All posts by Gerald Allen

Instructor Spotlight: Tyronda Boone

 

The Recreation Department would like to highlight one of our amazing instructors, Tyronda Boone! Tyronda, lovingly known as “Ms. Ty,” is a financial literacy and money management instructor for our recreation programs. She is originally from Georgia and has a master’s degree in education and finance. She has more than 20 years of teaching experience under her belt, making her abundantly qualified to lead our finance-centered programs. In Ms. Ty’s free time, she enjoys traveling, reading, and learning more about history. She loves her community and has a goal to empower everyone with financial information that will uplift the next generation. Take a few moments to get to know Tyronda Boone.

 

Q: Where does your passion for financial planning and literacy come from?

A: My ancestors have been my inspiration. My parents inspired me to raise awareness about financial literacy. When I was growing up, my parents described difficult financial situations they faced in their lives due to their lack of wealth and educational opportunities. I remember my father describing how the system of tenant farming (sharecropping) was the cause for his family’s poverty.

Additionally, he did not have the luxury of being left an inheritance by his parents upon their demise. Conversely, land was passed down to Boone’s mother and siblings. These events and conversations motivated me to introduce the concept of building generational wealth to my daughter when she was four years old. I wanted her to be aware of how to use money to grow her wealth. From that desire to help my daughter, I reached out to the community and discovered more families eager to teach their children the same fiscal information. Zoey and Zander’s Guide to Success was born.

Q: Why do you think it’s important for young people to have an early understanding of how to manage their money?

A: Imagine if we did not call a person by one name until they were adults. There would be mass confusion. However, children know their names as infants. They recognize hearing their names. As they become older, they recognize their name in written form, and then they learn to write it themselves. Provided the opportunity, they typically thrived. Early exposure to any concept is vital, so teaching children about finances as early as possible is important. We do not want our young people to learn about money as adults. Learning financial literacy as children can help them avoid many fiscal mistakes.

Q: What do you hope participants will take away from your class?

A: I hope that families start talking about money. Families are a wealth of knowledge. When class is over, students ask parents if what they are purchasing is a need or a want, develop savings goals as a family, discuss ways to avoid student loans, and look for ways to use credit to build wealth. When my class is over, I hope students will look for ways to grow their wealth using the toolkit given to them in class.

Q: How do you know when you’ve had a successful class?

A: We have students who have enrolled in every class made available to them. When students tell me this class is great and parents tell me about how their spending habits have changed, I know class has been a success. Additionally, the engagement of the students lets me know they are actively learning. The challenge is to make virtual learning as fun as possible. After putting together lessons, students are typing questions in the chat and debating various fiscal schools of thought with one another. The banter that takes place in the class lets me know it was successful.

Q: What have you enjoyed the most about working with the young people of Takoma Park?

A: I love working with the students. The young people are eager to learn about how to make use of their money as adults. There are so many moments where I see their eyes light up after understanding a concept. Working with them has been a pleasure. They are committed to their future, and their enthusiasm regarding wealth gets me excited. An organization that places so much value on the financial literacy of a community is a wonderful place. I want to say thank you to Takoma Park for hosting me. You are helping me reach the masses, so many thanks to you.

 

 

This article was featured in the May 2022 Newsletter. Visit the Takoma Park Newsletter webpage to see full list of past newsletters.

Neighborhood Noise

 

Spring is here and so are our yard care activities. Noise producing activities, such as mowing and leaf blowing, can disturb neighbors. Please keep in mind that no such noise producing activity should begin before 7 a.m. on weekdays or 9 a.m. on weekends.

Also, please consider replacing your gasoline powered lawn care equipment with electric or battery powered; they produce far less noise and air pollution. Each of us can play a part in reducing noise levels and being a good neighbor:

  • Monitor the volume of televisions, radios, and other sound-producing equipment, especially during nighttime. Pay particular attention to bass controls.
  • Use manual tools, such as brooms and rakes, for cleaning porches, patios, and driveways. Reserve power tools like leaf blowers for large jobs that cannot be done manually.
  • Consider the impact of noise from power tools in your home, garage, or outdoors.
  • Check central and window air conditioning units periodically to ensure that they are operating as quietly as possible.
  • Do not let dogs bark constantly.

