February 2015 Hyattsville Life & Times

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GANG PREVENTION

TOBACCO PIPES

DEMATHA ANNIVERSARY

As school resource officers, Hyattsville Police Sgt. Michael Rudinski and Cpl. Jim Denault work with students to prevent gang activity. PAGE 5

Brendon Pinkham makes each of his artisan tobacco pipes by hand. Join him in his workshop as he prepares a new piece for the Chicago Pipe Show. PAGE 3

In 1965, the DeMatha Stags ended Power Memorial Academy’s 71-game winning streak and propelled themselves into the headlines. PAGE 7

City seeks residential parking program overhaul by Rebecca Bennett

On Jan. 20, staff from the City of Hyattsville solicited feedback from the Hyattsville City Council on near-term proposed changes to the residential parking program. Early ideas include requiring parking permit renewal every two years, reducing the permit-less grace period to park in a residential parking zone from two hours to 15 minutes, and limiting the number of permits per household. “Our focus will be to ensure that the program is effective for both residents and their guests, while also ensuring that the program can be administered by the city,” Assistant City Administrator Jim Chandler said. “Understanding it’s not one particular issue, but a series of issues that’s creating this problem.” If implemented, Chandler said the changes would only apply to areas that have existing residential parking zones in place. “The biggest issue for us is that there is no way to keep track of [existing residential parking] permits after the car has been disposed of,” Chandler said, adding that there

Hyattsville Life&Times

Vol. 12 No. 2

Hyattsville’s Community Newspaper

Rollers race nights heat up by Scarlett Salem

PARKING continued on page 12

NONPROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID EASTON MD PERMIT NO. 43

February 2015

SCARLETT SALEM Participants bike on trainers during one of Arrow Bicycleʼs weekly winter rollers race nights.

The average cyclist is likely to avoid the roads when confronted by plummeting temperatures, snow, and ice. But as an alternative to locking the bike away until the spring, Arrow Bicycle, located on Route 1 across from Franklin’s, offers indoor training to keep cyclists in shape — and no — it is not a spin class. Arrow Bicycle hosts a weekly rollers night during the cold season, during which devices called “trainers,” securely lock bikes in place so that participants can cycle indoors. Unlike a spin class, where bikes are stationary, a set of rollers does not afford riders the luxury of stability. Rollers test a cyclist’s balance and cadence (peddling speed), and they require more attention and focus than a spin class would. Usually, beginners keep something within arm’s reach for balance like a wall or a chair. “When I first started out [on rollers], I rode with one hand on a table until I got the hang of it,” said Arrow Bicycle co-owner and Hyattsville resident Chris Davidson. ROLLER continued on page 13

Locals organize forum on loose aggressive dogs Hyattsville Life & Times PO Box 132 Hyattsville, MD 20781

by Caroline Selle

When Joanne Kirsch asked participants on a local listserv to report experiences with loose dogs in the Arts District, she received details on 10 attacks, 17 incidents of threatening behavior, 11 accounts of dogs that were loose but not aggressive, and two descriptions of encounters where dogs were loose and unaggressive but still caused injury. One woman, Kirsch said, fell and broke her shoulder after a loose dog approached her and she became tangled in her dog’s leash.

“It was a common enough occurrence it was worth pursuing,” Kirsch told the attendees of the Jan. 27 Loose Aggressive Dog Forum. Kirsch organizes the Gateway Dog Club, which sponsored the event along with the Hyattsville Community Development Corporation. Speakers included Joseph Mattingly, the Field Supervisor for the Prince George’s County Animal Control Office (and the City of Hyattsville’s former and last animal control officer), Sgt. Mike Rudinski of the Hyattsville City Police Department (HCPD), and Laura Costas of 1 on 1 Dog Training.

Residents expressed their frustrations both with loose dogs and officials’ inability to rectify the issue. “When I’m afraid to walk in my own street … then all of a sudden my feeling about living here really changes,” said Nancy Meyer. The speakers also gave attendees suggestions on how to deal with aggressive canines. Based on his 30 plus years of experience in animal control, Mattingly said his best advice is to stay calm. “Always carry something in DOGS continued on page 13

Included: The February 9 2015 Issue of The Hyattsville Reporter — See Center Section


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