Saturday, September 24, 2016

Sometimes, adults should just butt out

I’m a little late getting this post out, but late is better than never most of the time, and definitely in this case.

I’ve been procrastinating a bit for a variety of reasons. First, I did all the interviewing and reporting for a news story that I pitched to a couple of established news outlets, which both passed on the story. I don’t know if it was because the story was too controversial, or if they didn’t know who I was to know the story was well-vetted and accurate (even though I offered to provide contact information for all my sources), or, as I strongly suspect is the case, it would have hit some advertisers that newspaper managers are more and more loath to upset.

Secondly, I had to decide how to approach this topic as a blog post, because it could go in about a million different directions.

In any case, here’s the deal. 

It seems that a few disgruntled, jealous adults have misused their power and authority (and perhaps even intimidation) over a youth-led organization to enact a new rule that was designed to exclude a very limited number of children from participating in a livestock sale at the Great Frederick Fair.

In what many people close to the situation and familiar with the organization involved believe is nothing more than a retaliatory, vindictive move, The Frederick County 4-H Beef, Sheep and Swine Club voted to exclude from its annual sale any youngsters who sold animals at another county’s fair.

The new rule is so specifically written that this year, it targeted two children and only two — Matthew and Mark Chaney of Libertytown.

Many believe it is no coincidence that the rule was enacted after Matthew won a couple of top prizes at the 2014 Great Frederick Fair.

Rather than encourage their own children to work harder and commit more time to their projects to defeat their competition, parents took it into their own hands to eliminate that competition.

And it worked.

Take a look at the news story I prepared and then I’ll follow up with the rest of the story as it panned out during the last week of the fair.

It’s too late to do anything about this egregious act this year, but someone needs to fix this for next year. Either Frederick fair officials need to demand that no one be excluded from an activity happening under its auspices, or the board needs to tell the Beef, Sheep and Swine Club it can no loner hold its sale during the fair. 

I’m sure a more youth-friendly group of folks would be more than willing to step up and run a similar sale for all exhibitors.

Here’s the story:

All is not well within the Frederick County agriculture community.

And more than a few people are upset about it.

At issue is a controversial move by the Frederick County 4-H Beef, Sheep and Swine club, which regulates and runs a livestock sale at the annual Great Frederick Fair.

In March 2015, the sale club passed a motion that would prevent youngsters from selling animals at the Frederick fair sale if they had sold animals at other fairs outside of Frederick County. The motion was so narrowly written that it gives the perception of specifically targeting just a few students, many believe, leading them to think the motion is vindictive rather than supportive of local youth agriculture initiatives.

Libertytown residents George and Carol Chaney believe strongly that the motion passed by the Beef, Sheep and Swine Club specifically targets their two sons, Matthew and Mark. And they believe that it is no coincidence that the boys’ participation became an issue only after Matthew won grand champion market lamb in 2014.

“If Matthew had gone under the radar instead of winning grand champion, I don’t think we’d be having this conversation at all,” Carol Chaney said.

The March 19, 2015, BSS Club minutes state, “We also had the 4-H versus FFA discussion and a motion was made by Kendall Harshman that if FFA members sell at a different county fair, they aren’t eligible to sell at Frederick fair. The motion was seconded by McKenzie Wolfe and was passed by the club.”

“I believe this motion was the act of adults who pushed it upon the children of the club without giving them full and accurate information,” Carol Chaney said recently. “The youth leaders of the Beef, Sheep and Swine Club were used as pawns to push the agenda of jealous adults.”

She also believes the motion was “railroaded” through at that particular meeting because she informed club officials she and her sons would be unable to attend because of a previous commitment. She told Leslie Harshman, an adult volunteer in the club, that her family had a Howard County 4-H function to attend that evening.

“I was told people asked to have the motion tabled until the next meeting but it was decided the action had to be voted on then,” Chaney said.

Rules make it clear that youngsters cannot belong to 4-H in more than one county. Because Carol Chaney grew up in Howard County and was a 10-year member of Howard’s 4-H, she chose to enroll her children there when they expressed an interest. Chaney also served on the Howard County Fair board for 19 years, so it was only natural that Howard County was where her family would devote its energy, she said.

