The following violations to town code were reported by the Historic District Review Board:
• 614 Strawberry Street – Windows that do not meet HDRB COA approval
• 509 Monroe Avenue – New fence installed without Zoning and HDRB approval
• 527 Monroe Avenue – New roof on front porch without Zoning and HDRB approval
• 209 Mason Avenue – Front glass change without HDRB approval
• 616 Tazewell Avenue – New fence installed without Zoning and HDRB approval
• 606 Madison Avenue – New fence installed without Zoning and HDRB approval
• 124 Peach Street – Front porch work without Zoning and HDRB approval
• Lot 108 Washington Avenue – New Shed without BZA, Zoning, and HDRB Approval
• 209A Mason Avenue – Sign installed without Zoning and HDRB Approval
• 209B Mason Avenue – Sign installed without Zoning and HDRB Approval
• 10 Strawberry Street – Signs installed without Zoning and HDRB Approval
• 535 Jefferson Avenue – Shed installed without Zoning and HDRB Approval
Archives for May 2021
Meet Benjamin Sullivan, New Town Planner
Benjamin Sullivan was born and raised outside of Alexandria, VA. He graduated from York College of Pennsylvania in 2010 with a bachelor’s degree in Political Science and is finishing up his master’s degree in City and Regional Planning.
Ben enjoys playing computer games, board games, D&D, reading horror and fantasy books, and hanging out with people. He has two cats, Theo and Daisy, that he loves very much and cause him no end of frustration.
Capital Projects working Phase III of Community Trail
Capital Projects Manager has received permission from Canonie Atlantic to remove a power pole on railroad property. According to the staff report, this will simplify relocation of a Peach Street power pole as part of Trail, Phase 3 construction, as well as clear out some of the visual clutter across Mason Avenue.
The town received Department of Environmental Quality approval of Stormwater Management and
Erosion and Sediment Control Plan for Community Trail, Phase III construction.
Other notes of interest include:
• Refining task order for PPEA utility consulting services.
• Working with Department of Wildlife Resources to draft new boat ramp agreement
• Prepared and submitted Joint Permit Application for installation of pilings required for boat
docking contest in the harbor.
• Completed Request for Proposals for architectural services for future town offices.
• Received one bid for repair/modification of the Central Park fountain.
The MakeHER Collective with a Market of 22 shops May 29th at Peach St Books
Peach Street Books will be hosting The MakeHER Collective with a Market of 22 shops. The event will take place in the parking lot will be full of art and design and women-led makers.
Saturday, May 29, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
401 Mason Ave, Cape Charles, VA 23310
This regional group of creative women formed a collective to support one another and share knowledge to get business done better.
Their products include everything from woodworking to acrylic home goods, from colorful clay jewelry to hand-made driftwood poetry.
Pet of the Week: Meet Otis
Meet Otis!
Hi, I’m Otis and I am only about 1 year old, weigh 20 lbs, and am already neutered. I tested negative for heartworms and have started prevention.I am a good looking Beagle, even if I say it myself. I can be slightly shy when first meeting someone new, but warm up pretty quickly.
I will need patience while potty training, and maybe some house manners, too.I have been going outside with the gal I came in with, Ava, and we get along just fine, but haven’t been around other dogs yet, nor tested around cats.
If interested in adopting me, email shorespca@gmail.com to request an application as we are not open for viewing due to COVID-19. We schedule visits after going over applications.
Riverside Updates Visitation Restrictions
To protect the health of patients, team members and the community, Riverside on the Eastern Shore is updating its visitation restrictions for inpatients.
Effective May 19, 2021, hospital inpatients who are confirmed to be free of COVID-19 may have two visitors each day, and both visitors may be in the patient’s room at the same time. Mother/Baby patients may have one support person/birthing partner plus one visitor.
The following visiting restrictions are still in place:
- No visitors are allowed for patients with confirmed or suspected COVID-19.
- No visitors are allowed for patients receiving infusion at the Riverside Shore Cancer Center.
- Visiting hours for inpatients are 9 a.m. until 7 p.m.
- One visitor may accompany an adult emergency department patient once the patient is settled in a treatment room.
- Two parent/guardian companions may accompany a pediatric emergency department patient.
- One support person may accompany an outpatient who is having surgery.
