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Goucher Poll: A Third of Marylanders Facing More Financial Hardship than a Year Ago; Hogan Approval Ratings Remain High

Marylanders are concerned about their fiscal futures and are feeling the pinch from higher prices, according to a new poll. More than half of Marylanders, 56%, say that recent price increases have caused them financial hardship. About 30% said that meant a major financial hardship, while 26% said it had a minor effect, according to a Goucher College survey of 635 Maryland adults between March 1st and 6th. The poll, released Monday, has a margin of error of 3.9 percentage points.

Overhaul of Baltimore station will help speed trains through busiest rail corridor in nation

The Baltimore train station is getting its first major facelift in nearly four decades, an investment that railroad officials say will help move passenger trains throughout the busy corridor from Washington to New York. Renovation of the 110-year-old train hall began last month as part of a $150 million revamp that will include an extension of the concourse, two new train platforms, and dining and retail amenities to be completed by 2025.

Transit advocacy group warns of possible ‘missed opportunity’ with Baltimore Arena renovation

One of Baltimore’s top transit advocates hopes the city isn’t missing another opportunity to improve its public transportation system with a major economic development project. Brian O’Malley, CEO of the Central Maryland Transportation Alliance couldn’t believe what he saw when he looked at renderings of the upcoming renovations for the Baltimore Arena. The drawings presented to the Urban Design and Architecture Advisory Panel (UDAAP) appeared to indicate plans to remove a transit hub on the Baltimore Street side of the arena in downtown Baltimore.

Public access to police records in Maryland uneven, sometimes costly, despite new law

A community group in Montgomery County was asked to pay $95,000 for copies of police discipline and complaint records, which, under a 2021 change in Maryland law, are no longer automatically private. Public defenders in Baltimore seeking those records have been told to pay as little as $10 to the Harford County Sheriff’s Office but as much as $224,000 to the Calvert County Sheriff’s Office and nearly $500,000 to the Montgomery County Police Department.

Howard, Anne Arundel and Baltimore Leaders Urge Action on BWI Noise Concerns

In response to growing complaints from people who live near — and not so near — Thurgood Marshall BWI Airport, top local officials urged the General Assembly to address the noise and and potential health impacts associated with low-flying aircraft. Members of two legislative panels were told that the implementation of the Federal Aviation Administration’s Next Generation Air Transportation System, or “NextGen,” in 2015 has triggered a significant increase in the number of flights over portions of Howard and Anne Arundel counties and other Central Maryland communities.

Maryland Gov. Hogan declares 2022 the ‘Year of Harriet Tubman’

Maryland Governor Larry Hogan has proclaimed the year 2022 for Harriet Tubman, the abolitionist and military scout who helped advance freedom for African Americans during the Civil War era. Tubman, whose birth name was Araminta Ross, was born into slavery in 1822 in Dorchester County, Maryland. During the Civil War, Tubman was key in creating a secret network of antislavery activists and safe houses, known as the Underground Railroad, that helped escaped slaves from the south travel to freedom in the northern U.S. and Canada.

Read More: WTOP
Apple in red
Nearly Half Of Maryland Families Face Food Insufficiency, Maryland Food Bank Finds

Nearly half of Maryland families said their children were sometimes or often not eating enough food because of high costs, according to a new s udy from the Maryland Food Bank. The organization analyzed U.S. Census data and determined 45% of families said they were sometimes not giving enough food to their children because it’s too expensive. In February 2022, nearly 10% of respondents said their children were “often not eating enough because the household ‘just couldn’t afford enough food,” the group said in its report titled “A Research Guide to Child Food Insufficiency.”

Read More: WJZ
Adnan Syed case: Prosecutors, defense attorney ask court to retest crime scene evidence with new DNA technology

Evidence in the murder case against Adnan Syed could get a new look with the support of Baltimore prosecutors, marking the latest development in a two-decade legal saga that gripped the nation after it was highlighted in the hit podcast “Serial.” Baltimore prosecutors signed onto a motion with Syed’s attorney Thursday, asking a judge to order the Baltimore City Police Lab to retest certain items collected as evidence in the 1999 murder of Hae Min Lee, using the latest DNA technology. Lee was strangled to death and discovered in a clandestine grave in Leakin Park.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
‘Unworkable’ noise ordinance in Carroll County revised and headed to public hearing

Carroll County government staff and the sheriff’s office have formulated a countywide noise ordinance to update language in a 2005 law that largely addresses only noise from all-terrain vehicles. The next step is a public hearing to allow residents to comment and make suggestions. In 2005, the Maryland Department of the Environment’s noise control program was defunded by action of the state legislature. As a result, noise complaints started to be referred to local governments. Carroll County officials formed a committee to formulate a noise control document, and, at the time, the noisiest offenders in Carroll County were all-terrain vehicles in residential areas.

Loyola University Md. opens data analytics visualization lab

Loyola University Maryland’s Sellinger School of Business recently opened a new data analytics visualization lab, a classroom outfitted with technology to help students interpret, manipulate and present large amounts of data. Students from a range of academic majors, including accounting and information systems, will learn skills crucial to the future of business. The data analytics visualization lab will offer more powerful computing, projectors with touch capability on a 12-foot smartboard, seven large display monitors for huddle areas, integrated Zoom video conferencing with a high-resolution camera that can track subjects and movable, modular classroom furniture.

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