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Regional transportation money would fund projects in Brunswick, Frederick

Design of a trail project in Frederick and one to add sidewalks in areas of Brunswick are among the projects scheduled to be approved for funding Wednesday by a regional transportation organization. The money from the Transportation Planning Board of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments would provide $200,000 for design to tie two trail stubs on the eastern side of Frederick into the city's trail network, as well as $330,718 for design for sidewalks along H Street in Brunswick, a key priority for the city.

Prince George’s County greenlights construction of 8 new schools

Prince George's County Council has greenlit a resolution to move forward with a project to build eight new schools in the county through a mix of public and private funds. The approval comes after the county council was unable to get the necessary votes to advance to the second phase of the plan last week. Under the Blueprint Schools Program developers finance the construction, and Prince George's County Public Schools (PGCPS) pays for the new buildings over a 30-year period.

Read More: WUSA9
Baltimore Teachers Union presses school board to conduct transparent, national search for new CEO

Members of the Baltimore Teachers Union rallied outside the school system’s headquarters Tuesday to pressure the Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners to launch a national search for a new chief executive. Sonja Santelises, the Baltimore City Public School System’s CEO, signed a one-year contract in June after months of drawn-out negotiations with the board.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Howard County is buzzing about a proposal for an inspector general. Here’s what you need to know.

As the Howard County Council weighs two bills that would establish the county’s first-ever Office of the Inspector General, residents have taken more than a passing interest in the idea. Dozens of people appeared at a council meeting Monday evening to share their thoughts and concerns about the legislation — and even a few grammatical suggestions.

Baltimore Skyline
How an unusual experiment helped Baltimore house nearly 300 families and counting

An experiment that began five years ago — involving multiple city and state agencies, and all 10 hospitals in Baltimore — proved so effective in keeping formerly unhoused residents in new homes that officials gathered Monday to tout funding to expand the program. The idea pushed by housing advocates was that not everyone could be given a set of keys and expected to thrive, particularly those with serious medical conditions.

Pre-K enrollment in Maryland ticks back up under Blueprint. What are benefits, challenges?

For the first time since the pandemic, the number of children in Maryland enrolled in pre-Kindergarten programs climbed above 30,000 last year. Since then, that number has grown even more and additional enrollment is expected. The state is in the early stages of implementing the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future, a decade-long education reform law, which requires an expansion of full-day pre-K for 3-and 4-year-old children.

Black women crab pickers risked it all in 1938. Maryland finally recognizes them.

In 1938, about 600 workers — predominantly Black women — walked off the job in what was then the self-proclaimed “Crab Capital of the World” to protest a wage cut at the Crisfield crab-picking houses. For five weeks, the crab pickers fought to reinstate their pay. As they did, angry white mobs burned cars, invaded homes, and threatened their union representatives. Labor organizers brought in groceries; white residents blocked them from delivering them to the strikers, hoping starvation would bring them back to work.

Code Red Extreme Heat Alert in Baltimore through Wednesday. These cooling centers are open.

With dangerous temperatures continuing to climb, the Code Red Extreme Heat Alert in Baltimore City has been extended through Wednesday, July 17. The temperatures could reach 102 degrees on Tuesday and 97 on Wednesday. The heat index, a measure of air temperature and relative humidity that indicates how hot it feels to the human body, could get as high as 110 degrees over the next few days.

Read More: CBS Baltimore
Disciplinary incidents are rising among Washington County students, report shows

Molly Adams said she's "lucky" to teach third grade at Salem Avenue Elementary School. Salem Avenue is of Washington County's nine Title I elementary schools and one of the most impoverished in Washington County. But Adams used to teach in Baltimore City, where she said she had very little behavioral support in the classroom by comparison. "It is not that I had terrible daily bloodshed in my classroom in Baltimore or anything like that," she said.

‘Proud to come home’: Montgomery Co.’s new superintendent explains the realities of the job he’s taken on

The new superintendent of schools for Montgomery County, Maryland, is entering his third week on the job with the new school year beginning in just over a month. Thomas Taylor, who came from Stafford County, Virginia, now leads Maryland’s largest school district, with a budget of $3.3 billion, more than 160,000 students and over 200 school buildings. WTOP talked to Taylor about the job he’s taken on.

Read More: WTOP

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