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C.P. Crane power plant demolished, toppling iconic stacks, as focus turns toward site’s future

The sounds rang out like shotgun blasts in Bowleys Quarters Friday morning, before the iconic towers of the C.P. Crane Generating Station toppled to the earth. From hundreds of feet away, crews detonated 688 linear-shaped charges placed strategically throughout the old power plant, said Mark Loizeaux, owner of Controlled Demolition Inc. The explosives generated about 3 million pounds of pressure per square inch, he said, and in under 20 seconds, the structure fell to the ground in a cloud of dust and debris.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Smith Island weathered a tornado. Now a 7-person panel must decide how to distribute $116K in relief

Experts say the best thing people can do to help after a natural disaster is to donate money that will be distributed by a responsible, local nonprofit. Hours after a tornado spun through tiny Smith Island on Aug. 4, hitting 17 buildings and severely damaging three, that’s exactly what began to happen. Jay Fleming, a photographer and frequenter of the island, started a GoFundMe campaign the night the tornadic waterspout struck. So far, about 1,200 people have donated that way to the island’s relief efforts. The money will soon be controlled by Smith Island United, a tax-exempt charity on the remote island in the Chesapeake Bay.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
red and blue love neon light signage
Steep increases in rents put squeeze on budgets of Baltimore residents

The radius of Alonzo Washington’s apartment search keeps growing, but the results it turns up are always the same: too expensive. After a new apartment management company bought his complex in North Baltimore last year, he and other residents received notices that they had to vacate their units so the company could renovate the complex, he said. Those notices thrust Washington and his neighbors into the heart of an acute shortage of affordable housing, with rents spiking beyond the reach of many.

Four takeaways from the Baltimore Police Department’s latest consent decree update

Baltimore Police Department leaders and the federal judge overseeing efforts to reform the agency met Thursday for a quarterly review of the city’s implementation of its 2016 consent decree. Baltimore Police entered the agreement following a federal report that found widespread violations of constitutional rights, excessive use of force and racially-biased enforcement.

Anne Arundel teachers’ union calls for schools to address staffing by improving work conditions, not hiring contractors

Anne Arundel teachers’ union leaders are calling on the county school board to cancel contracts signed earlier this year to temporarily fill special education positions and to instead invest more in existing employees to support retention and recruitment. But school officials say the contracts are needed to fill important classroom roles as the school year nears. The first day of school is Aug. 29.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
USDOT set to nearly double the number of electric buses in US

A pair of newly expanded federal programs will nearly double the number of electric buses on US roads in one grant cycle alone — if domestic manufacturers can keep up with the demand. On Tuesday, the Federal Transit Administration announced a record $2.2 billion in competitive grants under the Buses and Bus Facilities and the Low- and No-Emissions Vehicle Programs, which collectively received a staggering 600-percent boost when the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law was signed.

Though COVID-19 continues to spread in Carroll County, officials say largely vaccinated population is helping to tame severity

COVID-19 continues to spread in Carroll County, with the BA.5 subvariant proving to be more transmissible than past versions of the virus. “The variant is everywhere,” Robert Wack, deputy health officer with the Carroll County Health Department, said in an interview Thursday. “It’s the dominant strain. It’s spreading pretty much unchecked. The good news is that hospital cases are steady. They’re not going up, but they’re not going down like we hope.”

Maryland extends unique health care payment deal with feds for better, lower cost health care

A unique agreement Maryland made with federal regulators that affects how much everyone in the state pays for medical care, and how they get that care in the hospital or a doctor’s office, has been extended through 2026. The program aims not only to contain overall health care spending but also to improve health outcomes by ensuring patients’ chronic conditions are managed and they avoid unnecessary hospital stays.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
City leaders move forward with efforts to stop illegal street racing

The Baltimore City Council is now approving harsher punishments for drivers who take part in street racing. It comes as police try to crack down on the illegal drivers. Skid marks are still visible at Pratt and Market Place. Video posted online revealed someone doing donuts in the area. It is not the first time illegal street racing was captured on video, and that is why city leaders are moving forward with a measure to discourage them.

Read More: WBAL
Worcester, Somerset, Howard counties join Maryland Criminal Intelligence Network

The Maryland Criminal Intelligence Network is expanding to add three new counties, Gov. Larry Hogan announced Thursday at the Maryland State Police barrack in Berlin. Worcester and Somerset counties will join Dorchester County in the Lower Shore Coalition, while Howard County will join the larger network, as well. Wicomico County was already active in the Maryland Criminal Intelligence Network.

Read More: Delmarva Now

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