- One support person may accompany an outpatient for a doctor’s visit if the companion is essential to patient care.
- For visitors to patients who are at the end-of-life, exceptions will be made on a case-by-case basis.
- All visitors are required to check in with Registration in the lobby of the hospital, cancer center or doctor’s office.
- All visitors and outpatients continue to be required to wear a mask covering their nose and mouth and to observe social distancing.
Entry into Riverside Shore Memorial Hospital after 6 p.m. is routed through the Emergency Room entrance.
For more information about COVID-19 and Riverside Health System’s response, visit riversideonline.com/covid-19.
Lost Dog found on Fisher Rd. in Parksley
Lost Dog found on Fisher Rd. in Parksley. If you know this dog or can help, please call the Esracf Melfa facility to find out how to reclaim your dog 757-787-7091.
History Notes this week of May 16
325AD: Convocation of the First Council of Nicea, one of the earliest attempts to define and formalize Christian church doctrine. It was ordered by Roman emperor Constantine I as a result of a number of competing heresies that were confusing the core truths of Christianity across the empire. 1800 bishops were invited, and anywhere from 250-318 attended. They worked through and resolved a number of significant issues, including the nature of the deity of Christ, condemnation of certain heresies, setting the process for dating Easter, and creating the first draft of what we know now as the Nicean Creed.
577AD: Death of Saint Brendan the Navigator, the Irish monk whose legendary travels in a leather currach helped establish the idea of a lush and inhabited island across the sea from Europe. “St. Brendan’s Island” often shows up on early maps; one school of thought believes it indicates that Brendan was actually the first European to make landfall in North America. He remains the patron saint of sailors and navigators.
1096: In the beginning of the unauthorized crusade led by Peter the Hermit, his unruly mob swarms into the Jewish section of Worms, Germany and begins a pogrom that leaves over 900 dead.
1499: Catherine of Aragon- the same Spanish royalty whom we keep reading about throughout the year- is married by proxy to Arthur, Prince of Wales, son of English King Henry VII. She is 14. He is 13. They have been legally betrothed* for ten years already, the Tudors of England and the Trastamaras of Aragon & Castile reasoning that a marriage of their two families would provide a solid diplomatic bulwark against the territorial claims on both countries by the Valois dynasty of France.
1506: Death of Christopher Columbus, in Valladolid, Spain, thus beginning another adventure regarding the movements of his corporeal remains around the world. He was initially buried in Valladolid, and then was moved to a monastery in Seville. At the request of his son Diego, who had been governor of Hispaniola, his remains were then moved back across the sea to Santo Domingo. When the French took over the island in 1795, the remains were moved to Havana, and then after the Spanish-American War in 1898, they were moved again to the cathedral in Seville, where they remain today (we think). The Dominican Republic maintains a huge memorial tomb they call the Faro a Colon (Columbus Lighthouse) in which is buried a small lead box, discovered in Santo Domingo in 1877, inscribed with “Don Christopher Columbus” and containing bone fragments and a bullet. Recent DNA sampling between the bones and Columbus’ descendants is inconclusive.
1532: Sir Thomas More resigns as England’s Lord High Chancellor, his second attempt to leave Henry VIII’s court over the issue of papal versus royal supremacy. The sovereign is not amused. More’s “season” approaches its end.
1536: Death of Anne Boleyn (b.1501), Queen Consort of King Henry VIII, beheaded after conviction on charges of adultery, high treason, and incest.
1568: Queen Elizabeth I of England orders the arrest of her cousin Mary, Queen of Scots.
1792: Opening bell on the New York Stock Exchange.
1795: Birth of Baltimore businessman and philanthropist Johns Hopkins (d.1873). One of the all-time wealthiest men in the United States, Hopkins was a keen businessman, parlaying a dry goods business into enough capital that he could invest in the nascent railroad industry, most notably the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, whose smashing success sealed his fortune. Fortunately for the rest of us, Hopkins left a huge endowment to the university and medical school that now bears his name, to say nothing of the rest of his artistic and cultural legacies.
1801: Birth of William Seward (d.1872), Secretary of State in the Lincoln Administration, and the official at Lincoln’s deathbed who announced to the press, “Now he belongs to the ages.” In the Andrew Johnson Administration, Seward became the chief advocate of the United States’ purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867. The popularly remembered “Seward’s Folly” cost the country $7,200,000.00, or 2 cents per acre.