But the Chaneys never attempted to join two different county 4-H organizations.

As Howard County 4-H members, Matthew and Mark over the years showed and sold animals at the Howard County and Maryland State fairs.

It wasn’t until they started high school and joined Future Farmers of America that they started raising separate project animals for showing at the GFF. Matthew, a Linganore High School senior, started showing at the Fredrick fair as an FFA member his sophomore year. Mark, a junior, will be participating in his second Frederick fair.

FFA rules prevent freshman from showing animals.

The boys attended the April 2015 meeting of the livestock sale club to plead their case. They read aloud from a letter spelling out information about their need to have two sets of animals; the requirement of attending a set number of meetings; and paying dues to two organizations to be eligible to participate.

“It is disappointing to know that adults in positions of knowledge know these facts but did nothing to communicate them to everyone,” the boys wrote in their letter.  “It’s disappointing to know that this was not previously discussed … and when others asked to have it tabled, they were denied. It’s disappointing to know that two very valuable youth agricultural organizations have not tried to work better together and that adults would not work toward promoting fellowship (one of this club’s objectives) and help build character among our members but instead to allow petty jealousy to fester and grow.”

Great Frederick Fair officials believe the decision to exclude certain participants does not support the mission of the local fair.

“These recent changes made by the BSS club do not coincide with our mission statement, ‘The Great Frederick Fair Inc. exists to promote agriculture and the education of our youth about the industry of agriculture,’ ” GFF president Joseph Devilbiss wrote in a March 9, 2016, letter to Frederick County Extension educators Todd McKinney and Donielle Axline.

McKinney and Axline are paid employees who oversee Frederick County 4-H under the auspices of the University of Maryland’s Extension Services.

Alluding to a previous letter sent to Rick Walter, without response or acknowledgment, Devilbiss wrote that the fair “felt inclined to readdress our position.” Walter oversees 4-H activities in Howard, Frederick and Montgomery counties.

“The Great Frederick Fair Board of Directors has come to a unanimous decision that all FFA members must have the opportunity to sell their animals during the Thursday night sale,” Devilbiss wrote. “We are hoping you can accept this decision and cooperatively move forward.”

By June, the fair board appeared to back off the strength of its previous letter when it sent another letter to McKinney and Axline.

“The Great Frederick Fair Board of Directors supports the 2016 Beef, Sheep and Swine Sale will be run as it has in the past, but encourages and continues to support the 4-H and FFA to find common ground for sale rules that will work for both organizations,” Devilbiss wrote in a letter dated June 3. “We are hoping you can accept this decision and cooperatively move forward.”

While the fair board appears to support the participation of all 4-H and FFA members, an Aug. 10 letter from BSS club leader Robert Fogle Jr. says the opposite.

“The fair board sent a letter in June informing the 4-H Extension educators and leaders of the club that they support the club and the club’s management of the sale, therefore the sale will be ran as it has been in the past under the rules and guidelines you as an organizational body approved at your meeting,” Fogle wrote in his letter.

After spelling out dates and times for arrivals and weigh-ins and other rule reminders, Fogle wrote, “You cannot have sold animals at another county fair either as a 4-H member or FFA member.”

Fogle’s statement contradicts the BSS Club’s minutes of March 2015, which state only that FFA members who sell animals in another county are not eligible to participate in the BSS sale. No mention is made of 4-H members.

Email and phone requests for an interview to Devilbiss were returned by Karen Crum, executive assistant to the fair board.

“The Frederick County 4-H Beef, Sheep and Swine Club has always run the sale but we expect 4-H and FFA members to be able to participate,” Crum said Sept. 8. “We expect the sale to be run as it has in the past with 4-H and FFA working cooperatively together.”

Chaney said that this decision as it stands according to Fogle affects only her two boys. Another child who would have been affected (and has also won grand prizes recently) aged out of the program, but a couple of siblings from those families will be affected in the next few years.

The decision to exclude a finely targeted group of youngsters from the sale mystifies community members and 4-H veterans alike.

