Sunday, April 28, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Frederick Health Hospital eliminating about 190 positions, most of them vacant

Frederick Health Hospital has eliminated 150 vacant positions this fiscal year and is “restructuring” roughly 40 current positions that are filled, according to President and Chief Executive Officer Tom Kleinhanzl. The Frederick area’s largest health care provider is also making additional cost-cutting measures by renegotiating purchasing agreements for hospital supplies.

 

Maryland horse racing could consolidate at Pimlico, as the future of Laurel Park is ‘very much in question’

Just a few years ago, the Maryland Jockey Club pushed to move the Preakness from Baltimore to Laurel Park. But soon, the track midway between Baltimore and Washington might not host any horse races at all. As the racetrack owners, horsemen and the General Assembly — which recently created a state-operated racing authority — contemplate the future of Maryland horse racing, it’s Laurel Park that could be a casualty of the declining industry.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Ugmonk
Unionized Apple employees in Towson say the company is dragging its feet

Apple may not be negotiating its contract with unionized employees in Towson in good faith, a union representative said. Jay Wadleigh, who is leading contract negotiations on behalf of the International Association of Machinists union, said contract talks with Apple have been “very, very slow.”

U.S. economy grew at 1.1% in early 2023, points to ‘significant slowing’

The U.S. economy wobbled in the first months of 2023, growing at an annual rate of 1.1 percent, as higher interest rates and a banking crisis dragged down activity across sectors. The latest figures, released Thursday by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, mark a sharp slowdown at a time when Wall Street is already bracing for recession, in part because of fears that the banking sector’s troubles will curtail lending.

Baltimore liquor board wants Sangria to resolve issues with Mount Vernon neighbors before license can be renewed

Three Baltimore businesses at risk of losing their liquor licenses were granted a renewal Thursday by the city’s Board of Liquor License Commissioners. But a fourth business will need to hash out concerns about security, operating hours and more before commissioners will approve another year of alcohol sales. The board gave Sangria, a Mount Vernon lounge, 10 days to seek mediation for issues with its neighbors, who said they are worried about two recent shootings near the business, and have concerns about the parameters of a memorandum of understanding, or MOU, between the community and Sangria that dates back to 2016.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Attman’s Delicatessen picks new Baltimore location for third sandwich shop

A longtime Jewish deli established 108 years ago on Baltimore’s once bustling Corned Beef Row is expanding for the second time in three years with a new location in the city. Attman’s Delicatessen this fall will move into a storefront at 1401 Point St. on the bottom floor of the 1405 Point residential building in the burgeoning Harbor Point development on the harbor near Fells Point.

Horse racing
Horse racing at Laurel Park could resume Saturday after consultant says dirt surface will be ‘safe enough’

Horse racing at Laurel Park could resume Saturday after a consultant hired by the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association found only modest problems with the track’s dirt surface during his inspection Wednesday morning. The track, which has been closed to racing since two horses suffered fatal injuries last Thursday, will reopen for full training Thursday morning. If feedback from trainers and jockeys is positive after morning workouts, plans for Saturday racing likely will proceed, said Tim Keefe, president of the horsemen’s association.

Second phase of $1 billion housing development begins in East Baltimore

Wearing brown leather shoes, a blue plaid suit and a white hard hat, Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott climbed into the cab of the excavator, pushed and pulled on the levers, and — under the supervision of a trained operator — began to demolish the final vacant building in what was once a block full of public housing units. The made-for-TV moment capped off a groundbreaking Wednesday afternoon for the second phase of one of the city’s most ambitious housing developments.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Montgomery County mom used to make English scones for friends. Now she owns what may be the only U.S.-based cream tea company.

About the business: Mrs. Bakewell’s is one of the only, if not the only, cream tea companies in the United States. Rose Bakewell, its founder, packs the boxes herself with her made-to-order English scones, imported clotted tea and jam, bamboo spoons, and Twinings tea sachets and ships them off to a nationwide clientele. The Clarksburg company is almost exclusively online, save for the sampler boxes she sells at Germantown’s Butler’s Orchard.

Philadelphia-area exec to lead Wells Fargo mid-Atlantic commercial banking

Tara Handforth will return to the Philadelphia area to become Wells Fargo’s division executive for the mid-Atlantic, leading a team of over 130 commercial bankers in five states and Washington, D.C. The commercial division provides loan, treasury management and deposit services to middle-market companies with annual sales of between $25 million to $5 billion. Handforth will work out of Wells Fargo’s (NYSE: WFC) Conshohocken, Pennsylvania office.

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