Wednesday, November 27, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Maryland State Fair dates set; Big Time Rush headlining concert series

This year’s Maryland State Fair is scheduled for three weekends during the summer with pop group Big Time Rush headlining the musical performances. The fair will be held Aug. 22 to 25, Aug. 29 to Sept. 2, and Sept. 5 to 8 in Timonium. During the last weekend of the fair, Big Time Rush will perform in the 2024 Live! ON TRACK! concert series on Sept. 7 with Crash Adams as an opening act.

 

Is Baltimore’s citation docket a success?

Baltimore City State’s Attorney Ivan Bates is remaining steadfast in the success of the citation docket, but there’s frustration that some of their partners aren’t on board and people could be missing out on services. Police issued 37 citations that have made it to court since the inception of the program, about half were rejected internally.

 

 

Read More: Fox Baltimore
Proposed county park creates tension between neighbors, equestrian enthusiasts

The Frederick County Planning Commission on Wednesday will review a preliminary plan to build a combined agricultural and equestrian park near Thurmont that has piqued the interest of horse riding enthusiasts but drawn a rebuke from farmers in the area. In 2017, the 183-acre site was donated to the county by Richard W. Kanode, after whom the proposed park would be named. At that time, Kanode, who died in 2020, also contributed $1 million to the Community Foundation of Frederick County to establish an endowment fund for the proposed park.

 

Bill to lower Deep Creek Lake faces opposition

Sometimes people forget Deep Creek Lake was built to produce electricity, Dustin Droege said. He’s director of operations at Brookfield Renewable US, which owns and runs the lake’s dam that helps power the region. The hydroelectric generation station was built nearly 100 years ago and is permitted to operate by the Maryland Department of the Environment.

A collection of books. A little time. A lot of learning.
Maryland ranks No. 3 on ‘Most Educated States’ list

If education equals intelligence, then Maryland is a very smart state. WalletHub’s annual ranking of Most Educated States has Maryland at No. 3 on the list, behind Massachusetts and Vermont, and it jumps to No. 2 for percentage of graduate or professional degree holders. Virginia ranks 6th overall, and No. 4 for graduate and professional degree holders.

Read More: WTOP
Law firm Blades & Rosenfeld, P.A. moving Baltimore offices to One South Street building

Cushman & Wakefield announced that law firm Blades & Rosenfeld P.A., will soon occupy 8,900 rentable square feet at the One South Street building in downtown Baltimore, the first lease for the property’s new owners, One South Street Baltimore LLC. Blades & Rosenfeld has deep roots in Baltimore, having its offices in the downtown area since its founding in 1921.

Maryland tax systems back online after system upgrade; half of returns processed after pause

The Maryland comptroller’s office said Monday that it has processed about half of the roughly 530,000 state returns received this year, following delays due to a tax system upgrade at the start of the season. State returns have been taking slightly longer — up to 10 business days — to process following the upgrade period that held up the office’s systems for roughly the first two weeks of the tax season, which opened Jan. 29.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Minaret rising at Baltimore mosque a symbol of connection, completion

Things have changed gradually and steadily at Baltimore’s biggest mosque since Hanan Williams started working there 17 years ago. The modest building that once constituted the Islamic Society of Baltimore in Windsor Mill has tripled in size. A private school that was situated in trailers has its own indoor wing, a gym hosts sporting events and prayer-session overflow, and three red domes surmount the sprawling, sand-colored complex.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Forget cafeteria pizza: City College students are using DoorDash for school lunch

One after the other, drivers pulled up the hilly terrain of The Alameda onto school grounds. A woman wearing a leopard-dotted headband and Baltimore City College sweatshirt emerged from the entrance near the football stadium. She stood in front of the orange door with a posted sign: “ALL FOOD DELIVERIES HERE.”

What the fight over an empty shopping center says about Maryland’s housing issues

It may not look like much, but the empty Baltimore County shopping center surrounded by a sea of empty gray concrete is one of Maryland’s most divisive, and consequential, pieces of land. Purchased by a county-based developer in 2020, Lutherville Station stands a few yards away from a light rail stop that connects Baltimore County to the city and Anne Arundel County. It has been eyed for new development that would add retail stores, commercial tenants and housing — lots of it — to the grounds.

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