The Hagerstown TEA Party thanks Washington County Public Schools Superintendent Elizabeth Morgan and the school system for listening to parents and for providing a common-sense solution regarding Tuesday's speech to students by President Obama.
With this decision, the school system empowered parents to make decisions regarding whether or not their children would view the president's speech. This decision allowed parents to watch the program with their children and have a healthy discussion afterward.
Red flags regarding the speech appeared when the press found out the U.S. Board of Education was asking students to "write letters to themselves about what they can do to help the President." Workbooks and activities have since been modified to remove objectionable content. We are thankful this partisan politicization has been exposed and removed from the U.S. Board of Education's curriculum guidelines.
Locally, the superintendent of schools has made the right decision to not politicize the school system by airing President Obama's speech live. It appears the school system just learned about the speech on Thursday. Morgan has used caution and wisdom rather than bowing to political pressure to air the broadcast.
The school system has appropriately listened to the parents that they serve and said "no" to unfettered access to Washington County's most precious resource, our students. This type of unfettered access to school students would set the nation's school system on a very slippery slope. The temptation for a president to politicize the school system to achieve political goals may prove too great to overcome. We are thankful and proud to know that our school system will not be participating in this activity.
Neil Parrott
Hagerstown TEA Party
Are you kidding me? How can I respect someones opinion on a matter that clearly is already so biased towards one side of the political spectrum that there is no point in even trying to reason with them? Do I need to remind them that George H. W. Bush did exactly the same thing and no one was running around claiming that it was going to corrupt our children. Nope, when the true red Republicans do this stuff they can do no wrong...
Clearly this opinion is not based on the content of the address, but on the politics of the writer. Our children deserve to hear from our national leaders, the deserve to know that the entire country is working for their future and that it is important for them to work hard. The only reason the school board didn't air the speech is because they have a weak stomach for people like Neil who writes into the Herald-Mail to rail against something that he really doesn't have much interest in other than that he is a Republican and the President is a Democrat.
If this country is to the point where people censor the president's speeches at the local level then we truly have entered a era of political upheaval. Personally, you respect the office that the President holds, I trust him to not do something stupid when talking to my kids and I think it is important that they understand he wants them to do well. I am ashamed of the weak willed folks at the school board that shut the access to a speech by our president, the leader of our country, the man or woman who we are all supposed to look up to and respect for who they are and what they represent.
Are you ready Hagerstown? Are you ready to believe in what can be done by the power of the human spirit? How many times have you heard the following:
We need to clean up downtown...
We should help those in the community that are less fortunate...
We should be more active in the education of our children...
We should volunteer to help other that have physical or mental disabilities...
We should help make where we live a better place.
Whether you are a democrat or republican, everyone can rally around the idea that each of us can contribute to our community out here in Western Maryland. Our new president is asking us to get involved, to stay involved and return the United States to the country that all others look up to as the pinnacle of a free and open society. Take a minute to watch Barack Obama's call to service...
If you are so moved, please look for ways to give back in Hagerstown:
While I must say I have not really followed the Hagerstown little league in the past, this year I am pumped about these guys. They are doing great in the regionals and look like they will be heading to the world series in Williamsport, PA! I must say that in New Hampshire we never played like this and as a transplant former little leaguer in my adopted home town I am excited to see my town kicking butt.
If you are interested in learning more about the little league you can visit their website here. If you want to see how they are doing keep your eyes on ESPN2 for more great little league baseball action!
"I have a question for our city fathers. If downtown Hagerstown is being improved so much, why are people moving from that area to the outer edges of Hagerstown, where I live? And people that moved into my area all tell me the same thing: They have to get away from the traffic congestion, no parking and the extremely loud stereos up and down the streets all the time. Now we have a couple (of people ) with loud stereos occasionally driving by, and some speeders, of course, but the times I've driven through downtown Hagerstown, I see no improvements." - Hagerstown
This is an interesting question to ask yourself as you drive through the town center and around 40 East and West. I think the simplest answer to this question is yes, the town is improving slowly but surely. The point I would emphasize though is that the progress is slow due to the state that Hagerstown deteriorated into after the 1970's when the rail yard went away. The economy in Washington County has been so bad for so long that there is no such thing as a quick fix to the situation that we find ourselves in currently.
If you look at the renovation occurring at some of the major buildings around North Potmac street, you will see the face of the Hagerstown to come in the next 10 - 15 years. The transformation will not be overnight, but it will come.
Are their loud stereos in the city? Almost all the time.
Are the streets overly congested? Every weekday rush hour.
Is there a high poverty rate? Absolutely.
For all of these reasons I don't live in the city center. Actually I live very close to Smithsburg because I like the space and the people that live around me. But then again, as more money gets pumped into downtown, it will become cleaner, more affluent and appealing to young professionals like myself who want to be in a more urban setting. Small, well maintained cities are great places to live and there are plenty of people who want to be in that environment. Hagerstown is moving in this direction and will get there in the next several years.
It seems that all too often people forget that improvement on this type of scale is not fast moving, nor does it always benefit the people living in the town currently. To revitalize a city of Hagestown's size takes years and lots of capital from outside sources which means the first companies and people to invest in the area are taking a substantial risk. The investors willing to take this step are not easy to find and like almost any business decision there must be a cost-benefit analysis done before any actions are taken. There is enough new money moving into the area now that this analysis is beginning to look favorable to more investors who are slowly trickling into the area.
