Archive for the ‘Living in Calvert County’ Category

The State of Calvert County Real Estate – May 2010

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Calvert County Housing Market Trends Through May 2010

In this third issue of The State of Calvert County Real Estate, let’s discuss the activity and trends we’ve been seeing over the last couple of months. The chart below presents a lot of data but shows a few points worth noting:

  • The month of May saw a dramatic increase in sales compared to months prior.  Sales were double what we saw in February and March.
  • The seller contribution to closing costs has remained consistent, around $6,000.00.  Sellers, be prepared to assist your buyer in this market.
  • On a positive note, there has been an increase in the sales price of homes.  Sales prices have hit over $300,000.00 for the first time since January 2010.

Lynn Bonde, Calvert Hospice CEO, Retires after 12 Years

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Lynn Leaves a Brilliant Legacy in Calvert County

First the bad news – Lynn Bonde, the energetic and visionary CEO of Calvert Hospice is retiring following a successful 12 year career. The good news – Lynn’s long list of accomplishments include the building of the Burnett-Calvert Hospice House and the creation of the Shoppe for Hospice ladies and children’s gently used clothing store. At Lynn’s Retirement Dinner, to highlight Shoppe for Hospice, a fashion show was hosted by Ann Kaine, manager of the Shoppe.

Lynn Bonde, Jay Webster, Ann Kaine

Lynn Bonde, Jay Webster, Ann Kaine

How Can You Tell When We've Reached the Bottom?

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Several New Reports Give Insights

For those of us whose constantly monitor the housing market, we’re ever watchful for what we hope will be the bottom of this Great Recession. Why are we looking so hard? Because no recovery can start until most of  the lights are off. The bottom will give us a new foundation upon which the economy and the housing market can rebuild.  Thankfully, all real estate markets are local.  We’re very grateful that we’re in the Washington Metro market which is still supporting strong job growth. Many areas of the country (FL, AZ, NV, CA) still have considerable bleeding left before they reach the bottom. 

In a recent report by Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Economy.com, noted that prices in the Washington Metro market would decline by about 6% but rebound next year by more than 4%.  Another report by Hanley Wood Market Intelligence places the DC area in the top 10 real estate markets in the country.

Speaking in very local terms, our Calvert County market seems to be sprouting some “green shoots” of stabilization.  In fact, our home and lot prices have started to rise in the last few months. This hasn’t happened for over two years. Be on the lookout for Melissa’s upcoming blog post where she’ll do an in depth analysis of our local sales activity.

So just maybe what I see rising under my feet is the bottom. Let’s hope.

Brooke

Kaine Homes Hosts Calvert League of Women Voters Holiday Dinner

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

Influential Political Organization Celebrates Holiday Season with Potluck Dinner Party at Kaine Homes Model

The Calvert County Chapter of the League of Women Voters enjoyed a festive dinner and meeting at our new Model Homes in College Station. We’ve hosted previous League events and we always enjoy brainstorming with League members as to how we can bring sensible and needed affordable housing to Calvert County. I was also privileged to give a short talk on why our TRADITIONS project failed to gain traction due to the overwhelming anti-growth sentiment here in Calvert County.

Brooke Kaine

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TRADITIONS community get thumbs up from Chesapeake Bay Foundation

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Letter of Support Affirms TRADITIONS  Environmental Commitment

Read the letter:  http://www.traditionscalvert.com/pdf/CBF_Support_Letter.pdf

TRADITIONS, a new way to create a real community

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

The way we used to live, and still want to.

We have an opportunity to transform a planned 60 lot “sprawl” subdivision into the most environmentally friendly and socially rich neighborhood Calvert County has ever seen. To make this happen, we’ll need your support. Please visit www.traditionscalvert.com, leave a comment, take the poll.

This vision can be a reality.

Thanks,

Brooke Kaine  brooke@kainehomes.com  301-943-1407

Trent Jaklitsch  jdgland@mac.com  410-474-5959

"Shoppe for Hospice" Grand Opening

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

New Hospice shop is a delight for fashionistas, moms

Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2009
By Pat Ullberg
Southern Maryland News
Prince Frederick Recorder

Sometimes, a good bargain — like a good man — is hard to find.

