Before looking forward with a new name, revised challenges, a restructured organization and a remodeled headquarters, the Calvert County Department of Community Planning and Building (formerly the Department of Planning and Zoning) took a look back in time.

The departmentโ€™s open house, held Tuesday, Aug. 7, began with the unveiling of two commemorative plaques honoring two of Calvert Countyโ€™s planning pioneersโ€”Col. Lawrence Bowlby and Frank Jacklitsch.

โ€œIt will always be Planning and Zoning to me,โ€ said Commissionersโ€™ President Gerald W. โ€œJerryโ€ Clark [R], the lone commissioner to vote opposed to the proposed department name change earlier this year. Clark conceded that โ€œzoning can be something that has a negative effectโ€ for landowners who may not be able to build certain structures on their properties because of the ordinances on the books. The board president pointed out that Calvert County โ€œis not overrun by a lot of strip developmentโ€ and that fact can be attributed to the planning programs that had their origins during the late 1960s.

Former state senator and county commissioner Bernie Fowler marveled at how far Calvert has come since the days when it โ€œwas a poor subdivision. But we knew some things were coming.โ€ Fowler said county leaders envisioned a more heavily populated county with the widening of Route 4, Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant and construction of the Governor Thomas Johnson Bridge all planned by state officials. โ€œThings were going to happen in Calvert County,โ€ said Fowler.

With the aid of federal money, allocated for โ€œemergency manpower,โ€ the county was able to pay Bowlby $60 a week to serve as the countyโ€™s planning officer, a post he held from 1968 to 1977. Fowler said Bowlby was only supposed to work a few days a week but put in many more hours beyond what he was paid. โ€œHe had a love for Calvert County,โ€ Fowler said of Bowlby, who passed away in 2006. โ€œWe had to create a plan or leave the gate open. He was key in helping us set the structure.โ€

Bowlby is recognized on the plaque for leading the process to create โ€œThe Pleasant Peninsula Plan of 1974.โ€

Fowler also praised the many professionals who comprised the departmentโ€™s staff throughout its six decades of existence. โ€œYou donโ€™t go anywhere without good staff,โ€ said Fowler.

Former department director Greg Bowen recalled serving on the Calvert County Planning Commission when Jaklitsch was hired to lead Planning and