Wednesday, December 3, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

Data, dots and devotees made the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 map huge. Now it’s done.

Excluding NORAD’s Christmas Eve Santa tracker, there may not be a world map viewed so many times as the one Johns Hopkins University engineers created to keep tabs on COVID-19. Housed on a Hopkins graduate student’s Google Drive, it crashed the day it launched in January 2020 as scientists and the public alike clamored for information on a novel killer virus that was not provided by the government or anyone else.

Community groups getting a boost from Baltimore City Health Department

The Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD), in partnership with Civic Works, announced new mini-grant opportunities for community-based organizations in Baltimore to provide health resources and combat COVID-19 in underserved communities. Each grant will be worth up to $25,000. The window to apply closes March 27. Funding will begin in April.

Old prison jail cells
Less than half of Maryland jails comply with opioid-addiction treatment law meant to save lives

When people are released from prison or jail, the weeks and months afterward can be a dangerous time, especially for those addicted to opioids, such as prescription pain pills, heroin or fentanyl. Drug overdose is among the top causes of death when people funnel back into communities with diminished drug tolerance and often little support to help keep them from using again.

Gov. Moore addresses Monday’s killing of Patterson High School student

In a WBAL NewsRadio exclusive interview, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore addressed Monday's killing of Patterson High School student Izaiah Carter. Carter was shot at the Joseph E. Lee Park on East Pratt Street near a walking path just behind the school. Moore said his administration has been quick to address youth violence in Maryland.

Read More: WBAL
Federal fraud trial for former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan’s chief of staff to begin this week

Roy McGrath, who served as former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan’s chief of staff for 11 weeks, is set to stand trial in federal court this week on charges of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the state. Attorneys are expected to begin picking a jury Monday for the trial, which is scheduled to run for several weeks in Baltimore’s U.S. District Courthouse. Federal prosecutors said in court papers that they need two weeks to present their case.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Middle school math proficiency plummets over pandemic, state data shows

Academic achievement data reported to the state by Montgomery County Public Schools shows that middle school math proficiency dropped by nearly half since the last pre-pandemic state report, with Black students, Hispanic/Latine students and students with disabilities scoring the lowest. On Thursday, the Maryland State Department of Education (MSDE) released its first statewide school report card since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Read More: MOCO360
Maryland AG to deliver redacted Catholic abuse report to judge, public release likely soon

Monday is the deadline for the Maryland Attorney General’s Office to give a Baltimore judge a redacted version of its 456-page report into the history of sexual abuse within the Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore, clearing the way for its public release. The report is the product of a four-year investigation and will detail the rape and torture of more than 600 children and young adults at the hands of clergy and other diocesan officials going back eight decades, as well as the church’s efforts to cover up the abuse and silence victims.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
As lawmakers prepare 2024 budget, structural deficit emerges from $478 million dip in revenue

Maryland appropriators warned Thursday that legislative ambitions in the first year of a new term under Democratic party rule in Annapolis might have to be constrained a bit after state revenue estimates came in lower than anticipated. House Appropriations Chair Ben Barnes (D-Prince George’s) said lawmakers would have to work on a budget that accounts for a new projected structural deficit before considering passing new bills with new spending obligations.

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