Anyone entering the work force for the first time, such as young graduates starting their first professional jobs, or former stay-at-home moms getting back into a job, often find that the up-front expense of assembling a professional work wardrobe can wipe out the first month’s salary — and more.

Your fearless columnist remembers when re-entry into the work world after several years at home raising children found that dressing for success became an issue. My wardrobe — if you can call it that—consisted mostly of jeans of various vintage, faded tees, sweat pants and a sprinkling of slightly outmoded dress clothes. How to get together enough decent quality clothes to make up a work wardrobe without wreaking havoc on the family bank account in the process was something of a challenge.

A new thrift shop that opened in Huntingtown on July 23 may be the answer to upgrading a business wardrobe without breaking the bank or maxing out credit cards.
Shoppe for Hospice is designed as a boutique, with a collection of recent, nearly-new styles from the likes of Coldwater Creek, the Gap and Nordstrom’s. This shop can be a boon for working women with small clothing budgets. The fashion magazines typically advise building a professional wardrobe one piece at a time, as you can afford each new piece, which for a new job entrant, could take quite a while. At Hospice boutique, even a tightly budgeted clothing dollar can cover the costs of several complete outfits in one or two visits.

A visit to the shop during last Saturday’s grand opening revealed a large, white painted room lined with clothing racks filled with women’s suits, tops, tees, sweaters and coats. There is a small table of jeans and sportswear, and a rack of special occasion and formal wear, but the main emphasis is on wearable daily clothing.

The racks along one wall hold children’s clothing in sizes from infant through pre-teen girls. Childrens’ wear, with labels like Carters, Healthtex and Old Navy, is the second retail focus of this shop, because children’s clothing is another big expense given that children can outgrow an entire wardrobe in months. Back-to-school shopping has been brisk since the shop opened, say the volunteers. A quick pass through the racks shows many classic current fashions in sportswear and dresswear.

The primary mission of Shoppe for Hospice, as the name implies, is to raise funds for Calvert Hospice, specifically Hospice’s Calvert-Burnett House, now under construction on Sixes Road in Prince Frederick. Hospice House will offer live-in, fulltime care to residents of Calvert County who have a terminal illness, and for whom care at home is not an option. The construction of the hospice house is being done entirely with generous donations of materials, labor and the volunteer time of many businesses and individuals. Shoppe for Hospice is intended to provide funds for the ongoing costs of staffing, furniture and the equipment necessary for a facility that serves terminally ill patients.

There are many thrift shops in the Southern Maryland area, and most have definite missions to support the many charities in the tri-state region. In the economic slump the country is now experiencing, charities are doing their best to meet greater and greater needs. As each charity addresses different needs, so do many thrift shops specialize in merchandise that appeals to special customer bases; — for instance, some shops are known for having a good selection of household goods and decorative articles.

The hospice shop in Huntingtown is the result of the generosity and creativity of the whole community. Brooke and Ann Kaine, owners of Kaine Homes, donated the shop space in their business center. It’s one large room with high ceilings and good light, more inviting than the donated makeshift spaces some thrift shops must inhabit. That fit in well with the planners’concept of the shop.

“We wanted to try for something a little different from most thrift shops, to have something more like a boutique where women could find good quality, gently used clothing for themselves and their children at a good price,” Ann Kaine said.
Kaine and other volunteers canvassed local suppliers for the materials, equipment and for labor: carpentry, plumbing and a shop sign.

“Everyone [we asked] did something, contributed a different piece,” Kaine said. “This was a real community effort. The energy output was terrific. Every time I wanted it to work so badly, and didn’t know where we’d find the wherewithal, somebody came forward with what we needed. For example, the shop needed mirrors for the dressing room, there was no budget to buy them, and nobody knew where to get them donated. I went to Royal Glass one day to have a window replaced in my car, and noticed they also sold mirrors. I asked the owners to donate the mirrors — and they did.”

