Monday, April 29, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Beloved Annapolis radio station WRNR 103.1 FM to cease broadcasting at midnight Saturday following sale

WRNR, a beloved Annapolis adult alternative station, will cease broadcasting at midnight on Saturday, said Steve Kingston, who has owned the station since 1998. The Federal Communications Commission approved in January the transfer of 103.1 FM from WRNR to Peter and John Radio Fellowship, a nonprofit that oversees Maryland’s largest evangelical Christian broadcasting network.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
This was captured well waiting for the doctor who was busy at the time
Health care leaders hope to inspire more workers with new website to curb shortages in Maryland

Maryland hospitals unveiled a new online tool meant to help students and individuals looking for new opportunities to decide if a medical career is right for them. JoinMDHealth.org is a new website created by the Maryland Hospital Association in collaboration with 60 medical facilities and health systems statewide. The website offers visitors a quiz that gives people an idea of what their “professional personality” entails. The results can help people decide what careers in health fit their personality best. For example, people who test as “heart-felt” may fit best as a clinical social worker or a community health worker. “These career opportunities are tremendous chances for people to get into something that provides an opportunity for service, an opportunity to make a good living, and then an opportunity also to go into leadership into management,” said Ed Lovern, president and CEO of Ascension Saint Agnes Hospital.

Read More: WYPR News
How much is a dispensary worth? A Cumberland deal gives a clue.

How much is a Maryland medical dispensary license worth? One deal in Cumberland might give a clue into the value of a license now that legal recreational use is on the horizon. TerrAscend, a Canadian company with operations in multiple states, purchased 100% of the equity of Allegany Medical Marijuana Dispensary for $10 million late last month. The real estate of the dispensary is not included in the deal. Instead, TerrAscend is entering into a long-term lease, with the option to eventually purchase Allegany Medical Marijuana Dispensary’s location at 100 Beall St. in Cumberland. The dispensary generated net revenues in excess of $8 million in 2022, according to a release.

As salaries continue to grow nationally, Greater Baltimore sees a decline

After months of soaring salary offers, wage growth started to slow nationally at the end of 2022 — and in Baltimore, it completely stopped. The Baltimore-Columbia-Towson metro area saw average private-sector earnings drop by 2.9% year over year in December, from $1,140.36 to $1,107.22, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.  Nationally, private-sector earnings rose by an average 2.9% in metro areas between December 2021 and December 2022. That’s down significantly from the strong salary surges that were taking place in spring and summer 2022, causing significant headaches for employers and driving up inflation.  The pace of year-over-year growth has slowed even since November when the average metro posted a 3.4% increase in private-sector wages.

HR trends: COVID no longer top office concern — mental health ranks higher

The COVID-19 pandemic is no longer the top office concern, according to a recent survey of executives and HR professionals by the Alexandria, Virginia-based Society for Human Resource Management. “What was clearly the top priority from 2020 all the way down to 2022 has now taken a step back and is now the fourth most-common priority,” said Alex Alonso, chief knowledge officer at the Society for Human Resource Management. “They are talking about how they go about managing it, as opposed to something that is taking lives or having to focus on vaccine mandates.” What has emerged as a top priority for employers this year, is the mental health of their employees.

Read More: WTOP News
End of Amazon Smile program leaves some Baltimore groups frowning

Amazon Smile, the charitable platform that paid out a half-of-one-percent donation on top of shoppers’ Amazon purchases to the charity of their choice, will be ceasing operation on Feb. 20, and some Baltimore beneficiaries are not happy. Amazon said in a press release that, with now over one million charities listed on its recipient list, the corporation’s ability to have an impact was “being spread too thin.” In the almost 10 years since its start in 2013, Amazon Smile states it has raised $400 million for U.S. charities. That makes the average benefit to each local charity just $400 over the entirety of over nine years of donating.

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As legal battle delved further into Angelos family’s personal, financial dealings, they agree to drop lawsuits

Soon, Georgia Angelos, the wife of Orioles owner Peter Angelos, would have been put under oath and questioned. A river of documents had begun flowing — to lawyers involved in the case, if not to the public — with details including everything from private email conversations to bank records to negotiations over a possible sale of the team. That was the backdrop to Monday’s abrupt end to the legal fight that erupted within the Angelos family in the wake of the 93-year-old patriarch’s illness and subsequent incapacitation.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Hagerstown, Salisbury enterprise zones fuel growth. Will door close on incentive?

In the last week before Gov. Larry Hogan left office, the Department of Commerce announced expanded enterprise zones in both Hagerstown and Salisbury. Now, the business development program, which started in 1982 to provide tax incentives to companies locating in the state’s most economically distressed communities, has come under scrutiny. “The enterprise zone program is one of the most expensive business tax credits in our state,” said Delegate Julie Palakovich Carr, sponsor of a bill to alter the program, during a House Ways and Means Committee hearing Thursday in Annapolis. “It’s not working as intended.”

Read More: Herald Mail
Towson pub will no longer host Jan. 6 political fundraiser; controversy affects Baltimore bar with similar name

After facing strong criticism on social media, a Towson bar says it will no longer host a fundraiser for people who were arrested for participating in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. In an email Monday evening, leaders of the Charles Village Pub & Patio in Towson said they had decided not to provide a venue for the Republican Women of Baltimore County and the Patriot Club of America to host the fundraiser, which was scheduled to take place at the pub Tuesday from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Making Montgomery Co. a destination for businesses — and a pledge to cut red tape

Montgomery County Council President Evan Glass says he’s determined to push harder to attract and retain businesses — and on Monday, he announced a “road map” to boost the Maryland county’s economic development. During a news briefing, Glass explained he had moved to split one of the county council committees, making the Economic Development a free-standing panel. Glass said his next steps would include seeking a review of compliance issues to ease regulatory burdens, especially on small and minority businesses.

Read More: WTOP

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