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Commissioners commit $2.5M toward design of new Carroll County Sheriff’s Office headquarters

The design of a new Carroll County Sheriff’s Office headquarters is finally moving forward after the Board of Carroll County Commissioners unanimously approved a $2,562,300 contract Thursday with Manns Woodward Studios, of White Marsh, for architectural and civil engineering design. The money for design is already allocated in the county’s fiscal 2023 operating budget, after commissioners decided in April to move up the project timeline by two years.

A new COVID subvariant is spreading among a weary, divided public

A new and easily transmissible COVID-19 virus subvariant is gaining traction in the U.S., according to the latest federal data, and public health experts in Maryland and elsewhere fear a fatigued and divided nation has let its guard down. Scientists, medical professionals and researchers are racing to understand BA.5, a new subvariant of the highly contagious omicron strain that emerged last fall and quickly fanned out across the country. The rapid spread of infections caused a statewide surge in sickness that prompted hospitals to resort to emergency standards of care as patients overwhelmed the health care system.

Anne Arundel County school system anticipates fall bus driver shortage

Anne Arundel County Public Schools anticipates between 45 and 50 driver vacancies among bus routes next school year, similar to where the system ended this school year, interim Superintendent Monique Jackson told the Board of Education Wednesday. Thousands of students last year were affected by late bus service, and in many cases no bus service at all. The disruptions were caused by a driver shortage, which AACPS says is a national problem. The system has been working with contractors to fill empty jobs.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
FCPS short 130 special educators for 2022-23 school year

Frederick County Public Schools needs to hire more than 130 special educators in the next five weeks to be fully staffed by the time classes resume — something district administrators acknowledge is unlikely.The shortage is most severe among special education instructional assistants (SEIAs), whom FCPS has been struggling to recruit and retain for months. At the June 22 meeting of the Frederick County Board of Education, the district staff reported 30 SEIA vacancies. On Wednesday, they reported 97 vacancies.

Thousands of Carroll residents still without power following Tuesday storm

Thousands of Carroll County residents were without power Wednesday after a strong storm system blew through the area Tuesday afternoon and evening. The Maryland Department of Emergency Management’s website showed 9,730 Carroll County customers without power midday Wednesday. According to BGE, as of 3 p.m., Wednesday, about 8,837 of its 59,959 power customers, or almost 15%, were without power. FirstEnergy showed about 700 customers without power, most of whom were in the Taneytown area.

BCPS looks to hire more teachers before 2022-23 school year begins

Local school districts are spending a good bit of their summer recruiting new schoolteachers. It’s a critical task as the nation faces teacher shortages that existed pre-coronavirus pandemic. It’s a year-round conversation that takes place among top administrators: How to make sure there are enough teachers in the classroom come the first day of school.

Read More: WBAL
Governor Hogan visits Havre de Grace highlighting Project Restore grants

Gov. Larry Hogan spent Friday in Harford County, visiting businesses in downtown Havre de Grace, including recipients of Project Restore grants, and saw the progress of the city’s living shoreline restoration project for the riverfront along Water Street. “It was good to have the governor see our living shoreline restoration project and the efforts we’re making to keep [Chesapeake Bay ]clean and to return the shoreline to what it looked like when Capt. John Smith sailed past in 1608,” said Havre de Grace City Council President Jim Ringsaker.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
red apple fruit on four pyle books
‘We are a house divided’: In her first address, Baltimore County’s new student board member calls for unity

The new student member of the Baltimore County school board, Roah Hassan, called during Tuesday night’s meeting for an end to division among the body’s members. Hassan, a rising senior at Perry Hall High School, was sworn in earlier this month. She used her first board meeting to express her thoughts on the needs of a school system that has over 111,000 students, and what she thinks the board could be doing to meet them. “We are a house divided,” Hassan, who is 16 years old, said Tuesday. “I have seen this board, and I have seen the tension and dysfunction that it entails. I have seen division in a space where we cannot afford to be divided.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
How a team from Baltimore turned data from the James Webb Telescope into the images seen around the world

Before the first full-color images from the James Webb Space Telescope were released to the world Tuesday, and before President Biden proudly unveiled the Webb’s photo of galaxy cluster SMACS 0723, Joseph DePasquale sat for hours in his office in Baltimore, working tirelessly to get them ready. DePasquale, senior science visuals developer in the Office of Public Outreach at the Space Telescope Science Institute, located on the Johns Hopkins University’s Homewood campus, was part of a team tasked with processing the Webb’s first photos — turning them from data sets to color images.

Bruce Springsteen’s 2023 tour coming to Baltimore Arena’s ‘grand opening celebration’

Bruce Springsteen will take the stage next year at a renovated Baltimore Arena. The rock legend’s 2023 tour includes a stop at the downtown Baltimore venue, according to a list of tour dates and venues unveiled Tuesday. Springsteen is scheduled to perform in Baltimore on April 7 as part of the international tour, which features 31 U.S. shows and appearances in Europe. The show will be the first for the upgraded arena, which is undergoing a major facelift led by Los Angeles-based Oak View Group. Officials gathered last month for a ceremonial groundbreaking on the $200 million project, which counts investors like NBA star Kevin Durant and the musician Pharrell Williams.

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