Cambridge Matters – May 28, 2019

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
May 28, 2019

Dear Readers:

Attached is my unofficial report on last night’s city council meeting. We had a lot to do and got it done quite quickly. Remember that you can watch the meeting in real time or later at your leisure on www.townhallstreams.com. Simply log into the site and go to Cambridge, MD.

We were able to finalize the budget matters for the upcoming Fiscal Year after a great deal of hard work finding ways to reduce costs while limiting the impact on services. Even with those savings, we had to increase the tax rate by 5 cents per $100 of value of Real Estate in the city.

I am always open to answer questions or listen to concerns.

Steve

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Cambridge Matters – May 13, 2019

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
May 13, 2019

Dear Readers:

Attached is a much too long Cambridge Matters. It is long because it provides information about what took place at a very long meeting of City Council that had a number of complicated issues to hear and decide upon. I hope that you will take the time to read it in its entirety as the issues discussed are important you.

The second document is made up of two pages of the city audit that explains an issue that was raised by Commissioner Sydnor that needed explanation and full disclosure to you as well as those who were at the meeting on Monday.

Steve Rideout

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Cambridge Matters – May 11, 2019 – June Chamber Music Festival

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
May 11, 2019

Dear Readers:

Attached is a brochure about the above Festival that is coming to Easton, Cambridge, and Oxford next month. I hope that you will consider attending one or more of the events.

In particular, on June 13th at 5:30 p.m. there will be a concert and reception here in Cambridge at Christ Church. I would love to see the community pack the church for this performance.

Steve

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Cambridge Matters – May 10, 2019

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
May 10, 2019

Dear Readers:

What is attached is a report on a work session that the City and County Councils held earlier this week along with a report on our tax rate meeting yesterday. I am also including old Cambridge Matters report that I did late last year on readiness for kindergarten and a recent paper by Dr. Steve Heyneman regarding school behavior.

I hope that you will find them helpful and also cause you to think about how you or your organization might be able to help with two significant challenges that our community faces in the need for preparing our youngest learners for school and helping them to be well behaved at school and in the community.

The answers to these challenges are with you or someone you know.

Steve

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Cambridge Matters – May 2, 2017 – Proposed Tax increase

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
May 2, 2019

Dear Readers:

Attached is a memo from the city manager that is going on the city website. It details some of the challenges that we have had in developing a budget that will address issues of concern to the city that are costing money that have come from unexpected increased costs for insurance, salaries, and effective services to the community. Included in the proposed budget will also be required cuts in department budgets to help keep the increase as low as reasonably possible.

There will be a meeting on May 9th at 5 p.m. at City Council chambers on Gay Street where we will be establishing the rate for Real Estate taxes and Personal Property Taxes. There is no plan to increase Personal Property Taxes.

There will be our first budget session on May 13th at 6 p.m. at our regular meeting that will have a number of other important matters on the agenda in addition to the budget. I encourage you to attend and let us know your views on the attached or how you feel that we can run the city with fewer dollars.

If you have questions, I am happy to talk with you to provide more detail on where I hope we come out with regard to a budget. This represents how can kicking that has taken place over many years as well as some unexpected expenses are impacting you this year. I also hope in the coming Fiscal Year to have us take action to address their cause and find less costly solutions.

As with any change that comes, some things must take place that are not popular with any, some, or most of the residents. If we are, however, going to continue to improve Cambridge, its economy, safety, and its housing, these are the kinds of costs that we are called upon to consider and make decisions on. Hearing from you will help us to decide what level of change you are ready to accept.

Steve

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Cambridge Matters – April 24, 2019

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
April 22, 2019

Dear Readers:

Attached are my notes from last night’s meeting. The budget process is not easy in any year but has been made more difficult this year due to several increases in costs about which we were not aware until recently as well as the increase in the salaries of many of the police officers that we needed to approve to help keep them working here. We have been losing too many officers to other police forces and jurisdictions at a significant cost to the city despite the reduction in crime in 2018 and already this year.

As you will see, however, from the comments of one citizen at the meeting last evening the crime reduction has not made it to all parts of the city. Improving those efforts is something that we need to be sure to do.

With regard to the budget, the City Manager will be providing that to us for consideration in May. There will be a public hearing where your concerns will be heard. It is clear that the tax rate will need to increase, but the exact amount will not be known until the tax rate is decided on May 9th. The expectation is that it will be no more than 10 cents and possibly less.

In order for you to really know how your City works, attending a city council meeting is one good way to do that. Talking with your Commissioner or the Mayor is another. I want city government to be as transparent as possible so that you know what we are doing and why. You may agree or not, which is your right, but we are doing our best to find ways to cut costs where we can without impacting services before making any decisions about increasing the tax rate.

