Friday, November 22, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

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In light of recent storms, how well prepared is Maryland for hurricanes?

Hurricanes Helene and Milton have ravaged states on the southern portion of the East Coast, causing property damage, death and extensive coastal flooding. With Maryland’s long coastline and the world’s evolving climate, how well is the state prepared to weather a high-caliber storm? The Maryland Department of Emergency Management works with federal, state and local partners to coordinate preparation, response and recovery activities for Maryland’s hurricane program, Edward McDonough, an agency spokesman, told The Baltimore Sun in an email Friday.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
When someone goes missing in Baltimore, these moms go looking

The two women locked eyes across the West Baltimore grocery store parking lot. “I’m Traci’s mom,” said Tammy Bombardier, raising her hand in a shy wave. Bonnie Marquez swept her up in a hug, then put her hands on the other woman’s shoulders. “I can tell you from experience, I’m not going to know exactly where your daughter is, but I am going to know by the time I leave Baltimore if she’s alive and if she’s been seen.”

 

Anne Arundel County releases draft master plan for park at site of old Crownsville Hospital

Anne Arundel County’s goal is to commemorate the history of the old Crownsville Hospital site while also making it a welcoming park space. Those goals are reflected in a draft master plan, the culmination of meetings with stakeholders and public forums within the community. The plan includes trails, recreation areas and a path of reverence for patients who lost their lives at the hospital.

Read More: WBALTV
Montgomery Co. loses hundreds of thousands of dollars in ‘lax administration’ of short term rentals, IG report finds

More than three quarters of short-term residential rentals being offered in Montgomery County, Maryland, are unregistered, according to a report from the county’s Office of the Inspector General. The findings in the latest report from Inspector General Megan Davey Limarzi show that more than 85% of the more than 1,400 short-term residential rentals operating in Montgomery County are not licensed.

Read More: WTOP
Md. hospitals, health officials brace for ‘difficult’ decisions amid IV fluid shortage

Maryland hospitals and health officials are keeping a wary eye on their supplies of sterile intravenous fluids after recent hurricane damage knocked out a major North Carolina-based manufacturer. There have not been any disruptions to scheduled surgeries yet, but the Maryland Department of Health is encouraging facilities to conserve supplies and look to alternatives – just giving people fluids to drink in cases of dehydration, for example – until the supply chain can be restored.

 

Saved by Facebook: How one community banded together to rescue a goat

Facebook is not just good for birthdays and baby pictures. Last month, in the wilds of western Baltimore County, Facebook helped save a stray goat. Gracie the goat’s social media adventure began in late September, when Windsor Mill residents reported seeing a honey-colored caprine animal in the woods. Upon closer examination, Gracie was not a wayward pet; she was a Boer — 100 pounds of tendons and muscles most often bred for meat.

aurora borealis on night sky
Maryland saw the northern lights — and they were glorious

The northern lights were visible in large parts of the country Thursday, including Maryland, delighting skygazers who witnessed the rare event. The Space Weather Prediction Center issued a severe geomagnetic storm watch for Thursday and Friday, after scientists detected a coronal mass ejection (CME) — a large blast of plasma and magnetic field from the sun’s surface — on Tuesday evening.

Walk and ride? State lays out vision for more development near MARC’s Penn Line stations

Driving a car to the parking lot to catch the MARC train is so 1984. Get with the times, people — wouldn’t it be nice to live within walking distance of the station instead? Few people can walk to a MARC station now. But that could change in a few years under a new state transportation plan released Thursday. The Maryland Department of Transportation wants to encourage construction of apartments and other housing — an estimated 2,600 total units — next to six train stations between Baltimore’s Penn Station and Washington, D.C.’s Union Station.

‘We can’t tell them, ‘You can no longer operate”: MDE holds public meeting on CSX permit

The Curtis Bay community voiced their concerns to the Maryland Department of Environment during a meeting Thursday. The hours-long meeting was about the permit renewal for the local CSX Coal Terminal. Residents have been vocal about their fear of the health impact the terminal has on the community. “Sometimes, if you come out the door, it smells like rotten eggs. Sometimes, it smells like an animal died somewhere around your house,” said Edith Gerald with the Community of Curtis Bay Association.

Read More: WBALTV
Why Milton’s ‘reverse surge’ sucked water away from flood-fearing Tampa

In the days before Hurricane Milton hit Florida, forecasters were worried it could send as much as 15 feet (4.5 meters) of water rushing onto the heavily populated shores of Tampa Bay. Instead, several feet of water temporarily drained away. Why? “Reverse storm surge” is a familiar, if sometimes unremarked-upon, function of how hurricane winds move seawater as the storms hit land — in fact, it has happened in Tampa Bay before.

Read More: AP News

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