1802: Napoleon Bonaparte initiates the French Legion of Honor award. It is the France’s highest decoration, available for military and civilians who exhibit extraordinary courage or accomplishment in the performance of their duties. It is specifically designed to not confer a title of nobility- the Revolution did away with all that- nor is it infused with any sense of religious legitimacy- the Revolution did away with all that, too. It is explicitly secular (using a 5-pointed star instead of a stylized cross) and based solely on merit, available to all, regardless of birth. The Legion remains active to this day as a functional body of the government, with the President as its head.
1802: Napoleon Bonaparte, acting as First Secretary of the French Directory, re-establishes slavery in French colonies, where it had previously been repealed in 1794 by an early decree of the French Revolution. Many of the colonies, particularly in Saint-Domingue (Haiti), rebel violently at this move. France’s inability to suppress the slave revolt there convinced Napoleon that he could no longer hold onto his American possessions, leading to his eventual decision to sell all of Louisiana to the United States a year later.
1845: The Franklin Expedition– Under the leadership of Arctic explorer John Franklin, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror depart the River Thames with 134 men on what they hope will be a conclusive discovery and transit of the elusive Northwest Passage. They are never heard from again. Their disappearance captures the imagination and curiosity of Great Britain, and multiple rescue and recovery expeditions are launched to find out what happened. Eventually, bits and pieces of evidence are found, including the emaciated and partially cannibalized corpses of several expedition members. The ships remain unlocated for over 150 years, although the documents recovered in earlier searches confirm they had proceeded well into the icy archipelago of northern Canada before they were completely iced in. In 2005, Canada launched a “Franklin 150” expedition using highly technical sensing equipment to search for the ships, in part to solve the historical puzzle and in part to affirm Canadian sovereignty claims in the high north. The search paid off in September, 2014, when Canadian PM Stephen Harper confirmed that the teams had discovered and conclusively identified the wreckage of Terror in the Queen Maude Gulf off the Adelaide Peninsula.
1860: Opening day of the Republican National Convention in Chicago. Springfield lawyer and former Member of Congress Abraham Lincoln defeats the front-runner New Yorker William Seward on the third ballot.
1861: Opening shots in the Battle of Sewell’s Point. Two Federal gunboats from Fort Monroe are dispatched to investigate Confederate activity across the water at Sewell’s Point. When they see two artillery pieces and the beginnings of fortified breastworks, they open fire and scatter the men working there. USS Monticello remains in place overnight and re-commences firing in the morning. The Confederate battery answers back. There are no fatalities on either side. The Confederate position is abandoned a year later when Norfolk is evacuated.
1863: General U.S. Grant completely surrounds Vicksburg, Mississippi and begins to lay siege to the city.
1868: President Andrew Johnson is acquitted on his impeachment trial by a single vote in the U.S. Senate.
1873: San Francisco tailor Levi Strauss patents a rugged style of denim trouser, fastened with copper rivets.
1879: Birth in Danville, Virginia of Nancy Langhorne (d.1964), who rose socially and politically to become The Right Honorable Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor. On the accession of her husband Waldorf Astor to the House of Lords, she ran for election for his Commons seat and won, becoming the first woman to be seated in that chamber. She was an exceptionally vocal MP, particularly during the buildup to the Second World War. After a tumultuous period of scathing critiques of just about everyone in the political spectrum, she retired in 1945, but remained in the public eye as something of a curmudgeon until her death. She is especially remembered for her acerbic wit. No-one was immune. A few quotes pulled from the estimable Wikipedia: “I married beneath me. All women do.” “One reason why I don’t drink is because I wish to know when I am having a good time.” “We women talk too much, but even then we don’t tell half what we know.”
1886: Death of John Deere (b.1804), American blacksmith who invented and successfully marketed the first cast steel plow.
