of the overall student body met the improvement goal in math, according to state education officials. Overall, 62.8 percent of students in 2009 were proficient in math compared with 68.3 in 2008. Students fared better on the math test, with 69.3 percent passing this year compared to 67.6 percent last year.

“Our special needs students didn’t perform like we would have hoped,” said High Bridge principal Charles E. Eller Jr. One-third of the school’s population is composed of special needs students, he added.

“I think we do a great job; it’s just not reflected in published data,” Eller said, adding that High Bridge’s students with limited English proficiency made high gains in English and math and that in one fourth-grade class all of the students were proficient or better on both tests.

Yorktown Elementary did not make its adequate yearly progress goal because not enough students in special education improved their proficiency in math, said Principal Cheryl Hughes.

“Unfortunately, despite great efforts and wonderful gains, we were one student short of achieving [adequate yearly progress] in mathematics in one subgroup,” she said. “Although this is disappointing, it teaches an important lesson. Educational excellence is about every student achieving at high levels.”

Other student groups at Yorktown made significant gains, including the Hispanic student population, which jumped from 70.6 percent proficiency to 100 percent proficiency in reading, Hughes said. Overall, 88.1 percent of students passed the reading test and 76.9 percent passed the math test at Yorktown.

Each of the schools that missed progress goals this year has missed the goals at some point since testing began in 2003, but not in consecutive years. Schools that miss progress goals two years in a row are placed on the state’s school watch list.

Other Bowie schools that had high pass rates on the tests last year continued to show success.

At Tulip Grove Elementary School, third- and fourth-graders scored 100 percent proficiency in math and reading.

A Heather Hills Elementary School, third- and sixth-graders scored 100 percent proficiency in reading. At Whitehall Elementary School, students in fifth grade scored 100 percent proficiency in reading, and students in fourth grade scored 100 percent proficiency in math.

Last year, Heather Hills and Tulip Grove had certain grades score 100 percent proficiency on portions of the test. Principals from all three schools were not available for comment by deadline.

Other Bowie area schools that made their yearly progress goals include Kenilworth, Northview, Pointer Ridge, Rockledge and Woodmore elementary schools.

Originally published at The Gazette.

Tree canopy gets green thumbs up

City planning additional plantings, may offer residents vouchers

A recent study has found the City of Bowie has better tree coverage than officials had estimated.

In the meantime, the city has begun a forest management plan to help make the tree canopy even larger.

Roughly 46 percent of the land in the City of Bowie is covered by urban tree canopy, according to a report completed in May by the University of Vermont and commissioned by the Maryland Department of Natural Resources in conjunction with the City of Bowie.

BGE utility clearing work, which is ongoing in Bowie and will remove about 15,000 trees to improve the city’s electrical reliability, is expected to reduce the canopy by about 1 percent. The removal is concentrated in residential areas, where the canopy will be reduced by 20 percent. The study was completed before the work began.

Urban canopy is the layer of leaves, branches and stems of trees that cover the ground when viewed from above.

Gary Allen, head of Bowie’s Environmental Advisory Committee, said a tree canopy tends to cool an area, reduce home energy use, provide greater access for wildlife and improve air quality.

“The actual canopy coverage is actually quite good for a suburban area in Maryland,” Allen said. “It’s among the best of communities our size.”

The City of Bowie’s Existing and Possible Urban Tree Canopy report, which used imagery taken in summer 2007 and was released this spring, found that the city’s canopy is significantly higher than 2001 estimates of 30 percent.

The 2007 report “gave a truer picture of the tree canopy,” said Joe Meinert, Bowie’s director of the city planning department. “We were amazed that it was documented at 46 percent.”

The study, done in 2008, was carried out by the Spatial Analysis Laboratory of the University of Vermont’s Rubenstein School of the Environment and Natural Resources in consultation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service Northern Research Station.

The city has been working on several projects, including tree plantings and inventories, as part of Bowie’s environmental action plan, Meinert said.

The city’s fiscal 2009 mid-year budget approved a tree conservation plan for forest mitigation banking — restoring or creating forests to meet state reforestation requirements — at Church Road Park and Gallant Fox Lane that have already begun to be implemented.

“From the environmental standpoint, it’s a good thing to do,” Meinert said.

The city plans to establish an urban tree canopy goal and establish an urban forest management plan during 2010, Mayor Fred Robinson said in an e-mail.

The city has a contract with a vendor to plant 4,000 trees on eight acres of Church Road Park for more than $56,000, with twice as many trees slated for planting during the next several years, Robinson said. Bowie spent more than $21,000 during the previous fiscal year to plant more than 300 mature trees in a forestation project at Gallant Fox Lane, and plans to plant 200 new street trees each year, Robinson said.

The city also plans to encourage residents to plant more trees on their own property, possibly by offering vouchers, Meinert said.

The city council also is investigating using other city-owned property as tree planting sites, Robinson said. “We will be working toward the construction of a comprehensive guide for all these efforts over the next year.”

BGE reimburses residents up to $100 for each of certain types of trees it removes from a property. The City Environmental Advisory Committee recommended that Bowie seek at least $850,000 from BGE — in addition to the residential reimbursement program — as compensation for trees lost within the city, Allen said.

