Friday, November 15, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Baltimore Police want new Tasers at a $5 million price tag over five years

Baltimore Police are requesting new Tasers for the department’s officers at a cost of roughly $5 million over five years. The requested contract with Taser maker Axon Enterprise Inc. will be considered Wednesday by the city’s Board of Estimates. It’s on the board’s non-routine agenda, meaning it likely will be discussed prior to a vote.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Howard University names scholar of the African diaspora as its new president

A historian of the African diaspora in Latin America who heads academic operations at a research university in Cleveland will become the next president of Howard University at a time of expanding influence for one of the nation’s most prominent historically Black institutions. Ben Vinson III, provost at Case Western Reserve University and a former administrator at universities in D.C. and Maryland, was announced Tuesday as Howard’s 18th president since its founding in Washington shortly after the Civil War.

Food Aisle on Supermarket
Half a million working families in the D.C. region can’t make ends meet, United Way report says

Full employment and an income level above the federal poverty line do not guarantee that a family of four living in Greater Washington will be able to easily afford food, housing, access to health care and other basic needs. That’s the finding of a new report from the United Way of the National Capital Area in partnership with United for ALICE, a United Way affiliate.

suburbs, homes, neighbors
Property, income tax hikes highlight Anne Arundel County $2.14 billion fiscal 2024 budget proposal

Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman on Monday proposed a $2.14 billion operating budget for the upcoming fiscal year along with increases in property and income taxes to pay for it. The budget, about half of which will go toward education, includes pay increases for school employees requested by the Board of Education and adds 208 positions in education and 30 positions in public safety.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Inspector general finds thousands in suspicious Yellow Cab charges to Baltimore City schools

A Maryland Office of the Inspector General for Education report released on Monday found that Baltimore City Public Schools paid as much as $631,000 over three years to a cab company for rides to school that students may never have taken. Investigators for the education inspector general’s office compared records from Yellow Cab — which is now known as zTrip, according to the report — with city school attendance records and found that between the 2018-19 school year and the 2021-22 school year, there were 1,115 students and 3,900 instances when the students had not been in school when the taxi company said they were transported there.

Proposals to regulate facial recognition could be ‘test case’ for Baltimore’s authority over its police

New legislation aimed at regulating the use of facial recognition and other forms of surveillance technology could test Baltimore lawmakers’ authority over their own police department, which is stuck in limbo in the wake of residents’ vote last year to bring the the department under city control. Twin bills introduced by Councilman Kristerfer Burnett would require both City Council approval and public input before the police department or other agencies can purchase surveillance technology.

Maryland Health Department launches new COVID-19 dashboard

The Maryland State Health Department has debuted a new online COVID-19 dashboard. The new dashboard is formatted differently from the original, but it shows some of the same data. Numbers reported include hospitalizations and case totals, along with new features like a color-coded map showing the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s community transmission levels for each county in the state.

 

Md. nonprofit wants to destigmatize mental illness with support groups for families

May is Mental Health Awareness Month, and a Maryland-based nonprofit says although the COVID-19 pandemic is over, it left behind a trail of mental health issues for local families. According to statistics from Columbia-based organization Maryland Coalition of Families (MCF), emergency room visits increased 39% for youth age 12-17 from 2019 to 2021.

Read More: WTOP
Food Aisle on Supermarket
Maryland Food Bank: Hunger continues to rise in the state

The Maryland Food Bank released a report on Friday that showed hunger in the state has not gotten any better, even with the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. Maryland Food Bank CEO Carmen Del Guercio said more than four out of five Maryland adults who received Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits reported financial hardship and difficulty paying their bills. That is an increase of 9% from March.

 

Without insurance, undocumented Marylanders are all but shut out of health care

In early March, Verónica del Cid Gaitán noticed a rash on her arms and suspected she’d had an allergic reaction. She’d been avoiding medical care — she didn’t have health insurance and couldn’t afford a large bill — but management at the restaurant where she worked insisted she get the rash checked out before returning.

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