Hyattsville
ON SCHOOLS: A look at what local students (and teachers) have accomplished this year. Pages 3 - 7
Record turnout at town hall meeting by Susie Currie
About 170 people attended the District 2 Town Hall Meeting at Northwestern High School on June 2 – a record turnout, said Prince George’s County Council Member Will Campos, who organized it. Campos presented an overview of the 2012 county budget, which the council unanimously passed on May 26. The $2.65 billion budget allows for such local projects as expanding the Hyattsville library and Prince George’s Plaza Community Center, establishing a Rhode Island Avenue trolley trail, and building a new elementary school next to Nicholas Orem Middle School. It also restores some education funding that had been cut in the original plan. That was welcome news to many in the audience, including Hyattsville Elementary School PTA secretary T. Carter Ross. HES parents had coordinated a letter-writing campaign addressing proposed cuts. “That effort helped get a partial restoration of funds for the Reading Recovery program throughout the county,” Ross learned in talking with Campos before the meeting. Campos went on to discuss his legislative agenda, which includes strengthening the county noise ordinance and tweaking the resi-
PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit # 43 Easton, MD 21601
TOWN HALL continued on page 12
Life&Times
Vol. 8 No. 6
June 2011
DIVING INTO
SUMMER
PAULA MINAERT Near-record heat sent many to Hamilton Splash Park on Memorial Day.
New school clears hurdle The
School Issue by Susie Currie
Hyattsville Life & Times PO Box 132 Hyattsville, MD 20781
Hyattsville’s Community Newspaper
Demolition of the former Hyattsville Presbyterian Church, at 3120 Nicholson Street, to make way for a new elementary school should begin this month, according to Prince George’s County Public School officials. The two-story, 87,000-squarefoot building, which will be located next to Nicholas Orem Middle School, has a projected enrollment of 792 students in pre-kindergarten through 6th grade. It was designed to address over-enrollment at six nearby
elementary schools: Hyattsville, Rosa Parks, University Park, Lewisdale, Thomas Stone and Carole Highlands. Boundaries for the yet-to-benamed Hyattsville Area Elemen-
tary School haven’t been set; if it opens as scheduled in August 2013, public hearings should begin in fall 2012.
Hyattsville city workers are close to winning some relief from the rising cost of living in the fiscal year that begins July 1. With only a few weeks left to decide on a 2012 city budget, it appears that the Hyattsville City
by Paula Minaert
Council will adopt a 1 percent cost of living increase for city workers. No COLA for city workers was one of several cost-saving measures included in the first draft of the $15.95 million budget drawn up by City Ad-
After more than three years on the city staff, Assistant City Administrator Vincent Jones is leaving to take over as city administrator for the nearby town of Seat Pleasant. But, he said, he is not leaving the community. “I own a home here in Hyattsville. That won’t be changing. I hope to still be an involved community member, just in a different way.” Originally from Petersburg, Virginia, Jones came to Hyattsville from Evanston, Illinois, where he
BUDGET continued on page 12
JONES continued on page 9
SCHOOL continued on page 13
City worker benefits are key point in budget discussions by Karen Riley
Assistant city administrator leaves post
Included: The June 8, 2011 Issue of The Hyattsville Reporter — See Center Section