Thursday, January 22, 2015

Basement Apartment No Longer a Lifelong Benefit

Now that Gov. Larry Hogan has been inaugurated and has hunkered down into the job of running Maryland, new delegates and state senators are seated in the Maryland General Assembly and a new councilman leads Baltimore County’s seventh district for the first time in 16 years, I thought I’d take the time to reflect on a comment made on Facebook by a friend of mine shortly after the election.

The election set many people on their ears — especially political types who didn’t care enough to really get a handle on just how upset many Marylanders are at the state of the state and its local jurisdictions. 

In the sixth legislative district, which covers Dundalk, Edgemere, Fort Howard and parts of Essex, three Republicans won seats that have been occupied by Democrats (no matter how conservative some of those “Democrats” were) for as long as most can remember.

When State Senator Norman Stone (D) announced his retirement after a 50-year career in government, Del. John Olszewski Jr. gave up his seat in the House of Delegates to pursue Stone’s senatorial seat. He received Stone’s endorsement and was touted as the heir apparent to the senate seat.

Olszewski, in what many consider the biggest shocker and upset in local election results, lost in November to the unknown Republican Johnny Salling. If there was collateral damage done by the voters, Olszewski, an intelligent, capable and passionate leader, was certainly one of its victims.

And Todd Crandell, a Republican, defeated Democratic challenger Joe DiCara, who defeated four other candidates in the primary election. Four-term Councilman John Olszewski Sr. chose not to run for a fifth term.

In a sign that the Olszewski name had lost its influence, Councilman Olszewski’s choice to succeed him, Ron Yeatman, finished last among the five primary candidates.

Republican Hogan soundly defeated Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown in what many perceive as a thumbs-down thumping of Gov. Martin O’Malley’s policies.

Which brings me to the comment I’ve been reflecting on since early November.

After the election dust had settled, I posted the following on Facebook: A new day in Maryland ... time for others to have a chance to right a sinking ship, whether our current officials want to admit it's sinking or not. And those are the thoughts of a lifelong Democrat who voted for a whole bunch of folks with the letter R behind their names.”

My friend Geff responded with Maryland moved back in with its parents yesterday. It's cheaper that way, and it's a great way to delay taking responsibility.”

Now, I’m not sure what he meant by that, and I admitted to myself that I didn’t get the analogy. But like I said, I got to thinking about his comment and formed my own interpretation.

Maryland (the government) didn’t just move back home with the parents (taxpayers). The mad-as-hell parents tossed the current group of freeloaders out of the free basement apartment and told them to get their own jobs and see what it’s like to try to survive on a real paycheck in this tax-and-spend state.

Government (freeloaders) has been living at home with the parents, so to speak, since elected governing began. Think about it … government earns no honest money of its own; it depends on an allowance from the parents (taxpayers) to pay its way.

The freeloaders user their allowance to wine and dine themselves and their friends on exotic foods and beverages, have smart phones, company cars, drivers, body guards, travel the world on the taxpayer's money and have extremely generous pension plans. With their overly generous paychecks—again provided by taxpayer dollars—they buy season football and baseball tickets, have vacation homes, trade their personal cars in every couple of years and generally live high off the hog, so to speak.

Meanwhile, the parents have to budget every last penny of their ever-decreasing paychecks, If they’re lucky enough to still have one. They’re buying orange-stickered meats at the market (many of us know what that means), driving their 10-year-old cars, wearing their three-year-old (or older) clothing and eating out at the local bar and grill on Tuesday nights for half-price burger night.

When the freeloading kids have blown through their allowance, instead of cutting back, making tough decisions and doing without, they go to their parents and demand —not ask—for more money. These “kids” raise every tax and fee they can think of and keep spending at a rate that is unsustainable.

Metaphorically speaking, the basement dwellers are out on their boats every weekend, vacationing at mountain and beach resorts several times a year and spending like there’s no tomorrow while their parents are using their vacation days to go to the doctor, get the 10-year-old car’s oil changed and taking care of sick grandchildren that they’re raising because the adult children refuse to take responsibility for the children they gave birth to.

