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Baltimore spending board to consider $345K settlement payment to family of football player Elijah Gorham, who died after a game injury

Baltimore’s spending board is set to consider a $345,000 payment to the parents of Elijah Gorham, the Baltimore high school football player who died last year after suffering a traumatic brain injury during a game. The payment would settle a wrongful death claim filed by the family, according to a Baltimore City Board of Estimates agenda. It will be considered during the board’s April 20 meeting. Additional information about the payment was not immediately available Wednesday afternoon.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
refuel, petrol stations, gas pump
Temporary suspension of Maryland gas tax expiring, but debate continues

The end is nigh for Maryland’s gas tax holiday. For nearly a month, the state has foregone the collection of its 36-cent per gallon tax. That all ends around midnight Saturday when dealers reimpose the full tax and prices lower than the national average disappear, jarring motorists back to reality. Kirk McCauley, legislative director of the Washington-Maryland-Delaware Service Station and Auto Repair Association, said the temporary pause worked well for his 700-800 members.

refuel, petrol stations, gas pump
Maryland gas prices set to surge above $4 per gallon Sunday as monthlong tax holiday expires

Gas prices across Maryland have hovered about 35 to 40 cents below the national average for the past month because of a 30-day holiday on collection of the state fuel tax — but with the tax break in effect only through 11:59 p.m. Saturday, they are set to jump well above $4 a gallon Sunday. That will come as a shock to many drivers who have appreciated the savings as they struggle with rising pocketbook pressures. The tax holiday will end just days after an economic report confirmed that inflation is rising more sharply than it has since 1981, in large part because of the surging cost of fuel.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland’s access to counsel in evictions program readies to launch with new funding

Maryland’s access to counsel program for low-income renters facing eviction has won two years of funding, a victory for advocates who have been anxious to offer stronger legal support to tenants amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The program is set to receive $12 million allocated as part of the coming fiscal year’s budget. Another $14 million is planned for the 2024 fiscal year, an amount that lawmakers set aside from the state’s abandoned property fund.

Environmental groups call for oversight of Baltimore’s other wastewater treatment plant as problems continue

Environmental groups are calling for third-party oversight at Baltimore’s Patapsco Wastewater Treatment Plant after an inspection conducted last week found continuing equipment problems resulting in high levels of bacteria and nutrients released into the river. It comes a few weeks after the Maryland Environmental Service took charge of Baltimore’s other wastewater facility, located along the shores of Back River in Dundalk, citing declining conditions after months of failed inspections.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Developers pitch ‘multigenerational community’ on Montgomery County land owned by religious groups

Two developers are advancing a shared plan to buy and redevelop religious institutions’ transit-accessible property in North Bethesda as a “multigenerational community.” The proposed 15-acre community, located at 4910 and 4920 Strathmore Ave., would include a 145-bed senior assisted-living facility and 125 single-family homes, of which about 115 would be attached and 10 detached. Brandywine Living, a New Jersey-based senior care company, would build the former facility on the eastern part of the site.

Howard County’s $6M offer to purchase Camp Ilchester accepted; Ball pledges to preserve the land as open space

Howard County’s offer to purchase Camp Ilchester in Ellicott City from the Girl Scouts of Central Maryland will allow the beloved camp’s land to be preserved for years to come, instead of being converted to a residential development, according to County Executive Calvin Ball. “It would be a great tragedy if this wonderful space was lost to bulldozers plowing over a legacy of the Girl Scouts,” Ball said during a news conference Wednesday.

Mask Mandate Aboard Planes, Trains And Buses In The US Extended Until May 3

The federal transportation mask mandate is being extended for another 15 days, meaning individuals traveling aboard airplanes, trains and on public transportation in the United States will be required to wear a mask until at least early May. The mandate, the federal government confirmed on Wednesday, is now set to expire on May 3. The Associated Press was first to report the extension. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced Wednesday that it was keeping its mask order in effect, and the Transportation Security Administration announced it was extending the mandate for an additional 15 days.

Read More: WJZ-TV
Md. grant will help students with disabilities set back by pandemic

Jovay Sweeney, a 21-year-old Hyattsville, Md., resident with cerebral palsy, had been making good progress toward someday living on her own. She had practiced answering questions for a job interview, and learned how to dress for a job, too. But when the coronavirus pandemic forced the D.C. region to shut down in-person schooling, Sweeney’s learning nearly stopped, said her mother, Karen Sweeney. More than two years later, the family is hoping a local nonprofit’s program can help make up for lost time.

Ethics Panel at Center of Prince George’s School Board Feud to Resign

The ethics panel that produced a controversial set of findings against members of the Prince George’s County Board of Education is stepping down en masse. The panel notified board chair Juanita D. Miller of their intention to resign as a group in an April 3 letter that was obtained by Maryland Matters. The departures will take effect on Friday and will leave the board, which has been dogged by allegations of misconduct, without ethics overseers.

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