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Around Maryland

Maryland LGBT population lower than national average, study says

Brandon Gruszczynski, who manages the LGBTQ Baltimore Eagle Bar & Nightclub in Old Goucher, fondly remembers a once-vibrant gay scene in Baltimore. It was during the ’90s and early 2000s when patrons could hop from bar to bar for hours on any given night or attend other activities, such as house parties, drag bingo or game and trivia nights throughout the week.

School shootings in the US: Fast facts

There have been at least 12 school shootings in the United States so far this year, as of February 16. Three were on college campuses, and nine were on K-12 school grounds. The incidents left seven people dead and at least 19 others injured, according to CNN’s analysis of events reported by the Gun Violence Archive, Education Week and Everytown for Gun Safety.

Read More: CNN
Irvine Nature Center demonstrates how Maryland tribes tapped trees for sap to make maple syrup

Marylanders have an opportunity to see how sap was tapped from trees over time to make maple syrup. Brittany Roger, the manager of school programs at the Irvine Nature Center in Owings Mills, gave 11 News a demonstration of how tribes would tap for sap in the Northeast thousands of years ago. "We can only tap in a time of year when the night temperatures are below freezing and the daytime temperatures above 40," Roger said.

Read More: WBALTV
Newspapers before Sale
Baltimore’s historically Black newspaper chain is sorting through its archives. Treasures are surfacing.

An envelope of loose seeds. A forgotten reel labeled “Thurgood Marshall.” A mysterious locked filing cabinet belonging to an influential publisher. Plenty of such unexpected treasures and time capsules tend to accumulate within a newspaper’s headquarters over the years. The cache amassed by the longest-running Black family-owned newspaper is another matter.

blue and red airplane on sky
BWI, Martin State among airports receiving federal funds from $970M grant program

The Biden administration said Thursday it is providing $970 million for improvements at 114 airports around the country — including two in Maryland — with work ranging from wider concourses and new baggage-handling systems to new terminals at some small airfields. Administration officials said the money comes from a $5 billion grant program to modernize airport terminals. Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport is slated to receive over $14.5 million to replace up to 14 passenger boarding bridges.

DOE partners with Maryland, Massachusetts and institutes to boost offshore wind development

Industry groups and clean-energy advocates have hailed a multimillion-dollar partnership between the U.S. Department of Energy, the states of Maryland and Massachusetts and leading research institutes to establish a center of excellence for offshore wind energy. The announcement comes as multiple states struggle to implement offshore wind projects and ensure that the clean energy transition is reliable and equitable.

Annapolis seeks to tell stories of a Black Chesapeake Bay at expanded park

The noon sky above the Chesapeake Bay shoreline in Annapolis was dull gray Thursday. The water was gray, too. Together, they stretched the flat five miles east toward the dreary gray smudge of Kent Island visible on the horizon. A tiny gray house stood behind the eroding shoreline. Maybe it was once white, but it isn’t much to look at now — a ramshackle collection of sagging rooflines, tilting chimneys, peeling paint and torn screens.

Moms for Liberty takes aim at Howard County school library books

The Howard County chapter of Moms for Liberty wants sexually explicit books off school library shelves, and they’re enlisting the “mastermind” behind Carroll County’s successful book-ban campaign to help it do that. Howard’s chapter of the conservative parents group announced its campaign to challenge school books on its website in an advertisement for a Feb. 26 event featuring Jessica Garland, the vice chair of Carroll’s Moms for Liberty chapter, as the guest speaker.

HUD awards $2.8M to Maryland housing groups

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Thursday announced more than $2.8 million in awards to public housing agencies and PBRA owners in Maryland as part of $128 million in grants through the 2023 Renewal and New Family Self Sufficiency (FSS) Program. The FSS program is a voluntary initiative offered to families in HUD-assisted housing. Participants receive coaching, referrals to services, and establish a family escrow savings account.

The Morning Rundown

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