Friday, July 10, 2026

Power outage at Montgomery Mall in Bethesda forces some businesses to close early


A power outage this evening inside Westfield Montgomery Mall in Bethesda forced some tenants to close early. Nordstrom was pitch black and boutiques like Victoria's Secret and White House | Black Market decided to close for the night. Some of the affected businesses regained power by 8:30, but the Apple Store was still turning customers away and directing them to come back tomorrow, despite having its power restored. 


Westfield released a statement within the last hour: "Due to a power outage, some stores at Westfield Montgomery are closing early today. We’re sorry for the interruption and appreciate your patience as we work to get things back to normal." We're seeing the failure of the Maryland electrical grid in real time, folks.





Maryland could face blackouts in 2027, utility CEO warns


The CEO of Exelon, parent company of Pepco and BGE, is warning that Maryland and other Northeast U.S. customers may be facing blackouts next year "due to a shortage of power plants," the Financial Times reports. "We came very close this past winter to having to curtail power for about 400,000 customers on some of the coldest days of the year," Calvin Butler told the FT. "And it's only getting worse." 

Electrical grid operator PJM, which supplies power to Pepco and BGE customers, reported a 6.5 gigawatt deficit last December. That deficit is anticipated to increase tenfold over the next decade, if more generation capacity is not added to the system.

Among the obvious causes of the failure to generate adequate power was Maryland elected officials' radical forced shutdown of 8 power plants statewide. But Butler brought up another devastating critique of Maryland legislators in his interview with the FT. It turns out that Exelon actually wants to construct new power plants in Maryland, but is being actively blocked from doing so by the state's limits on power plant ownership by utilities. In fact, legislators allowed two bills that would have allowed Exelon to move forward on new plants to die in committee.

Butler told the FT that legislators seem to be living in a different reality from the energy crisis Maryland is experiencing right now. "[R]ight now they don't perceive it as a crisis," Butler lamented. He said he is more optimistic that Delaware and New Jersey will update their rules on power plant ownership.

Thursday, July 09, 2026

Maryland drops to 36 on CNBC Top States for Business 2026 list, Virginia is #3


Maryland has become an even worse state to do business in over the last year, according to CNBC's Top States for Business 2026 list, which the cable TV business channel unveiled today. Moribund Maryland dropped four spots to #36 this year based on CNBC's criteria, which examine each state's infrastructure, economy, workforce, quality of life, cost of doing business, and technology and innovation. Virginia, by contrast, moved up to #3, and is perennially in the top 5 on this list.

Why is Maryland once again a bottom dweller, and sinking? The primary new factors are the state's IT tax, which has not only massively increased IT costs (including my own) for Maryland businesses, but has only increased the exodus of companies from the state. Maryland's highest profile infrastructure project, the Key Bridge replacement, has stalled out. That missing highway link not only remains a logistical nightmare for businesses large and small that relied on it, but only adds to Maryland's national notoriety as a state with inadequate infrastructure, and an ideological hostility to road construction. And after Maryland Governor Wes Moore and the state legislature used Zohran Mamdani slight-of-hand tactics to raid precious funds for a desperation one-year budget fix, S&P downgraded Maryland's long-term outstanding debt outlook from stable to negative.

Continuing to plague our state are our own elected officials. For another year, Montgomery County and Maryland officials failed to take any steps toward construction of the long-delayed new Potomac River crossing, which would give us the critically-needed direct access to Dulles International Airport that corporate executives demand (and currently get in Northern Virginia). In fact, our leaders proudly stand against the new bridge, which was supposed to have been constructed 50 years ago. Multiple highways planned to handle explosive housing growth that has already taken place over decades in Montgomery County not only remain unbuilt, but have been criminally removed from the master plan, a blatant dereliction of duty by our elected officials.

Electricity costs continue to skyrocket, again the direct result of actions by our elected officials. They forced the closure of 8 power plants statewide, and implemented clean power mandates. These buffoonish diktats brought us where we are now: not only unable to provide cheap and abundant energy for business, but unable to even provide sufficient electricity capacity to meet existing demand. This has required Maryland to import electricity at inflated boardwalk prices from out of state.

Maryland has only increased the tax burden on business, when our corporate tax rate was already not competitive for business. The Montgomery County Council not only implemented multiple tax hikes this year, including yet another property tax increase, but actually created new taxes amid an affordability crisis. And despite their minimum wage increases having been an utter catastrophe, ushering in the age of restaurants using touchscreens and fewer employees, the Marxist radicals on the Council are now poised to join the national bankruptcy movement that is calling for a $30 minimum wage. 


Yet another chance to change direction is quickly slipping through the fingers of MoCo and Maryland voters. Turnout in last month's primary election was humiliatingly small. The Banner, whose billionaire oligarch owner puts his news behind a paywall(!!) and is a well-known Democratic operative, actually posted a story on Facebook claiming Democratic Montgomery County Executive nominee Will Jawando "is expected to be sworn in as the next Montgomery County executive in December." In fact, The Banner wrote, Jawando "will almost certainly be sworn in as the next Montgomery County executive in December." 

