Monday, November 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

Battling ‘Urban Heat Island Effect’ in Fairmount Heights

A community in Prince George’s County is not content to throw in the towel to climate change. Instead, the Town of Fairmount Heights has converted a little-used public open space into an intentionally designed heat refuge to combat the heat island effect of surrounding urbanized areas. The park, which has no official name, and which most residents call “The Ravine,” used to be best known for occasionally flooding and for the cost of mowing the sun-scorched grass in the summer.

Read More: WUSA9
Baltimore under heat advisory as global temperatures break records

Much of Maryland — including Baltimore, Frederick, Columbia, Annapolis, Gaithersburg and Bel Air — is under a heat advisory from the National Weather Service from 12-8 p.m. on Monday. Heat indexes of around 105 degrees are expected around the region, according to the NWS. In Baltimore, temperatures could reach as high as 98 degrees with a heat index around 102, according to the forecast.

apartment buildings, housing concept
Report: Affordable apartments are out of reach of many low-wage Maryland renters

Maryland is among the most-challenging states for minimum wage workers to earn enough to be able to afford rent for a two-bedroom apartment, suggesting that affordable housing is “out of reach” for many low-wage renters. That’s the conclusion of the “Out of Reach” report from the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), a housing research organization, which shows that Maryland is behind only seven states and Washington, D.C., in the 2024 ranking.

 

A disaster waiting to happen: Tracking hazmat trucks illegally using Baltimore’s tunnels

When the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed into the Patapsco River, it destroyed a central passage for transporting hazardous materials up and down the East Coast. Soon, fears surfaced online that hazmat trucks are now using Baltimore’s underwater tunnels instead, despite state law largely prohibiting them from doing so.

Maryland joins other states urging Supreme Court to uphold ‘ghost gun’ restrictions

Maryland has joined 21 states, the District of Columbia and the Northern Mariana Islands urging the Supreme Court to uphold federal restrictions on “ghost guns,” unregistered and untraceable weapons that can be assembled at home from kits. The brief, filed Wednesday by attorneys general from the 24 jurisdictions, argues that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives did not exceed its authority when it passed a rule requiring that gun manufacturers and dealers treat ghost gun kits like firearms: adding serial numbers, keeping records on their sale and conducting background checks on buyers.

MD. Department of Health launches partnership to address youth behavioral health

The Maryland Department of Health has announced a partnership designed to establish a road map for improving the state’s youth behavioral health. The department’s partnership with the Maryland Coalition of Families and Manatt Health will make new school-based initiatives and investments in youth crisis services, Maryland Health Secretary Laura Herrera Scott said in a news release Wednesday.

Remaining Key Bridge structures will be blasted, demolished to make way for new span

The container ship Dali is gone. So, too, is the bulk of the 50,000 tons of wreckage that tumbled into the Patapsco River when the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed on March 26. Some of the last vestiges of the Key Bridge and its demise are the two existing ramps — which led to the bridge’s main span — still standing in the water. They, too, will be gone soon as authorities make way for a rebuilt Key Bridge by October 2028.

 

Read More: Baltimore Sun
top view mall interior photo
Malls, the last refuge of teen freedom, are tightening their grip

With summer freshly underway, Julia Ortiz and Yanni Marneris, cherub-faced, reclined in rocking chairs on the pretend village green by the pretend Main Street USA in front of a real but dry fountain, talking and watching the sunny afternoon unfold. They were in violation of a policy becoming standard issue at the malls of suburban Baltimore that requires anyone 17 years old or younger to be accompanied by an adult at least 21 years old.

taking sinovac covid-19 vaccination injection
Hopkins study: Regular vaccine boosts may help immunocompromised people fight COVID

For people who are the most susceptible to the damaging effects of the coronavirus, regular booster doses of a bivalent COVID-19 vaccine can help them fight the virus, according to a new Johns Hopkins Medicine study. In the study, published Tuesday in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, Hopkins researchers worked with 76 people who had received solid organ transplants and take immunosuppressant medications to prevent their bodies from rejecting the transplants.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
The Red Line’s future rests in the hands of a transit ‘true believer’

When the proposed Red Line transit project was canceled in 2015, Holly Arnold was angry. As the manager for the Maryland Transit Administration’s capital program at the time, it had been her job to plan out the money for the new east-west light rail. She loved the job. But then her boss’s boss canned the project. “Having to take the funding out of the program was one of the most depressing days of my career,” Arnold said in an interview Friday, just after the announcement by Gov. Wes Moore that the relaunched project would be a light rail, not a rapid bus.

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