Wednesday, November 27, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Road closures expected across the city on Saturday as 11,000 runners compete in the Baltimore Running Festival

Baltimoreans can expect road closures and parking restrictions Saturday as thousands of runners will fill the city’s streets for the 21st Baltimore Running Festival. About 11,000 participants are expected to participate across the events, which include a marathon, a half-marathon, a 10K and a 5K. They will come from all 50 states and 15 countries. About 500 volunteers also will come out to help, as the event returns to normal after two years of pandemic-related restrictions, according to a news release from Corrigan Sports Enterprises, which organizes the event. No live races were held in 2020. They returned in 2021, but with some restrictions, according to Lee Corrigan, event director and Corrigan president. A few hundred people are expected to participate in the event virtually, Corrigan said.

Children 5 and older now eligible for updated COVID-19 booster

Marylanders ages 5 and older are now eligible to receive the updated COVID-19 booster shot, the Maryland Department of Health announced on Thursday. The updated booster shot, also called the bivalent shot, protects people against the original strain of the virus, as well as Omicron BA.4 and BA.5. Children between 5 and 11 years old who have gotten their last COVID-19 primary vaccine or booster shot at least two months ago can now receive an updated booster dose, according to a news release from the state health department on Thursday. “We urge all Marylanders 5 years old and older to get the bivalent booster shot as soon as they can to be COVIDReady and together safely enjoy the colder months and upcoming holidays,” Dennis Schrader, secretary of the state health department, said in the news release.

University of Maryland Upper Chesapeake Health’s High-Risk Breast Cancer Clinic provides resources to those with higher risk of breast cancer

Rosie Dinh, a nurse practitioner at University of Maryland Upper Chesapeake Health, recalled a father of a family she saw regularly having a strong family history of breast cancer. He tested positive for colon cancer. The man also tested positive for the BRCA2 genetic mutation, which is a common cause of hereditary breast cancer. So, Dinh, who runs UMUCH’s High-Risk Breast Cancer Clinic, encouraged the man to have his two daughters tested for the mutation, one of whom in her early 30′s tested positive for breast cancer. If it wasn’t for the high-risk clinic,” Dinh said, “this would have been missed, and her diagnosis would be a later stage where it would be harder to treat.” The High-Risk Breast Cancer Clinic is a resource for individuals with an increased risk for developing breast cancer and focuses on its prevention and early detection.

Read More: The Aegis
8 things you need to know and a look at the B&O Museum’s Underground Railroad exhibition

Last week I had the incredible opportunity to tour the B&O Railroad Museum’s new exhibition that examines the historic railroad’s part in the Underground Railroad network of the early-to-mid-1800s.  The Underground Railroad: Freedom Seekers on the B&O Railroad is a new permanent exhibition at the Southwest Baltimore museum and opened late last month. It is located within the museum’s historic Mt. Clare Station that for many years served as a storage space before being given this new purpose. I won’t give too much away because I highly recommend checking it out for yourself, but the three-room exhibit has interactive features for kids, a replica ticket window and a multi-wall video and audio projection experience. The latter tells the stories of two freedom seekers who passed through Baltimore on their way from slavery to freedom.

Harford County awards $1 million in grant money for 8 projects preserving the county’s African American history

Harford County has awarded $1 million to eight recipients in the first year of its African American Heritage Grant program, which is dedicated to preserving African American history, according to a county news release. The awards were announced by Harford County Executive Barry Glassman at a reception Wednesday at Liriodendron Mansion in Bel Air. “The people and places that came before us helped shape Harford County,” Glassman said, according to the release. “African Americans are integral to our story and this program will raise up this heritage for future generations.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
happy traveler waiting for the flight in airport, departure terminal, immigration concept
Study shows Marylanders living near BWI Marshall could see medical costs spike

The constant barrage of noise from planes arriving and taking off at BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport could cause more cardiovascular disease, anxiety and low birth weights for its neighbors. A new study released this month by the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy discovered that the hidden price tag linked to treating those health issues could morph to over $800 million over the next 30 years. “If you put it at the population level, for those people impacted, it’s going to be a huge medical burden and a huge health burden,” said Dr. Zafar Zafari, the assistant professor who conducted the study with graduate student Jeong-eun Park.

Read More: WTOP
What is the future of Druid Hill Park, and will new designs be inclusive of all residents?

Theodosia Myers and Blanche Jones-Hall take a walk in Druid Hill Park at least twice a week or sit on one of the benches and read. They enjoy the fresh air and seeing the seasonal changes as they trek along the paths with their walking sticks. But they’ve noticed changes at the park, and know even more are coming, and wonder if what’s happening will be for all of Baltimore — especially lifelong residents like them who live nearby.

State delays Western Maryland Hospital Center privatization vote

At issue for the powerful Board of Public works was whether to approve outsourcing up to $128 million in nursing, long-term acute care and brain injury services State officials on Wednesday delayed voting on multimillion dollar contracts to privatize care at Western Maryland Hospital Center, a chronic-care facility in Hagerstown, citing the need for more information amid mounting opposition from unions and lawmakers. At issue for the powerful three-member Board of Public works was whether to approve outsourcing up to $128 million in skilled nursing, long-term acute care and brain injury services before a vendor was selected, an accelerated timeline that critics of the contracts say term-limited Gov. Larry Hogan wants locked in before he leaves office.

Forty-five percent of Montgomery County students identified as nonbinary in survey
Officials in Montgomery County Public Schools are pushing back on reports that the district has seen a significant increase in nonbinary students after a picture of a slide revealing district data from counseling surveys circulated online. A picture of the slide was shared on Twitter by Elicia Eberhart-Bliss, the acting assistant principal of Quince Orchard High School, and showed that since 2019, the school district’s counselors had processed 423 intake forms concerning student gender identity, with 45% of respondents indicating they identified as nonbinary.

Sugarloaf Mountain Could Close to Public

A debate is brewing before the Frederick County Council over the future of Sugarloaf Mountain. News4’s Derrick Ward reports.

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