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Around Maryland

What does rent stabilization mean for housing development in MoCo?

Montgomery County developers and realtors are concerned the rent stabilization bill (Bill 15-23) passed by the County Council in July could deter new multifamily development, reduce rental housing stock and have the opposite effect lawmakers sought. The impact the new legislation – which City Council officials say will start being enforced in late Spring 2024 – will have on development in the county ­is largely unknown.

 

Read More: MOCO360
Moms for Liberty is winning its fight to remove books from one Maryland school district

Carroll County Public Schools can’t keep up with a flood of requests to review 56 school library books by a group of parents who oppose their content, so the superintendent has temporarily taken them off the shelves. Flooding the queue is the conservative parents-rights group Moms for Liberty, whose Carroll County chapter has joined its nationwide call for stricter school library book selection, targeting titles with sexual content, in particular.

red and white train on train station
Maryland transportation money projected to start to run short in 2 years

Maryland’s pending list of ambitious transportation projects — the Red Line in Baltimore, a Southern Maryland transit way and a new American Legion Bridge over the Potomac River — faced a brutal financial reality Wednesday: Officials said there’s not enough money to pay for projects already approved. The state’s transportation trust fund is $2.1 billion short of what’s needed to build the existing $21 billion plan of transportation projects on the books, state officials said.

a close up of a police car with its lights on
Data in hand, Md. juvenile services chief says youth crime is down

Carjackings and handgun violations by young people have skyrocketed since 2020 in Maryland, but overall youth violence has been declining for more than a decade, mirroring a national trend, a new Maryland Department of Juvenile Services report shows. Agency head Vincent N. Schiraldi released the 33-page report Tuesday, pushing back against what he says appears to be a perception that Maryland exited the pandemic gripped by a youth crime wave.

Baltimore-area transit will be free weekend of Sept. 22-24

With the school year underway, are you tired of sitting in worse traffic? Of course you are. The Maryland Transit Administration wants you to take transit instead. In honor of World Car Free Day on Sept. 22, the MTA won’t charge for rides on local and commuter buses, Metro SubwayLink, light rail, MARC trains and MobilityLink van service that entire weekend, the agency said in a press release Thursday afternoon.

10 ‘guest splashers’ who would make waves in the Orioles’ Bird Bath

When the Orioles debuted the Bird Bath Splash Zone in mid-May, the team also unveiled a new mascot: “Mr. Splash,” a hose-wielding, flamingo floaty-wearing hype man. But his identity has remained a mystery, his voice seemingly distorted and face obscured in a rare — and dramatic — video shared by the Orioles soon after his conception.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Md. Supreme Court OKs release of court audio recordings, undoing ‘broadcast ban’

Maryland’s ban on the broadcast of court audio recordings will officially be history on Jan. 1 after the state Supreme Court on Tuesday approved new rules governing the release of the recordings to the press and public. The justices had little choice but to change the rule, known as the “broadcast ban,” after a federal court last year ruled that it was unconstitutional to prohibit the broadcast of legally obtained recordings of court hearings.

Annapolis suffers two homicides during eight-week summer crime plan, all other crimes down, police data shows

With his “really, really big heart,” Tre’on Hunt was a protector of his family. “He always had to be the big brother,” said Diesha Contee, Hunt’s aunt, “no matter what.” Having moved to Glen Burnie from the city where he grew up, Hunt returned to Annapolis on Friday for a job. He was scheduled to help clean the Naval Academy’s football stadium over the weekend as the team played its first home game.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Nearly 100 corgis prepare to race in Maryland Corgi Cup

The fastest corgis from across the country are preparing to face off in the Maryland Corgi Cup. It’s happening next month during the MARS Maryland 5-Star at Fair Hill in Cecil County. It’s an eventing competition, also described as an equestrian triathlon, that runs from Oct. 19 to Oct. 22. The Maryland Corgi Cup starts the morning of Sunday, Oct. 22, with qualifying race heats and wraps up that afternoon with the Maryland Corgi Cup Championship.

 

School shootings raise questions of mental health of college students

The shootings and violence at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill last month and in Frostburg near the university’s campus within the last year are having significant impacts on students’ ability to not only feel safe but perform well academically. As awareness for the importance of mental health continues to increase throughout the country, the impacts of potentially traumatic events are being more closely studied by mental health professionals.

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