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December 8, 2025

Centreville Spy

Nonpartisan and Education-based News for Centreville

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8 Letters to Editor

Letter to Editor: An Abundance of Cruelty

July 29, 2025 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

Have you noticed how often, how persistently, the word “cruelty” is showing up in the news?

I was reading about the prison built in the Everglades by the State of Florida to house people being rounded up by ICE. Built in a hurry, it is made up of cages for imprisoning humans and tarps for walls that freely allow mosquitoes in, not to mention the elements of summer in Florida. People who have been imprisoned there have reported maggots in the food, a lack of clean water, denial of medical care, legal access, and other basic human needs. The ACLU declared this “state-sponsored cruelty” and filed suit.  Thank goodness for the ACLU.

The setup is plainly sadistic. And Donald Trump apparently approved when he visited.  This denigration is OK with him, but is it OK with you? Is that what we are now?  Is this America?  My mother served as a WAC in World War II. She often told us how relieved enemy soldiers were to be captured by the US military–as opposed to being captured by Russian soldiers, who would just kill them. Americans were known for being big-hearted, kind, and compassionate. I was so proud when she spoke of this.

Why is this abuse of fellow humans still standing?  If we don’t protest, are we complicit? We might not be guilty of overt cruelty, but we are guilty of casual cruelty where we carelessly, with little empathy, maybe with a bit of superiority, blame the victim and shrug the thought aside. It’s a problem someone else can fix. Do you say to yourself, didn’t those illegals put themselves in this mess after all? It’s on you! Right?

Just type “cruelty Trump” into your search engine. Maybe the article title from the National Catholic Reporter will come up. It reads, “Silence in the face of Trump’s cruelty is complicity.” The headlines should be enough to make you weep. I hope so.

Marion O. Arnold
Easton

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

Letter to Editor: A Vanishing Way of Life

July 3, 2025 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

I am currently reading the book, Chesapeake Requiem, which was recommended to me by a friend. It was written in 2016 and chronicles the year its author, Earl Swift, spent with the watermen and other residents of Tangier Island. I have found it to be a fascinating and disturbingly sad read. It has taught me a great deal about crabbing and the life cycle of crabs as well as the daily routines of watermen and others who live on the Island. Their way of life is vanishing. According to the 2020 census, the town’s population was 436, at least half of whom were senior citizens. At its peak, in the 1940’s, the town’s population was 1250. Tangier Island has also lost 67% of its land mass since 1850. It is literally being swallowed up by Chesapeake Bay. Thus, the Island, its people, and their way of life are facing real extinction.

Reading this book has been a painful pleasure for me. While I am enjoying learning about this very isolated part of the world and its culture, I am keenly aware that even in 2016, when the book was written, Tangier Island was in a state of sinking deterioration from which it would not be able to recover. And despite not personally knowing anyone from Tangier or ever having set foot on its shores, I have felt saddened and upset while reading about this.

When I tune into what I am actually feeling, it is a visceral sensation of being punched in the gut, almost as though I can’t catch my breath. When I ask myself why I might be feeling this so intensely, it occurs to me that our current political climate has threatened us with a different kind of extinction. And much like the watermen and the other residents of Tangier Island, we complain about the changes that are happening in our midst, and then go about our day-to-day lives as though this is not really happening. I pray that, unlike Tangier Island, our country will recover from the greed, racism, and oligarchic fascism that have been biting at our shores and eroding our way of life. However, I am not sure we will be able to beat back this storm. Too many of us are asleep. Too many of us are selfish. Too many of us are complacent, too many of us are brainwashed, and too many of us are afraid to stand up to the routine cruelty and fear being used by the current regime to vanquish our freedoms.

While the end of Tangier Island seems to be a certainty, I think it is too early to say that about our democratic way of life. Perhaps the roots of our Constitution run deeper than we think. Perhaps the values of liberty, justice, and decency will be able to weather this storm. It is possible that the storm will turn out to be a clarifying and cleansing force, prompting us to let go of non-truths and embrace the democratic principles necessary for our survival. The one thing that seems clear from the many storms that Tangier Island has weathered over the years is that the longer the storm, the more damage it did, and the longer it took to repair. We will see how much damage this current storm does and how long it will take for these dark and menacing winds to finally subside.

