Friday, November 15, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

Carroll school board to consider approving new kindergarten and Pre-K classrooms at four elementaries

The Carroll County Board of Education is scheduled to vote on a measure Wednesday that would approve construction of new kindergarten and pre-kindergarten classrooms at Cranberry Station, Friendship Valley, Sandymount and Taneytown elementary schools. The school board’s monthly meeting is set to begin at 5 p.m., Wednesday, at 125 N. Court St. in Westminster.

empty chairs in theater
Maryland creates $150M endowment fund for public university scholarships

High school students in Maryland will have a new source of financial aid after the state’s public university system approved the creation of an up-to $150 million quasi-endowment fund. The new University System of Maryland fund will be funded through contributions from member schools and the returns it generates will be used to support need-based aid that could help entice more students to pursue an education.

Brunswick High replacement moved up priority list on proposed FCPS construction timeline

A newly proposed construction schedule from Frederick County Public Schools would accelerate the timeline for replacing Brunswick High School — a move residents say is long overdue. Students and parents from Brunswick have showed up en masse to school board meetings in recent months, urging officials to take action on what they argue are unacceptable conditions in the building.

After top candidate drops out, Taneytown’s search for a new police chief has slowed

The City of Taneytown has temporarily slowed its search for a new police chief after a leading candidate pulled himself out of consideration, City Manager Jim Wieprecht said. “Since the prior candidate withdrew his application, we have not re-advertised nor accepted more applications, so nothing’s changed there since the last search,” Wieprecht said.

Air quality concerns in US will continue through summer due to Canada’s wildfires

The U.S. is nowhere near out of the woods from the dangers of smoke billowing from hundreds of wildfires burning throughout Canada. A grayish haze continued to linger over much of the Northeast on Monday, nearly a week after the air quality emergency in the region began to confine millions of people indoors. Philadelphia’s Air Quality Index measured at 101 on Monday morning, or “Code Orange,” which is unhealthy for sensitive groups such as young children, the elderly, pregnant women and those with pre-existing lung and heart conditions, according to AirNow.gov.

 

Feds investigate Maryland data breaches affecting more than 100K people

The U.S. Office for Civil Rights is investigating 17 recent data breaches at Maryland businesses that affected more than 100,000 people, the 11 News I-Team has learned. The OCR, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, opens investigations into all “breaches of unsecured protected health information affecting 500 or more individuals,” according to its website.

 

What Marylanders should know before traveling on I-95 this week after Philadelphia road collapse

Both directions of Interstate 95 are shut down at a section in northeast Philadelphia after a roadway collapsed Sunday morning during a vehicle fire. The delays in Pennsylvania could affect travel to and from Maryland for days. The Maryland Transportation Authority and the Maryland State Highway Administration are actively monitoring the situation on I-95 in Philadelphia, the agencies said.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
A homegrown Baltimore Police commissioner: Bringing baggage from BPD’s history or ‘best of both worlds’?

Mayor Brandon Scott heralded his pick for police commissioner as a fellow “son of Baltimore,” a leader grown from within the department, someone who climbed his way up the ranks since his start in 1998. Richard Worley, the mayor said, has Old Bay in his blood: “That means a lot to me.” But given the Baltimore Police Department’s laundry list of scandals and unconstitutional practices, a decades long track record in its ranks potentially carries some baggage.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Frederick County marks 275 years with celebratory jubilee

At 275 years of age, Frederick County looks good, Maryland State Delegate Christopher Eric Bouchat said on Saturday. Bouchat was among several government and elected officials who spoke at a jubilee at Utica District Park, a festive celebration marking the county’s 275th anniversary of June 10, 1748.

 

25,000 Marylanders with Medicaid just lost their coverage

The Maryland Department of Health said nearly 25,000 Marylanders — or 21% of the 120,000 up for renewal in April — lost their Medicaid coverage as of June 1 as part of the massive redetermination process the state is undertaking due to the end of the COVID-19 public health emergency. These are the first enrollees to lose benefits as part of this effort.

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