Ocean City is surrounded by water on three sides, making it a great place to participate in watersports, whether you are a beginner or an expert. From a leisurely pontoon boat ride with family and friends, to a fast jet ski spraying water across the Bay, these splashing around in the water photos, taken at Odyssea Watersports on 50th Street, show the fun that awaits you.
Splashing Around in the Water Photos
Commander hotel celebrates 85 years in OC
(June 5, 2015) A hotel can’t last in Ocean City for 85 years without undergoing a bit of change and the Commander Hotel on the Boardwalk has seen that change and then some.
For example, in 1997 the building was replaced entirely.
Now, under the management of the Real Hospitality Group, working on behalf of owners Will Lynch and Todd Burbage, are deciding what form that change will come in for the next big project at the hotel.
“Phase I gave us the chance to expand, phase II was replacing the restaurant and phase III is renovations,” Rick Day, public relations officer for the Real Hospitality Group, said.
Grotto Pizza opened in late May as the first Ocean City location of the Rehoboth Beach-based pizza chain.
“We want to retain the history but also give a sense of what we are trying to be,” Day said. “I’ve seen a couple of preliminary drawings, we’re currently working on ideas and expect to begin in 2016.”
After all, flat-screen TVs and other design or functionality features such as Wi-Fi weren’t exactly the norm even in 1997.
“We want to clean it up a bit and examine the nuance of our offerings,” Day said.
History is important, especially to those who lived it. More than 200 people RSVP’d to the 85th anniversary celebration held last week, Day said.
According to Bunk Mann’s “Vanishing Ocean City” history book, the Commander Hotel was, for a long time, the northernmost hotel on the Boardwalk. Its dining room was famous and the Commander outranked many other hotels, enjoying “elite” status.
“To dine at the Commander was a special occasion for tourists and locals alike,” according to Mann. The beachfront clambakes were especially spectacular, according to Mann’s book.
The Lynch family renovated and restored the Commander several times before handing over day-to-day operations to the group, Day said. The facility underwent a two-stage renovation in 1979, and in 1992 the cabanas near the pool were rebuilt. Of course, 1997 brought the full-building replacement and added retail space for rent facing the Boardwalk.
Coach’s Corner back in business
(June 5, 2015) After spending 24 years on 61st Street and taking an almost five-year hiatus, Coach’s Corner Diner is back to serve breakfast and lunch daily out of the Beachmark Motel on 74th Street.
Omelets, breakfast sandwiches, pancakes, cheesesteaks, salads, cold sandwiches and desserts are a few of the homemade choices prepared fresh in owner Marty Furst’s kitchen since opening on Mother’s Day weekend. Enjoy endless coffee for $2.25 and fresh squeezed orange juice.
The restaurant will have a daily lunch special and from 6-7 a.m. there will be happy hour discounts and specials.
Originally, someone else was supposed to take over the space and Furst planned on helping out in the kitchen. When that person reconsidered, it left the landlords without a tenant and Furst decided to reach out to Hugh and Toni Wilde, owners of the Beachmark Motel.
“It was a matter of circumstance to have the opportunity. [General’s Kitchen original owner] Gus [Bollas] would come and eat at Coach’s Corner when [General’s Kitchen] closed for the winter and it’s awesome we ended up with this location,” Furst said. “We share the same passion for it.”
Furst and his wife, Jennifer, tried to resurrect their previous diner as best they could in the new location and have the same color scheme of red, white and silver.
They worked with the intimate space to add a hand sink at the server station and stainless steel with tiles were put in for easier cleaning. The restaurant seats 66 people with new tables and chairs. All new carpeting was added and many appliances and the ceiling in the kitchen were replaced, Furst said.
“It’s nice to be around again and see old customers who watched our kids grow up,” Jennifer Furst said. “We didn’t come home, we went to the diner and to be able to connect with them again is neat.”
