Monday, December 23, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Baltimore County Public Schools to offer free meals to students

Baltimore County Public Schools will cover breakfast and lunch meals for all students regardless of income starting in the 2023-24 academic year. During the pandemic, Baltimore County was among a handful of districts that provided free meals regardless of parents’ income status. Now, the district will likely return to this practice permanently. “Two-thirds of all students, which is 73,000 students, now qualify for free and reduced meals in BCPS, but there are thousands more who need food and are invisible in these statistics,” said school board member Christina Pumphrey.

Read More: WBAL
Cleanup continues after fatal tanker truck explosion in Frederick, Md.

A fuel tanker crash and explosion that killed the truck’s driver and damaged six homes on Saturday probably will require a cleanup of contaminated soil at the site along Route 15 in Frederick County, Maryland Department of the Environment officials said Sunday. Five units of the department and a contractor with vacuum trucks responded to the emergency, which was reported after noon Saturday, recovering materials from the remains of the tanker as well as overseeing the removal of fuel and flushing of the area’s storm drain system, the agency said.

Maryland youth survey: Rise in mental health issues during pandemic, decline in substance abuse

A new survey by the Maryland Department of Health shows a decrease in substance abuse issues among the state’s youth between 2021 and 2022 while. At the same time, there was also an increase in mental health challenges due to the pandemic. The Maryland Youth Risk Behavior Survey and Youth Tobacco Survey, conducted in the fall of 2021, involved close to 60,000 students in 366 public middle and high schools. It also looked at COVID-19 screen time, mental health status and other “adverse childhood” experiences.

 

 

Read More: WTOP
Thousands of Marylanders are losing federal food aid. Here are resources to help.

Hundreds of thousands of Marylanders are experiencing a significant cut to their federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits this week. During the pandemic, the food assistance program issued extra funds to low-income households, called emergency allotments, to help weather the national emergency. And now, amid record high inflation and benefits theft, emergency allotments are coming to an end. “There’s no making up for this,” said Maryland Hunger Solutions Director Michael J. Wilson. “This is going to be devastating.”

 

Baltimore or bust? Charm City in top 10 places people want to move to

If money were no object, where would you move? Baltimore was a top choice, according to a recent national poll. Fourteen percent of respondents who moved last year said Baltimore was among the five cities where they’d want to relocate. The poll, in which people shared their motivations, experiences and disappointments with moving, was conducted by Home Bay, a real estate advice website, and was featured in The New York Times.

 

 

Food Aisle on Supermarket
Maryland is the first state in the country with a plan to replace stolen SNAP benefits with federal funds

Maryland became the first state this week to get federal approval for a plan to reimburse victims of food benefits fraud — and Gov. Wes Moore (D) included funding for the effort in a supplemental budget delivered to the General Assembly on Friday. The Maryland Department of Human Services announced the plan to repay more than 3,800 victims more than $2.5 million in stolen benefits earlier in the week.

The front façade of the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington, DC.
Md. high court weighs ban on gun possession by nonviolent ex-convicts

A defense attorney told a seemingly skeptical Maryland Supreme Court Thursday that the state’s ban on gun possession by someone sentenced to more than two years in prison for a nonviolent common law crime violates the constitutional right to keep and bear arms in light of the U.S. Supreme Court’s broad interpretation of the right last year.

 

New signs, gates on Bay Bridge to give drivers earlier warning of lane closures

Starting next week, drivers heading to the Eastern Shore over the Chesapeake Bay Bridge will encounter a new automatic lane closure system during two-way traffic on the westbound span of the bridge. The system will roll out March 6 on the Western Shore near U.S. 50/U.S. 301, the Maryland Transportation Authority announced. This system is aimed at improving safety for motorists and road crews by using overhead signals and automatic gates to close lanes, instead of barrels.

 

Read More: wtop.com
Eldersburg residents speak out against Carroll Highlands storage facility during packed meeting

Dozens of upset Eldersburg residents packed the South Carroll Senior Center on Tuesday night, speaking out against a four- or five-story storage facility proposed for their neighborhood. Carroll County Sheriff’s Office deputies parked outside the senior center in Eldersburg as the meeting inside at times became contentious and heated. Carroll County Commissioners’ President Ed Rothstein, who represents District 5, which includes Eldersburg, and storage facility developer representative Mike Castellitto were peppered with questions and concerns from angry residents.

Maryland is incorrectly seizing tax refunds from some parents paying child support

Maryland government officials are fessing up to mistakenly withholding tax refunds for back child support — but for parents whose accounts are up to date. Calls started coming in to the state Department of Human Services in recent weeks as residents began filing their tax returns. Instead of receiving their refunds promptly, the callers told the department their refunds were blocked for child support, even though they made their payments.

 

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