Friday, October 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Employers add still-solid 187,000 jobs in July; unemployment dips

The job market has cooled over the summer. But it’s still strong enough to defy predictions that higher interest rates would tip the United States into recession. U.S. employers added 187,000 jobs last month, fewer than expected. But the unemployment rate dipped to 3.5% in a sign that the job market remains resilient.

 

Peter Angelos sells landmark Towson office tower for $13.55M

A landmark Towson office tower was recently sold by an entity linked to Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos for $13.55 million. Court Towers at 210 W. Pennsylvania Ave. changed hands in early August to Mid-Atlantic Properties Inc., a Towson-based investment group and development firm that owns several other Towson properties. The cash deal closed last week after brokers from JLL, who represented the Angelos family, received several bids.

blue and red airplane on sky
Southwest Airlines to add new flights to Central America at BWI

Baltimore travelers will have a new tropical spring break option come spring 2024. Southwest Airlines Co. announced Thursday that it will offer flights to and from Belize beginning March 9, 2024 at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, pending government approval. The new service will be nonstop on Saturdays, according to a press release from the airline, which accounts for roughly 70% of BWI Airport’s passenger market share.

With job training and accountability, a program helping squeegee workers is succeeding

For years, Kahlil Nottingham washed windows for tips.Squeegeeing was a means for Nottingham, 19, to earn money, take care of himself and develop independence, he said. He’d started washing windows in 2017, after spending a night in a juvenile detention holding cell for trying to steal a woman’s purse. He decided to try making money a different way — first, by selling water bottles, then by squeegeeing. With an income, he’d be able to buy things he wanted on his own, without having to ask a parent for help.

Charlie Health expands mental health services to Maryland

Charlie Health, a Montana-based provider of virtual high-acuity mental health care for teens and young adults, Thursday announced the expansion of its services into Maryland and Wisconsin. With these new markets, Charlie Health has expanded its virtual intensive outpatient program (IOP) to reach half of the U.S, comprising a population of more than 245 million.

 

‘Disrupted and destroyed lives for essentially nothing’: the traumatic legacy of a West Baltimore neighborhood’s redevelopment

There is an empty plot of land in West Baltimore’s Poppleton neighborhood that haunts Cynthia “Diane” Bell. mIn moments when she is alone, her mind wanders to the three-story rowhouse and she becomes paralyzed by anger and confusion. Bell has spent years in quiet desperation, trying to understand why the city bought her home for a New York developer who has done nothing with the land.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Pepsi sign on I-83 now advertises Plant 83, redevelopment of old Baltimore bottling plant

The iconic Pepsi sign visible to motorists on Interstate 83 has come down, now advertising the warehouse space replacing the cola bottling plant. Commuters will now see a sign for Plant 83, a redevelopment of the Pepsi facility in Hampden, which closed in 2011. It’s unclear what has changed in the 187,500-square-foot facility or if the new ownership has signed on any tenants.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore County 2030 Master Plan approaches final vote after Planning Board nixes amendments

The Baltimore County Council will vote soon on the current 2030 Master Plan proposal, which maps the county’s growth and development framework for the next decade. But the latest draft of the plan, which the Baltimore County Planning Board approved in late June, bucks recommendations advocates say would bring more transparency and order to the county’s complicated planning and zoning processes.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Nearly entire city block on Baltimore’s west side hits the auction block

Most of a city block on Baltimore’s west side is headed to auction as the ongoing reset of the once-popular area continues. The multi-building portfolio is in foreclosure and will be sold on Aug. 29 on the courthouse steps downtown. The auction will consist of five mixed-use buildings and a 410-space, multi-level parking garage, including the 392-unit Centerpoint Apartments and 33,000 square feet of street-level retail space.

Bits & Bites: Canton marina floats new restaurant concept, Harbor Point adds more eats and Smashing Grapes rebrands

In a city with spectacular waterfront views, sometimes it’s easy to forget that there are equally stunning vistas from the water looking in. I was reminded of this truth last week as I took in a different view of Canton, from the seat of a rental boat belonging to the Oasis Boat Club at Lighthouse Point Marina. I hitched a ride to talk to Lars Kristiansen, the vice president of food and beverage for Oasis Marinas, who was there to tell me all about the hospitality group’s plans for a new restaurant at the site of the old Bo Brooks Crab House.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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