Tag Archives: history

Rockville Council to Weigh Rules of Decorum, Zoning Rewrite, and King Farm Future

King Farm Farmstead recommendations for Phase 1 (cost est. $14.6 M).

The Rockville Mayor and Council will meet on Monday, September 29, 2025. Several significant issues are up for discussion, ranging from meeting rules to long-term planning for land use, transportation, and historic preservation. Below is a preview of the topics most relevant to residents and businesses.


Rules of Decorum for Council Meetings

The Council will consider adopting formal Rules of Decorum and Protocols for public meetings. These rules cover conduct for councilmembers, staff, and members of the public, aiming to ensure meetings run efficiently and respectfully. This proposal formalizes expectations for behavior in Council chambers, reinforcing civility and safety. Some of the proposed rules may be toughest for the councilmembers themselves to follow, especially the bans on interrupting or talking over colleagues and on making lengthy or repetitive comments that delay business.

Opportunities and Threats

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In 1776, Independence Wasn’t Obvious

Today, as we celebrate our independence from Great Britain and look forward to the 250th anniversary in 2026, it’s important to reflect on the complex journey to liberty and freedom. While we grill hot dogs and slice watermelon, we might nostalgically view the decision for independence as an obvious one. However, it was a highly contentious process. If you think achieving national consensus is challenging today, consider 1776, when delegates from the colonies gathered in Philadelphia to debate independence. For instance, in December 1775, Maryland unanimously and vigorously voted against separation from Great Britain, declaring they were:

desirous to remove from the mind of the King, an opinion which we feel to be highly injurious to the people of this province and in order to manifest to his Majesty, to the Parliament, the people of Great Britain, and to the whole world, the rectitude and purity of our intentions in the present opposition to the measures of the British Ministry and Parliament, do declare, That the people of this province, strongly attached to the English constitution, and truly sensible of the blessing they have derived from it, warmly impressed with sentiments of affection for and loyalty to the House of Hanover, connected with the British nation by the ties of blood and interest and being thoroughly convinced, that to be free subjects of the King of Great Britain, with all its consequences is to be the freest members of any civil society in the known world, never did, nor do entertain, any views or desires of independency. That as they consider their union with the mother country, upon terms that may insure to them a permanent freedom, as their highest felicity, so would they view the fatal necessity of separating from her, as a misfortune next to the greatest that can befall them.

Maryland considered independence a “misfortune next to the greatest”? Why did they change their minds six months later?

“For the Pennsylvania Packet.” Pennsylvania Packet (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) V, no. 235, April 22, 1776: [2].