The Furst children, James, Sonny, Barbara and Martin, can most likely be spotted seating, serving or running food to patrons this summer. Their nephew, Anthony Shaver, helps out in the kitchen.
“We are a nice family place and encourage kids,” Furst said. “Being family-owned and operated separates us. A lot of this has to do with my mom and dad, they started the restaurant.”
Mel Kurtz, cook and kitchen manager, worked for the Fursts for 11 years in their first location.
The diner has decades of family tradition tied to it and the Fursts are thankful for many of their old customers who have stopped by since opening.
“We are looking forward to serving the locals and visitors,” Furst said. “We have made a bunch of new friends in the short amount of time we have been open.”
Coach’s Corner Diner plans to be open year-around, seven days a week from 6 a.m. until 1:55 p.m. Lunch starts at 11:30 a.m. and breakfast is served all day.
Two ‘Meant To Be’ main characters cross paths in OC
(June 5, 2015) Historical fiction writer Jessica James debuts her first contemporary novel, “Meant To Be” Saturday, where two main characters meet in Ocean City for the first time.
“One of the interesting things I noticed about Ocean City as I walked down the Boardwalk was all the memorial benches dedicated and I realized how important it is to people,” James said. “People are so connected to that city and it’s amazing.”
She is from Gettysburg, Pa. and has visited Ocean City a number of times.
“I went there [Ocean City] to get away to finish a historical fiction book with no phones and for some reason this story came to me, so I wrote it down,” James said.
She never thought anything would come of the idea since she wrote historical fiction, but as the title fittingly says, it was meant to be.
“The main characters meet in Ocean City, neither one tells the other what they do and later on, they meet by chance in Afghanistan [after thinking they would never see each other again],” James said.
The suspense and romance novel has received positive reviews from members of the military with one active duty member describing the book as, “American Sniper but intertwined with an unforgettable, epic love story,” James added.
It’s important for James to create stories that readers will remember and to honor our military for their dedication and service.
Members of both sexes from mid-teens to adults will be absorbed in her vivid scene descriptions and characters. “My books have been described as emotional. Readers laugh and cry, they can’t stop thinking about the story,” James said. “The characters all connect together through emotional writing.”
“Meant To Be” is James’ fifth novel with three others taking place during the Civil War and the other during the Revolutionary War.
Her novels can be purchased on all online book retailers including Amazon.com, on Kindle for $6.99 and in paperback for $16.99. She urges members of the community to request her book at local libraries.
Part of the proceeds from the novel sales will be donated to the LZ-Grace Warrior Retreat, which provides a place of respite for combat warriors and their families.
For more information, visit www.jessicajamesbooks.com.
More than 300 graduate from Stephen Decatur HS
(June 5, 2015) In front of a room packed with family, friends and loved ones, 327 seniors graduated from Stephen Decatur High School last Wednesday, May 27, at the Roland E. Powell Convention Center on 40th Street.
Class President Tripp Ortega delivered a farewell address to students during the ceremony, encouraging his fellow classmates to dream big, be themselves, never give up and do everything to their full potential.
After thanking facility, friends and family, he proclaimed, “The class of 2015 is the best class that went through Stephen Decatur.”
The Worcester County Board of Education uses a three-tiered senior recognition program where each student receives a cumulative weighted GPA, which is calculated at the end of the third marking period in English, math, social studies, science, world languages and Advanced Placement courses. Class rank with valedictorian and salutatorian honors was ended several years ago.
Students who earned a 5.05 GPA or higher received Summa Cum Laude honors, those receiving a 4.9-5.04 GPA earned Magna Cum Laude accolades and those earning a 4.8-4.89 GPA received Cum Laude distinction. All honorees stood for recognition during the commencement ceremony.
Of the graduates, 163 (50 percent) will attend four-year colleges or universities and 107 (33 percent) will attend two-year schools. Two students (less than 1 percent) will study at trade and technical schools, 40 (12 percent) will go into the workforce and 15 (5 percent) are heading to the military.
