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Mpox spread has slowed drastically in Maryland, across the country

The spread of the mpox virus — which increased rapidly across the country between June and July, only to start dropping later in the summer — has slowed to a sluggish crawl. The World Health Organization renamed the virus to mpox in November to reduce stigma and other problems associated with its former name, monkeypox. Only five new cases of the virus were reported nationwide on Dec. 21, the last day for which data was available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Three-fourths of the 738 cases that have been reported in Maryland since the start of the outbreak are from three jurisdictions: Baltimore City, Prince George’s County and Montgomery County. Most counties in the state, including Frederick County, never reported more than 10 cases of the virus.

Archdiocese of Baltimore to hold Mass Thursday for former Pope Benedict XVI

The Archdiocese of Baltimore will hold a Mass on Thursday in honor of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who died Saturday. The Mass will take place Thursday at 5:30 p.m. at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen. “Priests throughout the Archdiocese are warmly invited to concelebrate this Mass,” Most Rev. William E. Lori, the archbishop of Baltimore, wrote on the archdiocese’s website. Lori asked the faithful to pray for the repose of the soul of the former pope, who was the first to resign in 600 years. “Pope Benedict was a man of deep faith and keen intellect who placed his considerable gifts at the service of Christ and his bride the Church,” Lori said in the statement on the archdiocese’s website.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
A Baltimore food tradition that ‘most people don’t know about’

Yasmine Young is the historian of her family. As such, she has bought and is in the long process of restoring her family’s big house in Ashburton, built in the 1920s. She’s traced her family’s history back eight generations, including 352 ancestors who came to Baltimore from Virginia and the Eastern Shore. She’s also keeping alive traditions passed down throughout the years. One is Manning’s Hominy at the breakfast table. A corn product first produced in a Canton backyard and one of the last canned goods to leave Baltimore, Manning’s has a more than 100-year legacy in area kitchens. Think of it like Charm City’s answer to grits.

police line, yellow, crime
As Baltimore ends another violent year, it takes toll on those working for change in city’s deadliest neighborhood

Cynthia Tensley for years has organized a “vigil for life” each time someone is killed in Carrollton Ridge. For each person, even for those who lived elsewhere, Tensley tries to find a photo to celebrate their role as a friend or brother. The community association president said she wants to help her neighborhood heal. But by late December, Tensley had fallen behind. She counted at least 10 people she hadn’t yet commemorated.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Some residents want recall of Columbia Association board members

A public argument over the direction of Maryland’s second largest city erupted Monday as a group of residents called for the recall of Columbia Association board members to prevent them from ousting the association’s top paid staff member. The board has not commented on speculation that it is about to remove association president, Lakey Boyd, who believes the heart of the issue is the tension between old and new in a growing community of 104,000 residents. Two board members reached Monday declined to comment.

Baltimore teacher pay lags rest of state; organization wants to close police, community divide

As we look forward to the second half of our school year, Baltimore City school staff, the Baltimore Teachers Union and Baltimore City Public Schools need to work on an overhaul of teacher salaries and the teacher evaluation process. According to data from the Maryland State Department of Education, the salaries of Baltimore City teachers with master’s degrees became the lowest among Maryland jurisdictions in 2020. Starting salaries for Baltimore teachers now rank at No. 20 out of 24 school districts.

Prince George’s teachers union reaches tentative deal with schools

Maryland’s second-largest school system reached a tentative agreement with its teachers union this week, after a roughly two-month impasse. The Prince George’s County Educators’ Association — which represents about 10,000 educators — announced the agreement in a statement Wednesday. The union characterized the deal as making “strides on empowering educators to lead the district,” but there was little information shared about the agreement’s details. A spokeswoman for the union said further details will be released in September, when the contract is ratified.

Stargazing in Maryland: A partial solar eclipse and good conditions for meteor showers in 2023

Though Marylanders will be missing out on a total solar eclipse passing over Western Australia in 2023, and a “ring of fire” eclipse crossing the Western United States, there’s still plenty to look for in the skies in the coming year. Maryland observers will be able to catch the moon obscuring part of the sun’s face during the mid-October eclipse, and dark skies will accompany some of the year’s strongest meteor showers, the Perseids and the Geminids, thanks to the phase of the moon. That makes for ideal viewing — as long as the weather holds.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Gas prices rise in Maryland

The average price for regular unleaded fuel in Maryland on Monday was 25 cents more compared to this time a week ago. According to AAA, the average price for regular unleaded fuel in Maryland was $3.30 per gallon. This time last week, the price was $3.05. Maryland’s price of fuel was above the national average. The country’s average on Monday was $3.21 per gallon of regular gas.

Read More: WBAL
How big will the Gen Z ‘problem’ be in Baltimore? Here’s what the data says.

Imagine thousands of potential employees vanishing into thin air. That’s the prospect many metro areas are facing, thanks to the demographic shifts taking place in the American workforce. Between the relatively small size of Generation Z, declining birth rates and low immigration totals, experts say the tight labor market of the Covid-19 era is likely to stick around for the long term — even if there is a recession.

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