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Baltimore prosecutor handling fatal squeegee shooting removed from case, accused of leaking document to victim’s family’s lawyer

The Baltimore prosecutor assigned to the case of the teen squeegee worker charged with fatally shooting a bat-wielding man this summer has been removed from the case, with her supervisor accusing her of violating the law. Michael Dunty, the state’s attorney’s office’s homicide division chief, on Wednesday filed a disclosure in the case obtained by The Baltimore Sun. In the filing, Dunty wrote that Assistant State’s Attorney Rita Wisthoff-Ito “provided” a motion to Thiru Vignarajah, who is representing the Reynolds’ family as a crime victim advocate attorney, in violation of laws that keep juvenile records confidential.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
State board approves moving Maryland Department of Health to Metro West complex near Lexington Market

The Maryland Board of Public Works voted Wednesday to approve a new 15-year lease for the state Department of Health to move into the vacant Metro West complex. The health department is housed nearby in State Center, and the pending move is part of a broader plan by Gov. Larry Hogan’s administration to move agencies out of that aging complex of state-owned buildings and into leased buildings closer to the city’s core.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore approves contract to explore uses for conduit system one week after voters OK’d measure barring its sale or lease

A contract to explore options for Baltimore’s conduit system was approved by the Board of Estimates Wednesday in spite of the overwhelming passage on Election Day of an amendment to the city charter barring the sale and lease of the system. Approved by a 3-2 vote, the $50,000 agreement with FMI Capital Investors will help determine the “best and highest use” of the conduit system, city attorney Hilary Ruley told the board last month, when the contract was first proposed.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore County will let police first review requested disciplinary records and challenge their release, worrying Anton’s Law advocates

Under new Baltimore County Police policies, officers whose disciplinary records are requested under the Maryland Public Information Act as well as the union representing police will be notified of such requests within two business days. The officer and a designated representative — an attorney or member of the Fraternal Order of Police lodge, for example — will then be permitted to review the documents five days before they are released to the requester.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
‘A true medical home’: Howard County expands school-based wellness centers to reach underserved and uninsured students

Doctors visits can be time consuming for students, taking them away from the classroom for hours sitting in traffic and waiting rooms. But at some Howard County public schools, a pediatrician is just a click away. At the county’s 11 school-based wellness centers, students can receive onsite physicals and screenings and, at eight of the locations, connect with a local provider remotely via a telemedicine appointment.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
red apple fruit on four pyle books
Baltimore County groups join forces to advocate for education issues

A coalition of Baltimore County community groups met Tuesday in Randallstown to brainstorm ways to help Black students succeed and hold school leaders accountable if they fail. The inaugural Baltimore County Education Justice Table meeting at Union Bethel AME church focused on equity for Black students. It consists of members from the Randallstown NAACP, the Teachers Association of Baltimore County, also known as TABCO, the Baltimore County NAACP, the League of Women Voters of Baltimore County, Bridge Maryland Incorporated and St. Francis Episcopal Parish and Community Center. Its mission is to increase justice, protect and improve the quality and ensure accountability in public education.

National Aquarium in Baltimore reopens rainforest exhibit after replacing glass roof

The National Aquarium reopened its tropical rainforest exhibit Tuesday following a monthslong closure for the replacement of its massive, 684-pane glass roof. The glass panes were as old as the aquarium itself, which opened 41 years ago, and aquarium officials say the new glass brings a host of benefits for animals — both inside and outside of the aquarium. The new, etched panes will help control temperatures inside the exhibit for plants and animals and minimize the number of migrating birds that inadvertently strike the glass. Workers also added LED lights to the top of the pyramid structure, capable of turning blue to represent the aquarium, or purple and orange for the Baltimore Orioles and Ravens.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore Archbishop William Lori elected VP of US Conference of Catholic Bishops

Archbishop Timothy Broglio of the Military Services, who oversees Catholic ministries to the U.S. armed forces, was elected Tuesday as the new president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Broglio, 70, was elected from a field of 10 candidates. He will succeed Archbishop José H. Gomez of Los Angeles, who assumed the post in 2019. The archbishop of Baltimore, William Lori, was elected as the conference’s new vice president. Usually the election of a new USCCB leaders is a formality, with the bishops elevating the conference’s vice president to the post. But this year’s election was wide open because the incumbent VP — Detroit Archbishop Allen Vigneron — will turn 75 soon, making him ineligible to serve.

‘A place to begin to heal’: Fort Meade opens a resiliency center for those who bear the weight of secret, stressful missions

On one side of the Fort Meade gate, they are part of the nation’s secret-finding and -keeping apparatus. They’re on the front lines, however remotely, of global conflicts and nefarious threats. On the other side, they are just another tired worker who stops at Royal Farms for coffee — but with the weight of knowledge to which no one else in line is privy. One such Fort Meade worker told Tim O’Ferrall that he remembered thinking: “How are you all not screaming right now?” “It’s a stressor,” O’Ferrall says now, with some understatement. O’Ferrall is the general manager of the Fort Meade Alliance, a community group that supports the installation and partnered with it to create the Education and Resiliency Center that will have its grand opening Thursday.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Al Hutchinson is Baltimore’s highest-paid ‘storyteller.’ Supporters say he’s worth every cent.

As the world started shutting down in March 2020, Al Hutchinson, CEO and president of Visit Baltimore, began to prepare for a seismic shift in the business of marketing Charm City to potential visitors. The leader of the city’s tourism arm, a quasi-governmental agency, is responsible for “heads in beds,” or attracting visitors to spend time — and money— in Baltimore. Soon enough, the destination marketing specialist realized the work had hit a historic roadblock. Like so many others during the initial months of the coronavirus pandemic, Hutchinson learned to pivot. Before the Baltimore Convention Center transformed into a field hospital, he and his team showed up to what events were left and distributed hand sanitizer. When stay-at-home orders went into effect, he helped connect small businesses with financial resources to keep the lights on.

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