 

This article was featured in the May 2022 Newsletter. Visit the Takoma Park Newsletter webpage to see full list of past newsletters.

City Grants Supports Takoma ARTery

 

The City’s Arts and Humanities Division has partnered with the Takoma ARTery to promote the work of local artists through a new online artist directory at takomaartery.com. The volunteer-led artist collective was organized during the COVID-19 pandemic to connect local artists and help them share their work with the public.

Artwork displays have filled storefront windows in downtown Takoma Park and at the Historic Takoma building at the Takoma Junction. The City’s Arts and Humanities Coordinator Brendan Smith also helped organize a previous grant to support the group’s start-up costs and its first art fair last summer outside the Takoma Park Community Center.

Takoma ARTery artists have reported not only sales but also a broadened sense of connection and support from other artists and residents, according to ARTery co-founder Eleanor Landstreet. “The financial and staff support from the City have helped transform the ARTery from an innovative pandemic-related arts project into a vibrant artist community, which is boosting the creative economy and small businesses run by artists,” Landstreet said.

The $1,100 grant will help pay for the creation of the artist directory that will feature artwork images, artist bios, and contact information. Artists will pay an annual fee to support the ARTery’s work and offset future expenses. Artists don’t have to be Takoma Park residents to be included in the directory and can email takomaartery@gmail.com for more information.

 

This article was featured in the May 2022 Newsletter. Visit the Takoma Park Newsletter webpage to see full list of past newsletters.

Extended: Onsite COVID-19 testing on Wednesdays in May!

In partnership with Montgomery County, the City of Takoma Park is extending its COVID-19 PCR testing clinics and will offer them on select Wednesdays in April.

Test Dates:

Days: Wednesdays in May
(May 4, 11, 18, & 25)

Time: 9:00 am – 6:00 pm

Location:

Takoma Park Recreation Center
7315 New Hampshire Ave
Takoma Park, MD 20912

What You Need To Know:
  • Walk-ins – no appointment needed
  • Clinics will provide self-administered PCR tests. Results will be available in 1 – 2 days.
  • No government I.D. or doctor’s order is required.
  • Testing is free. If you have insurance, we will ask for your insurance information; however, there are no copays or deductibles.
  • Testing is available for all ages!

National Poetry Month: A Poet Laureate’s Potpourri

 

By Kathleen O’Toole

This will be my last column as Takoma Park Poet Laureate. I’m coming to the end of my term, and my husband John Ruthrauff and I are preparing for a move to a retirement community this spring. So, here’s a potpourri of parting reflections.

 

On Poetry and Solidarity 

It’s April again − National Poetry Month, and hard to believe that only one of my four as Poet Laureate was pre-pandemic. We’ve weathered a lot, and I’ve been asked to offer poetry as consolation and have encouraged writing poems as a daily practice for wrestling with it all − finding beauty and hope in a world of loss. And now, just as we seemed to be emerging cicada-like from our COVID hibernation, the onslaught of war in Ukraine.

In my 20 years here, I’ve known Takoma Park as a community in solidarity with those suffering from conflicts around the world, one that rallies in hope for a better world. I wrote a poem “Storm” in 2004, a year after the start of the Iraq War, inspired in part by the Buddhist peace flags I passed on Westmoreland and Walnut each day walking to the Metro. An excerpt seems timely: “Afternoon of March winds −//surprise cloudbursts drench the fat squirrels // in my yard. Sunshine, blowback // disheveled branches:// litter of a year of war. // …. On the corner // rows of Buddhist peace flags//raveling with each new storm.”

 

A Return to In-Person Poetry Readings!

Our Takoma Park Arts team kept poetry programming alive during COVID lockdowns with online readings and our sidewalk poetry contest (look for more poems under your feet soon!) Finally, after omicron-related delays, we’re looking forward to the first in-person poetry readings since February 2020 at the Community Center. Mark your calendars!

The Free Minds Book Club will be returning at 7:30 p.m. on May 12 in the auditorium. Their first reading here in 2020 of poetry created by those incarcerated in the D.C. jail and the federal prison system and presented by formerly incarcerated poet-mentors drew a large crowd and was riveting.

Then on June 2 at 7:30 p.m., we’ll host a themed reading: Poetry of Migration with Indran Amirtanayagam, Luz Stella Mejía, and Sofía Estévez, again in the Community Center auditorium.