Keep watching over the next 10 years and I bet you will see an increasing number of projects cleaning up downtown and making it into a much more trendy and cosmopolitant place to live.
"I was reading Mail Call this morning, July 1, and I agree 100 percent with the person that called in about having alcoholic beverages at The Maryland Theatre. I think it's totally ridiculous that we have to have alcohol at any function, such as the blues festival. That was mighty disgusting when we were down there, when we had friends to take down from out of town. We don't need alcoholic beverages for entertainment. I would like to also add it'd be great if we could bring the fair back to Hagerstown fairgrounds, and some craft shows, such as Williamsport C&O Canal and etc." - Hagerstown
OK, so I don't drink much either, but this comment is rediculous. There is no need to ban alcohol at the Blues Fest, if someone wants to have a beer then let them. Are you the same person that was disgusted when there was alcohol at Octoberfest? The truth is, if you could trust people to be responsible with the substance then there would not be any issue with this at all, but at the same time, those that are responsible should not be penalized because of the few that are.
But we banned smoking in public places right? Yes we did, but that poses an iminent health risk to all people around the smoker which is putting the people that don't feel like having cancer at risk. In the case of drinking, just because you have a personal belief that it should not be going on it does not mean that you are really putting others at risk if it is. Whereas smoking truly does put others at risk no matter if you feel like it should or not.
The bottom line is that if people are not responsible drinking then that is when they get thrown in jail. If you don't like drinking because it offends you moraly then I would suggest you stick to places where alcohol is not offered. For example, I would never go to a strip club brcause I don't feel like it is the right thing to do, but I don't go around telling people they should all be put out of business, nor do I care if my friends go. IF you feel the same way about alcohol and where it is served, just stay away.
"I grew up in this, what was onceunty,social a small, family-oriented town, when we had noise ordinances, and we had laws that would make the young people stay off the street and the corners after 11 at night. What happened? We travel quite extensively, to many towns, many states and other countries, but in the U.S. and the other towns that we ... when we have to hear that violent, boisterous rap and hip-hop that shakes our cars, that shakes our houses and makes our blood pressure go up, there's something wrong. Clean up Hagerstown. Enforce it with city codes." - Hagerstown
This text above was recently in the Mail Call section of the Herald Mail and I think this caller is going to get what they are asking for if they can stick it out another 10 or so years in Hagerstown. The city is being cleaned up in the downtown areas slowly but surely. As developer renovate and rebuild many of the older buildings and turn them into modern office space more money will flow into the heart of downtown and spread outwards from there. Once this begins to happen, the city will get cleaner and friendlier as time goes on.
What is going to prove interesting though is what will happen with many of the poor inhabitants of downtown Hagerstown that will be forced out due to higher rent and a clash of cultures. When downtown becomes a trendier place to live, the people with more money will certainly be able to push many of the lower income families out of the city. I think this is both good and bad, it does get rid of some of the less desirable elements that are downtown but it also forces the good hardworking people of the town out of their homes. In many ways this is what has happened in some of the cities back in New Hampshire where I am originally from. There we had old mill towns where the industry died and what was left were a lot of blue collar workers without jobs. This led to a lot of very bad areas of these cities until several years ago when developers decided they could start turning the old mill buildings into high-value loft apartments or office space. This effectively created a divide between halves of these cities and it continues to grow today. This will likely happen to Hagerstown as well, it is just a question of when and to what extent.
Personally, I like Hagerstown and the mix of people it offers. While I would love to see high-tech, higher paying jobs come into the area so I could work here, I moved away from the city to specifically avoid some of the culture that brings with it. I have never been places as unfriendly as the suburbs of Washington DC in Montgomery County. People really don't care about anyone but themselves and they will do anything to get ahead in whatever they are doing at the moment (driving their car, getting in the elevator, going through a door, etc.) even if it means steamrolling over someone else at the same time. Hagerstown really isn't like this, people care more about each other and what they are doing. No one is too busy to hold a door, say hello, or wish you a good day in almost all situations.
So I am torn, Hagerstown is coming to a crossroads and it is going to be interesting to see what types of extremes will be found as events progress. I sincerely hope that the city does not lose the down-to-earth atmosphere that I moved out here for. I don't want to be around the people I moved away from again but I also want to see Hagerstown develop economically and to some degree socially.
So it's been a while since I posted, mostly because I have gotten sick of the political blogging for the time being since things are all about numbers at this point. But I saw something tonight that I have seen before in Hagertucky but never written about. This phenomenon is the use of tow trucks to carry around four-wheelers.
Why are tow trucks being used to carry around four-wheelers? Would it not be more cost effective to use trailer? I think this is a uniquely western Maryland thing that would draw laughs in many places but in Hagertucky is looked upon as a perfectly normal thing to do. Having grown up in New Hampshire I am used to some pretty "hickish" things going on but this is a new one that I never saw growing up. I guess most of us up there just settled for a trailer to carry our snowmobiles and four-wheelers around with them and didn't get this creative. So I salute you four-wheeler carrying tow truck guy, you have proven to be more creative than my fellow New Hampshire natives.