The city included a request for $800,000 in compensation for tree mitigation in a letter to the Maryland Public Service Commission, Allen said. The commission has not yet acted on the request. BGE forester Chad Devine was unavailable for comment.

Andrea Noble contributed to this story.

Originally published at The Gazette.

Joining forces to fight crime

Clinton Woods neighborhood unites residents, police in first community walk

Residents of the Clinton Woods neighborhood are fed up.

Over the course of the Clinton neighborhood’s first community walk led by District 5 police representatives Tuesday night, residents expressed their annoyance and anger with some of the continuing crime problem areas in the community, including drug use, break-ins, theft, vandalism and noise disturbances.

“The reason for the community walks is to get the police out into the community,” said Sgt. James Shomper of the District 5 Police Department. “It lets us know the citizens and the citizens get to know us.”

The walks, which will continue throughout several months in different District 5 communities, are supposed to start at 7 p.m. and last until 8 p.m., although Clinton Woods residents and police officers stayed in the area to talk for an additional hour. District 5, in south county, covers from Clinton and Brandywine to Eagle Harbor.

Community members are invited to walk through the neighborhood with a unit of police officers. On the walk, residents are encouraged to get to know the police force on a personal level and share their concerns in the neighborhood, pointing out areas that may need more police attention, such as a house that residents say is a crime hub.

Eight to 10 community walks were scheduled, including four more scheduled in August and September throughout District 5. The next walk is scheduled in Woodyard and Estonian Estates on Aug. 24.

About 40 area residents, including some who don’t live in Clinton Woods, met at the walk’s start point on Clinton Way, and even more residents joined as the walk progressed through the neighborhood.

Charles Fountain, a representative of the Clinton View Homeowners Association, attended to support the event’s message.

“We try to support each community,” he said. “We want to let people know that we stand against the crime.”

Others hope that the community walks will help build community awareness of the problems.

The one-on-one communication and personal interaction with the police are things that Raymond Butler, vice president of the Oak Orchard Community Association, and Carolyn Lowe of the District 5 Coffee Club, a community involvement and public safety organization, agree are some of the best elements of the community walks.

The community walk program has been held in District 5 since at least 2006, according to Maj. David Morris, commander of District 5. He said this is the first walk to have taken place in the Clinton Woods community.

“We’re here to show the community that we’re united,” Morris said. “It’s not just the police department and not just the citizens. It’s us together.”

Phyllis Boone, a Clinton Woods resident for 17 years, said that the neighborhood has changed a lot throughout her time here. Boone said she has to call the police at least once a week for disturbances in the neighborhood.

“We have a really nice community,” Boone said. “We’re not going to accept it.”

Morris said Clinton Woods is a good neighborhood but has a small group of residents who commit crimes.

“This is my district, my backyard,” he said. “I’m not going to let that happen in my backyard.”

 

Originally published at The Gazette.

Man arrested in fatal shooting in Temple Hills

Forestville resident charged with first-degree murder

A Forestville man was arrested Friday night and charged with first-degree murder in a fatal shooting a day earlier in Temple Hills.

Wydell Eugene Butler, 19, of the 6400 block of Hil Mar Drive was arrested in connection with the death of Donte Kearney, 21, of the 4000 block of Roy Place in Bladensburg, who was shot in a domestic dispute, according to Prince George’s police.

Butler had pleaded guilty earlier this month to second-degree assault and theft in February. Butler had been awaiting sentencing, which would have taken place this September.

At around 11:35 p.m. Thursday, officers responded to the 4100 block of 21st Avenue for a report of gunshots.

They found Kearney suffering from a gunshot wound to the upper body after an apparent domestic dispute, said Evan Baxter, a spokesman for the Prince George’s County Police Department. Kearney was pronounced dead at the scene. Police declined to release additional information about the dispute or how the men knew each other.

Butler was remanded to the Department of Corrections on a no-bond status. He is scheduled to appear in Prince George’s Circuit Court in Upper Marlboro at 8:45 a.m. Sept. 11. Butler does not yet have an attorney.

Anyone with additional information about the case is asked to call the Prince George’s County Police Department’s Homicide Unit at 301-772-4925 or Crime Solvers at 1-866-411-8477.

Originally published at The Gazette.

Body found in Upper Marlboro

Police trying to identify man located in woods

Police are trying to identify a man whose body was found Sunday afternoon in a wooded area in Upper Marlboro.

Police responded to a report of a man lying in the 14300 block of Oak Grove Road at approximately 3:55 p.m.

When officers arrived, they found the man unresponsive on the ground, and he was pronounced dead at the scene.

He appeared to be Hispanic, said Officer Evan Baxter, a spokesman for the Prince George’s County Police Department. No other identifying information on the man was released.

Police found no obvious signs of trauma and are investigating the incident as a death investigation as opposed to a homicide, Baxter said. Police are waiting for autopsy results from the state medical examiner’s office in Baltimore.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Prince George’s County Police Department’s Homicide Unit at 301-772-4925 or Crime Solvers at 1-866-411-8477.

Originally published at The Gazette.