The November general election hasn't even taken place, folks. This is classic voter suppression by The Banner: make voters feel hopeless. Why bother to vote when The Banner has told you the outcome is already known? "Democracy," right? At The Banner, democracy dies in a $50 million grant from the billionaire Democratic operative owner to run that propaganda outlet, which was warmly welcomed in Montgomery County by the very politicians who would fear a true journalistic examination of their true crimes and corruption. Fortunately, the Montgomery County and Maryland cartels don't control CNBC, and the results truly speak for themselves.

Wednesday, July 08, 2026

Dog vs. grass saga continues at Bethesda apartment tower


It's been a dog-eat-dog world for the grassy mounds that make up the green space on the promenade at the 8001 Woodmont apartment tower in Bethesda since the building opened. While many expected these grassy hills to be a park-like leisure space for adults and children, once residents started moving in, they quickly became a public restroom for neighborhood dogs, whose owners haven't always collected their canines' deposits. Along with the disgusting reality that the germs in the dog waste don't magically evaporate from the grass even if the solid material is picked up, the lush carpeted lawns became much less inviting to have your kids crawling around on, much less a spot for picnics or outdoor movie screenings.


By the fall of 2022, the building had posted signs begging people to keep their dogs off of the grassy mounds. More recently, fencing was finally put up around the mounds, giving the space a less than pleasant Little Falls Parkway Road Diet Bollards aesthetic. Now, however, all of the verdant grass has been torn out. In its place are scattered tufts of a less-luxurious grass species, and a lot of brown dirt. This has left the promenade temporarily competing with that weird spot at Westbard Square for the Roughest Public Space in Bethesda title.


For those keeping score, the dogs are currently winning.

Tuesday, July 07, 2026

Mystery DJ waking the neighbors in downtown Bethesda


There's a new disc jockey on the scene in downtown Bethesda, but not in a bar. This DJ can be heard spinning for about 15 minutes twice a day in the vicinity of Del Ray Avenue, near the Gallery Bethesda, Gallery Bethesda II, Triangle Towers, and The Palisades apartments. To the chagrin of nearby apartment dwellers, one of the near-daily sessions typically takes place between midnight and 4:00 AM. Residents disturbed by the loud music report that calling the Montgomery County police (who have a station directly across the street on Rugby Avenue) and the management of the Gallery II (where some believe the early morning bangers are eminating from) has so far failed to stop the turntables. This has been going on for about 3 weeks, they say.

Monday, July 06, 2026

Red Line shuttles begin using bus lanes in Bethesda as Metro stations close for summer


Bus-only lanes along MD 355 were activated early this morning between North Bethesda and Friendship Heights. The Bethesda, Medical Center, and Grosvenor Metro stations will be closed for major construction from today until September 6, 2026. Monday morning commuters at the Bethesda Metro station found no personnel from transit agency WMATA on-site to assist customers in locating the free shuttle buses that will be running between the shuttered stations for the next eight weeks. There was also a lack of signage. 


Adding to the confusion is that, unlike previous station closures in Bethesda, a hodgepodge of privately-owned charter buses is being employed as shuttles, instead of Metrobuses. And many of those buses had the name of the charter company displayed on the screen above the windshield, instead of the destination.







Demolition permits requested for properties on St. Elmo Ave. in Bethesda


The other shoes are starting to drop in the pending demolition of multiple buildings at the corner of Old Georgetown Road and St. Elmo Avenue in downtown Bethesda. Over the weekend, a demolition permit request notice for the former Jewelry Exchange building was posted on the premises. Last night, identical demolition permit notices were posted outside of 4938 and 4940 St. Elmo. Head2Toe Health & Aesthetics had already vacated their space last December, moving to 7505 Democracy Boulevard. Bethesda Boxing & Kickboxing is currently in the process of moving across the street to 4927-A St. Elmo Avenue. Other structures due to be razed for a planned apartment tower on that corner include the buildings that previously housed Bethesda Florist and that currently house Old Georgetown Grille and Colonial Opticians.




Sunday, July 05, 2026

Demolition permit requested for Jewelry Exchange in Bethesda


A demolition permit has been requested from Montgomery County for the former Jewelry Exchange building at 7747 Old Georgetown Road in downtown Bethesda. The building is one of several adjacent properties that will be demolished in the near future to make way for - what else! - a new apartment tower. After twenty years and two million TV commercials, "THE JEWELRY EXCHANGE BETHESDA!!!" closed in the spring of 2022. Those "thousands of GIA diamonds" were cleared out long ago, and we'll see how soon the other properties move to the demolition phase.




Saturday, July 04, 2026

Home burglarized in Kenwood


Montgomery County police responded to a report of a burglary at a home in the exclusive Kenwood neighborhood of Chevy Chase Thursday afternoon, July 2, 2026. The burglary was reported at a house in the 5200 block of Dorset Avenue at 5:09 PM. Officers responding to the scene found evidence of forced entry at the home.