“This decision doesn’t make any sense all,” Dan Braucher, a former 4-H extension agent, said Friday. “The rules state that you can’t be a 4-H member in two counties but that isn’t the case here.”

Members of both organizations have always been encouraged to take advantage of the educational opportunities offered by the fair, the 30-year agriculture educator said. Each organization sets its own requirements for participation and it is the responsibility of each youngster to meet those requirements.

“This decision to exclude some kids because they sold animals in another fair makes no sense, there’s no logic to it,” Braucher said. “You can only sell an animal once; these boys have two different sets of project animals to meet the requirements of each organization.”

Matthew and Mark have gone to the additional expense of raising two complete sets of animals needed to participate in the two different county fairs. In addition to the expense of raising, grooming and training animals, the man-hours are doubled as well. They have to keep two sets of record books and need to be able to discuss their projects with judges.

“This sale is important because that’s where the kids make some money back and allows them to buy animals next year,” Carol Chaney said. “This idea that the boys are ‘double-dipping’ is ridiculous. They work twice as hard to be able to show at the two fairs.”

Braucher said he just couldn’t come up with a single, positive, educational reason for this exclusion, or see any way it would help or support the mission of 4-H.

“I think it’s a personal vendetta that will hurt both groups,” he said. “We’re all role models and this decision puts a dark spot on us.”

Scott Shorrow, who owns Landscape Concepts in Frederick County, has supported the livestock sales for the past couple of years at the invitation of the Chaneys.

“I’ve been a fair vendor with a display for my company for several years,” Shorrow said. “But I started going to the goat and beef, sheep and swine sales because of the Chaney boys.”

Shorrow was disappointed to hear of the club’s decision that appears to target just the Chaneys.

“For them to be excluded from this sale makes no sense,” he said. “They have to have separate projects, separate record books, twice the expenses, twice the time involved. They don’t have an advantage over anyone simply by participating in multiple shows. You can only sell an animal once.”

Shorrow said he isn’t privy to all the inside politics and doesn’t know many of the families involved, but sees no positive outcome for the sale club’s decision.

“The Chaney boys work hard and do well in these shows, that’s what it is, cut and dried,” he said. “That’s what this is all about.”

Shorrow said agriculture is a way of life for Matthew and Mark.

“This is their life, their passion,” he said of the boys’ livestock training. “They don’t do sports, they don’t have jobs or other hobbies — this is their job, their hobby, their passion. Why should they be punished for having a passion that perhaps others don’t have?”

Shorrow said he would not participate in this year’s BSS sale.

“I’ve spent tens of thousands of dollars at these sales but I can’t participate in a sale that excludes anyone,” he said. “I can’t be a part of something that excludes kids.

He fully expects to support the goat sale, which is governed by a different club.

As of Tuesday, the statement from Fogle denying sale participation to the Chaneys was the last official word on the sale.

If, when the dust settles, that decision remains, Carol Chaney said her boys will abide by it and let it roll off their shoulders.

But exclusion from the sale won’t prevent the boys from showing their animals, and won’t stop them from their mission of breeding, raising and training champion animals.


“Both boys are extremely competitive and they are passionate about their livestock projects,” she said. “This decision will just make them more competitive.”

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Swimming is creating lifelong memories for Long

Author's note: I'm using my blog to archive some of my favorite stories I've written over the years. Much of my work has been lost online because of news outlets creating new websites and not migrating old content to the new sties:

This article was originally published as a Talk of the Town column in The Dundalk Eagle on July 31, 2008. I reprint it here in anticipation of the Rio de Janeiro Paralympics, which kick off tonight with the Opening Ceremony.


Jessica Long continues to add to record books and her personal scrapbooks as she counts down the days to the International Paralympic Games that kickoff in September in Beijing.

Major media outlets, of course, are all over Towson’s Michael Phelps and Katie Hoff, who between them could bring home as many as 14 Olympic medals.

But lost in the shuffle are Paralympians at large, and here, Long specifically.

Long, 16, is the Michael Phelps of Paralympic swimming. She routinely wins seven, eight and nine races at every meet she enters and long ago lost track of the number of medals she owns.

