Monday, November 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Baltimore’s sheriff is pushing for changes that will mean fewer evictions

Inside the Baltimore sheriff’s office, Sam Cogen boasts of the department’s new computer system, new equipment and new staff members brought on at his direction since the start of his term nearly 18 months ago. But the biggest change? Look no farther than the top of his bookshelf. There sits a copy of “Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City,” a Pulitzer Prize-winning bestseller by sociologist Matthew Desmond who went on to found The Eviction Lab at Princeton University.

$6.8M grant will help Maryland educators learn to use the science of reading

The Maryland State Department of Education has received a $6.8 million grant that will allow teachers to take courses on the science of reading, an evidence-based instructional philosophy. The four-year grant will provide free professional development for more than 30,000 eligible teachers, administrators and paraprofessionals.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Assistant chief tapped to lead Montgomery County police

The search for a new Montgomery County police chief has reached a milestone with the nomination of one of the members of the Maryland county’s police department. Assistant Chief Marc Yamada has been tapped to replace Marcus Jones, who earlier this year announced that he will be retiring in July as head of the Montgomery County Police Department.

Read More: WTOP
Shark Tank U: Maryland students compete for $2M in private equity to reduce school shootings

The 22 high-achieving University of Maryland students gathered in a loft-like classroom had to apply just to get into this class. And the class itself is a high-stakes competition. Over three semesters, they’re charged with inventing a workable technology to detect gunshots in school buildings, which could reduce casualties. In a year, they’ll gather for a “Shark Tank”-style competition to present their business pitches.

Baltimore youths say a redeveloped Harborplace should be cleaner and drama-free

There are generations of young people who have never experienced Harborplace in its heyday, with lots of shops, eateries and fun places to hang out. They only know what’s left of the downtown waterfront and the mostly vacant green pavilions, slated for redevelopment by developer P. David Bramble and his company, MCB Real Estate. Like teenagers before them, today’s youths still meet friends there, most often during spring, summer and other school breaks.

County Council votes to adopt $982M budget, raise property taxes

The County Council on Tuesday voted to adopt a $981.5 million operating budget for the next fiscal year, with a property tax increase of about 4.7% to help support school construction. The council previously cut $442,120 from Frederick County Executive Jessica Fitzwater’s fiscal year 2025 budget proposal. On Tuesday, the council decided that the surplus funds will go toward the Board of Education, which is trying to close a gap in its budget.

 

Dali has left Key Bridge wreckage site, but work is far from done, Moore says

With a backdrop cleared of a container ship for the first time in eight weeks, Gov. Wes Moore on Tuesday thanked the Unified Command and other officials for a quick and decisive response to the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. But the mission is far from complete, he said. “I will not be satisfied until I can look over this same site and see the Francis Scott Key Bridge standing again. That’s mission completion,” Moore said.

 

Maryland officials say they brought portable toilets, bottled water to people at city jail without water last week

A Baltimore jail was without water for nearly 36 hours between May 12 and 13, after the facility’s main sanitation pipe had been clogged with paper waste and sewage, state officials acknowledged Tuesday. The water supply was disrupted again last Thursday. State officials said they were informed about the initial blockage at 11 a.m. that Sunday and the water supply was restored around 10:30 p.m. the next day.

 

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Captured in a metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia primary school, this photograph depicts a typical classroom scene, where an audience of school children were seated on the floor before a teacher at the front of the room, who was reading an illustrated storybook, during one of the scheduled classroom sessions. Assisting the instructor were two female students to her left, and a male student on her right, who was holding up the book, while the seated classmates were raising their hands to answer questions related to the story just read.
Wright: There must be ‘a conscious effort’ to grow, diversify Maryland’s teacher workforce

Maryland State Schools Superintendent Carey Wright said Tuesday that school leaders must work harder to diversify and boost the state’s teacher workforce. “It’s got to be a conscious effort,” Wright said during a break at the state Board of Education meeting in Baltimore. “Are we really going into our HBCUs? Are we recruiting? What do those techniques look like?”

 

bike, trail, bicycle
After recent crashes some in Southeast Baltimore want better bike routes

Residents and advocates said two recent crashes between cars and cyclists in Southeast Baltimore highlight the need for better bike routes, stressing that small changes could make their neighborhoods safer for drivers and pedestrians alike. The nonprofit Friends of Patterson Park, which organizes community events and programming for the iconic Southeast Baltimore green space, wanted last weekend’s group ride to highlight the lack of a safe east-west connection between the park and downtown, said Teddy Walsh, board president for the organization.

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