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Around Maryland

New Anne Arundel Health Officer Tonii Gedin puts improving health equity at top of priority list

While Tonii Gedin has only officially held the role of Anne Arundel County health officer for about two weeks, she already has some lofty ambitions. Gedin took over as acting health officer in March when Dr. Nilesh Kalyanaraman was tapped by the state’s health department to serve as deputy secretary for public health services. She was approved to be his permanent replacement last week in a unanimous vote by the County Council.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland before time: Rare dinosaur bone bed uncovered in Prince George’s County

Long before the Chesapeake Bay or I-95 corridor etched the land that would be Maryland, an enormous carnivorous dinosaur lived and died here. About 115 million years later, staff and volunteers at Prince George’s County’s Dinosaur Park say they have unearthed a tibia, or shin bone, belonging to that apex predator of the Early Cretaceous period.

Baltimore Office of Promotion & the Arts approves $83,232 settlement for its former CEO

The Baltimore Office of Promotion & the Arts has agreed to pay its former executive director, Donna Drew Sawyer, an $83,232 settlement in exchange for her resignation as the leader of the city’s embattled arts council. Though Sawyer stepped down Jan. 10, four days after Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott called publicly for her ouster as CEO of the arts council known as BOPA, the settlement agreement wasn’t inked until May 11.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Brooklyn needed help before the mass shooting. Here’s what residents say.

Perhaps the way Brooklyn came to be part of the city of Baltimore is symbolic of the way residents sometimes feel about their neighborhood today. Although there are many things they love about where they live, they say they sometimes feel shut off from the city and an afterthought to more known neighborhoods in the same district, such as Locust Point and Federal Hill, which tend to be more vocal and politically active.

Anne Arundel County school board narrowly rejects proposal to limit flags

A divided Anne Arundel County school board on Wednesday rejected a controversial proposal that would have restricted what flags could be displayed on school property — a measure that critics said was written to ban flags such as the rainbow Pride flag. The board voted 4 to 3 not to adopt the proposed policy, with one board member abstaining.

New reporting indicates youth curfews don’t reduce crime; Baltimore mayor responds

The 11 News I-Team obtained the most comprehensive data so far that details how many youths that curfew staff have interacted with each night since the curfew program began over Memorial Day weekend. While the numbers aren’t perfect — they don’t tell everything about how the team of social workers, school police and others are engaging with youths who are staying out past the permitted times — but they are the most substantive data made available so far.

 

Read More: WBALTV
Complaints filed against 19.8% of Montgomery County officers last year, police data show

Complaints were filed against 19.8% of Montgomery County police officers last year—234 out of a force of 1,181, according to a report from the department. The first-of-its-kind summary was discussed at a public hearing with the County Council on Tuesday afternoon. But members of the council’s public safety committee and an advocacy group want more information, saying the report doesn’t show the full story.

Read More: MOCO360
Grants awarded to organizations fighting food insecurity

Thirteen local organizations working to combat food insecurity in the area received $350,000 in grants this month from The Community Foundation of Frederick County. The Community Foundation awarded one-year grants, financed by money awarded to the county by the U.S. Treasury Department, to local nonprofits whose programs alleviate food insecurity, according to a news release from the foundation on Wednesday.

 

Mount Airy has two counties but one identity

Main Street is more than the center of business and local history in Mount Airy, Md. It’s where the Frederick-Carroll County line bisects the town and determines where children attend school and how much property taxes residents pay. That invisible demarcation dictates how businesses are licensed and how city officials apply for grants.

A new Orleans Street? Baltimore DOT apologizes for ‘Orelans’ typo on street sign

Unfortunately, there’s no Ctrl + Z for a street sign. The Baltimore City Department of Transportation acknowledged Wednesday afternoon in a Facebook post that it had committed an unfortunate spelling error on a street sign at the 1000 block of Orleans Street. It chided itself for the mistake. “Yes, we saw it. Yes, we messed up. Yes, we JUST replaced that sign. … It’ll be fixed by morning,” the department posted.

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