Margot Weiss McClellan
Easton

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

Letter to Editor: How the Big Beautiful Bill Would Affect the Mid-Shore

June 30, 2025 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

President Trump has all but demanded that his One Big Beautiful Bill Act pass both houses of Congress for his signature by July 4. The differences in the legislation approved by the House of Representatives and what has emerged from the Senate must be resolved in conference before the president can sign it into law. So stay tuned. In the meantime, here are a few provisions in the mammoth legislation that affect us locally, and in one case, already have affected us here in Talbot County. The proposals cited below are among many, many others in this 940-page bill that will have major consequences for fellow Americans across the country. Here are a few observations about what is at stake.

The Talbot County Council meetings of June 10 and March 11 offer proof positive on how presidential politics, however spiteful or misguided, can coerce local elected officials into voting against their better angels.

U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy, citing a directive from President Trump, warned that federal funds for capital improvements for civilian airports – Easton Airport, in this case – are contingent on the removal of DEI (Diversity, Equity and Inclusion) policies from local government. The council statement of support for DEI principles had no enforcement provisions or financial commitment by any Talbot County governing body. Yet the message was direct and uncompromising: Unless you remove any mention of DEI objectives in employee handbooks or annual reports about meeting or failing to meet diversity goals, Talbot County would say goodbye to $48 million in federal grants for runway expansion and modification at Easton Airport, no matter the reason. Not for safety nor for the county’s economic benefit.

The council voted 4-1 to approve the directive, which eliminates two statements previously passed by the Talbot County Council in support of DEI objectives, as well as removes such language from any public documents emanating from county government. Such directives, if passed as expected by Congress in the president’s proposed “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBBA), would codify by law the banishment of DEI references from the official vocabulary. Censorship by presidential fiat. Forget that the Easton Airport improvements at stake are intended to comply with Federal Aviation Administration regulations. MAGA loyalty trumps – pun fully intended – safety and security.

The meeting in March had resulted in a reaffirmation of the council’s DEI statements of support. In June, the council’s arms were twisted, MAGA-style, to rescind any mention of those principles. King Don must have it his way. Or else.

John Swaine III, spokesman for the Talbot County Farm Bureau, says the aspect of the Big Beautiful Bill that most troubles local farmers and crop-processing companies is the proposed mammoth increase in funding for apprehending, detaining and deporting undocumented immigrant workers, even those who have worked and lived in Eastern Shore farming communities for decades and have never been criminally charged. The recent arrest and detention of longtime farm workers in Caroline County alarmed two farm owners who relied on them in order to stay in business. They’ve had no luck finding other help because migrants fear being nabbed by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agents. What’s more, it’s difficult to find American-born citizens to take jobs as day laborers. Some farm families, including those with adult children who have no interest in farming, have considered retirement by selling their land to developers or leasing it to corporate farming companies.

Another issue of deep concern to farming families are the proposed punitive tariffs resulting from Trump’s declaration of a national emergency to rectify trade imbalances, especially involving China. Tariffs on Chinese products were set at a whopping 145 percent until negotiations reduced them to 30 percent on top of the 20 percent level during Trump’s first term, starting in 2017. China has threatened retaliation by purchasing soybeans from Brazil and Argentina instead of the United States. Currently, much of the field corn and soybean crops grown on Talbot farms and all over the Eastern Shore go to producing feed for Mountaire Farms and Perdue Farms, two of the largest poultry companies in the U.S. However, if China withdraws from the American market, it would likely drive down the prices of such crops to farmers in every state. The Big Beautiful Bill would codify Trump’s executive order, making it harder to overturn except by a change in leadership in Congress and the White House. Federal courts, in general, have been mostly indifferent. So it’s up to voters in the mid-term elections next year and the presidential election in 2028.