 

Poetry and “Mixed Emotions”

W. H. Auden reportedly said: “Poetry might be defined as the clear expression of mixed feelings.” So, my own feelings – about leaving my post (with many plans upended by COVID), not to mention leaving this community − a mix of gratitude and sadness: delighted that on April 29, I’ll do the poetry workshop for the residents of Victory Towers that was set for March 2020, and regretful that a reading of local Ethiopian poets will have to wait for the next Poet Laureate.

As for leaving this community − our neighbors and our home here, I’m reminded of lines from poet-friend Rob Soley’s “Moving Day”: “It’s time to walk through your home//with the eyes of one who will no longer be there…no longer look at the sun as it comes in a room at a certain angle//and plays like newborn light across the kitchen floor.” Still, I’m comforted by what we’ll take with us: friendships, the spirit of Takoma Park, and spring days we continue to savor.

 

This article was featured in the April 2022 Newsletter. Visit the Takoma Park Newsletter webpage to see full list of past newsletters.

County Codifies Improved Municipal Tax Reimbursement Process with Phase-In of Higher Takoma Park Payment

 

By Sean Gossard

On Monday, March 14, 2022 Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich signed Bill 2-22, which will reimburse incorporated cities and towns—including Takoma Park—for duplicate taxes for services like local police enforcement, crossing guards, and park and road upkeep according to agreed upon formulas.

“The codification of municipal tax duplication formulas is a long overdue request from our municipalities,” Elrich said in a statement. “This reimbursement program addresses the issue of property tax duplication since both the County and the municipality levy a property tax, but only the municipality provides that service within its jurisdiction.”

Municipalities and the County’s Chapter of the Maryland Municipal League have pushed for revisions to the tax duplication legislation going back to the 1970s and the changes in Bill 2-22 come as a major relief for city leaders. “It’s been a really longtime coming,” said Deputy City Manager Jessica Clarke, who helped negotiate with County and other municipal leaders for over six months to ensure feedback from municipalities was fairly incorporated into the bill. “It’s nice to reach an agreement with the county knowing that it’s a stable revenue source for the foreseeable future.”

Previously, the City would need to renegotiate the reimbursement every year with plenty of time-consuming back and forth between City and county officials. While the county would occasionally reimburse the municipalities for services, the total amounts would need to be renegotiated every year. “Every year we weren’t sure when the county would give us the money and weren’t sure what the amount would be,” Clarke said. “It felt like a political process each time. Now it’s all
in the code.”

Bill 2-22 formalizes that Montgomery County owes a certain amount every year for certain services, which is an incredibly significant step, according to former Takoma Park City Manager Suzanne Ludlow, who had been pushing the passage of the legislation since the late 1990s.

“There’s been two issues,” Ludlow said. “One is that the county never liked paying the money and wanted to spend that money somewhere else, and two, the county didn’t really see it as an amount that was owed. How much of that and how much they owed was a topic of conversation every year. There had been formulas years ago from the economic crash from 2008 to 2012 and trying to get that back has been a particular challenge.”

Over the years, the amount the county would reimburse had remained stagnant and had not kept up with inflation or the growing budget of the city’s police force. “The bill that just passed also codifies quadrennial reassessments, so the fact that we now have a formal codified process for tax duplication and a timeline for when reimbursement activities need to happen each year is a significant improvement to the ad hoc processes of the past,” Clarke said.

In all, the bill will double the County’s reimbursement for municipally delivered services from $10.1 million for Fiscal Year 2022 to $20.5 million with an 80 percent phase-in for Fiscal Year 2023, a 90 percent phase-in for Fiscal Year 2024, and a total phase-in for Fiscal Year 2025.

“The phase-in was a compromise we had to make to reach agreement with the County,” Clarke said. “After Fiscal Year 2025, reimbursements must be increased [based on] the annual Consumer Price Index percentage change for the D.C. Metro area.”

Takoma Park itself is expecting to see reimbursements of around $5.3 million for Fiscal Year 2022, with increases over the next few years. That includes a guaranteed minimum of $4,020,521 for the city’s police department. The money goes directly to the City’s General Fund.

