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Frosh, fellow AG’s support new federal poultry rule but question oversight

The attorneys general of 10 states, including Maryland, are backing a proposed rule by the U.S. Department of Agriculture that is meant to get poultry growers fair agreements with meat processors, but they want stronger oversight. “One of the many reasons it’s tough for small poultry farmers — and small farmers of all kinds — to afford their lives is because of imbalances of power, money and information between farmers and processors,” Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D) said Monday when he joined his counterparts in nine states to publicly comment on the USDA proposal.

Annapolis food blogger is ‘a surgeon in the kitchen’ on ‘Great American Recipe’

Before the pandemic, Annapolis food blogger Robin Daumit was best known for winning a trio of Food Network shows. She won all three, including “Guy’s Grocery Games,” Guy Fieri’s supermarket scramble that has more in common with bumper cars than Michelin-star cooking. Daumit had fun, but in retrospect, she found limited satisfaction in, “trying to knock people off in 45 minutes.” “After COVID hit,” Daumit says, those opportunities became less appealing.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Md. campus officials prepare for Monkeypox prevention as fall semester approaches

University officials across Maryland are preparing for both the return of students in the coming weeks and the Monkeypox public health emergency. “The main thing is educating the student body about what they can do to prevent the disease and also recognize it early,” said University of Maryland, Baltimore Public Health Officer Dr. Marianne Cloeren. Dr. Cloeren said contact tracing and vaccination efforts, once supply ramps up, will be critical in the response to Monkeypox. The University of Maryland, College Park sent a letter to its campus community Tuesday laying out prevention, symptoms, and information about the virus. So far, there have not been any cases within its community, the letter said.

Read More: CBS Baltimore
Deaths down but Maryland seeks to keep housing ‘COVID-19 remains’ in makeshift morgue in downtown Baltimore parking garage

A makeshift morgue housed in a downtown Baltimore parking garage that put a harsh spotlight on a massive backlog in cases at the state medical examiners’ office is poised to remain in business until January to accommodate “COVID-19 remains.” The Maryland Department of Health turned to the makeshift morgue space during the pandemic’s peak in January, spending about $30,000 a month, and officials have asked the state spending board to approve paying an additional $180,000 in rent during its meeting Wednesday.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland kids in distress are being kept in emergency departments for weeks, months

Hundreds of Maryland children have spent weeks or months living in emergency departments and other areas of hospitals over the last few years — confined to bare rooms and barred from going outside, seeing friends or having access to an education. The longer these children with behavioral issues stay, hospital physicians and administrators say, the more their mental health deteriorates, and the more that limited and costly emergency room resources are shifted away from other patients.

‘Look at me now’: Using neuroscience to help at-risk kids — and change Maryland’s juvenile justice system

Raynold Smith beefed with another man for months and when they crossed paths in March 2021, both were armed. The reason Smith didn’t pull the trigger? In a split-second moment, when life and death hung in the balance, he glimpsed a child’s car seat and suddenly realized everything his enemy stood to lose. Almost immediately, Smith felt a bullet rip through his leg, narrowly missing a major artery and immobilizing him for weeks.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Montgomery County Schools working to fill hundreds of teacher, staff vacancies

Three weeks before school begins, Montgomery County Public Schools is facing roughly 500 teacher and support staff vacancies, mirroring a national shortage of educators that has left school systems scrambling to fill positions. The school system — Maryland’s largest with roughly 160,000 students — is trying to recruit and hire teachers in a more competitive environment than in previous years, Schools Superintendent Monifa B. McKnight said Monday during a media briefing on the system’s staffing. The school district’s biggest hiring needs are for special education instructors, elementary school teachers and school psychologists.

Park Heights apartment complex design receives a thumbs up, will advance

Plans for a 53-unit multifamily project in Park Heights are moving forward this year as a major overhaul of the disinvested Baltimore neighborhood continues. The project at Park Heights and Virginia avenues in Northwest Baltimore is a companion to a senior apartment complex expected to break ground in the fall by Henson Development Co. and NHP Foundation. The latest project will be called Woodland Gardens. The site today at 4701 Park Heights Ave. is a vacant lot.

Ocean City crime had lower-key summer start, as police keep high-visibility

Ocean City police had a less busy start to the summer, Police Chief Ross Buzzuro told the Town Council, noting a dip in patrol officers. During the July 18 council meeting, Buzzuro reported there were 5,182 officer calls for service in June 2022 as compared to the 6,144 during the same month last year. Citizens calls for service in 2022 were 2,739, lower than the 2021 total of 3,141.

Read More: Delmarva Now
selective focus photography of white baseball balls on ground
30 years at Camden Yards is about much more than just baseball

Oriole Park at Camden Yards is a magical place. When you enter the ballpark, the sights, aromas and sounds take you back to a simpler time — to a place where the hustle and bustle, the fears and frustrations, the stresses of life fade away for a few hours. Some of my happiest memories reside at Camden Yards, the old-timey, red-brick ballpark at the edge of downtown that is marking its 30th anniversary this weekend. At least once a year, it’s where my daughters and I have a standing date. They’re not huge sports fans, but there’s a connection to the Orioles and the stadium that always gets them excited.

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