That was typical of the response Kaine and other volunteers got to their canvassing efforts. A list of the donors is too long to include here, but is available at the shop.
The clothing donations also have been coming in at a fast rate, volunteer Cristel Libiot, the Hospice event coordinator, said.

“We’re getting a very good response. And anything we can’t use won’t go to waste. We pass it on to other sources for sale or distribution.”

Libiot and Kim Zabiegalski, the volunteer shop manager, were at the sales counter the afternoon of the grand opening event. Kaine had just come in with a bouquet of sunflowers, and was looking for the best place to display them. The volunteers are serious about making the shop an attractive place to browse and buy — which it is.
“And we’ve got plenty of free parking here.”

The great merit of thrift shops is that the customers save money on purchases, and — at the same time — these purchases help the thrift shops raise money for local charities, a real double bang-for-the-buck, since those dollars are, in effect, doubled, and stay in the community.

In addition, most if not all of these thrift shops are operated by volunteers, which means that all of the sales proceeds go to a charity, and not to salaries or overhead costs. It’s a win-win situation all around.

Shoppe for Hospice is located in the Kaine Industrial Park, just north of the Huntingtown Volunteer Fire Department on Old Town Road. The shop is open every Thursday, noon to 7 p.m., and Fridays and Saturdays 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Donations are accepted only on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, because volunteers need time to sort size, price and hang the clothing.

There are also volunteer opportunities available. For further information, or to inquire about hours, donating or volunteering, call 410-535-0892 or 301-855-1226, or e-mail Cristel Libiot at clibiot@calverthospice.org.

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Time to Start "Shoppe-ing"

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Lynn Bonde, Director, Calvert Hospice and Maryland State Delegate Sue Kullen

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Calvert County Commissioner President Wilson Parran and Calvert County Register of Wills, Margaret Phipps

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Mallory Kaine, Christine Blake of Calvert Hospice and Erika Kaine

 

Growing Up in Calvert in the 1950's Part 3

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Why didn’t she stop?

Some people have vivid memories of their early childhood; I do not. In writing these brief thoughts about growing up in Calvert County in the 1950’s, distant memories have resurfaced and not all are pleasant. I guess time has a way of filtering out the bad and keeping the good. And sometimes the getting rid of the bad means cleaning out the whole memory closet. A bad memory I wish I could have tossed was the day our neighbor didn’t stop her car. No big deal except that she had just ran over my dog. Unfortunately, I had a perfect view from a nearby hill. I saw my dog, the car, heard the sound and felt the horror as she just drove away. Now understand, back then with a population just about 12,000, you knew everyone and every car. So, I had known this person all of my young life but my thoughts of her (and maybe even of adults as well) were forever changed that summer day.

It took me thirty years to love another dog.

Brooke with standard poodles Suzette and Madeline
Brooke with standard poodles Suzette and Madeline

 

State Approves $522,687 for Three Parks Projects in Calvert

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Southern Maryland Online

Posted on February 19, 2009

ANNAPOLIS (Feb. 19, 2009)— The State Board of Public Works approved local-side Program Open Space funding for 25 local park and land acquisition projects in 12 counties on Wednesday. Calvert County is slated to receive $522,687 for three projects. Neither Charles or St. Mary’s counties received any funding during this exercise.

The projects in Calvert include:

– $78,000 for athletic fields, playground areas, a skate park and other park improvements at Solomon’s Town Center Park;

– $371,687 to allow for parking, restrooms, a new playground and picnic shelters at Hollowing Point Park in Prince Frederick; and

– $73,000 for the second phase of energy-efficient lighting and restroom facilities at Cove Point Park in Lusby.

“All projects funded through Program Open Space are made possible by a coordinated commitment – to conserve land and improve outdoor recreational opportunities in our local communities, even during tight fiscal times,” said Governor O’Malley in a statement. “Preserving our natural resources remains one of Maryland’s highest priorities and this Program allows us to continue to advance the common good, no matter the economic climate.”

Calvert Schools Emerging As Stars

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

By Jenna Johnson and Daniel de Vise
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, July 28, 2008; B01

 

Nestled in the affluent enclaves of Calvert County is a school system often overlooked in lists of the Washington area’s best.