1881: Birth of Mustafa Kemel Ataturk (d.1938), the First President of the Turkish Republic. General-Pasha of the Ottoman army during the Great War, he was in command of the Turkish forces that held the ANZAC invasion of Gallipoli (DLH 4/25) to nothing more than a toehold until they withdrew under fire nine months later. He then commanded Ottoman armies both in the Levant and on the northern reaches of Anatolia against the Russians. After the war, he served as Aide-de-Camp in the Sublime Porte during the Allied occupation of Constantinople and Izmir as the British and French worked to divide up the outer reaches of the Ottoman Empire. By June of 1919, he had had enough of external meddling, and began a two-pronged Army revolt- both militarily and politically- that eventually led to the establishment in October, 1923 of the explicitly secular Turkish state as we know it today, or at least as we knew it until the current demi-Islamist party got voted into power a few years back. Ataturk is constitutionally the only person who will ever be permitted to assume that title, which means, “Father of Turkey.”
1896: Providing yet more proof that the U.S. Supreme Court is capable of error, the Court issues on this day a decision in Plessy v. Ferguson that “separate but equal” facilities for different races is legal.
1897: Birth of Phoenix. Arizona native Frank Luke (d.1918). World War I American fighter Ace and Medal of Honor winner, he was second only to the great Eddie Rickenbacker for the number of confirmed kills by an American pilot. Luke’s fearlessness and airmanship led him to focus on destroying German observation balloons, and earned him the moniker of “The Balloon Buster.” One would think that diving a screaming fighter in towards a huge, immobile gasbag would not be much of a challenge, but one would be gravely mistaken in that assumption: the balloons were not only surrounded by dozens of pre-loaded light artillery pieces aiming straight up, each one of their ascents was also covered by a flight of German fighter planes flying high cover overhead. Luke and his wingman perfected the technique of diving out of the sun and making repeated passes at the balloon until its hydrogen finally burst into flames and plunged to earth. His total count was 14 balloons and four aeroplanes, all shot down in the course of only 10 sorties over 8 days. Rickenbacker himself called Luke the “…the most daring aviator and the greatest fighter pilot of the entire war.” Luke Air Force Base in the Phoenix suburb of Glendale is named for him.
1918: As a companion bill to its recently passed Espionage Act, Congress passes, and President Wilson signs, the Sedition Act. It makes it illegal to criticize, e.g.: to“…willfully utter, print, write or publish any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language” about the U.S. government during time of war. In addition to a $10,000 fine and 20 years in prison, the Postmaster General was tasked to halt mail deliveries to and from any person convicted or associated with a person convicted of the act. Over 1500 were charged and more than 1000 were convicted. Wilson’s Attorney General sought to keep a peacetime version in place after the war, but Congress repealed it in December, 1920.
1920: Birth of the late Polish theologian Karol Wojtyla (d.2005).
1921: The US Congress passes the Emergency Quota Act, limiting legal immigration to a small percentage of the current nationalities then residing in the country. The act effectively shut off the flow of immigrants who were streaming into the country from southern Europe and the Balkans.
1927: With pressure building from competitors, Charles Lindbergh takes off from Roosevelt Field in Long Island in his heavily laden, custom-built Ryan aircraft, the Spirit of St. Louis, in an attempt to become the first to fly solo across the Atlantic, New York to Paris. After only a few hours of fitful sleep last night, he carries a thermos of coffee and two sandwiches into the drippy New York sky. The country holds its collective breath to see if the young daredevil will make it…
1932: American aviatrix Amelia Earhart takes off from Newfoundland, enroute to Ireland, in an attempt to become the first female to solo across the Atlantic. The country again holds its collective breath, wondering if the young daredevil will make it…
1940: The end of the “Sitzkrieg.” Eight months after Germany’s invasion of Poland and the immediate declaration of war that followed by the western Allied powers, neither Germany nor the Allies have made any significant military moves against each other. The period is known by many different names: Sitzkrieg was the German’s pun on their Blitzkrieg strategy; Churchill called it the Twilight War; Brits in general called it the Bore War (pun on the relatively recent Boer War in South Africa); the Poles, who were on the receiving end of it, called it the Strange War; and the French, anticipating what was to come, referred to it as the drole du guerre, the Bizarre War. All this uncomfortable humor came to a sudden stop on the 10th of May when Chamberlain resigned, Churchill became Prime Minister, and Germany began its advance west into the Low Countries. The Nazi armies enter and occupy Brussels, Belgium, and concerns grow about the impending invasion of France.
1940: The first prisoners arrive at the new Nazi concentration camp in Auschwitz, Poland.
1941: German paratroopers invade Crete. The Brits evacuate to fight another day.
