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Anne Arundel County publishes map to check for lead pipes

Anne Arundel County is the latest jurisdiction in Maryland to publish a map showing residents whether they need to check their home service lines for lead water pipes. It’s not because officials  think pipes have lead in them. It’s because federal law requires utilities to inventory lead pipes in home service lines. “[T]he probability of finding lead in the County water system is low, with our water quality consistently remaining well above state and federal regulatory standards,” Anne Arundel County officials wrote on the county website.

 

U.S. Postal Service to release Underground Railroad stamps this week in Maryland ceremony

The U.S. Postal Service is honoring 10 leaders from the Underground Railroad on new Forever stamps, which are being unveiled in a Saturday ceremony in Dorchester County. Many leaders of the Underground Railroad, the secret network of those escaping slavery and those who assisted them, remained anonymous. But the figures being honored on the stamp include Catharine Coffin, Frederick Douglass, Thomas Garrett, Laura Haviland, Lewis Hayden, Harriet Jacobs, William Lambert, the Rev. Jermain Loguen, William Still and Harriet Tubman.

 

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Hagerstown officials address questions about new ballpark, parking, crime and development

During their recent State of the City presentation, Hagerstown officials discussed benefits and concerns with the upcoming opening of a new downtown ballpark as well as issues developers of smaller projects are facing. The Washington County Chamber of Commerce hosted the State of the City on Tuesday morning in The Maryland Theatre ballroom. About 200 people attended the event, sponsored by Wright-Gardner Insurance.

Organized crime ain’t what it used to be. Md. lawmakers say it’s time to update the law

For a lot of people, the term “organized crime” conjures up images of backroom mafia deals or highly structured street gangs dealing drugs and getting engaged in turf wars. But like everything else in the world, things are changing. “We are witnessing the emergence of smaller, more agile criminal groups that lack the hierarchical structure traditionally associated with larger crime syndicates,” Prince George’s County State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy told a House committee in Annapolis, Maryland, on Tuesday.

Read More: WTOP
A recycling bin near Bournemouth beach, helping people to recycle their plastic.
Baltimore resumes weekly recycling pickup after years-long pause, reasons for delays questioned

While Tuesday marked a big day when it comes to recycling in Baltimore, some city leaders are not pleased with the reasons for years-long delays. City Councilman Isaac “Yitzy” Schleifer, D-District 5, said weekly recycling pickup is required by the City Charter, but recycling service was suspended altogether in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. “The reality was there was a point in time two years ago recycling was being picked up every single week,” Schleifer told 11 News. “It’s just important that the most basic city functions that people are paying for, the city is delivering.”

Read More: WBALTV
How did a single developer come to control the fate of Harborplace?

P. David Bramble doesn’t want to mess this up. The developer and West Baltimore native controls the city’s most intriguing piece of real estate: Harborplace. The Inner Harbor’s dilapidated pavilions with green roofs are the result of a controversial bargain struck nearly five decades ago. Under a plan approved by voters, the city ceded public land to a private developer. In return, Baltimore got a dazzling festival marketplace on a waterfront promenade a block away from the central business district.

Short-Term Rentals Continue to Gain Popularity in Ocean City, Draw More Attention from Town Leaders

Talks in the resort town over short-term rentals are heating up. Officials are eyeing possible regulations, especially for rentals located in residential areas. Right along 15th street, positioned near multiple homes is a short-term rental property. The sign out front proudly displays that the one story home “sleeps up to 10”. While it may seem out of place, Joan Roache, who lives right near the rental property said it is right where it belongs.

Read More: WBOC
Howard County launches new student Rental Subsidy Program

With the costs of housing stretching budgets, some students in Howard County are getting a little help making ends meet. County Executive Calvin Ball announced a new student Rental Subsidy Program that offers Howard County community college students who already have housing, assistance with rent costs. To qualify, you must be a student enrolled in fall and spring semesters, be in good academic standing and make 60% less than the median income in the area.

 

Read More: CBS Baltimore
Baltimore County plans to convert power plant site into a park

When the Charles P. Crane Generating Station was demolished two years ago, the implosion could be heard for miles. People gathered to watch its towers, long part of the Bowleys Quarters skyline in Middle River, come crashing down. Baltimore County announced Monday it plans to on acquire most of the 153-acre site and turn it into a county park. Forsite Development, which currently owns the property, will keep some of it for what’s being called “low impact uses.” The details of what Forsite might do with the land were not clear, though the county said it could “support the resiliency of the regional power grid.”

 

Baltimore may spend another $2.1M on a new, three-year ShotSpotter gunshot detection contract

Baltimore is poised to consider a $2.1 million contract for the gunshot detection technology known as ShotSpotter, which has come under fire in cities across the country and was recently ended by Chicago’s skeptical mayor. The surveillance technology uses acoustic sensors to detect and locate gunfire, and alerts police of the incident. The company, now known as SoundThinking Inc., contends the system allows police to respond to more gunfire incidents, improve response times and collect key evidence from a scene.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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