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19 Thursday, April 11, 2013<br />
The <strong>County</strong> <strong>Times</strong><br />
To The Editor<br />
Support Hospice<br />
This Weekend<br />
The 18th Annual Run and Fun Walk for Hospice of St. Mary’s will<br />
be held this Saturday, April 13th. The walk and race will begin at 8:30<br />
a.m. at the Governmental Center in Leonardtown and take walkers and<br />
runners through the streets of Historic Leonardtown. It is the largest<br />
run and fun walk in <strong>Southern</strong> <strong>Maryland</strong>.<br />
The most important reason to participate is that 100 percent of the<br />
money raised will benefit Hospice of St. Mary’s in its mission to provide<br />
care and comfort to terminally ill patients and their families and to<br />
provide bereavement support to those families and to the community.<br />
I believe that everyone in their lifetime will know someone who will<br />
receive a heartbreaking diagnosis of cancer or a diagnosis of a terminal<br />
illness. Hospice will be there if you need them. There to offer comfort,<br />
compassion and support.<br />
Please come out and support this event. Walk or run this Saturday,<br />
April 13th. You will enjoy a fabulous brunch, great music and most<br />
importantly you will be giving back to your community. You can make<br />
a difference. See you there.<br />
Patty Belanger<br />
Hollywood<br />
Barber Not Honorable<br />
This is a response to the April 4th article in “A Journey Through<br />
Time” by Linda Reno, as her stories are usually very interesting, but I<br />
say she left out some important parts of that story.<br />
The man Thomas Barber who owned the Sotterley Plantation for<br />
just four years in 1822-1826 was “well educated” as she said, but he<br />
was educated as a white racist and white supremacists who held captive<br />
African people and their descendents as slaves. He claimed to be a<br />
Christian while his wealth was sustained from that cruelty and exploitation<br />
of innocent human beings.<br />
The story said that he had four different wives and one after another<br />
each new wife died, died, died, died, so his obituary said he was<br />
a “kind and affectionate husband” while it appears more accurate that<br />
in more pronounced ways he was really the very worst of husbands, as<br />
much as being a dishonorable man.<br />
JP Cusick<br />
Hollywood<br />
Legal Notice<br />
Dominion Cove Point LNG LP,<br />
Proposes Cove Point Liquefaction Project<br />
On April 1, 2013, Dominion Cove Point LNG, LP (DCP) filed with the Federal Energy Regulatory<br />
Commission (FERC), in Docket No. CP13-113-000, an Application for authority to construct, modify,<br />
and operate facilities used for the export of natural gas under Section 3 of the NGA, and an Abbreviated<br />
Application for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity under Section 7 of the NGA (the “Application”).<br />
This Application seeks authorization for certain facilities located in Calvert <strong>County</strong>, <strong>Maryland</strong><br />
and Fairfax and Loudoun Counties, Virginia which comprise the Cove Point Liquefaction Project<br />
(“Project”). DCP seeks authorization for this Project by February 1, 2014. The details of this proposal are<br />
more fully set forth in the Application that is on file with the Commission and open to public inspection.<br />
Specifically, DCP is seeking authorization to add the capability to provide gas liquefaction services for<br />
the export of LNG to the Export Customers, who will provide their own gas supplies. The proposed Project,<br />
combined with existing facilities, will provide a bi-directional service of import and export of LNG<br />
at the Cove Point LNG Terminal. The proposed liquefaction facilities are expected to have a nameplate<br />
capacity of up to 5.75 million metric tons per annum of LNG. The Project does not include the addition<br />
of any LNG storage tanks or any increase in the size and/or frequency of LNG marine traffic currently<br />
authorized for the Cove Point LNG Terminal.<br />
DCP is also requesting authorization under Section 7(c) of the NGA for the Section 7 Facilities, to<br />
add compression to the existing Pleasant Valley Compressor Station and to modify the existing Pleasant<br />