Just over the weekend of July 13-15 at the Can-Am tournament, she set a new world record in her first dip in the pool — much like Phelps setting a new world record in his first Olympic Trials race in late June.

The girl who started her competitive swim career as a member of the Dundalk-Eastfield Rec Council team could hardly have envisioned what was ahead for her that first day when she jumped in her grandmother’s backyard swimming pool and discovered a second home.

She’s been around the world, met celebrities and made lifelong friends and has some pretty amazing photographs and memories to share with her grandchildren.

It would seem difficult to top 2007, when Long in April became the first Paralympian to win the James E. Sullivan Award, given annually to the nation’s top amateur athlete. Later in the year, she was named ESPN’s top female athlete with a disability, and along the way she won every race she won.

Bit it appears 2008 has not been any kind of a letdown.

Her success in the pool continues , and the recognition and lifetime moments outside of the pool  continue to pile up as well. 

On July 21, Long was one of 22 athletes invited to a reception and official send-off of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic teams at the White House. President Bush hosted the gathering in the Rose Garden, and then each athlete posed for individual pictures with Bush in the Oval Office.

Pretty heady stuff for a teenager!

President George Bush posed with Jessica Long on July 21, 2008 in the Oval Office at the White House. Jessica was one of the athletes selected to represent the 2008 Olympics and Paralympics teams at the visit with Bush. White House photo Eric Draper


In May, the double below-the-knee amputee was the recipient of the Juan Antonio Samaranch Award, named for the former president of the International Olympic Committee. 

The Samaranch IOC President’s Award has been presented annually since 1990 to an athlete, past or present, who in the face of adversity displays courage, desire and athletic ability to achieve goals in the competitive arena.

Long received the award during a ceremony at the 2008 Paralympic World Cup in Manchester, England, on May 10.

At the Can-Am Paralympic swim championships in Victoria, British Columbia, in July, the American swim team set 36 American, 18 Pan-American and five world records. Women set all five world records. including Long’s new record in the S8 100-meter butterfly. Her performance in that event earned her Swim of the Meet recognition, and she also claimed Swim of the Day honors on both Friday (100-meter butterfly) and Saturday (200-meter individual medley).

President George Bush met with members of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic teams in a July 2008 visit to the White House. White House photo by Shealah Craighead.


U.S. team head coach Julie O’Neill said in a statement that she’s pleased with the team’s performance following its final tune-up prior to China.

“Overall the team looks fantastic,” she said. “Most of them are in the middle of a hard training cycle right now and despite that there are still many lifetime best swims, new records and great races. All of the coaching staff is very pleased with how the team looks heading into Beijing.”

Paralympic swim competition will be held Sept.  6-17 in the same venue as Olympic swimming in Beijing.

Keep an eye on Long, who’s sure to make multiple appearances on the medal stand.


Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Maryland athletes expect the Rio gold rush to continue

Much has been said about the Herculean efforts — and accomplishments — of the Maryland Olympic delegation in Rio de Janeiro.

And deservedly so. For 16 exciting, exhilarating, exhausting days, Maryland’s world-class athletes set world and Olympic records, made Olympic history (to say nothing of herstory), and stood on medal podiums more times than residents of a tiny state could ever have hoped. 

Along the way, those athletes made their families burst with pride, gave their fans much to cheer about and, perhaps most importantly, inspired a future generation of Olympians.

But the fun, excitement and state pride doesn’t end with the Closing Ceremony of the Summer Games.

The Olympic facilities are getting a much-needed rest — and perhaps the green water problem in a couple of the pools has been worked out — before nearly 4,000 disabled athletes descend upon Rio for the International Paralympic Games.

As inspiring as our able-bodied athletes are, there’s something about watching disabled individuals perform at an athletic level that puts most of us couch potatoes to shame.

The athletes who are now reporting to the Olympic Village have become world-class athletes in spite of disabilities they were either born with or received because of illness or traumatic injury. Several athletes — including Maryland’s Brad Snyder, a blind swimmer — are disabled because of injuries sustained while serving in the U.S. military. 