The top choice college for Decatur graduates was Wor-Wic, with 94 enrolling this year and another 33 will stay close to study at Salisbury University.
Other popular choices include Towson University, University of Maryland College Park and University of Maryland Eastern Shore who will each welcome 10 or more Decatur graduates in the fall.
The class of 2015 received more than $9.3 million in scholarships and grants with $3.7 million in tuition aid.
“Commencement is not an ending, it’s a beginning,” said Dr. Jerry Wilson, superintendent of Worcester County schools. “A whole new, exciting phase is about to begin… set the bar high…”
He reminded the graduates of Dr. Steve Maraboli’s quote, “To embark on the journey toward your goals and dreams requires bravery. To remain on that path requires courage. The bridge that merges the two is commitment.”
Class of 2015 graduates were given the opportunity to choose their own commencement speaker and they decided on Louis Taylor, chief operating officer for Worcester County Public Schools, a 1978 graduate and principal of Stephen Decatur High School for 17 years.
He told the graduates they will find out who they are and what they want to be during challenging periods.
“Understand life is not what you are given, but what you aim to achieve when you refuse to give up,” Taylor said. “Obstacles and loss will act as motivation. Learn from failures and always keep persevering.”
Stephen Decatur Principal Thomas Zimmer may have said it best, “They have left our mark on us… it’s time for them to leave their mark on the world.”
More than 800 terrapin spotted during May count
(June 5, 2015) The Maryland Coastal Bays Program participated in the fourth annual terrapin head count survey May 26-30, which encompassed all five bays including tidal creeks and marsh guts. More than 800 turtles were spotted by 39 volunteers.
Last Friday, a turtle count on Sinepuxent Bay near Assateague Island uncovered about 45 turtle sightings from around 8-10:15 a.m., although other volunteers may go out and not see any at all, said Maryland Coastal Bays Programs Manager Jennifer Rafter.
All surveys taken during the count, regardless of turtles spotted, are valuable to the Maryland Coastal Bays and the Maryland Terrapin Working Group, who partnered together to count turtles in the Chesapeake Bay and Coastal Bays for the fourth year.
Population numbers of diamondback terrapin in Maryland are largely unknown and to better understand their status in the area these surveys are taken annually.
“In order to study if a species is doing well you need a starting point and it takes time to gather information to see if they are declining, remaining the same or increasing,” Rafter said.
Counting terrapin heads in the water as they gather to breed or come out of hibernation is considered an effective way of monitoring population numbers. The state reptiles are never captured or disturbed.
Wayne Faircloth provided his motorized boat for the adventure on May 29, with more than half a dozen surveyors using canoes, kayaks and stand-up paddleboards this past week to count turtles.
He has been participating since the second year of surveys and has a seminal site, which allows researchers to compare the same areas for a consecutive amount of time and is valuable research for the group.
“It’s largely a citizen effort and it wouldn’t be effective without volunteers,” Rafter said. “We had 30-40 volunteers this year [Maryland Coastal Bays] and could always use more, we need more people to cover larger areas.”
Each year, new participants survey different areas and repeat volunteers continue to count turtles in the same places.
In addition, land based surveys were conducted to collect additional data for the first time.
Rafter said hundreds of turtles are counted each year and the Maryland Coastal Bays conducted its surveys a little later than surrounding areas since the Coastal Bays have colder water temperatures and terrapins emerged later after the harsh winter.
The decline of their habitats is the main reason the Maryland House and Senate decided to ban commercial harvesting of the Diamondback Terrapin in April 2007.
The turtles take a long time to reproduce, which makes it harder to increase population numbers quickly.
Females need soft, sandy beaches to nest in. Many shorelines in the area are too hard for these creatures with their bulkheads and rift raft, Rafter said.
Diamondback Terrapin eat mollusks, clams, worms, some fish and love snails, she added.
Snails destroy the Chesapeake’s marsh grasses, which makes terrapins essential to the Chesapeake ecosystem and invertebrates would increase without the state reptile.
