Thursday, November 28, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Around Maryland

Taxpayers sank almost $100 million into a glove factory that never opened

The promises echoed into a massive warehouse once used by Bethlehem Steel: $350 million in public and private investment, 2,000 new jobs and the return of manufacturing to Sparrows Point within a year. It was March 2022, the tail end of the Omicron wave of COVID-19 in the U.S., and a company called United Safety Technology hosted local politicians and federal officials at a groundbreaking of its state-of-the-art nitrile glove factory — jumpstarted by a $96.1 million investment from the federal government.

people sitting down inside vehicle
MTA riders raise concerns about proposed cuts to DC-bound bus routes

Just last year, Rebecca Hwa of Annapolis moved into a new home, choosing it partly due to its location. The bus was on the MTA 220 bus route, which runs from Maryland’s capital to D.C.’s Foggy Bottom neighborhood. Now the George Washington University employee is concerned because that route is on the chopping block as the Maryland Department of Transportation tries to address a $3.1 billion budget deficit.

 

Read More: WTOP
Baltimore City claims ‘negligence’ in lawsuit against the Dali, the ship that caused Key Bridge collapse

Baltimore City is suing the owners and managers of the Dali, the cargo ship that crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge on March 26, causing it to collapse and killing six construction workers. The lawsuit claims the owners of the Dali were negligent in letting the ship leave the Port of Baltimore without failing to fix known power problems.

Read More: CBS Baltimore
Quantum Loophole breaks ground on 600-acre nature reserve in Frederick

Quantum Loophole Inc., the developer of the first master-planned data center community, Monday announced it broke ground on its 600-acre Nature Reserve at the more than 2,100-acre campus, Quantum Frederick. The nature reserve will act as a carbon-sink onsite, enabling operation of the first carbon negative industrial-development of its kind.

Legal fight over ghost guns, Baltimore’s most common firearm, heads to Supreme Court

The Supreme Court agreed on Monday to take up a Biden administration appeal over the regulation of difficult-to-trace ghost guns that had been struck down by lower courts. Ghost guns, firearms without serial numbers that are usually privately made, have become more common on American city streets, and especially so in Baltimore.

Second draft of the FY 2025 capital budget proposal is $8 million leaner than the first

As final drafts are being prepared for Washington County’s Fiscal Year 2025 budgets, the proposed capital budget has reduced a bit. Originally proposed at $73.8 million, the newest draft totals $65.8 million. Chief Financial Officer Kelcee Mace told the Board of County Commissioners the change was made in response to their requests and the requests of the departments and agencies affected.

City capital plans include multiple parking projects

The city of Frederick’s long-range plan for maintaining the city’s infrastructure includes several projects that could affect the future of parking downtown. A committee is expected to provide recommendations in the coming weeks that would affect the future of one project — the demolition of the city’s Church Street parking garage, which would be rebuilt with more spaces.

 

Six times bridges fell — and who paid to replace them

Just hours after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed last month, President Joe Biden vowed that the federal government would “move heaven and earth” to build a new bridge fast — and would foot the bill. But many have wondered why taxpayers are on the hook when the Dali, a privately owned shipping vessel nearly twice the size of Baltimore’s tallest building, took the bridge out.

Prince George’s Co. police Real Time Crime Center to open later this year

It’s been years in the making, but soon, the Prince George’s County Police Department will begin building its own Real Time Crime Center (RTCC), which will be similar to the one that recently opened in D.C. Police in Prince George’s County, Maryland, already have a relationship with the District’s RTCC and help coordinate responses when criminal suspects trek back and forth across the D.C.-Maryland border.

Read More: WTOP
RayBan sunglasses
Why this summer may be especially hot in the United States

A new outlook for summer from the National Weather Service is a toasty one: Hotter-than-normal conditions are favored almost everywhere, except for a small portion of the northern Plains. The highest odds for a hot summer stretch from Texas into the Pacific Northwest, as well as much of the Northeast. This forecast sets the stage for bouts of record-challenging high temperatures throughout the nation and the possibility of the hottest summer ever observed.

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