It has truly been an effort on multiple fronts, including other municipalities in Montgomery County like Chevy Chase, Gaithersburg, and Rockville, along with plenty of Takoma Park employees and leaders. “I appreciate that over time we’ve really made progress formalizing this process with the municipalities. That’s the hugest step; it’s really phenomenal,” Ludlow said. “The pressure on the county has been consistently coming from the mayors of Takoma Park—including Bruce Williams and Kate Stewart—keeping pressure on the elected officials as something that needs to get done.”

 

This article was featured in the April 2022 Newsletter. Visit the Takoma Park Newsletter webpage to see full list of past newsletters.

Register for the Takoma Park Safe Routes to School 5K Now

 

Fourteen Years supporting safety, fun, and fitness!

Click here to register for the 2022 Takoma Park Virtual 5K!

The race will take place from May 15th – May 31st, where participants can run anywhere, anytime, and record their stats online.

For more information on the event, to donate, or become a sponsor, visit the link above!

Here’s how it works:

Step 1: Sign Up

Step 2: Stay updated with our TKPK5K webpage! Information about where and when to pick up your souvenir t-shirt will be shared closer to the event.

Step 3: Plan Your Route – Run anywhere – your neighborhood, your favorite trail, your treadmill.

Step 4: Submit your results HERE.

Step 5: Be proud that you contributed to the health and safety of the students at Takoma Park Elementary, Piney Branch Elementary, East Silver Spring Elementary, Rolling Terrace Elementary, and Takoma Park Middle School!

About the TKPK5K

Since 2009, the TKPK5K has been held on the first Sunday in May (with the exception of 2020).

The TKPK5K is a fun, family-oriented community event. Proceeds from the event fund health, fitness, bike, and pedestrian safety activities at five local schools:

  • Takoma Park Elementary
  • Piney Branch Elementary
  • East Silver Spring Elementary
  • Rolling Terrace Elementary
  • Takoma Park Middle

Masks no longer required but strongly encouraged in City buildings and facilities

 

Recently, the CDC has shifted its focus from community transmission to community levels as the basis for their guidance regarding recommended COVID-19 preventative measures. Montgomery County currently has a “low” community level as of this past Monday, March 7. The City of Takoma Park will be adjusting our protocols and lifting our mask mandate.

Effective Wednesday, March 9th, masks are not required indoors but strongly encouraged for any unvaccinated visitors in any City buildings or facilities, where social distancing is challenging, and/or when there is direct interaction between the public and employees.

As safety and health remain our #1 priority, the City of Takoma Park will continue to have KN95/N95 masks and rapid test kits available for the public and employees as necessary. We will continue to monitor the community levels and will be prepared to shift our protocols when appropriate.

Friends Book Group March Selection

 

By Tim Rahn

The Story of Lucy Gault, a novella by William Trevor, will be discussed by the Friends Book Group on Thursday, March 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Hydrangea Room of the Community Center.

The Story of Lucy Gault begins in 1921 when the Irish revolution that led to the founding of the Irish Republic rages in the countryside. After a young man is shot by the father of an Anglo-Irish family, the parents decide they must leave Ireland to avoid more confrontation.

As they prepare to leave, Lucy, their young daughter and only child, runs away, determined to stay at the idyllic family home. When she cannot be found, she is presumed dead, and her parents leave to wander Europe. For the next seven decades, Lucy’s life plays out against feelings of remorse and guilt. Tim Adams, in his 2002 Observer review of the novel, wrote that Trevor “is the modern master of the life never quite lived, his fiction ever aware of the spaces between his characters, the silence that always threatens them.”

Trevor was a celebrated short-story writer. The Story of Lucy Gault, which was published in 2002, was short-listed for the Booker Prize. Copies of The Story of Lucy Gault are available to borrow from the library, and as an audiobook from Hoopla, the library’s digital streaming service.

 

This article was featured in the March 2022 Newsletter. Visit the Takoma Park Newsletter webpage to see full list of past newsletters.

New Parking Meters Come to Carroll Avenue

 

Keep an eye out for new parking meters on Carroll Ave! Three new parking meters will be installed in front of 6940 Carroll Ave, across from CVS, where previously there were none. The installation will occur as soon as ordered materials arrive. The new meters will help turnover parking spots more frequently in support of nearby businesses.

 

This article was featured in the March 2022 Newsletter. Visit the Takoma Park Newsletter webpage to see full list of past newsletters.