Forgotten crab and ghost pots trap and drown dozens of turtles every day.
“Reptiles have to breathe air and pots need to have a turtle excluder device, which is a piece of metal to block the entrances for terrapin shells,” Rafter said.
Faircloth recalled finding an abandoned crab pot with six turtles who were stuck and drown inside.
“They are our state reptiles and we should not let anything happen to them,” Rafter said.
Report terrapin sightings all summer long at www.mdcoastalbays.org/terrapin-project. It is important to supply GPS coordinates or a specific street address when reporting turtles.
Dulany returns as director of Ocean City Tennis Center
(June 5, 2015) Rod Dulany has returned to his position as director of the Ocean City Tennis Center on 61st Street with plans to expand its programs and drive more traffic by offering activities for everyone to enjoy.
“We have the nicest public facility on the Eastern Shore and offer a wide variety of programs for everyone from doubles to private lessons and clinics on all types of activities,” Dulany said.
This Tuesday evening, June 9 from 6-7 p.m., will be the final opportunity to attend a free adult tennis clinic for players who have never tried the sport or who want to get back into the game.
Participants will be taught the basics of court positioning, doubles strategy and certified professional staff will be on site to assist players.
The clinic leads into an evening doubles league, which runs from June 16 to Aug. 11, where participants can go out and compete against others who have the same skill level.
“We are trying to build up the local base and serve the resort visitors,” Dulany said.
Expanding the youth program is a huge priority for Dulany and tournament play for all age groups will be going on throughout the summer.
“We want to expand the junior base that is out there and try to be the center for junior tennis on the Eastern Shore,” Dulany said.
During wintertime, four 10-and-under and four 8-and-under USTA-sanctioned outdoor courts were added to the tennis center in Ocean City to benefit children with their modified size.
A 10-and-under play day will take place on the last Sunday of each month this summer, where youth can learn to play tennis in a low-pressure setting. The cost is $10 per day and each session runs about two hours.
“Kids from six to 10 years old have the opportunity to meet a lot of other kids while competing in a couple different matches with pros on hand to help out, and it’s a low cost,” Dulany said.
Opportunities are abundant for younger players and tournaments for high school tennis male and female athletes will be offered.
Pickleball, one of the fastest growing sports in the country, is being introduced at the tennis center this summer and consists of a wooden paddle and whiffle ball. It is played on the 10-and-under courts on Mondays and Wednesdays for $10 from 5-7 p.m. through Aug. 19 with instructors.
Marie Thomas, the women’s tennis league coordinator for 13 years, has grown the program from about eight women to more than 220, Dulany said.
“Ladies will drive from Salisbury and Rehoboth Beach to play in Marie’s group because she makes you feel like a part of the family,” he added.
Men and women have dozens of adult programs to choose from and they take place at various times throughout the day.
“Quality hard and soft courts with a USTA certified staff makes it easy, accessible and fun for everyone,” Dulany said. “It’s a low expense sport with a variety of programs for all ages.”
Dulany grew up on the Eastern Shore and eventually bought a home in Ocean City. He ran a country club in northern Virginia for 30 years and moved to Ocean City permanently when it came time to retire last year.
“We would come down on the weekends, my wife loves it here on the bay and it’s very calming,” he added.
He was asked to return as director of the tennis center and the camaraderie of Ocean City staff made his decision easy. Dulany was the director of the center from 2002 until 2008. For six years, he served as executive director of the United States Tennis Association/Mid-Atlantic Section.
“If you’re visiting Ocean City, we can probably get you in two or three days if you’re here for a week,” Dulany said. “Tennis hasn’t had a focus on the Eastern Shore for years and we want to change that.”
For activity times and more information, visit www.oceancitymd.gov/tennis or call 410-524-8337.
Scammed OC lifeguards trying to move on
(June 5, 2015) Four Ocean City Beach Patrol members who were scammed out of $7,000 and their housing for the summer on Craigslist have begun to move on by finding a nice place to live on 36th Street and creating a Go Fund Me web page to raise money.
