Similar Articles
NEW FOR THURSDAY: Assateague Foal Naming Contest Nears End
ASSATEAGUE -- The clock is ticking on a unique opportunity for a holid...READ MORENEW FOR THURSDAY: OC Planning Commission Again Supports Utility’s Substation Expansion
OCEAN CITY – Once again the Planning and Zoning Commission passe...READ MORENEW FOR WEDNESDAY: Big Changes Planned For OC Fire Department Buildings
OCEAN CITY – The Ocean City Fire Department (OCFD) has received ...READ MORENEW FOR TUESDAY: Council Majority Stands Against Outdoor New Year’s Bar
BERLIN -- A packed house of supporters last night at Town Hall wa...READ MORENEW FOR MONDAY: OC Man Busted For Pot Distribution; Ocean Pines Residents Charged With Major Computer Crimes
OCEAN CITY -- A local man was arrested with a significant amount of ma...READ MOREParents Praise Schools In Survey
SNOW HILL -- Though return rates saw a minor drop from 2011 levels, th...READ MORENew Snow Hill High School’s Price Tag Questioned
SNOW HILL -- The cost of a proposed Snow Hill High School (SHHS) renov...READ MORESalisbury Audit Shines Light On ‘Challenging Year’
SALISBURY -- Dormant bank accounts, a re-examination of the city’...READ MOREState Officials Outraged FEMA Denied Further Storm Assistance
OCEAN CITY -- Maryland’s congressional leaders’ appeal for...READ MOREO’Malley Reaches Out To Obama For Offshore Wind Support
OCEAN CITY -- With another General Assembly session looming, and likel...READ MOREMandatory Sprinkler Law Delayed
SNOW HILL -- Worcester County received two small pieces of good news this week, at least from the County Commissioners’ perspective.
The first piece of good news that came to the commission was the revelation that the state will not force mandatory sprinkler systems into newly built county homes for several years.
“Basically it’s backed off now until 2015,” said Director of Development Review and Permitting Ed Tudor.
Last year, the commission had voted to exclude Worcester from a then-fresh state mandate that would have required all new residential homes to have expensive fire suppression sprinkler systems included. But a few months ago, the commissioners learned that Annapolis decided to make the systems mandatory regardless of whether local government had decided to opt out.
However, Tudor revealed Tuesday that the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development’s interpreted the recent legislation that would have made sprinkler systems mandatory in such a way as to allow counties that previously opted out to continue to do so until the next code cycle in 2015.
“It’s one minor victory,” said Commission President Bud Church, who has been vocal in his dissatisfaction with state intrusion into local government this year.
The other piece of good news, while not a clear-cut a victory for the commission, is the Administrative, Executive, Legislative Review (AELR) committee will continue taking comments past its previous deadline in regards to controversial proposed septic regulations.
Earlier this month, the commissioners received word that Annapolis planned on handing down more stringent home septic regulations than previously anticipated. Those regulations would require an expensive initiative to install new septic systems using Best Available Technologies (BATs) in new residential structures in both critical and non-critical watershed areas.
While the commissioners all agreed that the goal of the regulations was positive, the expense, which would fall almost entirely on the county, was unrealistic and wrote a letter to the state to that effect. Commissioner Madison Bunting, along with many other state and county representatives, contributed comments to the first AELR committee hearing last week.
Bunting suggested that Worcester look into the legality of the proposed septic regulations while continuing to emphasize how unrealistic the county believes the costs would be.










