A STREET pAvED WITh GREEN
AT ThE DRIvE-IN
Decatur Street in Edmonston is the greenest street on the East Coast, and maybe even the U.S. PAGE 3
Postcards from the Past talks about the days when drive-in movies and restaurants were popular in Hyattsville. PAGE 5
All work and all play by Krista Atteberry With less than one week on the job, Steve Yeskulsky, the city’s new Recreation and the Arts Director, hit the ground running by helping out at the Hyattsville Volunteer Fire Department’s 5-mile run on October 23. He was impressed with the more than 60 volunteers and the community spirit at the first annual event, in which dozens of runners ages 10 to 75 competed. Before coming to Hyattsville, Yeskulsky served as a program coordinator for six years with Florida’s Sarasota County Government Parks and Recreation Department, where he “did a thousand things . . . including mostly overseeing larger special events.” Originally from San Diego, he graduated from San Diego State University with two Bachelor of Arts degrees in art history and cultural anthropology. During his time in San Diego, he was instrumental in organizing an art exhibition, “Salon de San Diego,” to help raise funds for an AIDS charity. Yeskulsky also enjoys writing for the Parks & Rec Business magazine and is a certified Park and Recreation Professional and Playground Inspector. First on his agenda is getting acclimated to the area and meeting more folks in the community. Also, once the city council approves the city’s Parks Master Plan, which is expect-
PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit # 43 Easton, MD 21601
dIrecTOr continued on page 12
IS ThAT TRASh OR TREASURE? Local residents get their heirlooms evaluated at Hyattsville’s version of the Antiques Roadshow. PAGE 2
Hyattsville Life&Times
Vol. 7 No. 11
Hyattsville’s Community Newspaper
Mall at Prince Georges area planning for new, major development by Paula Minaert
In the not-too-distant future, the area around the Mall at Prince Georges and Northwestern High School could look very different, because some major development projects are in the works there. Some of these projects are within the city’s borders and some fall just outside. All will have an impact on life in Hyattsville.
SPOOKY The city’s annual Halloween party drew about 200 people of all ages. MORE PHOTOS ON PAGE 10
FEST
Where the wild things are by Fred Seitz
Hyattsville Life & Times PO Box 132 Hyattsville, MD 20781
November 2010
Hyattsville is frequently identified as an arts community, but there is also a community of wildlife that lives both in our parks and backyards. Some residents have actively worked to encourage this by participating in the National Wildlife Federation’s Certified Wildlife Habitat program. NWF started the program in 1973 to help wildlife and “give people a way to connect with the natural world,” according to David Mizejewski, a NWF wildlife biologist. Since then, 135,000 homes across the country have been certified as wildlife habitats. Hyattsville has 23 of them. HaBITaT continued on page 12
fred seitz Nicola Hain’s small pond is part of a certified habitat.
1. The Landy Property
Landy is owned by Marvin Blumberg, a major developer in the Washington region. He owns a 33.94acre parcel of land located south of Northwestern High School and north of the mall. Most of this land is wooded and lies outside the city limits, except for a small portion at the northeast corner. The District Council – which is the arbiter for development in Prince George’s County − recently approved a Landy proposal for residential construction on part of that land: an apartment building of about 400 units that would be on the street line of Belcrest Road. The building would include the portion of land that is within the city. This has led to discussion on the city council of the city annexing the unincorporated portion so that the entire building would be in Hyattsville, said council member Tim Hunt (Ward 3). His ward borders the area of the proposed development and includes the portion within the city. This is Phase One of the project and deVelOPMenT continued on page 13
Included: The November 10, 2010 Issue of The Hyattsville Reporter — See Center Section