March 2013 Hyattsville Life & Times

Page 1

CHAIN GANG

WHAT TO DO WITH YOUR WEEDS

NEW PUBLIC WORKS DIRECTOR STARTS

Arrow Bicycle’s Park Tool School equips riders to handle life’s little bike emergencies. PAGE 4

Two perspectives on invasive plants: Eat them, weed them or do a little of each. PAGES 10 & 11

Former Greenbelt assistant takes the reins in Hyattsville, nearly a year to the day after the city’s last full-time DPW director departed. PAGE 2

Hyattsville filmmaker launches web series

Hyattsville Life&Times

by Ivonne Olguin

Vol. 10 No. 3

Fines to start March 19 by Susie Currie and Nkongho Beteck

An ordinance before the Hyattsville City Council this month would authorize up to 10 speed cameras in the city – double the

number originally approved for the speedmonitoring program. Hyattsville’s first speed cameras began operation on February 19 with two cameras in each direction along the 3700 block of EastWest Highway, near America Boulevard. In the first seven days of operation, 70 warnings

were issued, according to Sgt. Chris Purvis of the Hyattsville City Police Department. The city has gotten approval for three more cameras: two in each direction along the 5900 block of Ager Road, and one in the

PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID Permit # 43 Easton, MD 21601

FILMMAKER continued on page 12

Hyattsville Life & Times PO Box 132 Hyattsville, MD 20781

March 2013

Police seek approval for up to 10 speed cameras

Y T R A P DANCE

Many of us love the excitement of sitting in the dark watching a movie and being taken to faraway lands or into the lives of others. But for others, such as Hyattsville native Francis Abbey, the excitement comes from creating those stories. Abbey is an independent filmmaker whose fourth film project, “The Broken Continent,” may be his most ambitious yet. Described as an “epic fantasy adventure web series,” the series pilot premiered to an invitationonly crowd on March 7 at the Landmark E Street Cinema, in Washington, D.C. On March 10, it became available on www.brokencontinent.com. Set on the mythical continent of Elyrion, it tells the story of idyllic times ended by a king’s power over magic and the wrath of a god who fractures the land into Five Shards – ever after known as the Heart, the Blade, the Crown, the Eye and the Fist. Three millennia later, war rages as the struggle for power over the Shards has the various peoples of Elyrion battling for survival.

Hyattsville’s Community Newspaper

KOREY BERG Esther Berg holds daughter Avery at the cityʼs Surfʼs Up! Parent and Child Dance Party, held February 23 at the municipal building.

CAMERAS continued on page 13

Mi Patio asks to host nightly DJ, live music Liquor board, not city, must approve permit by Susie Currie

Call it a Tale of Two Licenses. Last month, the Hyattsville City Council rejected a West Hyattsville restaurant’s application for a dance hall license after residents at a public hearing raised concerns about potential noise and public intoxication. But another restaurant in the same shopping center wants a permit that would allow the same activities and more – and they can get one without ever setting foot in city hall, or even notifying anyone who works there of their intentions. It comes down to differences in a byzantine licensing system, where the separate responsibilities of city, county and state are murky at best. Overlapping roles can make it hard to identify where the jurisdiction of one ends and another begins. NIGHTCLUB continued on page 13

Included: The March 12, 2013 Issue of The Hyattsville Reporter — See Center Section


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