While the basement dwellers are burning through their allowance, the parents have been laid off, furloughed and asked to take permanent pay cuts. The parents are unemployed, underemployed and/or haven’t had pay raises in upward of eight years. And while their gross paychecks haven’t changed (unless the amount has gone done) the power of the net result continues to shrink because of increasing taxes, health issuance premiums, fees and other costs. 

As parents are paying more for health insurance, they’re taking a double and triple hit, because the quality of the insurance coverage decreases with the increasing premiums, so it costs more per doctor’s visit, per specialist’s appointment and per prescription.

If these basement dwellers were our biological children, we would laugh in their faces when they ask for their allowance to be increased. But the freeloading government members legislate their allowance, and we have no choice but to pay up.

So here’s what I think about the basement apartment analogy of election results.

Because we have no choice, we will always have freeloaders living off of us. But here’s what happened in November. The mad-as-hell parents said enough is enough and booted out the current occupants. Many Democrats finally turned their backs on the party that has turned its back on the working class and voted for Republican challengers, hoping new faces would bring new ideas and tough budget decisions to the governing process.

I’m hoping the election results are a sign of voters becoming more involved, more informed and more willing to get off the sofa to actually vote. The message was sent to career politicians that they need to remember they were elected to represent a constituency, and were not sent to office to take care of personal priorities and wheel and deal their votes with their buddies.

And Democrats should get the message that they don't have our votes simply because they're Democrats. They need to show some substance, they need to tell us what they will do if elected (as opposed to throwing mud at their opponent) and they need to talk to us more often than once every four years.

Just as good leaders are willing to "go across the aisle" to accomplish what's best for the jurisdiction, so too are voters willing to cross over on election day. Don't take our vote for granted; try earning it.

So the newly elected group of elected leaders need to know this: We’re watching. We’re keeping an extra close eye on you basement dwellers and come four years from now, if you didn’t follow through on your promises and you forget who we were the day after the election, you're out of here. You'll get the boot and the basement apartment will be turned over to the next group.

We can’t eliminate the free ride for our government but we can limit the amount of time the freeloaders spend on our dime.


Thursday, January 15, 2015

Meet Baltimore's Other Elite Swimmers

The Baltimore metropolitan area has long been known for being a hotbed of swimming. More than a few Olympic medalists have trained in Maryland pools — Beth Botsford, Anita Nall, Theresa Andrews and some guy named Michael Phelps come immediately to mind — and the Free State is also known for being home to world class swim coaches (Murray Stephens, Bob Bowman) who have been largely responsible for nurturing and training those athletes.

But there’s another, even more impressive group of swimmers from the Baltimore area competing in pools across the globe, although they tend to get much less attention.

The United States Olympic Committee this week named its Paralympic National Team. Of 14 swimmers named to the A Team, four are from the Baltimore area: Jessica Long, Rebecca Meyers, Ian Silverman and Brad Snyder.

If you do the math, 28 percent of the team is from Baltimore. Impressive, to say the least.

I’ve been following Jessica Long since she was 11, when she was a member of the Dundalk-Eastfield Swim Club, which called the CCBC-Dundalk campus pool home. As a reporter for the Dundalk Eagle, I got a tip about this young athlete from Bruce Mills, who was at the time the president of the Dundalk-Eastfield Recreation Council. I made arrangements to meet her at a Saturday morning club practice and I became one of her earliest and most enthusiastic fans.

Jessica, who is a double, below-the-knee amputee, never beat any of her able-bodied teammates while swimming for the DESC. Her main competitor was the race clock, and she consistently lowered her race times while honing her technique and learning different strokes.

It didn’t take long for the young swimmer to come to the attention of Paralympic swimming organizers. As a 12-year-old, she was named to the U.S Paralympic swim team that competed in the Paralympics in Athens, Greece, in 2004. She was the only one not surprised when she came home with three gold medals.