“We are so happy about the Go Fund Me page. Friends and family members have donated a lot and we love them so much for their support,” Ocean City lifeguard Youcef Belrachid said. “We are still far from the $7,000 goal so we encourage people to continue sharing our story, talking about it and make a donation, anything helps. Finally, we have received amazing messages from [donors] and these comments are the ones that make us want to go out there every day and do the job that we do.”
Belrachid said they feel blessed after seeing family members of Beach Patrol members, Ocean City residents and people who they have never met helping to cover their loss.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the lifeguards had raised $3,430 in six days from 63 people.
On May 24, Belrachid and two friends, all from Montreal, Canada, drove about 600 miles to Ocean City for a job on the Ocean City Beach Patrol. They arrived to a gutted and unlivable condominium that had already been paid for via an Internet rental company. Belrachid’s brother, Rayhm, did not make the initial trip.
A summer housing ad placed on Craigslist by “Ocean City Vacation Rentals Management” turned out to be a scam and does not exist.
Belrachid, Rahym, and friends Aude Lemaire-Hamel and Adam Bielawski, were all supposed to live at the Nassau Village in unit 50 on 94th Street this summer, or so they thought.
“Scammers know we are not from here. It’s easy to steal identities online and it’s hard to trace, but we are not dropping this. If it keeps happening over and over to people, it means we are not shouting loud enough,” Belrachid said.
After investigating, it became apparent that the Canadians weren’t the only victims of fraud. The scammer had also co-opted some images and logos of the local vacation rental company, Central Reservations, to make its faux ad look more official.
In addition to lifting information and pictures from Central Reservations’ website, the fraudulent outfit also took company owner Mark Fritschle’s name to make the Craigslist ad and pretended to be him through emails with the lifeguards.
The fictional company’s ad included an email address, phone number, trademark and copyright icons.
The Ocean City Police Department could not write a report since the incident did not occur in its jurisdiction, Belrachid said.
The money was sent through PayPal, whose insurance policy does not cover real estate or services. PayPal did file a claim for the group, but if the scammer answers in 10 business days and disputes the charges, PayPal does not investigate and the case is closed, he added.
Local Realtors were helpful this past week and Belrachid met with them on his lunch breaks and before shifts.
“It was hard because our working hours go beyond those of the Realtors so it was not easy to visit places and see all the options out there while working,” Belrachid said. “We still managed to figure it out and we are glad we did. The place is a bit pricey but at this point we are just grateful to have a roof over our head for the summer.”
Any money raised that exceeds their $7,000 goal will donated to the SurfRider Foundation in Ocean City.
“It’s an organization that invites popular surfers to teach disabled or impaired children how to surf,” Belrachid said. “Their work is really meaningful and they change the lives of many kids so we really want to encourage such an engagement in our community by giving them all the extra money that we will raise.”
To donate money to the lifeguards, go to www.gofundme.com/OCBPlifeguards
Longboard Team Challenge this weekend at 38th Street
(June 5, 2015) For those wanting to catch a wave of surfing nostalgia, or those looking to ride it before it hits the Zeitgeist, there is this weekend’s Longboard Team Challenge.
The challenge runs all weekend in the water in front of the Castle in the Sand, 38th Street in Ocean City.
Friday night is for the local surfers, as they make further inductions to the OC Legends roster at a ceremony to be held at Barn 34 on 34th Street. OC Legends are analogous to a hall of fame registry for the Ocean City Surf Club, member Brad Hoffman said.
Saturday is when the event begins in earnest with a lighthearted, spirited team competition beginning at 8:30 a.m. and running until 4 p.m.
“It’s a fun event and everyone comes out to compete. We keep score and award points but it’s just a really open, good time,” he said.
Registration for the competition is closed, but it’s free to watch.
