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Annapolis breaks record for most flooding events since 2019

The City of Annapolis reached a new record for the most flooding events experienced in the city’s history, according to new data from the Annapolis Office of Emergency Management. The city has flooded 74 times in the past 8 months, according to data provided to The Capital Gazette from OEM. This is nearly ten more than the previous record of 65 set in 2019.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland’s trucking industry feels effects of strike at Port of Baltimore

Maryland's trucking industry is feeling the effects of the port workers' strike at the Port of Baltimore. The Maryland Motor Truck Association told WJZ that terminals are essentially closed with only a few trucks able to pick up cargo that was dropped off before the strike. Truck companies were given extended hours last week to remove cargo from the terminal grounds at the Port of Baltimore.

Read More: CBS Baltimore
Baltimore gears up to send 911 operators to help North Carolina recover from Helene

As western North Carolina navigates the destruction in the wake of Hurricane Helene, Baltimore is readying a team of 911 operators and emergency dispatchers to potentially assist the state. “As a city who has seen our fair share of significant emerging situations and challenges, I know how meaningful support from other jurisdictions can be,” Mayor Brandon Scott said at a news conference Wednesday following the city’s Board of Estimates’ meeting.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore Police make enforcement push against illegal scooter activity

Baltimore Police launched a citywide initiative last month focusing on unregistered motorized scooters due to increased traffic violations and crime involving illegal ones, the department said. Unregistered vehicles such as mopeds, minibikes and all-terrain vehicles have been targeted to a greater extent by Baltimore Police since mid-September, according to a Friday news release.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Hagerstown motorists have until Friday to do online survey about traffic safety concerns

Hagerstown motorists have an opportunity to share feedback about traffic concerns, including those affecting pedestrians and bicyclists, with local and regional planning officials through a survey that must be completed by Friday. As of Monday morning, 449 people had submitted responses through the survey, said Matt Mullenax, executive director for the Hagerstown/Eastern Panhandle Metropolitan Planning Organization, or HEPMPO.

Prince George’s Co. school showcases future of new school construction

As the Prince George’s County Public School System celebrated National Energy Efficiency Day, school leaders and others from the Maryland community gathered at Ellen Ochoa Middle School in Landover Hills to see what the future of new school construction will be like. A new school that opened this fall, Ellen Ochoa Middle School, sits on a big plot of land. Underground there are 90 geothermal wells that run 400 feet deep, but at ground level, one can’t even tell.

Read More: WTOP
What to know about DMV vigils, events and rallies planned around Oct. 7

As the anniversary of the Hamas attacks on Israel and the ensuing war approaches, people around the Washington region are mourning, praying, rallying and finding comfort in their communities. The nation’s capital has seen a steady drumbeat of vigils and protests since the conflict erupted nearly a year ago on Oct. 7, when Hamas militants attacked Israel, prompting a devastating military response.

Stethoscope and Laptop Computer. Laptop computers and other kinds of mobile devices and communications technologies are of increasing importance in the delivery of health care. Photographer Daniel Sone
Insurance plans offered in Maryland marketplace now available for preview

Maryland’s health insurance open season starts on Nov. 1. The state is opening its exchange up for people to browse plans and prices in preparation for the 90-day period where people can sign up for insurance or change their plan. Open enrollment runs from Nov. 1 to Jan. 15, 2025 for coverage next year. The marketplace offers health plans to Marylanders who do not get plans through their employers or through Medicaid or Medicare.

Read More: WYPR
In a demanding job, a fifth of Baltimore garbage workers don’t have health insurance

Nearly one-fifth of garbage workers in Baltimore’s Department of Public Works don’t have city health insurance, a fact some of them didn’t realize until the inspector general started looking into the question last month. That finding, detailed in a report released Tuesday by the Office of the Inspector General, comes eight weeks after a trash collector for the Department of Public Works overheated on the job, collapsed and died.

Most 8th graders can’t pass Maryland’s math test. Can you?

Can you find the area of a cylinder? Add exponential numbers? Solve a system of equations? Eighth graders in Maryland are supposed to know how to do all of that and more. But the latest round of state test scores shows that very few of them do. Just 7% of test-takers passed the state’s eighth grade math test, part of the Maryland Comprehensive Assessment Program.

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