Thursday, November 28, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

Howard County to get a new flag — and residents have lots of opinions

There’s one thing some Howard County residents do not want forgotten: The county is a farming and agriculture hub, and its flag pays tribute to that with a shock of wheat in the upper-left corner. But when the flag was designed in 1968, it was a different time. The U.S. had not yet landed on the moon and the Beatles were about to break up. The county looked a little different, too.

Old Silver Spring Library to transform into child development center focused on low-income, immigrant families

At the end of the summer, CentroNía Martha Gudelsky Child Development Center will open at the old Silver Spring Library in Montgomery County, Maryland. The library operated for nearly 60 years, but will now provide early learning opportunities to nearly 130 children up to age 5. CentroNía’s President and CEO Myrna Peralta said this has been nearly 10 years in the making.

 

Read More: WTOP
MoCo Police Chief reflects on his tenure as he prepares to retire

Montgomery County Police Chief Marcus Jones, 59, announced Wednesday that he will end his 38-year career on the department and five-year tenure as police chief on July 1 when he retires. MoCo360 spoke with Jones to ask him to reflect on his time as chief of police and how he addressed challenges, like increases in gun violence and juvenile, and the pandemic.

Read More: MOCO360
Baltimore County is courting diverse teachers with a new scholarship

The Baltimore County executive and the county’s Education Foundation are giving up to $1 million in scholarships for people of color and women in STEM pursuing a teaching career in the district’s public schools. The Growing Our Own for BCPS Scholarship aims to attract and retain more high-quality teachers to the school system and create a more diverse teacher workforce, according to a Thursday news release from the county.

Celebrate Black History Month
25 Black Marylanders to Watch for 2024, plus 5 Living Legends

The Baltimore Sun celebrates Black History Month by honoring a wide range of notables who are working to improve the lives, health, education and experiences of all Maryland residents. The third annual 25 Black Marylanders to Watch includes activists and artists, CEOs and presidents, venture startups and adventurous restaurateurs. The names were chosen by The Sun’s editors and reporters, who cover these topics and communities and see the progress these honorees are making in their fields. In addition, we honor five Living Legends, who continue to give back while still leading in their own ways.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Veterans treatment court approved for Frederick, Washington counties

A regional veterans court has been approved for Frederick and Washington counties, and a presiding judge is hoping to start hearing cases this summer. “I’m very excited. I’m very happy,” said District 11 Administrative Judge Eric Schaffer. “It’s been a long process.” Last year, Schaffer, an Army veteran, studied the need for a veterans court in District 11, which is Frederick and Washington counties.

 

Baltimore teachers negotiate a 9% pay bump for early-career educators

After about a year of negotiations, Baltimore’s teachers will get significant pay increases — worth about $50 million — under a tentative contract approved by city schools and teachers union negotiators on Tuesday. If ratified by a vote of the entire teachers union and approved by the city school board in February, the new three-year contract would give the greatest increases to both ends of the scale — veterans and the least-experienced teachers.

Race for Anne Arundel school board begins to take shape

As the filing deadline approaches for Anne Arundel County school board races, four incumbents are seeking reelection while three others haven’t filed to run, meaning there might be a few fresh faces on the board after the November election. As of Wednesday, 10 candidates had filed or announced their attention to run for seven seats in the purple county, where Democrats control the top offices. Interested persons have until 9 p.m. on Feb. 9 to file.

Local officials testify in favor of bill creating school funding task force

Frederick County elected officials advocated before the state’s Budget and Taxation Committee on Wednesday for a bill they argue is a first step toward a more equitable formula for school funding. Senate Bill 385, sponsored by state Sen. Karen Lewis Young (D-3), initially included alterations to the formula that would have aimed to eliminate what officials call a “funding lag” that hurts growing districts.

No, the new owners cannot move the Orioles. But what comes next?

So the Orioles are heading to new ownership, with John Angelos agreeing to sell the team to Baltimore native David Rubenstein and a group of investors that includes Orioles legend Cal Ripken Jr. Rubenstein will be the “control person” overseeing the the operation of the franchise and communications with Major League Baseball. John Angelos took over the role in 2020 for his father Peter, the team’s majority owner, due to the patriarch’s declining health.

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