Tuesday, December 16, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
Baltimore, MD
27°
Cloudy
FOLLOW US:

Around Maryland

Over 20 family members of Key Bridge victims secure authorization to come to the U.S.

Twenty-four family members related to the six victims of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse have secured passage to the U.S., according to a news release from two immigrant-focused service organizations. According to CASA and the Esperanza Center, the latter of which is operated by Catholic Charities of Baltimore, 16 family members are currently in the U.S. and eight more are set to arrive this week.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Dates announced for summer Metro Red Line station closures

The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) announced Monday that the Glenmont, Wheaton, Forest Glen and Silver Spring Metro stations will close June 1 and reopen Sept. 1 and the Takoma Metro station will close June 1 and reopen June 30 in order to allow for construction at the stations and the Purple Line.

Read More: MOCO360
Health care for Marylanders with HIV is facing huge cuts this summer

By the end of June, health care providers in Maryland will lose nearly three-quarters of the funding they use to find and treat thousands of people with HIV. Advocates and providers say they had been warned there would be less money by the Maryland Department of Health, but were stunned at the size of the drop — from about $17.9 million this fiscal year to $5.3 million the next. The deep cuts are less than three months away.

Baltimore police provide updates on traffic violation crackdown

Baltimore police are sharing more details after a new push to crack down on traffic violations. In an exclusive interview with WBAL Radio, Commissioner Richard Worley said BPD performed nearly 700 traffic stops this past weekend alone. Since implementing the increased focus on traffic enforcement on March 29, Worley said the department is averaging more than 200 traffic stops per day.

Read More: WBALTV
Wind farm construction under way on Dan’s Mountain

Clearway Energy Group has closed on $174 million in construction financing and has begun construction on Dan’s Mountain, a 55 megawatt wind farm in western Allegany County, the company said. Dan’s Mountain is the first new onshore wind farm to be constructed in Maryland in nearly 10 years and is expected to increase the state’s wind energy generating capacity by nearly 30%.

With overall US crime down double digits, what’s boosting violent crime rates in Prince George’s Co.?

Nationwide, crime is trending generally down, and that’s the case in Prince George’s County, Maryland, too — but not when it comes to violent crime, which county police said is up so far this year. At a Monday afternoon hearing, Prince George’s County Police Chief Malik Aziz offered a quick rundown on where things stand after the first third of the year, as he went over the department’s budget proposal for the upcoming fiscal year.

Read More: WTOP
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
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.

The Morning Rundown

We’re staying up to the minute on the issues shaping the future. Join us on the newsletter of choice for Maryland politicos and business leaders. It’s always free to join and never a hassle to leave. See you on the inside.