Monday, December 22, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

Maryland city now can boast of its own roller derby team

Screeches of plastic against hardwood fill the room as a sweat-drenched skater flies around the edge of the track. Colorful makeup radiates above and below her eyes. With her left hand behind her back to preserve momentum, she sweeps through a long section of the track and comes up behind eight skaters. A referee skates beside her with their right arm pointed toward her and left arm raised up in the air. She skates up to the pack, where four skaters match her in blue and another four look ready for battle in bright orange.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
One of my first few attempts at panning.  here we see a Toyota Land Cruiser 5.7L that has sheer power and is a versatile off road machine, pushing around 450 Horsepower.
I-83 cameras catch nearly 84,000 speeding cars during first month in Baltimore; $40 fine set to begin next week

Speed radars and billboards warning that Baltimore’s Interstate 83 is now enforced by speed cameras might have been taken as a light suggestion by hasty motorists. Despite the signage, cars barreled through the Jones Falls Expressway at 12 mph or more over the speed limit nearly 84,000 times in 30 days, the Baltimore Department of Transportation said. After the camera went live April 14, motorists were given a 90-day grace period during which speeding citations that arrived in the mail did not include a financial penalty.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Here are MDOT’s 7 possible alternatives for Baltimore’s canceled Red Line

For a project that never actually broke ground, the Baltimore Red Line has had a rather busy afterlife. In the seven years since its abrupt cancellation by Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, the 14-mile proposed east-west rail link between Johns Hopkins Bayview Hospital in Southeast Baltimore and the Social Security Administration and Centers for Medicaid Services in the western Baltimore County suburb of Woodlawn has sparked a federal Title VI investigation into its demise, served as a flashpoint for multiple election cycles and inspired both state and federal legislation.

Baltimore Police Release Draft Map Of New ‘Data Driven’ Districts

Baltimore police have released a draft map with the first boundary changes to the department’s nine districts in decades. Under the proposal, some of the biggest changes would come to the Central, Eastern and Southeastern districts. The Eastern would lose several neighborhoods to the Central (Johnston Square, Oldtown and Penn-Fallsway) and Southeastern (Middle East, Madison-Eastend and Biddle Street), while expanding into neighborhoods that were previously part of the Northeastern, such as Clifton Park, Coldstream Homestead Montebello and Berea.

Read More: WJZ
Judge allows Baltimore County chief auditor to continue working indefinitely

A judge has ruled that Andrea Barr, the chief auditor of Baltimore County Public Schools, can keep her job, shooting down a county school board challenge over a vote that should have renewed her contract. Baltimore County Circuit Court Judge Sherrie Bailey granted Barr a preliminary injunction Thursday morning after a two-day trial between Barr and the county board of education. Barr can continue working until the court can hold a trial on the merits of the case. A hearing has not yet been scheduled. The board is not allowed to retaliate against her, nor interfere with her employment.

Keith Davis Jr. alleges Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby violated court order, again, with online comment about murder case

Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby earlier this week commented on an Instagram post about the repeated prosecutions of Keith Davis Jr., potentially violating an order prohibiting lawyers involved with the case from talking publicly about it for a second time. Attorneys for Davis cited Mosby’s comment in a legal paper supporting their argument earlier this month that she should be held in contempt of court. The new filing brings yet more attention to a case that has become a sore spot for the Democrat, who is seeking a third term as the city’s elected prosecutor.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Large field, ideological chasm mark Frederick County school board race

When Karen Yoho ran her first campaign for the Frederick County Board of Education four years ago, she checked public voting records from the previous election. The information allowed the retired elementary school teacher to see the addresses of every county resident who voted in the school board race two years earlier. They were the most likely to vote again, she figured, so she’d knock on their doors — every one she could — and ask for their support.

Sample and mail-in ballot hiccups hit several Maryland counties

Early in-person voting in Maryland’s primary elections begins Thursday, but issues with sample and mail-in ballots sent to voters have been cropping up across the state over the past few weeks as election boards adjust to redrawn district maps and a delayed election date. In Montgomery County, 791 residents received two mail-in ballots after state ballot vendor Taylor Corp. mistakenly mailed an additional ballot to a batch of voters, according to county and state officials.

How redevelopment of Prince George’s Hospital Center will bring amenities to Cheverly

The town of Cheverly, Maryland, and its roughly 7,000 residents have a unique and proud community, but they don’t have a proper coffee shop. But there are plans to change that and bring much more. Tucked mostly between U.S. Route 50 and the Baltimore-Washington Parkway as they converge on the D.C. line, Cheverly residents love to live there, even though the town does not have all of the amenities that many communities have.

Read More: WTOP

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