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Around Maryland

Black and Hispanic faculty underrepresented in Maryland public universities

Black and Hispanic communities are underrepresented among university faculty at Maryland’s six largest in-person public universities, according to the 2021 Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS). IPEDS is an annual data collection system run through the U.S. Department of Education. This aligns with trends across the country, data shows.

Baltimore Mayor’s Christmas parade returns for 50th year in December

The Mayor’s Christmas Parade returns Dec. 3 at 1 p.m., marking 50 years of local bands and holiday revelers marching down the streets of Hampden/Medfield in North Baltimore. The parade will feature Baltimore’s Marching Ravens as well as Morgan State University’s Magnificent Marching Machine. Neighborhood and high school bands, including the Calvert Hall Marching Band, which has been in the parade since the beginning, will also join the festivities.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Captured in a metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia primary school, this photograph depicts a typical classroom scene, where an audience of school children were seated on the floor before a teacher at the front of the room, who was reading an illustrated storybook, during one of the scheduled classroom sessions. Assisting the instructor were two female students to her left, and a male student on her right, who was holding up the book, while the seated classmates were raising their hands to answer questions related to the story just read.
Baltimore City schools proposes a teacher-pay overhaul. Other districts could follow.

Baltimore City school officials say they want to overhaul a merit-based salary scale that was considered a groundbreaking approach to teacher pay when it was adopted more than a decade ago. But it doesn’t have support from the teachers union. The goal is for the new pay structure to be aligned with the requirements of the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future, landmark legislation committing billions of dollars to reform education in a number of ways, including raising teacher pay.

City Dock Park site plan to appear before Annapolis Planning Commission in December

The Annapolis City Planning Commission is scheduled to consider the site plan for the new City Dock Park at a December meeting. This update and discussion of the overall project aimed at protecting the downtown area from frequent flooding and honoring the city’s maritime history was the subject of two city work sessions held Thursday for the City Dock Action Committee to update city leaders on waterfront plans.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Worcester Co. Sheriff’s Office To Implement Radio Encryption; Public Shares Concerns

The Worcester County Sheriff’s Office will soon be moving to encrypted radio communications. Like a growing number of police departments nationwide, the Worcester County Sheriff’s Office will be transitioning in January to encrypted radio communications. Sheriff Matt Crisafulli says the change is meant to keep law enforcement officers safe. “I understand that this is not a popular decision, however; it is a necessity for the preventative safety of our law enforcement officers,” Crisafulli said.

Carroll officially bans 3 books from school shelves; parental permission required for 4 others

Carroll County public schools officials have made final decisions on 10 of the 58 books that Superintendent Cynthia McCabe ordered removed from library shelves last month amid challenges from the Carroll County chapter of Moms for Liberty. “A Court of Thorns and Roses,” by Sarah Maas, and “Water for Elephants,” by Sara Gruen, were both banned from school shelves by the decision of the superintendent-appointed Reconsideration Committee on Sept. 15.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Construction site barricades
Baltimore Beltway project, which saw 6 workers killed in March, enters a new phase. What’s changed?

Months after six construction workers died as the result of a high-speed collision on the Baltimore Beltway, work is ramping up again on the congested road’s median as the state highway department issues changes designed to make the work zones safer. Criminal and safety investigations of the March 22 crash remain ongoing as the new phase begins on the northern section of I-695. Meanwhile, another probe of the Woodlawn work zone recently concluded the job site failed to give motorists proper notice of gaps in the barriers.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Challenges continue to emerge as the Md. health department works through Medicaid unwinding

Before the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency earlier this year, state officials and advocates warned about the challenges that could arise from the massive undertaking of resuming annual redetermination of Medicaid eligibility for millions of people, also known as Medicaid unwinding. Several months in, inappropriate terminations, computer errors and even call center wait times have added hurdles for the Maryland Department of Health and frustrations for some of the 1.8 million Marylanders on Medicaid waiting to see if their coverage will be renewed or if they will be rolled off and have to shop for insurance in the marketplace.

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