Washington
Washington County deed transfers for June 30 – July 7, 2024
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The following deed transfers, for June 30 – July 7, 2024, in Washington County are public record in the Maryland Department of Assessment and Taxation office:
Residential:
- Tri State Property Buyer LLC to Travis Kelley, 339 S. Artizan St., Williamsport, $360,000
- Norman Rosemary Nissel to Marta Aguilar, 18023 Putter Drive, Hagerstown, $240,000
- Andrew Paul Branzell to AZM Clan LLC, 10116 St. George Circle, Hagerstown, $240,000
- Freedom Hill Homes LLC to Brian Howard Robertson, 13924 Patriot Way, Hagerstown, $350,000
- Teresa Serrano to Sundeep Davuluri, 20231 Capital Lane, Hagerstown, $350,000
- Mantua Homes LLC to Monika Thosani, 17612 Basalt Way, Hagerstown, $320,000
- Philip Callaghan to Daniil Naumenko, 12904 Nittany Lion Circle, Hagerstown, $490,000
- Ned Lucas to Aric Metzger, 13608 Rock Maple Court, Hagerstown, $462,500
- Fred and Bonnie Lowman to Linda Nahm, 9708 Lock Tender Lane, Williamsport, $460,000
- Roland and Deborah Baker to John Burgan, 14724 St. Paul Road, Clear Spring, $415,000
- Scott and Karen Hamilton to Carlos Gonzalez Guardado, 17916 Golf View Drive, Hagerstown, $290,000
- Nicholas Suggs to Christine Skeens, 13726 Patriot Way, Hagerstown, $390,000
- FB Real Estate LLC to John Strott, 119 E. Lee St., Hagerstown, $184,000
- Jeffrey and Michelle Short Sr. to Ronald Gaither, 1125 W. Irvin Ave., Hagerstown, $356,000
- Nancy James to Stefany Madai Amaya Fuentes, 1050 Matthew Court, Hagerstown, $228,000
- FL BJC LLC to Dremonarc Enterprises International LLC, 422 N. Locust St., Hagerstown, $280,000
- Rabia Khalid to Ludwin Vasquez Rivas, 749 Monet Drive, Hagerstown, $290,000
- Eric Barr to Dylan Altman, 12417 Cedar Ridge Road, Williamsport, $275,000
- Yardworx LLC to Christopher Achuenu, 735 Washington Ave., Hagerstown, $300,000
- Yardworx LLC to Christopher Achuenu, 737 Washington Ave., Hagerstown, $300,000
- Naveedullah Ayoub to Andrew Stuart Leon, 231 West Side Ave., Hagerstown, $239,000
- Francis Mwaura to Alander Paulette Ricketts, 1039 Dual Place, Hagerstown, $300,000
- NVR Inc. to Josephine Azonfack Djifack, 6 Patti Lane, Hagerstown, $435,860
- Jacqueline Gosche to Bruce Alan Whittenburg, 13105 Primrose Lane, Hagerstown, $400,000
- Ned Ardinger to Mark Gary Scialdone, 1012 Lindsay Lane, Hagerstown, $319,900
- Kenneth Grimm Jr. to Reel and Row Properties LLC, 16424 Leon Grimm Drive, Hagerstown, $1,200,000
- Kenneth Grimm Jr. to Reel and Row Properties LLC, 16428 Leon Grimm Drive, Hagerstown, $1,200,000
Non-Residential:
- EWS LLC to Julian Etches, 180 Eastern Blvd. North 188, Hagerstown, $1,375,000
- David Lyles Living Trust to 1145 Omega LLC, 1145 Omega Drive, Hagerstown, $2,300,000
- Lloyd Allen Wynn to Monsurat Akinsanya, 63 E. Antietam St., Hagerstown, $520,000
- Lloyd Allen Wynn to Monsurat Akinsanya, 65 E. Antietam St., Hagerstown, $520,000
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Washington
Harold Washington fought for voting rights. Here we go again
My grandmother met Harold Washington once. I was young when she told me the story, so I don’t remember every detail. What I remember is what she kept: a mug he gave her, which she held onto until the day she died.