1943(a): The B-17 Memphis Belle flies its 25th combat mission over occupied Europe, a bomb run against German submarine pens at L’Orient, France. A documentary camera crew recorded the mission and the crew celebrations afterward, which became part of a full-length feature film. The aircraft and crew returned to the States and began a publicity tour around the country in support of War Bonds.
1943(b): A dramatic RAF raid by “The Dam Busters” smashes three dams in Germany’s industrial heartland. The crews trained in secret for three months perfecting the technique of “skip bombing” to get through German defenses.
1944: After four months of bitter battle and near-continuous bombing and shelling that obliterated the medieval mountaintop monastery, the German redoubt at Monte Cassino is captured by the Allies. Polish forces lead the climb to the shattered Italian hilltop and raise their flag.
1954: The Supreme Court hands down its decision in Brown vs. The Board of Education of Topeka, overturning the separate-but-equal doctrine previously codified by the Supreme Court’s 1896 Plessey vs. Ferguson decision.
1980: At 0832PDT, Mount St. Helens detonates with an eruption that lasts over 10 hours. The pyroclastic flow, landslides, ash, fire and earthquakes destroy 210 square miles of southwest Washington state wilderness. 57 people are killed, including Mr. Harry Randall Truman, 84 year old denizen of Spirit Lake, who refused repeated entreaties to leave his lodge in the months before the mountain blew. “If the mountain goes, I’m going with it…” It did, and he did; his lodge was buried under 150 feet of ash and landslide debris.
1987: USS Stark (FFG-31) is struck by an Iraqi Exocet missile while monitoring shipping in the Persian Gulf during the Iran-Iraq war. 37 sailors are killed, 21 wounded.
Get Ready for Pain: Labor Shortage is Serious
In this week’s Shore Daily News, Ted Shockley wrote a great piece about how the labor shortage is affecting businesses on the Eastern Shore. While the shortage on the Eastern Shore is acute, it is not unique. It is happening all across the United States.
Labor shortages are having a strong impact on the entire US economy. Today’s conditions could easily develop into one of the worst labor shortages of the last 50 years.
A report from the The Conference Board notes that the extreme shift in labor market conditions in the past decade is not a coincidence, but the result of a perfect storm in which several long-term trends have converged simultaneously.
- The massive retirement of the large baby boomer generation is bringing growth in the working-age population to a halt—a trend that will continue through 2030. This is the main reason why this era of shortages is so different. Never before have such a large number of retirements and almost zero growth in the working-age population happened before.
- The working-age population of noncollege graduates is already shrinking. As a growing share of young adults are enrolling in four-year colleges, the number of working-age people with a bachelor’s degree is solidly and uninterruptedly increasing by about 2 percent annually. On the flip side, the number without a bachelor’s degree is shrinking.
- The recovery in labor force participation has been disappointing. Overall, the tight labor market has led to an increase in labor force participation in recent years. But the improvement has not been remotely fast enough to prevent the labor market from tightening and has been somewhat disappointing, especially for men, and especially compared to other advanced economies in the last decade.
- Compared with earlier decades, young men without a college degree are less likely to be in the labor force. That decline in participation is partly because they are much more likely to be single, living with their parents, and have less of a need to earn income. These trends are more structural than cyclical and will be hard to reverse.
- The large drop in labor force participation of 16-24-year-olds. While good from a societal perspective since it is a result of higher education attainment at this age, the steep decline in the labor force participation of young people (aged 16 to 24) significantly reduces the supply of workers in occupations that typically hire young and less-educated workers.
The demand for blue-collar workers continues to grow, partly due to the unprecedented slowdown in labor productivity in the past decade. This is really a problem in manufacturing, where labor productivity has remained essentially flat since 2010.
Also, e-commerce has pushed the demand for other blue-collar and manual services workers such as in transportation and warehousing industries, which have increased by over 20 percent, compared to 9 percent in the total economy. Employment in personal care and health support jobs has been increasing.
The tightening labor market has already affected hiring and retention. Employers are hiring less-educated workers, which is partially responsible for historically high levels of concern about labor quality. Employee retention rates are declining due to increased employment opportunities, where voluntary quit rates are already well above 2007 rates.