Along with trepidation about overzealous ICE agents, the rampant immigration round-ups may – if detention goals prescribed and funded in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act are realized – result in the writ of habeas corpus being denied for good. Or certainly ill. Even American citizens and legal migrants are at greater risk than ever of losing their habeas corpus protection. These are rights that go as far back as 12th century England and are guaranteed (until now?) in Article 1, Section 9, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution. But there appears to be no room for due process in the headlong rush to rid MAGA Amerika of all manner of immigrants. The pace suggested by OBBBA and the president’s “antisocial media” postings could lead to the formation of migrant concentration camps – they’ll call them “internment campuses” – to accommodate the population overload as the Trump administration runs out of countries that will accept deported immigrants.

“My understanding of the OBBBA,” says Matthew Peters, director of the Easton-based Multicultural Center serving Eastern Shore immigrants regardless of status, “is that it aims to spend enormous amounts of money to immigration enforcement efforts, aims to deter anyone from applying for asylum relief, aims to deter any sponsorship of unaccompanied minors, aims to reduce the amount of financial aid sent to families abroad, and aims to eliminate any tax credits or benefits for mixed-status families – all of which would affect families currently living here.” In short, denying their rights as humans.

All the rest of us are at risk, too. Especially now that the U.S. Supreme Court has taken away the remedy of District Courts issuing nationwide injunctions against presidential overreach pending an appeal to a higher court. ICE agents – sometimes acting like masked thugs – will feel freer than ever to manhandle anyone who gets in their way.

Steve Parks
Easton

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

These Republicans Are Right – Don’t Blame Governor Wes Moore For Maryland’s Long-Projected Budget Deficit

April 2, 2025 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

In a recent debate on closing Maryland’s budget deficit, Minority Leader Jason Buckel, a Republican Delegate from Allegany County, made an important point: “The man upstairs has only been there for two, three years. I don’t blame him for our economic failures of the last 10,” referring to Democratic Governor Wes Moore, who was elected in 2022 and whose office is on the second floor of the State House.

Buckel’s comments highlight a key reality that many of his Republican colleagues seldom admit ahead of the 2026 gubernatorial elections: it isn’t right to blame Governor Moore for budget challenges that have been brewing for years.

Maryland’s structural deficit, now projected at $3.3 billion, was a problem that started long before Moore took office. In fact, it was first projected in 2017, during the tenure of former Governor Larry Hogan. This isn’t an opinion—it’s a fact that Buckel and other lawmakers, including Republican Delegate Jefferson Ghrist, have bravely acknowledged. During that same debate, Ghrist remarked that the Department of Legislative Services had warned about this deficit throughout Hogan’s administration, yet he did little to address it.

Ghrist pointed out that during Maryland’s so-called “good years,” when the state received a flood of federal COVID-19 relief dollars, spending spiraled without proper regard for long-term fiscal health. Hogan used these one-time federal funds to support ongoing programs, masking the true state of Maryland’s finances and creating the illusion of fiscal stability. Hogan continues to take credit for the “surplus” Maryland had in 2022—even though experts have repeatedly noted that it was caused by the influx of federal dollars during the pandemic.

As Ghrist correctly noted, the lack of fiscal restraint and slow growth during the Hogan years laid the groundwork for the $3.3 billion structural deficit we face today. Indeed, Maryland’s economy has been stagnant since 2017, especially in comparison to our neighboring states, well before Governor Moore took office.

Compounding these challenges are President Donald Trump’s reckless policies, including massive layoffs and trade wars with our allies. Thousands of federal workers who live in Maryland are losing their jobs, which is costing the state hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenue. Trump’s tariffs are also putting an enormous strain on our local businesses, including farmers on the eastern shore who are now subject to up to 15% retaliatory tariffs on agricultural products like chicken, wheat, soybeans, corn, fruits, and vegetables.

In light of this grim reality, Maryland’s lawmakers are making difficult, but necessary, decisions to shore up the state’s finances. Governor Moore and state legislative leaders recently came together on a budget plan that prioritizes growing Maryland’s economy without raising taxes on the vast majority of residents.