I grew up on South Shore Drive, sold the Sun-Times for a quarter at a paper stand at 75th and Stony Island, right in front of the KFC, and graduated from Hyde Park Academy. I did not know then that I would spend my career studying the civil rights terrain Washington had walked. But I understood, even as a child, what it meant that he was there.
I am thinking about him now.
Harold Washington served barely two terms in Congress before becoming Chicago’s first Black mayor in 1983. In that brief time on Capitol Hill, he did something that does not get remembered often enough. From the House Judiciary Committee in 1982, he helped lead the extension of key sections of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, including protections requiring jurisdictions with documented histories of racial discrimination to obtain federal approval before changing their voting rules.
The Congressional Black Caucus chose Washington to manage that bill on the House floor, where he spent seven weeks in hearings fighting to keep the enforcement mechanisms that protected Black voters from states that would prefer to be rid of them.
He won that fight.
Now, more than four decades later, we are fighting it again.
I am recalling Mayor Washington because of the efforts by President Donald Trump and many Republicans to pass the SAVE America Act, a proposed federal election law that would make it much tougher for many citizens to vote and is currently stalled in the U.S. Senate.
States curtail voting rights
Republican governors in Florida, Mississippi, Utah and South Dakota have already signed bills requiring documentary proof of citizenship for voter registration or citizenship checks, with similar legislation passed in Tennessee. Five states, Arizona, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming, will have show-your-papers requirements in place for the 2026 midterms.
In New Hampshire, the law has already produced its intended effect: In 2025 town elections, married women who did not have their marriage license on hand could not register, with at least one woman required to come back three times.
The infrastructure of exclusion does not require a federal law to take effect. It requires the threat of one, and the states that were waiting have already moved.
Washington would have recognized this immediately. The Voting Rights Act extension he managed in 1982 was not a symbolic gesture. It was a structural intervention, closing the door on states that wanted to escape accountability for their documented histories of discrimination.
The SAVE Act opens that door again, not with a return to literacy tests or poll taxes as such, but with a documentary requirement that functions identically: neutral on its face, devastating in its application and concentrated in its harm on the communities Washington spent his life trying to bring into the democratic process.
Washington’s 1983 mayoral campaign brought together Black voters on the South and West sides, Latino voters long excluded from the machine’s benefits and progressive white voters who believed Chicago could be something other than what it had always been.
His campaign was powered by a voter registration drive that added nearly 100,000 new voters to the rolls before the primary. He understood, instinctively and strategically, that expanding access to the ballot was not a prelude to political power. It was political power.
The SAVE Act would dismantle the registration infrastructure Black and Brown turnout campaigns depend on. Only 6% of voters register in person at an elections office. Washington’s coalition was built on the other 94%.
What Washington’s record demands of us
Washington deserves a reckoning, not a commemoration. He knew that formal equality was not enough, that the machinery of democratic participation had to be actively maintained against those who would narrow the circle.
His mug sat on my grandmother’s shelf for decades. She was not a politician. She was a Black woman on the South Side of Chicago who met a man running for mayor and felt, maybe for the first time, that he was talking to her. He gave her a mug. She kept it her whole life.
That is what is at stake. Not abstractions. People. The kind of people who keep a mug for decades because a politician made them feel like they mattered.
Harold Washington fought this battle once, from the Judiciary Committee floor, in seven weeks of hearings most people have forgotten. We are fighting it again, this time against a bill that would quietly push millions back out of the process, with six states already implementing versions of it before Congress even acts. The least we can do is remember who showed us how.
Donathan L. Brown, Ph.D., is an associate professor at Northeastern University, a former U.S. Fulbright professor, and the author of five books on civil rights and voting rights. A native of the South Side, he graduated from Hyde Park Academy.
Washington
Upriver Fire Near Spokane Triggers Evacuations For 12,000 Residents Amid Critical Fire Conditions
Washington state is currently experiencing an early-season flare-up of wildfire activity, particularly in the southeastern and central parts of the state, as well as the Upriver Fire, a fast-moving incident East of Spokane.
A combination of an ongoing statewide drought emergency and critical fire weather—including a strong, dry cold front with high wind gusts—has caused several fires to grow rapidly over the last few days.