Since that debut on the world stage — er, pool — she has collected more medals and world records than she can track and has won just about every major award there is, including the James E. Sullivan Award (presented to the nation’s top amateur athlete), the 2006 Disabled Swimmer of the Year (presented by Swimming World magazine), the 2006 U.S. Olympic Committee Paralympian of the Year Award, the 2011-12 Paralympic Sports Woman of the Year award (named by the USOC) and a couple of ESPY awards.

Winning the Sullivan award puts Jessica in good company. Recent winners have included Michael Phelps, J.J. Riddick, Tim Tebow, Michelle Kwan, Peyton Manning and Dan Jansen. Since its 1930 inception, the award has been given to athletes who were the household names of their day, including tennis player Don Budge, decathlete Bob Mathias, figure skater Dick Button, divers Sammy Lee and Patricia McCormick and runners Rafer Johnson and Wilma Rudolph.

Jessica, who grew up in Middle River, is the most decorated female athlete with 17 Paralympic medals (including 12 golds), according to a statement from the USOC. She has competed in the Paralympics in Athens, Beijing and London, and now has her eye on the 2016 games in Rio de Janeiro.

Rebecca Meyers, a resident of Timonium, won two medals (one silver and one bronze) at the London Paralympics, and  finished fifth in the 50m freestyle. She also holds two world records, according to the Team USA website.

Brad Snyder, who lost his sight to an IED while serving in Afghanistan, won three medals at the London Paralympics. The U.S. Naval Academy graduate competes in six events, including the 100m and 400m freestyle, 100m butterfly and the 200m individual medley.

In London, he won gold medals in the 100m and 400m freestyle races and silver in the 50m freestyle.

Ian Silverman won a gold medal in the 400m freestyle in London and has an impressive collection of medals from national and world championships, according to the Team USA website. He holds Paralympic world and American records in 15 events. 

He was named the 2013 Tricia L. Zorn Disability Swimmer of the Year; received Scholastic All-American recognition for high school swimming  for the 2013-14 season; was a member of the All-Maryland team from 2010-2014; and was the Maryland Swimming Swimmer of the Year in 2006 and 2009 through 2013, according to the website.

Paralympians compete in disability classifications that ensure the athletes compete against others with similar disabilities.

While these athletes train as long and hard as their able-bodied counterparts, they mostly  perform in obscurity. The Paralympics get just a fraction of the airtime that the Olympics get, though NBC is working to provide more coverage of the Paralympics.

The national swim team competes in many national meets and well as international meets and world championships, and top Paralympians have the opportunity to live and train at USOC training complexes. 

To keep an eye on the accomplishments of this stellar group of Baltimore area athletes, check out the Paralympics website.

Let’s do our part to bring attention to these athletes and do some bragging about Baltimore's other hotbed of swimming.



Jessica Long competes in the Women’s 100m Breaststroke - SB7 Heat on London Games 2012 © • Getty Images

Thursday, January 8, 2015

A Seinfeld-esque Declaration to Finally Create a Blog

I've been talking about creating a blog for several years. I write posts in my head while I'm in the shower, while I'm in the car, when I can't get to sleep and it's approaching an hour much later than I like to be awake, and pretty much any time I hear or read something that gets my emotions going.

But while I create these absolutely brilliant essays in my head, they rarely—if ever—get committed to paper or an online document. So while I know how brilliantly I addressed a particular trending topic or how artfully I brought to life a good deed of a local citizen, the success of a special event or my frustration with elected officials, that life remained only in my head. I finally decided that, in failing to commit these brilliant observations to some sort of shareable format, I was denying the world access to said brilliant thoughts.

I know ... the world just stopped on its axis, right?

So, anyhow, I've taken this first step to actually get this blog started. Hopefully, this public declaration of my intention to post brilliant stuff on a fairly regular basis will be the motivation I need to do just that.

I intend to write about many of the wonderful things happening in and around Greater Dundalk—a community near and dear to my heart—and pretty much anything else that matters to me.

I'll be bugging some of my very successful blogger friends for tips, help, suggestions and ideas for improving this site, and I'll work on making it an aesthetically pleasing blog as well as (hopefully) a pleasant read.

See you again soon!