11-2023 College Park Here & Now

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INSIDE HELP YOUR PAPER: We need you! P.2 TRAINS & TUNNELS: Construction updates, PPS.3-4

VOL. 4 NO. 11

NOVEMBER 2023

WHAT TO EAT: Local Thanksgiving produce, P.8

COLLEGE PARK’S AWARD-WINNING COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER

New city councilmembers elected By Elizabeth Shirley and Nancy Welch The City of College Park preliminary election results are in. On Sunday, Nov. 5, residents took their turns in lines and booths at the College Park Community Center to cast their ballots, elect their representatives and answer a nonbinding advisory question asking whether fouryear city council terms would be better than the current twoyear terms that councilmembers serve. Incumbent Mayor Fazlul Kabir ran unopposed and was reelected with 1,217 votes, about 8% of College Park’s 14,428 registered voters. In District 1, Councilmember Kate Kennedy chose not to run for reelection. Five candidates, including incumbent Alan Hew, ran in a highly competitive race for the district’s two seats. In preliminary results, 1,060 voters turned out from District 1,

Voters headed to the polls at the College Park Community Center Nov. 5. KIT SLACK

College Park elections use new verification technology By Robert Stewart For College Park residents who voted in-person during the 2023 election, the process should have seemed relatively similar to any previous year, with a few exceptions. For one, the paper ballot had boxes instead of ovals this year. Also, each voter received a paper confirmation after scan-

nearly 20% of about 5,500 voters in District 1. Newcomer Jacob T. Hernandez was elected in District 1 with 266 votes. Hernandez ran on a platform focused on family and community involvement, with a bilingual approach and a message of commitment to giving back to the local institutions which have helped him live the American dream. Alan Hew was reelected in District 1 with 322 votes. A city resident for more than 30 years, Hew has served on the council and numerous committees as his way of giving back to the community. He campaigned for reelection while promoting his permaculture garden on the trolley trail. The garden is beneficial to pollinators and wildlife and offers up healthy snacks for children, along with the chance for them to see where food comes from. Kamthorn G. Clay, Bryan Haddad, and Brian J. Roan lost

ning in and confirming their ballot. That second change may seem ordinary, but it’s the result of more than a decade of research into a two-fold challenge: how to let voters confirm that their votes have been counted, while keeping their votes private. A voter can now go to a website, scan or enter a code from the confirmation they received

after they voted and verify that the vote was counted. “Think of it as like FedEx saying your package has arrived,” said Robert “RC” Carter, head of the ElectionGuard program, during an information session hosted by the city on Sept. 27. The printed confirmation does not allow voters to check how they voted, just whether they were included in the vote tally, according to an ElectionGuard fact sheet posted on the city’s website. Election officials have implemented the technology in only SEE VOTING ON 7 

SEE RESULTS ON 11 

COLLEGE PARK WILD

Meanwhile, back at the lodge By Rick Borchelt

B

usy as a beaver is an accurate watchword for this industrious mammal, second only to the South American capybara among the world’s largest rodents. November and December is when beavers kick into overdrive, and our chances of seeing this mostly nocturnal creature during the day in local lakes and

streams are pretty good. Beavers (Castor canadensis) were all but ubiquitous in Maryland when European settlers arrived in the 16th century. It’s no great stretch to say that the Maryland landscape early settlers found was literally sculpted by beavers. The state’s streams were dotted with beaver ponds every half mile or so, strung like a necklace of pearls SEE WILD ON 10

INSIDE: THE NOVEMBER 2023 ISSUE OF THE COLLEGE PARK POST HYATTSVILLE MD PERMIT NO. 1383

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