On Sunday, the professionals take over from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
“It’s the Stanley Cup of longboard surfing,” Hoffman said, “It’s a perpetual trophy, so it’s kind of cool that it passes from winner to winner from one year to the next.”
Called the “Walk da Plank” open, this is the second year for the competition offering about $5,000 in cash prizes, Hoffman said.
“You’re going to see things you haven’t before,” at the competition Hoffman said.
“These guys hang five, hang ten; they really know how to work these longboards,” he said. “It really takes a lot of knowledge to work the boards the way they do.”
About a dozen professional longboarders are registered to compete with the hope that another few will trickle in before the event starts. A significant amount of competitors, Hoffman said, will compete both Saturday and Sunday.
“This is another step in the right direction to put Ocean City back on the map as a surfing destination. I’m super excited,” he said.
The Ocean City Surf Club, a non-profit organization that sponsors scholarships, local cleanups and competitions runs the Longboard Challenge, Hoffman explained.
“We’re trying to make great surfers and great people. We want to teach people how to give and get respect, and to keep all the money we raise local,” Hoffman said.
This year, for the first time, the competition is “going green” by partnering with environmentally conscious sponsors, Hoffman said.
Ocean City movie theater pursuing beer, wine license
(June 5, 2015) Presumably as part of its $1.5 million redevelopment effort, which included new reclining seats with retractable armrests among other upgrades to the 143rd Street Fox Sun & Surf, Fox Theatres has applied for a Class B liquor license and hired Ocean City attorney Joe Moore to facilitate the effort.
“Class B is normally for a restaurant,” Moore said. “So we must put our proposal in line with the requirements of the board. We think we can make it work.”
The movie theater has applied for a seven-day, beer and wine license and was originally scheduled to appear at the June 17 meeting of the Board of License Commissioners, the governing board for liquor licenses in Worcester County. Moore has asked for, and received, a postponement until the July meeting.
A Class B license would allow sales of beer and wine both as an on-site purchase and for takeaway.
While the license, if granted, would be the first of sorts in Ocean City, it would not be breaking new ground nationally or even in Maryland. A number of movie theaters on the western shore offer customers the opportunity to make such purchases, as doe some theaters in Virginia and Delaware.
Another of the Fox Theatre chain’s locations, Fox Berkshire in Wyomissing, Pa. began selling alcohol earlier this year.
Fox Theatre owner Donald Fox told the Reading (Pa.) Eagle that sales in that venue would take place at specific registers at the concession stand. In addition, the concession area was upgraded to expand food service.
Incorporating these elements might be enough to meet Maryland license code’s rule 11, which requires Class B license holders to “have available from the regular menu, hot meals between the hours of 12 p.m. to 9 p.m. provided the premises are open to the public.”
Other movie theaters in the region that offer alcohol sales do so with widely varying slates of amenities. Some offer iPads to VIP customers for in-show ordering of food or beverages, while others employ “ninjas” — or, employees dressed in black outfits as to not disturb other patrons, to provide wait service.
Some offer light appetizers and finger food, while others offer full meals. Some chains dedicate certain theaters to alcohol-consuming guests only.
County tax rate jumps
(June 5, 2015) Starting July 1, Worcester County residents will see their property tax rate increase by 6.5 cents per $100 of assessed value to 83.5 cents, and Jan. 1, 2016 will bring a one-half percent hike to the income tax, increasing it to 1.75 percent.
In a 5-2 vote, with Commissioners Bud Church and Joe Mitrecic against, the Worcester County Commissioners officially adopted the fiscal 2016 budget.
Mitrecic said he supported the budget and the tax increases, but the exclusion of funding for raises and cost-of-living increases for county employees and teachers, along with the elimination of an additional $200,000 to Ocean City’s grant, changed his mind.
Mitrecic said the increased grant to Ocean City was not a fix for what the resort sees as double taxation, but would have “gone a long way” to stave off possible litigation. For years, Ocean City has desired a tax differential to offset the taxes resort residents pay for county services they don’t use because resort government provides them.
