STOUTS AND STEINS
MIDDLE SCHOOL MELODIES
IT’S A-LURE-ING
Local brewers and potters show their wares. PAGE 6
10th-anniversary gala for Center for Performing Arts highlights local talent in eight disciplines. PAGE 5
The annual trout stocking of the Northwest Branch lures anglers from throughout the region. PAGE 3
Gateway Arts District earns top state award by Woody Wilder
The Gateway Arts District received one of the state’s top two Arts & Entertainment District awards at a June 4 ceremony in Baltimore. Accepting the Maryland State Arts Council’s 2013 Award for Outstanding Achievement were the executive directors of the two Community Development Corporations that manage the district: Stuart Eisenberg, of the Hyattsville CDC, and Carole Bernard, of the Gateway CDC. The other district to win was Silver Spring’s. More than 300 sculptors, painters, musicians and other artists live in the Gateway Arts District, which became the first of its kind in 2001 under a program started by the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development. The area extends throughout the communities of Hyattsville, North Brentwood, Brentwood and Mount Rainier along Route 1 between Oglethorpe Street and Eastern Avenue, the D.C. border. The accolade “recognizes the collective growth of enhanced public facilities, new restaurants, incoming housing, and increasing tenancies along the Route 1 Corridor,”
Hyattsville Life&Times
Vol. 10 No. 6
Hyattsville’s Community Newspaper
St. Jerome alum headed to NBA by Chris McManes
ARTS continued on page 12
NONPROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID EASTON MD PERMIT NO. 43
June 2013
MIKE MURRAY Victor Oladipo, certain to be a first-round NBA draft pick this month, will be the first St. Jerome alum to play professional basketball. He reunited with his middle-school teacher, Janice Volpini, at a May reception in his honor hosted by his high school alma mater, DeMatha.
When Victor Oladipo is among the first players chosen in the NBA Draft on June 27, don’t be surprised if a cheer or two erupts in Hyattsville. Oladipo graduated from St. Jerome and DeMatha Catholic High School before becoming a first-team AllAmerican at Indiana University. While the basketball star’s exploits at DeMatha and Indiana are well-chronicled, little has been written about his formative years at what is now St. Jerome Academy. “Without St. Jerome’s, I definitely wouldn’t be here in the position I am today. That’s where it all started,” Oladipo said during a recent visit to the area. Oladipo credits his St. Jerome varsity coach, Dick Brown, with helping him along the path to professional basketball. Brown mentored Oladipo from 2004 to 2006 before succumbing to cancer months after coaching his final game. “He was a great coach – one of the best I’ve ever had,” Oladipo said. “I know he’s looking down on me from heaven because he’s OLADIPO continued on page 13
Tough challenges ahead for city budget Hyattsville Life & Times PO Box 132 Hyattsville, MD 20781
by Rosanna Landis Weaver
The issues that challenge Hyattsville’s city budget are nearly universal: tax rates, retirement expenses and what to cut when there’s not enough money for everything. Some decisions have been made that create the framework and other questions need to be resolved before the council
can pass the budget for FY 2014, which begins July 1. The six new members, seated on May 20, have plunged in and joined the four incumbents in tackling difficult issues. Joseph Solomon (Ward 5) estimates that by early June, they had already logged 16 to 20 hours of formal meetings, most of it related to the issues discussed below.
Tax rate
First and foremost, in the May 20 meeting following the swearing-in ceremony, the new council voted by a narrow margin to keep the current real estate tax rate at .63 per $100 of assessed value. This will amount to a tax decrease for homeowners whose assessments have fallen. Councilmember Patrick Paschall (Ward
3) estimated at the June 6 meeting that the average Hyattsville resident will pay 10 to 13 percent less in taxes this year. Lower assessments translate into a loss of tax revenue of over $1 million for the city. In subsequent meetings, some on the council questioned the wisdom BUDGET continued on page 12
Included: The June 12, 2013 Issue of The Hyattsville Reporter — See Center Section