In fact, 94% of Marylanders should either see a tax cut or no change at all to their income tax bill under the proposed agreement. Lawmakers also want to cut government spending by the largest amount in 16 years, while making targeted investments in emerging industries, like quantum computing and aerospace defense, so we’re less reliant on federal jobs.

While the richest of Marylanders could see their income taxes go up, it’s reasonable to ask someone making over $750,000 a year to pay $1,800 more to support law enforcement, strengthen our schools, and grow our economy. As for the proposed tax on data and IT services, these products aren’t subject to Maryland’s sales tax under current law. Maryland leaders want to modernize our tax code, just like other states across the country including Texas and Ohio, by levying a 3% sales tax on these products.

These ideas are fair—especially since they don’t raise income taxes on the overwhelming majority of Marylanders—and because state leaders are also cutting spending by the billions. They’re also necessary, as Governor Hogan chose to kick the can down the road instead of addressing Maryland’s long-predicted deficit, and because Trump’s policies are laying off thousands of Marylanders and issuing tariffs that hurt our state.

By making responsible choices now, Maryland leaders are putting the state on a path toward long-term economic stability. These decisions will help Maryland continue to thrive, create jobs, and invest in the vital services that every resident relies on—without burdening the majority of hardworking families. I’m confident Maryland will emerge stronger, more resilient, and ready to lead in the industries of tomorrow.

Elaine McNeil
Chair of the Queen Anne’s Democratic Central Committee

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

Letter to the Editor: Maryland’s Legislature is failing rural communities By Janet Christensen-Lewis

February 17, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

Maryland’s Legislature is dominated by Senators and Delegates from urban centers—lawmakers who wield an overwhelming majority to pass legislation that does not meaningfully impact their constituents. They legislate from a distance, with little regard for the rural communities bearing the consequences.

SB0931 and HB1036 are prime examples of this disconnect.

The Majority has sided with the Solar Energy Industry, overriding the voices of rural counties and trampling on local land-use planning and taxation authority. These counties—required by the state to invest time, energy, and taxpayer money into drafting Comprehensive Plans—have done so with care, ensuring growth aligns with the aspirations of their residents. These plans form the backbone of land-use ordinances, designed to protect communities, preserve agricultural lands, and foster responsible development.

Yet the Majority seeks to dismantle this process, imposing laws that strip counties of their ability to safeguard farmland from industrialization. By forcing solar projects onto agricultural land, this legislation accelerates the loss of productive farmland, threatening the future of farming and the cultural heritage that defines our rural communities. The facts cannot be ignored: Maryland’s solar expansion is happening on agricultural land, and the richest, most productive farmland is concentrated in the very rural counties that the Majority chooses to ignore—particularly on the Eastern Shore.

SB0931 enforces a one-size-fits-all landscaping standard for solar developments, disregarding the unique character of each community. It treats the gateway to a historic town the same as a remote backroad, ignoring the value of scenic viewsheds and historic landscapes. Rural communities are not just places on a map; they are living histories, cultures rooted in agriculture, and the embodiment of Maryland’s heritage. This bill sacrifices those values in the name of misguided environmental policy.

Adding insult to injury, the Majority is also undermining local financial autonomy, restricting how counties generate revenue while simultaneously increasing the burden of unfunded mandates with other pieces of legislation. It is an attack on local governance, forcing counties to do more with less while their voices are drowned out in Annapolis.

And for what? The climate benefit that SB0931is meant to support will result in a mere 0.16% reduction of Maryland’s contribution to global CO₂ emissions—an impact so minuscule it is statistically irrelevant. Yet the cost is devastating: the destruction of farmland, the erosion of rural culture, and the continued disenfranchisement of Maryland’s rural communities.

The Majority will pat themselves on the back for their “progress,” but make no mistake: rural Maryland is being sacrificed for political convenience.  We cannot stand by in silence while the communities of rural counties around the state and the Eastern Shore are being sacrificed.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor, Archives

Letter to Talbot County Council: Keep employee handbook DEI statement

February 10, 2025 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

I’m writing to ask the Council not to remove the Inclusion Statement on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion from the Employee Handbook.  I cannot understand why asking people to treat others with dignity and respect is something that anyone would find objectionable.  Isn’t the first thing we teach our children, be kind, treat your classmates with respect,  be inclusive in your games?  Don’t many go to church to hear the preacher remind us to treat others as we would like to be treated?

