Tuesday, December 16, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

Baltimore police plan to step up traffic stops to cut down on road rage incidents

Baltimore Police Commissioner Rich Worley plans to increase traffic stops for traffic violations in the coming weeks. Worley spoke Sunday morning with Jayne Miller on WBAL NewsRadio 1090 AM and 101.5 FM about a variety of topics, including having his officers increase traffic stops for traffic violations. "Part of the reason is, not only the fact that we're disregarding the signs and the speed limits and the stop signs and the parking signs, but the fact that we have vehicles speeding that are causing more fatal crashes and severe injuries," Worley said.

Read More: WBALTV
Maryland to extend contract with troubled prison health provider — again

Maryland officials plan to spend tens of millions of dollars for another contract extension with a troubled prison health provider. The state Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services is proposing to spend nearly $125 million to continue having YesCare provide medical care to the 20,000 people in state-run jails and prisons through the end of the year. It comes after the state extended the contract three months past the end of the prior contract Dec. 31.

Centuries-old battle gear unearths clues on life in Maryland’s first colonial capital

There’s little historians know about Maryland’s early colonial past. So, when archaeologists in St. Mary’s City uncovered a nearly 400-year-old piece of battle gear last month, researchers celebrated. “This was definitely an exciting moment. Our eyebrows rose,” said Travis Parno, director of research and collections at Historic St. Mary’s City, told WTOP. “We were whooping and hollering. It was really dramatic.”

Read More: WTOP
Church pews are sitting empty. Can they become affordable housing?

Northwood Presbyterian Church is, in a sense, a kind of home. People have gotten married in the cinder block building. They’ve sat with their kids in the pews and watched the Rev. Chris Deacon deliver sermons beneath the stained-glass cross for years. But as the 15,000-square-foot church, which sits on seven acres on the edge of Silver Spring, Md., has seen its congregation shrink from 400 at its first service in 1958 to just above 100 in recent years, Deacon and his colleagues believe the church could be used to house people in a more literal way.

This was captured well waiting for the doctor who was busy at the time
University of Maryland Medical System plans logistics center at Tradepoint Atlantic

The University of Maryland Medical System plans to open a facility in Sparrows Point to serve as a base for storing and delivering hospital supplies and equipment. The medical system said Thursday it has signed a lease for and started building a 400,000-square-foot Logistics Operations Center at the Tradepoint Atlantic distribution hub in Baltimore County, an estimated $32 million construction project.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Anne Arundel, Chase Your Dreams Initiative partner on weekend event aimed at preventing youth gun violence

Anne Arundel County — which has pursued innovative ways to reduce gun violence — is partnering with the Chase Your Dreams Initiative on a weekend of events aimed at engaging with and educating young people about the problem. The dialogue on Saturday and Sunday will focus on the causes of gun violence and promoting solutions that help create safer communities, according to the Gun Violence Prevention Celebrity Weekend website.

Howard School Board adopts $1.5 billion budget; now it goes to the county

The Howard County Board of Education adopted a nearly $1.5 billion fiscal year 2025 budget Thursday evening that reduces the number of looming staff cuts and restores popular school programs. The approval comes after weeks of public hearings and work sessions, including one budget deliberation earlier in the week that a board member said was “like a bad dream.”

Mid-Shore Officials Stand with Fishermen Against Rockfish Regulations

Mid-Shore officials are rallying behind their fishermen, expressing the opposition to recent rockfish regulations imposed by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC). Kent County leaders have taken a stand by sending a letter to the state, explaining the detrimental impact these regulations could have on the local economy of the eastern shore.

Read More: WBOC
War of Words Continues in the Saga Over School Safety in Worcester County

Every single principal in Worcester County has come to the defense of district leadership. They are hammering home the point that their schools are safe after criticism from law enforcement. The principal at Snow Hill Middle School, Matthew Record, said they have proof that the schools have made progress. Record said the letter points out specific safety measures like vape detectors and protective shield.

Read More: WBOC
Safe Streets area in West Baltimore celebrates full year without a homicide

A West Baltimore neighborhood where the city's violence intervention program, Safe Streets, has a location, is marking a significant milestone. The Penn North community has gone an entire year without a murder. It has been 478 days without a homicide investigation in the neighborhood. The Penn North neighborhood was once the epicenter of unrest in the city.  Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott said this accomplishment is proof that his office's anti-violence and crime initiative programs, including Safe Streets, are working.

Read More: CBS Baltimore

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