Calvert has long fared well on state tests, but it has quietly climbed the ranks of area school districts, surpassing Montgomery County and nearly matching Howard County this year. Yet its academic prestige seems confined to some education circles and to Southern Maryland, in part because of the relatively modest profile of Calvert high schools.

Maryland School Assessment results in 2008 for grades 3 through 8, released this month, show that 91 percent of Calvert students rated proficient or better in reading and 86 percent in math, ranking the county third and fourth in the state on those respective tests. Of particular note were gains in reading pass rates at middle schools, including two that had double-digit increases.

“I see them wanting to be on the cutting edge of initiatives, innovation, and I think that’s really accelerating. I didn’t always see that,” said State Superintendent of Schools Nancy S. Grasmick. “I think in many ways it’s an emerging county.”

Some analysts have pointed out that because the state tests were shorter this year, that might have played a role in higher MSA scores. State officials, however, have said the level of difficulty remained the same.

Calvert Superintendent Jack Smith credited principals with identifying the challenges facing individual students, setting goals and aggressively addressing them through “intervention classes” and other strategies. Rather than relying on after-school or summer sessions, teachers try to integrate help for lagging students into the regular school day to ensure a systematic approach, Smith said.

Because the school system is small, with 17,000 students and four high schools, Smith said educators can closely monitor each student’s progress and implement most initiatives countywide.

“We have scale on our side,” he said. “I know every single school administrator on a personal scale, and that’s a huge advantage.”

Calvert also has demographics on its side, as do other prosperous counties that surround the struggling urban school systems of Washington and Baltimore. Calvert has the third-lowest rate of student poverty among the 24 Maryland school systems; 15 percent of county students qualify for federal meal subsidies. Calvert’s median teacher salary is the highest in the state, meaning the well-paid teachers tend to stay put.

This year, relatively high percentages of Calvert students rated advanced, the highest of three performance levels, on the tests: 40 percent in math, 46 percent in reading.

Calvert officials said they noticed last year that students could benefit from learning vocabulary and other language skills outside reading classes. So all teachers, including specialists in music, art and technology, were coached to throw new words into their lessons and break the words down into roots, prefixes and suffixes to help students make connections to similar words.

Calvert’s low profile might stem in part from its performance on the SAT and Advanced Placement tests, which have emerged as twin beacons of academic prestige.

When shopping for a house or a school, parents tend to pay more attention to SAT scores or AP participation than to the pass rates on state tests. They tend not to regard proficiency on the state test as a particularly ambitious goal. Some education scholars agree, saying that many states, including Maryland, have built their state tests on academic standards that are too low.

Calvert’s composite SAT score last year, 1518 of a possible 2400, was more than 100 points below the scores in Howard, Montgomery and Fairfax counties, which have many of the region’s top-regarded high schools. None of Calvert’s four high schools ranked among Maryland’s top 30 on the 2008 Challenge Index, created by Washington Post reporter Jay Mathews to measure participation in college-level AP and International Baccalaureate tests.

However, on Maryland’s High School Assessments, which the state uses to establish minimum end-of-course standards in four subjects, Calvert had a composite pass rate of nearly 86 percent in 2007. That was second best in the state, just behind Howard. Among 13 Washington area school systems, Calvert has the second-highest graduation rate, 86 percent, just behind Loudoun, according to a 2008 report by the trade newspaper Education Week.

Ted Haynie, Calvert’s director of system performance, said focusing on state test scores is not enough. The school system is working to increase the rigor of its curriculum, especially in high schools.

Haynie said SAT scores and AP test participation are more difficult to quickly improve because high school “is just such a difficult culture to change.” Plus, he said, the county is focusing on improving HSA scores because they affect all students, not just those continuing on to college.

School officials note that teachers have encouraged more students to take AP classes and tests. The number of students taking at least one college-level test has more than doubled since 2004.

“As we try to increase the rigor, there is a transition time,” Haynie said. “While we are enjoying good, overall aggregate success, there are still kids who are not performing well. It’s all relative. There are always things to improve.”