Why would anyone find a statement objectionable which encourages diversity, which is an opportunity to learn of the richness inherent in our differences; equity, simply treating people equally;  Inclusion, not leaving people out of opportunities for which they are qualified.  Why?

– Judy Fauntleroy

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

Letter to Editor: Representative Harris snubs the ‘Beagle Brigade’

February 2, 2025 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

Politics can be as unpredictable as the weather.  And a recent vote by the Eastern Shore’s Congressman, Andy Harris, proves that point. Though Harris represents an agricultural region and chairs the ag subcommittee on the powerful House Appropriations Committee, the legislator recently voted against a federal program that protects the American food supply from the import of unapproved animal and plant materials.  

As the previous Congress neared its end in late December, Harris voted No on Senate Bill 759.  This measure laid the groundwork for funding of the school that trains dogs, mostly beagles, to sniff out pests and diseases on wild and agricultural items coming into the country.  Because the hound has been the favorite canine worker in the program, it has been nicknamed the Beagle Brigade. 


Although Harris voted No, the bill passed the House and is now law.  The USDA training center for detector dogs, located near Atlanta, can rely on funding beyond user-paid fees that rise and fall erratically with the economy, as was the previous practice.  In recent slumps, an association of American pork producers provided resources, according to Congressional testimony. That situation struck observers as a potential conflict of interest. 

Despite strong partisanship in Congress in recent years, the beagle measure passed unanimously in the Senate and even enjoyed bi-partisan sponsorship there. No dollar figure was included nor yet forecast by the Congressional Budget Office; the bill simply said the school for detector dogs would be “permanent.”  Of the 11 senators who endorsed the bill in the Senate, five were Republicans – Ernst and Grassly of Iowa, Ricketts of Nebraska, Crapi of Idaho and the new vice president of the U.S., J. D. Vance of Ohio.  It was introduced by Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia.  

The bill also passed easily with both parties onboard in the House (381 for, 20 opposed).  Harris was one of the 20 No votes.  Three messages given to Harris staff in Washington and an email, all seeking his reason for opposition, got no response over a span of a week..  

Public perception of the program has been generally positive.  Beagles and beagle-mixes are preferred, the Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) asserts, because of ”their keen sense of smell, non-threatening size, …., and gentle disposition with the public.”  The agency says it finds all animals for the brigade at shelters.   

Over the course of the program’s 40 years, a total of 150,000 interceptions of illicit items have  “prevent(ed) the introduction of harmful plant pests and foreign animal disease from entering the U.S.” (CBP post entitled Agriculture Dogs.)

The actual inspections have been performed by agents of the CBP since 2003. They take place at border crossings, preclearance locations, and international passenger airports, where  returning Americans are shocked to learn the pressed flowers they innocently collected and the smoked sausage in their carry-on pose threats and are not allowed.  Inspections of commercial volumes of fruits and vegetables are conducted at air cargo terminals, ports, and warehouses. Even mail facilities that see heavy international business will receive visits.

From its beginnings with one dog at the Los Angeles airport in 1984, then under Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (often called Aphis for short, which still runs the training school), the Beagle Brigade has grown to about 180 teams of dog and handler, CBP reports. Though no specific mention of the program was found in reviewing Harris sources, the website andyharris.com had the following on its second page on January 22, 2025: 

“It’s been my honor to represent all of you and to stand up for your needs in Washington – needs like fighting invasive species in our waterways and on our crops, but also fighting for lower prescription prices and keeping the FDA and CDC accountable.”

Linda G. Weimer
Kent County 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

Letter to the Editor: Will Rogers

July 21, 2024 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

Correspondents for cable news seem to have found a favorite spot in the United States Capitol to file their reports. They stand so close to a statue of the great American humorist, Will Rogers, that he appears to be listening in on their commentaries.