So while gold medalists Helen Maroulis, Katie Ledecky, Michael Phelps and other Maryland Olympians are relaxing, making the talk show rounds and other personal appearances or preparing to head off to college, Paralympians Jessica Long, Becca Meyers, Daniel Romanchuk, Gail Gaeng and others are preparing to pick up where their Olympic counterparts left off.

And when the sun sets over the Paralympics, our Free State athletes are expected to be just as successful as the group they will replace in Rio.


Long, who grew up in Middle River and got her competitive swimming start with the old Dundalk-Eastfield Swim Club, will be the U.S. delegation’s most decorated Paralympian in Rio.


Jessica Long with her medal from the 100-meter breaststroke at the 2015 IPC World Championships. Photo from Facebook
She made her first Paralympics appearance as an unknown 12-year-old at the Games in Athens in 2004. Swimming under the radar at her first major international competition, Long returned home with three gold medals.


She heads to Rio after also having competed — and won— in Beijing and London.

Jessica Long trained for a time at the North Baltimore Aquatics Club. Photo from Facebook

NBC has promised unprecedented coverage of this year’s Paralympics, though the coverage will still pale in comparison to other nations’ treatment, let alone the network’s coverage of the Games just concluded.

Check out the schedule here and catch the livestream coverage here.


In the coming days, look for biographies of our athletes and tips on what to keep an eye on as they uphold Maryland pride in yet another international sports spectacle.


Thursday, September 1, 2016

Identity crisis averted; The Pigman is back in business

Steve Austin, proprietor of This Swine’s for You catering services, has jumped through all the hoops as required by Baltimore County government officials and is back is business.

Sort of. Now The Pigman, as he’s affectionately known on the North Point peninsula, is suffering from an identity crisis since county officials told him he had to serve food from a completely contained entity.

Steve Austin, proprietor of This Swine's for You catering services, relaxes during a quite moment in his new food trailer. Photo by Marge Neal
For more years than Austin can recall, he set up his pit sandwich stand on the front parking lot of Donovan’s Lounge on North Point Road. He cooked pork, beef, turkey and ham on a custom-built, 55-gallon drum grill perched atop a trailer base that he towed to the site with his trademark red catering truck.

He pitched a white canopy, set up a meat slicer and set out condiments, napkins, utensils and all the other accouterments needed for the food service effort.

After the county shut down Austin and other stands like his, the local businessman invested in a custom-built trailer, outfitted with a grill, oven, stove, sinks, refrigerators and everything else he needed to essentially have a restaurant — or at least a commercial kitchen— on wheels.

To get the show on the road, Austin had to have all the electrical work done and then had to get the trailer inspected and approved by the county.

Once he had the approval of the county’s Food Nazi, as Austin not-so-affectionately calls the county inspector, he put word out on his Facebook page when he was open for business and waited for his regular customers to return to the fold.

Steve Austin and his daughter, Christine Thamert, staffed the food trailer Thursday at Donovan's. Photo by Marge Neal


But that was slow to happen. Folks tend to be creatures of habit and The Pigman’s customers were used to looking for the well-used drum grill and the white canopy.

The trailer with the raging generator at the front end did not look familiar.

But Austin, in true show business fashion, figured out what he needed to do to get his customers back.

In addition to the trailer from which he prepares and serves food, he also now brings the familiar red catering truck, as well as the grill, which he puts in the corner of the bar’s front parking lot.

In case anyone is wondering why Austin made the switch from his more customer-friendly stand to this trailer and its obnoxious generator. Photo by Marge Neal


“Now that I have the grill back and the canopy up, more people are coming in,” Austin said Thursday. “Having the grill here seems to be helping, people are used to seeing that here.”

Austin sells pit beef, ham, turkey and pork sandwiches and platters, which include your choice of two sides from baked beans, macaroni and cheese, macaroni salad, cole slaw and potato salad. On Sundays, he also offers a limited number of racks of ribs.

The stand is open from 11 a.m. until the food is sold out. Austin sets up at Donovan’s Lounge, 6900 North Point Road in Edgemere.


He’s also available for catering private events. For more information, check out his website.

The latest addition to the This Swine's for You fleet of catering vehicles. Photo by Marge Neal