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Squeegee jobs dried up from some Baltimore intersections after city ban. Some have found work through city’s Hire Up program.

Carlose DeBose Jr. doesn’t remember a time when he felt like a kid. Not after his mother got sick. Not after he started taking care of his little brother. Not after he started playing the part of a grown-up. “I always had to be serious, like take on a role,” DeBose said. “I just always had it pretty much put together. I had to. I had no choice.” DeBose played that role for more than five years, rising at dawn and heading from the Upton neighborhood to wash car windows on Chase Street or Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Employers add 339,000 jobs in May, strong growth that defies head winds

Employers posted a blockbuster 339,000 jobs in May in the latest sign that a booming labor market continues to keep the country from slipping into a recession, but the economy also gave new warning signs with an increase in the unemployment rate. The unemployment rate rose in May to 3.7 percent from 3.4 percent, one of the fastest increases since early in the pandemic, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Friday.

‘Shark Tank’ goes local at Prince George’s Co. police event for entrepreneurial students

Prince George’s County police hosted a real-life “Shark Tank” event Friday that gave young student entrepreneurs the opportunity to pitch their business ideas to community leaders. This year’s Young Entrepreneurs Program event was the third annual meeting held in the county, as crowds gathered at the Tanger Outlets courtyard in National Harbor to cheer on the leaders of tomorrow.

Read More: WTOP
camden yards, baltimore, maryland
Orioles’ 2023 attendance up 24% compared with last year at same point; MLB attendance up 6%

Michele and Dave Cookson’s first date was almost an Orioles game. He asked her out to one — but she opted to go to a Coldplay concert instead. Eighteen years later, their umpteen-hundredth date was, however, an Orioles game last week, and there are more on the way. The season ticket-holding couple from Woodberry has attended over 250 games together and they are now visiting Camden Yards more than they did during the team’s recent rebuild.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
MLB commissioner accuses Sinclair chairman of threatening Diamond Sports bankruptcy in streaming rights dispute

A simmering dispute between Major League Baseball and the Hunt Valley-based broadcaster Sinclair erupted into public view Wednesday in federal bankruptcy court. MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said in court that Sinclair’s executive chairman threatened to force its Diamond Sports Group regional sports networks into bankruptcy, potentially hurting the league, if MLB refused to give it baseball game streaming rights.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Grant program aims to boost pay for restaurant workers in Prince George’s Co.

One of the hardest parts of running a restaurant coming out of the pandemic has been hiring good workers, and keeping the ones who are good from leaving. It doesn’t help that other jurisdictions around the D.C. region pay more, with D.C., specifically, phasing in a raise from $5 per hour to $16.10 in the coming years.

Read More: WTOP
Pimlico owners reconsidering plans to shut down off-track betting

The owners of Pimlico Race Course are reconsidering plans to shut down off-track betting at the historic venue, a day after a news report indicated the track would stop carrying simulcast wagering by the end of the month. In an email sent to employees Thursday afternoon, 1/ST Racing and Gaming CEO Aidan Butler wrote that ownership is “reassessing” the move, which he indicated would have occurred only “during the summer months when it is not as utilized by our patrons.” A

Downtown Baltimore hotel sells, awaits conversion to 12-story apartment tower

A group of local investors led by developer Brad Byrnes has acquired the shuttered 12-story Hotel RL Baltimore Inner Harbor with plans to turn it into a 130-unit apartment tower. Byrnes said Thursday the group will pump $18.5 million into the building at 207 E. Redwood St., his latest effort to transform the street in the city’s former financial district.

research
University of Maryland medical school launches $30M addiction research center

The University of Maryland School of Medicine launched a new institute on Wednesday to research new ways to treat addiction as Maryland grapples with a worsening opioid crisis and the upcoming legalization of recreational cannabis.The Kahlert Institute for Addiction Medicine will bring together neuroscientists, clinical researchers and substance use disorder specialists to develop new treatments for addiction as part of a statewide push toward better forms of drug treatment.

Md. Tech Council, Mount Saint Mary’s to offer continuing education program

The Frederick-based Maryland Tech Council (MTC), the largest technology and life sciences trade association in the state, and Mount St. Mary’s University (MSMU) Wednesday announced a partnership to provide MTC’s members with continuing education opportunities needed to advance their careers. With this partnership, the MTC’s more than 700 members will be eligible for 20% tuition savings on courses in the university’s Division of Continuing Studies.

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