The most significant other current active blazes include:
Omak Lake Road Fire: Things are moving fast up there right now. As of this afternoon (Wednesday, June 17), the Omak Lake Road Fire has officially merged with the nearby Kartar Fire, creating a massive blaze that has already burned roughly 6,500 acres on Colville Reservation land.
Tule Fire (Yakima Region): Ignited on June 14 south of Toppenish, this is currently the largest wildfire in the state, having ballooned to approximately 20,665 acres with 0% containment. It is burning primarily in dry grass and brush and has been producing a massive smoke plume that is impacting air quality throughout the Columbia River Gorge.
Juniper Dunes Fire (Franklin County): This fire has burned over 10,577 acres and is 10% contained. It has pushed into the challenging, roadless terrain of the Juniper Dunes Wilderness area, making ground access difficult for crews.
A Red Flag Warning remains in effect across much of Eastern Washington due to sustained high winds and low relative humidity, meaning any ongoing fires face an extreme risk of rapid spread, and new starts can ignite easily.
Is smoke from around the state forecasted to arrive in NCW?
Right now, North Central Washington is in the clear. The active wildfire smoke is staying well away from the Wenatchee Valley and surrounding areas, and local air quality remains firmly in the “Good” category.
The main reason for this breaks down to wind direction and fire locations:
Westerly Winds are Our Friend: Strong winds blowing from the west across the Cascades are actively dispersing air over NCW and pushing regional smoke eastward.
Where the Smoke is Heading Instead:
South: Earlier this week, massive plumes from the Tule Fire down in Yakima drifted west/southwest into the Columbia River Gorge and Portland-Vancouver metro.
East: With the current wind shift, smoke from the large fires in the Columbia Basin (like Tule and Juniper Dunes) is now being carried east toward the Tri-Cities, Walla Walla, and the Palouse.
North/Northeast: Up north, the Kartar and Omak Lake fires east of Omak are causing localized downwind smoke impacts, but the smoke is drifting east toward Nespelem and the Coulee Dam rather than dropping south into Chelan or Douglas counties.
Because these breezy, dry conditions are expected to persist through the rest of the week, weather and air quality officials note that intermittent smoke impacts will mostly be a concern for communities situated directly downwind (east) of the active blazes.
Where can I look online to see where wildfire smoke is coming from?
A few years ago, I discovered a Canadian website that not only shows you where wildfire smoke is coming from, but also how the smoke forecast will affect you in the coming days. It comes from the BC Wildfire Service.
Click on this helpful wildfire smoke map and bookmark it.
A couple of things to know about this BC Wildfire Service website.
1) When you first find the smoke map, select the Smoke Forecast button.
The map will come to life, showing where current wind conditions are directing wildfire smoke and where it is forecast to travel in the coming days.
2) Since it’s a service of the BC Wildfire Service, it doesn’t provide any information on fires here in the US, but it does show where smoke is forecast to come from any wildfires north and south of the border.
Where can I find updated information about wildfires in Washington?
The Watch Duty app for any device.
The Washington DNR fire dashboard is active throughout the fire season and shows up-to-date information on wildfires affecting Washington state.
View a full-screen version of the DNR fire dashboard with this link.
Oregon Coast Getaway Photos
Oregon Coast Getaway Photos
Gallery Credit: KEVIN MILLER
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Gallery Credit: Stephen Lenz
Washington
Eastern Washington wildfire forces evacuations and destroys homes
SPOKANE, Wash. — High winds drove a wildfire into a Spokane neighborhood, forcing the evacuation of about 1,200 people and potentially damaging or destroying up to 15 structures, according to fire officials.
The Upriver Fire started at 12:17 p.m. Tuesday near Upriver Drive in northeast Spokane, said Fire District 9 spokesman Robert Gray.
“It moved rapidly up the hill and once it reach the top the wind shifted and it went right into the Northwoods neighborhood,” Gray said. Fire crews from Washington state and Idaho attacked the fire from the ground and air, but it quickly grew to 225 acres (.35 square miles) in an area called Beacon Hill.
The blaze was 10 percent contained by Wednesday morning, according to a report by the National Interagency Fire Center. The wind had died down overnight, but the fire was still burning on the ground, so there was potential to expand on Wednesday, said Isabelle Hoygaard, a spokesperson with the Washington state Department of Natural Resources.
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