Steve

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Cambridge Matters – April 19, 2019 – UM Shore Medical Center at Cambridge

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
April 14, 2019

Dear Readers:

In the event you did not see the article below, I thought you would be interested. While the number of beds planned and advocated for is less than we hoped for, the good news is that the time frame to open the new facility is much sooner than expected. This will also give the Sailwinds Project an adequate time frame in which to reach some agreements with Shore Health about the current hospital. That will help with the ongoing plans to develop that property.

Steve

Eastern Shore medical center receives regulatory approval
By: Tim Curtis Daily Record Business Writer April 18, 2019

University of Maryland Shore Regional Health received regulatory approval Thursday to convert its Cambridge hospital to a smaller facility and to move some of its existing services to the system’s larger Easton hospital.

Shore Regional Health is one of several smaller health systems in Maryland to go through this process, which exempts conversions of hospitals to so-called free-standing medical facilities from the more stringent certificate of need process.

The Maryland Health Care Commission approved requests Thursday to exempt the project from the certificate of need process.

The project will close University of Maryland Shore Medical Center at Dorchester, Dorchester County’s only hospital, and convert it to a free-standing medical facility with an emergency department including behavioral health services.

These new facilities are essentially free-standing emergency rooms that can also include things like observation beds and other rate regulated services. Shore Regional Health’s initial plan called for 10 observation beds but after conversations with the health care commission’s staff that plan was reduced to six beds.

The new facility would be about one mile down U.S. Route 50 from the current hospital, opening more space for Cambridge’s ongoing waterfront redevelopment efforts. The plan is to sell the land back to the city and the county.

The Dorchester hospital will send 29 beds to the University of Maryland Shore Medical Center at Easton. The beds sent to Easton will be part of the current hospital once the new Cambridge facility opens.

That facility, which is undergoing the full certificate of need process for a new $350 million hospital building, will become the hospital hub for the Eastern Shore’s mid-Shore counties.

The new Cambridge medical center, called University of Maryland Shore Medical Center at Cambridge, will be on the first floor of a two-story building.

The facility will have 22 emergency treatment spaces and six observation rooms in its emergency department. The second floor of the building will house medical offices.
The cost of the entire building is currently estimated at $60.4 million.

The converted medical facility is expected to open summer 2021 while the new Easton hospital, pending approval, is planned to open 2024.

Shore Regional Health is not the only Maryland health system to go through the exemption process to convert existing hospitals to the smaller medical facilities.

University of Maryland Capital Region Health received commission approval last year to convert Laurel Regional Hospital to a free-standing medical facility. University of Maryland Upper Chesapeake Health has requested an exemption to convert Harford Memorial Hospital in Aberdeen into a free-standing medical facility.

The belief is that these smaller facilities will help health systems become more efficient as admissions decline. The state’s all-payer contract with the federal government has encouraged health systems to find ways to treat more patients outside of the hospital, reducing costs.

This has become particularly useful for these three systems, which are affiliated with the larger University of Maryland Medical System. They can use their connection to the flagship University of Maryland Medical Center to treat the most serious cases where it is most appropriate.

“We recognize that as a community hospital system on the Eastern Shore, we should have limitations to the level of care that we provide,” Ken Kozel, president and CEO of Shore Regional Health, told The Daily Record last year. “We shouldn’t be doing open heart surgeries on the Eastern Shore.”

https://thedailyrecord.com/2019/04/18/eastern-shore-medical-center-receives-regulatory-approval/

Cambridge Matters – April 14, 2019 – Zoning Proposal for 201 Mill St

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
April 14, 2019

Dear Readers:

For those of you who are interested, please see the email below and the link to the Ordinance that is being proposed by the Planning and Zoning Commission. This will come before City Council for consideration and possible adoption at one of the upcoming city council meetings, probably in May.

If you have an interest in this matter and want to provide city council with your views, be sure to note when the matter will be on our agenda.

If you want notices about upcoming meetings of any of the commissions or city council, you can sign up on the city website to receive them automatically.

Steve

—–Original Message—–
From: Pat Escher To: Steve Rideout ; judd.vickers@gmail.com
Sent: Fri, Apr 12, 2019 8:04 am
Subject: RE: School House Ordinance is on the City’s PZ Web Page

Steve
Here is the link

https://www.choosecambridge.com/DocumentCenter/View/1713/Ordinance-No-1143—NC-3-Overlay-District-Final

The attachment below shows where it is on the web page.

Cambridge Matters – April 8, 2019

Commissioner Steve Rideout
swrideout@aol.com
April 8, 2019

Dear Readers:

Attached is my report on the most recent city council meeting. Along with it is an update on what is happening with regard to progress on housing issues here in the city. We are in the midst of budget discussions and information gathering and will have a meeting on Monday the 15th at 5:00 p.m. in Council Chambers, if you are interested in attending.

I mention in my report a surprise motion regarding a possible change in the City Charter that was made by Commissioner Foster and supported by Commissioners Cannon and Sydnor. You will be hearing more about that as that process moves forward. As it is something that I oppose, I will be asking you to help me to oppose it. Do not do anything at this point, as we need to obtain more information as to why the request is being made.

Steve

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