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Virgin Mary statue returns to Mount St. Mary’s in Maryland

A 26-foot statue of the Virgin Mary is back in place at a Catholic university in Maryland. The Frederick News-Post reports that the statue has been put back in place atop a 78-foot pedestal at the National Shrine Grotto on the campus of Mount St. Mary’s University in Emmitsburg after a year of restoration work. That work continues even as the statue is back in place, surrounded by scaffolding. Workers are now in the process of layering gold leaf to statue’s exterior. The university has raised $400,000 to support the restoration; about $450,000 more is needed.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
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Carroll County Public Schools to host hiring event in hopes of addressing teacher shortages, filling several other positions

In an effort to address teacher shortages and fill several other positions, Carroll County Public Schools is holding an in-person job fair next week for the upcoming school year. The school system says it is actively recruiting teachers, assistants, substitute teachers, clerical staff, cafeteria workers and facilities operations and maintenance personnel. Representatives from the CCPS transportation department also will be at the event to help connect anyone interested in becoming a bus driver with local contractors, according to a news release.

Rents Expected To Rise In Montgomery County After Lawmakers Delay Vote On Rent Control Bill

Some tenants in Montgomery County, Maryland, are bracing for sky-high rent increases in August after the council declined to extend COVID rent protections. The council was scheduled to vote Tuesday on a temporary rent control measure introduced by County Executive Marc Elrich. Expedited Bill 22-22 would have barred landlords from raising rents more than 4.4% for another six months, granting more short-term relief to renters as landlords ratchet up rents across the region. But the council took the vote off the agenda, meaning the measure will not receive a vote until after lawmakers return from summer recess in September.

Read More: DCist
Baltimore family sues Sesame Place, alleging discrimination

A Baltimore family is suing a Sesame Street-themed amusement park for $25 million over claims of racial discrimination, alleging multiple costumed characters ignored a 5-year-old Black girl during a meet-and-greet event last month. The lawsuit comes in the wake of a video, shared widely on social media, showing two other Black girls apparently being snubbed by a costumed employee during a parade at the park in Langhorne, outside Philadelphia. Sesame Place apologized in a statement and promised more training for its employees after the video went viral earlier this month.

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Baltimore City under pressure to hire hundreds of teachers before school starts

Baltimore City Public Schools needs to hire hundreds of teachers to fill a shortage with about a month left before school starts. The district needs to hire almost 200 teachers a week in order to fill all of its vacant positions in what's being called one of the hardest hiring years the school system has seen in some time.

Read More: WBAL
Carroll County Public Schools hires nearly 100 new teachers, but still more positions are left to be filled

The Carroll County Board of Education unanimously voted to approve the hiring of nearly 100 new educators, but school leaders say there are still more positions to be filled before the first day of school Sept. 6. “We’re working very hard to fill all of our vacancies for the upcoming school year, which has been challenging in CCPS and for all other systems across the state and nationally,” Superintendent Cynthia McCabe said at the board’s July 21 meeting. “This is particularly true in critical shortage areas, but staff are working hard to fill these positions.”

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