Thursday, November 28, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Two Baltimore-area Regal Cinemas movie theaters are set to close, but one may reopen

A pair of Regal Cinemas theaters in Greater Baltimore are set to close this month, though one may reopen under another brand. The Regal Bel Air closed Thursday while the Regal UA Snowden Square in Columbia will close on July 26, according to Regal’s website. Both theaters’ closings are the result of Regal reworking a master lease agreement it has with Kansas City real estate investment trust EPR Properties Inc., which owns the Columbia and Bel Air locations as well as 55 other Regal-occupied movie theater properties across the country.

Washington, D.C.-area restaurateurs will bring Creole eatery to Northwood Commons

A couple of Washington, D.C.-area restaurateurs will bring Creole cooking to Baltimore’s Northwood Commons development. Jeffeary “Chef Jeff” Miskiri and his wife, Toya Miskiri, plan to open Miss Toya’s Creole House early next year in the North Baltimore shopping center, which is in the midst of a $50 million redevelopment.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Tornado damage to Pfizer plant will probably create long-term shortages of some drugs hospitals need

The fallout from a Pfizer factory being damaged by a tornado could put even more pressure on already-strained drug supplies at U.S. hospitals, experts say. Wednesday’s tornado touched down near Rocky Mount, North Carolina, and ripped up the roof of a Pfizer factory that makes nearly 25% of Pfizer’s sterile injectable medicines used in U.S. hospitals, according to the drugmaker.

 

Mexican restaurant Baja Tap sets opening date in Fells Point

Baja Tap is slated to open in the former Bond Street Social space in Fells Point on Sept. 15, the owners of the Mexican restaurant said on Thursday after receiving approval for a liquor license from the Baltimore City liquor board. The venture at 901 S. Bond St. will be the second Baja Tap location opened by the Wave Group, the Virginia- and D.C.-area restaurant partnership that launched the concept in the Adams Morgan neighborhood of D.C. in March 2023 with a rooftop bar, patio and extensive menu.

FedEx Field in Washington DC
NFL owners approve $6.05B sale of Commanders to Harris group

The Washington Commanders no longer belong to Dan Snyder. NFL owners voting during a special session Thursday unanimously approved the team’s sale from the Snyder family to a group led by Josh Harris. The Harris group is paying $6.05 billion, a record sum for a North American sports franchise. Snyder had owned the majority of the Commanders since 1999, and his family became the sole owners after he bought out his limited partners two years ago.

Read More: ESPN
Baltimore Business Journal unveils 2023 CEO of the Year and the Power 10

The Business Business Journal’s 2023 CEO of the Year had a hand in turning Baltimore’s Inner Harbor into a famed tourist destination in the 1980s at the side of the city’s beloved, yet demanding Mayor William Donald Schaefer. So it’s only fitting that Sandy Hillman, president of Sandy Hillman Communications, gets the nod for the BBJ’s prestigious lifetime achievement award in the same year the beleaguered Harborplace is poised for a dramatic turnaround by developer MCB Real Estate.

For customers, Black Restaurant Week means food. For owners, it means visibility.

Grilled chicken hot dogs with fresh strawberries, feta cheese and spicy arugula, folded in a fluffy bun. Sweet potato cheesecake topped with a toasted marshmallow topping. A rich banana pudding with cinnamon and snickerdoodle swirls. Is your mouth watering yet? That’s the hope of the owners participating in Black Restaurant Week, which returned this month with its fourth iteration in the Greater Washington, D.C., and Baltimore area.

Maryland treasurer puts pressure on Orioles lease negotiations: ‘There’s something that we’re not being told’

As the Orioles march towards the end of their current term at Camden Yards — but with promises to soon agree to a long-term one — Maryland’s treasurer is concerned there’s a holdup in lease negotiations and said the public is being kept in the dark. Treasurer Dereck Davis said Wednesday the drawn-out process, in which he does not have a part, between the Maryland Stadium Authority and the team makes him believe “there’s something that we’re not being told.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Cannabis workforce development programs gain steam in growing industry

Cannabis advocate Jacquie Cohen Roth is concerned that the rush of cannabis users going to dispensaries for the first time may not know what they’re getting into and is starting a new program to enable workers to better educate customers. Cohen Roth’s company CannabizMD is partnering with Baltimore’s CannaWorkforce to train underprivileged people to work entry-level jobs in the cannabis industry, with the goal of having a workforce that’s better educated on cannabis plant biology and preparation in all aspects of the industry.

Bioenergy Devco Md. center honored as environmental management leader

Bioenergy Devco’s Maryland bioenergy center in Jessup was awarded the Top Project of the Year Award in the Environment + Energy Leader Awards program, the company announced Wednesday. Bioenergy Devco’s newest organics recycling facility, located on the Maryland Food Center campus in Jessup, is the first anaerobic digester of its scale in the state.

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