Instead of a budget request this year, Ocean City officials offered a memorandum of understanding that would phase in a differential.
Church called the budget “short-sighted,” and said it did the most harm to employees who earn the least.
Commissioner Chip Bertino of Ocean Pines, however, said the tight strictures on spending were necessary.
“It’s not going to make everyone happy but does what needed to be done,” Bertino said.
Earlier this year, County Treasurer Phil Thompson delivered the county’s revenue report, which showed that revenues had not recovered from the financial crisis of 2008. Last year was expected to be the “bottom of the trough” with regard to revenue, because Ocean City, representing about 60 percent of the county’s assessable base, was due to be reassessed for 2016 and property values were expected to rise.
But they didn’t. Worcester county is on a three-year cycle of assessments, which means the resort won’t be reassessed until 2019, so the hard times for the county don’t appear to be over.
The flat revenue left the county with less money than it had last year. According to the State Department of Assessments and Taxation, the county had a tax base of $14.86 billion in FY 2015. That number slipped to $14.79 billion for the upcoming tax year. For comparison, the tax base in 2009 was $20.25 billion.
Then there is the matter of the budget stabilization fund, which is money previous boards of county commissioners set aside as a rainy day fund.
The county is projected to use about $8 million from the fund before the current year is over, leaving a balance of between $8 million to $10 million.
But when the county departments and municipalities made their budget requests, the total was $22 million more than projected revenues, meaning the commissioners could empty the rainy day fund and still come up short.
To cover the shortfall using only property tax revenue would cost residents an additional 15 cents per $100 of assessed value from the current tax rate of 77 cents. From there the rate increase moved to an eight-cent increase before settling on the 6.5 cents accompanied by the income tax hike.
These rate increases are not revenue neutral, and are expected to create almost $1.5 million in surplus funds. These funds, according to County Administrator Harold Higgins, will go to replenishing the budget stabilization fund.
That surplus has not gone unnoticed by teacher advocates.
“I find it interesting the board is taxing people more than necessary to increase budget stabilization,” while not including funding for salary increases, Gary McCabe, of the Maryland State Education Association, said.
Educators protest with ‘work to rule’
(June 5, 2015) At least a few teachers from each of Worcester’s 14 schools are participating in a “work to rule” salary protest in response to the absence of a raise in the Worcester County Commissioners’ budget for the next fiscal year.
“Work to rule” means doing only what the rules or contract require and nothing more. In this case, the teachers are entering school at the exact time they are required and leaving promptly at the end of the school day. The idea is to demonstrate how much more teachers in the county do beyond the dictates of their contract.
During budget work sessions late last month, the commissioners voted to remove funding for step and cost-of-living adjustments for all county employees, including teachers. That decision was ratified Tuesday morning when the commissioners formally adopted the FY 2016 budget without changes in a 5-2 vote. Commissioners Bud Church and Joe Mitrecic voted against the adopted budget, specifically citing the raise funding as a reason for their dissent.
The county commissioners decide how to fund 13 separate areas of the Board of Education’s budget, of which one is employee salary. The teachers’ union can then negotiate a contract based on that figure.
The Board of Education can, subject to the commissioners’ approval, reallocate funding between the areas. This is traditionally done at the end of the calendar year, Assistant County Administrator Kelly Shannahan said.
“We were hoping that commissioners would fund a pay increase to all county employees, but they have not. As a result, we are forced to decide if giving our employees a pay increase warrants internal reductions. Because we believe our employees have earned a pay increase, we will be seriously considering the options. For us, our people come first; they are worth it,” Superintendent Dr. Jerry Wilson said.
All seven of the commissioners said they would be willing to listen to a proposal from the Board of Education, should it decide to pursue this option to fund step increases.
This is the fourth time in six years the county commissioners have decided to forgo step increases for county employees by invoking a circuit-breaker clause that permits them to skip raises because of financial limitations. The county has used this measure in 2010, 2011 and 2012.