Tuesday, November 26, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Money to widen US 15 through Frederick included in Md. long-term transportation plan

If you’ve driven in or through Frederick, Maryland, you’ve likely encountered congestion on U.S. 15. Now, after years of disappointment, money to widen the road is in the state’s long-term transportation plan. Frederick County and City of Frederick leaders have long sought financial support to widen the 4-mile stretch of U.S. 15, stretching from Liberty Road — also known as Md. 26 — at the north, down to Interstate 70, at the point where U.S. 15 heads to Loudoun County, Virginia, and West Virginia.

Read More: WTOP
Anne Arundel parents worry about crowded buses; outages affect more than 95 routes at end of first week

Anne Arundel County schools started the academic year Monday with a shortage of bus drivers leading to many routes not being served. That situation got worse as the week progressed. And with changes to bus routes and stops that launched Monday, many families are reporting crowding on buses. These factors together are leaving some parents frustrated.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
‘Were all leaders’: Wicomico schools Superintendent Micah Stauffer embraces challenge

Micah Stauffer firmly believes that every individual is a leader. The Wicomico County public schools superintendent officially took the reins July 1, succeeding Donna Hanlin, who retired June 30 after serving the county for six years. Since then, the surrounding community has welcomed him with open arms, Stauffer says.

Read More: Delmarva Now
Vacant properties cost Baltimore at least $200 million a year, report estimates

Baltimore loses $100 million in tax revenue from vacant properties every year and spends another $100 million annually maintaining them, according to a report published Thursday by Johns Hopkins researchers. The economic and social costs “far exceed the investment needed to bring them back to productive use,” the report argues. In an interview, study authors Mac McComas and Mary Miller, both of Hopkins’ 21st Century Cities Initiative, said that while $200 million may be a conservative estimate, it is the most accurate and holistic assessment of the crisis produced in several years.

Baltimore Police cellphone search warrants on hold, as law enforcement agencies seek to adhere to Maryland high court’s consequential ruling

Baltimore Police have stopped extracting data from cellphones, a powerful investigative tool, while the department evaluates how to ensure its search warrants meet the requirements of a consequential opinion rendered this week by Maryland’s highest court. The Court of Appeals’ ruling on Monday mandates police in Maryland be more specific when applying for warrants to search people’s cellphones and recommends law enforcement agencies adopt protocols to pull data from the devices under more narrow parameters.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland launches human monkeypox vaccination pre-registration system

The Maryland Department of Health announced on Thursday that residents can sign up through a new pre-registration system to be alerted when monkeypox vaccines become available. “This pre-registration system is another step to ensure that Marylanders can access the tools to stay protected from human monkeypox,” Health Secretary Dennis R. Schrader said in a statement. “Keeping impacted residents healthy and safe remain our top priorities.”

Carroll County Sheriff’s Office to spend $1.4M on body-worn and in-car cameras for deputies

The Carroll County Sheriff’s Office has taken the first steps toward implementing a state-required body-worn and in-car camera program for all of its deputies. It will be at least a year until the cameras will be installed and used in the county, officials estimate. On Thursday the Board of Carroll County Commissioners unanimously approved a $1.4 million contract to purchase the cameras and related equipment for the sheriff’s office from Motorola Solutions, Inc., of Chicago. The sheriff’s office applied for and was awarded funds from the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program in 2021.

‘Sloppy and negligent’: Questions raised about Baltimore sheriff’s deputy’s affidavits for warrants, wiretap in gang case

A Baltimore sheriff’s deputy swore to a federal judge that a local rapper’s moniker was an acronym for a faction of a violent gang, then went on to write in an application for a search warrant that several of the musician’s comments were related to violence and organized crime. In 2019, a federal magistrate judge signed the search warrant, finding that the deputy, Sgt. Jamile Boles, who is assigned to a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration task force, provided enough probable cause for a court order requiring Instagram to give him access to the private messages of Xavier Johnson, also known as rapper Lor X.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Harris announces $1.5 million DOT grant to extend Easton Airport runway

Easton Newman Field Airport has been awarded a more than $1.5 million grant to extend a runway. Congressman Andy Harris, M.D., MD-01, the Acting Ranking Member of House Appropriations Agriculture Subcommittee, announced Thursday that the Department of Transportation has issued a discretionary grant award in the amount of $1,546,734 to cons truct and extend a runway at Easton Newman Field Airport as part of the airport’s safety improvement plan.

Read More: Star Democrat
yellow school bus on road during daytime
Howard superintendent’s plan aims to relieve crowding at Hammond, Long Reach and Howard high schools next fall

Howard County’s superintendent will present a plan Thursday to relieve crowding at several Howard County high schools next school year. The proposal would reassign 46 middle school students and 2,555 high school students next fall, in anticipation of the opening of high school 13 near Jessup. Superintendent Michael Martirano will present his Proposed Attendance Area Adjustment Plan for redistricting to the Board of Education at 4 p.m., Thursday, during a public hearing, which can be viewed online at https://www.hcpss.org/board/meetings/.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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