If he were here today, he would be sorely tempted to add some pithy remarks of his own about the country’s political mish mash.

The bronze sculpture that captures Roger’s typical hands-in-his pockets “aw shucks” pose, was a gift of the State of Oklahoma.  He was born there in 1879 when it was still a territory on the western frontier.  He died on August 15,1935, along with the legendary flier, Wiley Post, when their plane crashed in Alaska. His widow, Betty, urged that Jo Davidson, an internationally recognized sculptor of the day, be commissioned to do the piece. Franklin Roosevelt participated in the 1939 unveiling ceremony by broadcasting to audiences across the country from his home at Hyde Park, NY.

Starting as a cowboy on a Texas ranch in 1898, Rogers later found his calling as an entertainer with a traveling Wild West show where he was known as “The Cherokee Kid,” busting broncos and winning cheers for his skills with a lasso. After a few years performing with the Ziegfield Follies he became a film icon, staring in both silent movies and “talkies.” In 1933 he was the highest paid actor in Hollywood.

Rogers lectured across America capturing the hearts and tickling the funny bones of his audiences with his humorous, sometimes irreverent, comments about public figures and political parties.  Here are some of his observations:

“The short memories of American voters are what keep our politicians in office.”

“In this country people don’t vote for, they vote against.”

“I am not a member of any organized political party. I am a Democrat.”

“We shouldn’t elect a President. We should elect a Magician.”

“It takes nerve to be a Democrat, but it takes money to be a Republican.”

“The whole trouble with Republicans is their fear of an increase in the income tax, especially on high incomes.”

“Both parties have their good and bad times at different times. Good when they are out, bad when they are in.”

Hundreds of people—legislative staff, elected officials, visitors, TV correspondents—pass by Will Rogers every day.

If he could speak, he might offer them another bit of homespun advice: “Don’t let yesterday use up too much of today.”

By the time he died Will Rogers was known to all Americans, and to many abroad, for his unsurpassed wit, engaging personality and dedication to the ideals of the nation.

Ross Jones

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor, Archives

Letter to Editor: Delmarva Pride Festival: Fun, Food, Support and Free Advice

June 10, 2024 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

The four-day Delmarva Pride Festival, running Thursday through Sunday, June 13-16, got a huge publicity lift at the last Easton Town Council meeting on June 3 with an outpouring of support for the local LGBT+ community from ordinary tax-paying residents who were upset about comments by two members of the council at its previous meeting. (Video is still posted on talbotspy.org).
Town Council President Frank Gunsallus and Councilman David Montgomery proposed withholding Town of Easton funds in support of “ideological movements” – pointedly mentioning the upcoming Pride Festival as a prime example. They did not have the votes on the five-member council to revoke the funds.
Dozens of residents spoke at the comments period after important town business was presented, some of which were voted on, including measures for final approval of a new central Mid-Shore hospital in Easton. An overflowing gathering of citizens, many standing for an hour and a half, waited for their turn to speak.
But early in the meeting, Mayor Megan Cook, at the end of her mayor’s report to the council, made her position clear in support of a wide diversity of events and recognition in the Town of Easton for people of various ethnic, social, and religious persuasions.
To that end, Tina Jones, who helped found the Easton-based Delmarva Pride Center and who was appointed by Gov. Wes Moore to Maryland’s Commission on LGBTQIA+ Affairs, praised the mayor for her support and for “the beautiful lights,” which now line the block on Harrison Street, from Dover to South streets, marking the site of the Delmarva street fair all day on Saturday of the festival.
The pride festival opens on Thursday with practical advice at a free legal clinic for people with issues ranging from legal support for victims of crime to family law matters, including custody rights of children involved, plus more routine advice on estate planning and income maintenance issues. Also, on Thursday, there will be a Pride Welcome Table from 2-4 p.m. during the Forest Music concert at Adkins Arboretum in Ridgley as part of the Chestertown-based National Music Festival.
Getting down to the business of even more fun, the Avalon Theater hosts what is now the annual Delmarva Pride Drag show. You’re encouraged to bring adult friends with dollar bills to throw around to tip the performers with much-appreciated paper applause. A cash bar is available as well as – new this year – VIP cafe tables on stage with a backstage tour before the show.
Earlier on Friday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., there will be a drive-through supplies distribution at the Dorchester County Health Department in Cambridge. Stop by for a “goodie bag” with LGBT+-related health resources, including PrEP info for lab tests and results delivered to your home. Call 410-228-0235 for details.
The day-long Pride Festival street fair, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, promises a celebration with live musical and drag performances, plus vendors selling everything from books to baubles – not to mention food and beer. Wine, sparkling water, and sodas, too. So, don’t forget to bring your ID. The sugar police could be on patrol. Just kidding.
The Pride Festival winds up with a Pride Dance, 6-10 p.m. Saturday at the Hummingbird Inn in Easton, with guests 18 and up invited, 21 or older, to browse the cash bar. It’s followed on Sunday with the Delmarva Pride Brunch down the road from Easton at ArtBar, 420B Race St. in downtown Cambridge. It’s a chance for the LGBT+ community and their straight allies to break bread and sip mimosas together, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Sunday.
BTW: If you’re curious and don’t already know yet, the Delmarva Pride Center is located within the Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship at Easton on Ocean Gateway, also known as U.S. Route 50. Just turn in at the west-bound parking lot with the Welcoming Congregation Flag – you’ll recognize the colors – and follow the sign to the left of the fellowship building to the Pride Center entrance. Drop by, 5-7 p.m. Tuesdays and noon-2 p.m. Saturdays, or by appointment whenever you need to speak to someone. [email protected]
DELMARVA GAY PRIDE FESTIVAL