The most basic and intuitive way to solve labor shortages is to raise wages. This is the most used solution for both recruitment and retention challenges. Wage acceleration is occurring in blue-collar and manual services jobs. Wage growth for management and professional workers, which includes close to 40 percent of the workforce and most of total compensation, is not rising as quickly.
Companies are using a mix of solutions to solve the problem.
The situation is only going to deteriorate in the coming decade as working-age population growth will be closer to zero and the decline in the number of noncollege graduates will accelerate.
To maintain the growth rate in standard of living, the US either needs to greatly improve labor productivity growth and labor force participation or introduce more immigrants to the country’s labor supply.
Restoring Fish Habitat in Virginia
NOAA – Tucked between the Rappahannock River and the York River, Virginia’s Middle Peninsula is mostly off the beaten path. While the Middle Peninsula is not far to the east of the busy Interstate 95 corridor and Virginia’s capital, Richmond, it remains mostly rural. It includes thousands of acres of ecologically valuable wetlands, forests, pastures, rivers, streams, and bays.
Many families have lived in the area for generations. Other people have discovered it more recently and have built second homes there as vacation spots. Some residents still make their living by farming, forestry, or fishing. That’s thanks to a fairly healthy ecosystem, which supports life both on land and in the water. Both residents and visitors enjoy the land and water and appreciate the area’s maritime culture and history.
But as in many other areas in the Chesapeake Bay, the Middle Peninsula faces economic and environmental challenges, and the future is uncertain. It’s important that we take care of the Middle Peninsula. The area experiences frequent flooding and coastal erosion. These events can affect the local economy, which depends on a vibrant ecosystem. It’s also important to consider threats like pollution and runoff, and the effects they could have on creeks, rivers, and the Chesapeake Bay. NOAA and partners are looking for ways to keep these special places healthy.
One of the ways NOAA is doing this is by helping to restore nearshore fish habitat. Fish, crabs, and other species use several different kinds of habitat. Sometimes they need the hiding places that oyster reefs offer. Other times they like to hang out along shorelines, sometimes in submerged aquatic grasses.
Together with partners, NOAA is working to establish 438 acres of healthy oyster reef in the Piankatank River and 200 acres of reef in the York River. These reefs will not only provide habitat for critters, but because oysters are filter feeders, they will help remove excess nutrients from the water. Better water quality benefits fish, crabs, and humans, too!
They are also pitching in on efforts to design and build climate-resilient nearshore restoration projects. Developing solid design plans is a key step before building projects to support fish habitat and wetlands. We have funded two design projects, and our colleagues at the Chesapeake Bay Trust and the Virginia Coastal Zone Management Program have funded work, too. These projects will also reduce shoreline erosion from coastal storms. Project designs have been developed for locations including the Yorktown Naval Weapons Station and Hog Island.
The Yorktown Naval Weapons Station nearshore restoration design used the latest science on oyster restoration for fish habitat and shoreline protection. The Department of Defense recently selected it to receive implementation funding. We look forward to progress as this and other projects move into the implementation phase over the next year or so.
Supporting the Local Economy
The Middle Peninsula has higher-than-average poverty rates, and a majority of residents must commute to outside of the area for work. Businesses and homes in some areas are at risk due to increased flooding, sea level rise, and shoreline erosion.
Habitat restoration projects will enhance seafood production and help coastal communities be more resilient to the effects of climate change. They can preserve real estate value by reducing shoreline erosion, and boost tourism and recreation by protecting places people enjoy spending their spare time. All of these elements boost the financial bottom line of the Middle Peninsula.
Bringing Partners Together for a Sustainable Effort
It will take strategic partnerships to do all this work. For example, we help with the York River and Small Coastal Basins Roundtable. The Roundtable is a group managed by the Virginia–Chesapeake Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve that brings local and regional partners together. They work on topics that are important for the area: water quality, habitat, resilience, and stewardship. Our NOAA Chesapeake Bay Office created a subgroup of the Roundtable, the Habitat Restoration Steering Committee, to focus on nearshore restoration projects.
And as NOAA has learned from their work in the Choptank Habitat Focus Area, building a strong community of partners can lead to larger-scale and more collaborative projects. These longer-term strategic partnerships will last beyond a few restoration projects to have a sustained impact.
Last updated byNOAA Chesapeake Bay Office on May 20, 2021
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