Valley M&R site and existing Loudoun M&R site located in Fairfax and Loudoun Counties, Virginia,<br />
respectively. The proposed additional compression at the Pleasant Valley Compressor Station and<br />
modifications to the Pleasant Valley M&R site and Loudoun M&R site, together with the use of turnback<br />
transportation capacity, will enable DCP to transport on a firm basis 860,000 Dth/day of natural gas from<br />
existing pipeline interconnects near the west end of the Cove Point Pipeline to the LNG Terminal for the<br />
Export Customers.<br />
The filing may also be viewed on the web at http://www.ferc.gov using the “eLibrary” link. Enter the<br />
docket number excluding the last three digits in the docket number field to access the document. For<br />
assistance, please contact FERC <strong>Online</strong> Support at FERC<strong>Online</strong>Support@ferc.gov or toll free at (866)<br />
208-3676, or TTY, contact (202) 502-8659.<br />
The Project name and docket number are important to know if you want to contact either DCP or FERC<br />
with questions concerning this Project. The name of this Project is the Cove Point Liquefaction Project<br />
and the docket number is CP13-113-000. Please use both the Project name and docket number in any<br />
communication with DCP or the Commission.<br />
DCP is a limited partnership organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware with its<br />
principal place of business at 2100 Cove Point Road, Lusby, <strong>Maryland</strong>, 20657, and offices at 701 East Cary<br />
Street, Richmond, Virginia, 23219. DCP owns the Cove Point LNG Terminal, as well as an 88-mile gas<br />
pipeline (i.e., Cove Point Pipeline) connecting the LNG Terminal to the interstate pipeline grid. DCP is<br />
a subsidiary of Dominion Resources, Inc. (“DRI”), one of the nation’s largest producers and transporters<br />
of energy. DRI is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia<br />
with its principal place of business at 120 Tredegar Street, Richmond, Virginia, 23219.<br />
A separate notice concerning the project is being mailed to each affected landowner and to the government<br />
agencies involved in the Project. A copy of the Application can be viewed at the following libraries:<br />
Legal Notice<br />
Should’ve<br />
Spotlighted<br />
Jack Russell<br />
On the April 4th edition of the <strong>Times</strong>, I noticed Ed Morgan (sic.)<br />
commented on the county budget. It appears he was speaking for all<br />
the commissioners. We have commissioner president, Jack Russell. If<br />
any comments are made representing all the commissioners it should be<br />
given by the president. Put the commissioner president in the spotlight,<br />
not Ed Morgan.<br />
Louis C. Dunn Jr.<br />
Lexington Park<br />
Notice is hereby given that the following vessel has apparently been<br />
abandoned for 30 days on the property of James M. and Alba M. Rosenbluth,<br />
45341 Nat’s Creek Rd, Hollywood, MD, 20636. The vessel is described<br />
as a grey 1987 Winner 18’ bass boat with trailer, MD registration<br />
number MD1175AS, hull identification number WNRT5004K687.<br />
Application for title will be made in accordance with Section 8-722 of<br />
the Annotated Code of <strong>Maryland</strong>, Natural Resources Article, if this vessel<br />
is not claimed and removed from the above property within 30 days<br />
of this notice. Please contact (703) 628-9234 to arrange for removal of<br />
the vessel from the property.<br />
4/11/2013<br />
• Calvert Library Prince<br />
Frederick<br />
30 Duke Street<br />
Prince Frederick, MD 20678<br />
Phone: (410) 535-0291<br />
• Richard Byrd Library<br />
7250 Commerce Street<br />
Springfield, VA 22150<br />
Phone: (703) 451-8055<br />
• Rust Library<br />
380 Old Waterford Road<br />
Leesburg, VA 20176<br />
Phone: (703) 777-0323<br />
For additional information,<br />
including a copy of the application<br />
and a publication called<br />
“An Interstate Natural Gas Facility<br />
on My Land What Do I<br />
Need To Know” is available<br />
through the FERC’s website<br />
at www.ferc.gov. In addition,<br />
you may contact FERC’s Office<br />
of External Affairs at 202-<br />
502-6088 or see http://www.<br />
ferc.gov. To contact DCP about<br />
the Project, contact Amanda<br />
Prestage at (866) 319-3382 (toll<br />
free) with questions regarding<br />
the Application.<br />
4/11/2013