Thursday-Sunday, June 13-16, in Easton and Cambridge. delmarvapridecenter.org/festival

Steve Parks
Easton

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

Letter to Editor: Legal Challenge To Striped Bass Regulations Gets Wide Support

April 1, 2024 by Letter to Editor Leave a Comment

A lawsuit was recently filed in Federal court by the Delmarva Fisheries Association (DFA) and the Maryland Charter Boat Association (MCBA). The suit challenges a mandate for new Striped Bass fishing regulations in Maryland. The mandate is from the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission.

Since the lawsuit was filed there has been an outpouring of support from those who understand this mandate has already had and will have a devastating impact far beyond watermen and charter boat captains.

Others impacted negatively include Eastern Shore hotels, motels, restaurants, businesses, and merchants who depend upon wild fishery harvests and charter boat tourism.

The Rural Counties Coalition of the Maryland Association of Counties (MACo) has expressed the following concerns. “These regulations will affect local small business models that operate in the charter boat and commercial fishing industries as well. Rural counties along Maryland’s shoreline depend on these industries and oppose these changes, as they will dramatically affect economic development and the livelihood of small business owners. Many of Maryland’s waterfront businesses will undoubtedly bear financial losses due to the restrictions. For many years, these industries have operated with restrictions in harvesting and strict regulatory compliance yet have remained in operation. The proposed restrictions will be a point that may force good businesses to close and may prohibit other businesses from locating within Maryland’s coastal counties. “In addition to the MACo support letter, the Boards of Commissioners in Dorchester County, Queen Anne’s County, and Kent County have submitted comparable letters. More are expected.

Support for the DFA and MCBA lawsuit goes well beyond Maryland.

The East Coast Fishing Coalition (ECFC) represents over eight hundred for-hire charter and party boats across Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, and Maryland. The president of ECFC has written “We share in your concerns, as these actions threaten not only the present viability of our businesses but also the long-term sustainability of the for-hire sector of the fishing industry. If these decisions are not rectified, we anticipate a significant decline in business that will persist well into the future. The ramifications also extend beyond our industry, impacting businesses such as hotels, restaurants, tackle shops, and other merchants that rely on our operations to sustain their own livelihoods.”
DFA and MCBA are represented by the McCloud Law Group in Chestertown and Meeks Butera & Israel, Washington, D.C.

Captain Rob Newberry
Chair Delmarva Fisheries Association.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 8 Letters to Editor

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