Wednesday, October 23, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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New Baltimore program to help small businesses compete for utility contracts

Baltimore Mayor Brandon M. Scott and Department of Public Works (DPW) Director Jason W. Mitchell announced the DPW Unbundling Initiative, a program to mentor Baltimore-based diverse and small businesses and prepare them to compete on their own as general or prime contractors. The DPW Unbundling Initiative will expand the capacity of Baltimore’s local and diverse contractor community to compete as general or prime contractors for the Department’s water and wastewater utility contracts. On large DPW and other city contracts, small businesses tend to serve as subcontractors to general contractors.

 

Anne Arundel Economic Development Corp. names new CEO

Anne Arundel County’s economic development agency has tapped a top Howard County planning and zoning official as its new CEO. Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman appointed Amy Gowan to lead Anne Arundel Economic Development Corp., a quasi-governmental agency funded by tax dollars. Her appointment is effective in April. Gowan makes the switch to Anne Arundel after seven years with Howard County Government, where she led the 50-person Office of Planning and Zoning for four years.

Job openings outpace the unemployed in Maryland and nationwide as workers and employers struggle to match up

As a 2019 college graduate, Raquel Ellis thought she’d have plenty of options. Ellis, who earned scholarships to cover tuition, had been assistant editor of Towson University’s literary magazine and hoped to land a business, technical or grant writing job. But dozens of applications have brought little response. Since then, the East Baltimore resident and mother of two daughters has worked at a restaurant, delivered for DoorDash, taught as a substitute and spent months unemployed. For now, she’s working 12-hour night shifts at Amazon’s Broening Highway warehouse. She’s been there a year.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Medical examination and healthcare service concept
Mercy Health Services opens new Preventive Care Center in Baltimore

Mercy Health Services announced Wednesday the opening of a new Preventive Care Center in Baltimore, part of the health care operator’s effort to provide patient education, greater access to care and resources to address social determinants of health. Located on the second floor of The Mead Building on North Calvert Street, the center will be an important step to expanding population health outreach and bringing needed medical staff under one roof to better serve our community, said Dr. David N. Maine, MHS president and CEO.

 

Harborplace reimagined: Ideas from readers

Imagine if Harborplace, the once popular tourist spot on Baltimore’s waterfront, was converted into living quarters for the elderly. What if it hosted bull riding competitions? Or was home to an arcade with a view of a Ferris wheel on a bustling boardwalk? These are all suggestions that came in after we asked readers how they envision a redeveloped Harborplace as developer P. David Bramble readies to embark on a reincarnation of the property.

 

 

Cannabis as ‘an OK thing’: Inside Maryland’s first marijuana smoking lounge in Burtonsville

Whether it was because their apartment policies restricted them from smoking in their units or their spouse didn’t like the smell of weed in their home, medicinal cannabis smokers needed a place they could smoke and relax in peace, says Venushski “Venus” Hemachandra, 33. In efforts to appease their demands, Hemachandra says, she opened Ceylon House, at 4009 Sandy Spring Road in Burtonsville.

 

Read More: Moco360
Lockheed Martin plans layoffs in a Sikorsky division in southern Maryland

Lockheed Martin Corp. (NYSE: LMT) has disclosed plans for layoffs of 176 workers based in southern Maryland as part of a key program comes to an end.
The Bethesda contracting giant said the layoffs are effective April 27, affecting workers in its Sikorsky division supporting the heavy lift helicopter program at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, according to a Work Adjustment and Retraining Notification filing with the state.

Lockheed Martin builds emerging technology partnership

Bethesda-based global security and aerospace company Lockheed Martin, Korea Aerospace Industries and Red 6 Aerospace, a Lockheed Martin Ventures portfolio company, Wednesday announced a new partnership that will deliver advanced 21st Century Security capabilities across a spectrum of training and combat aircraft.

 

Chef
The Dish: How veganism became one of Baltimore’s hottest restaurant trends

Baltimore City Councilwoman Odette Ramos became vegan 25 years ago, when “all I could get was a salad,” she wrote in a text message. Now, she has a wealth of options from which to choose. Case in point: Maryland Vegan Restaurant Month started last weekend, showcasing plant-based meals at eateries in Baltimore and beyond. You can try curry mung bean soup at Heritage Kitchen in Hampden or a three-course, $50 prix fixe meal at Alma Cocina Latina in Station North that includes a vegan take on Venezuelan pabellón.

 

 

National sneaker chain Snipes expands footprint in Baltimore

Snipes, a fast-growing retail chain that got its start from one of Germany’s largest shoe company, is opening its fourth store in Greater Baltimore. The national footwear store recently leased 5,500 square feet at 5600 The Alameda for its second city location. The move to the 89,000-square-foot Alameda Marketplace boosts the small strip center located about a mile from Morgan State University toward full occupancy as it restocks tenants post-Covid-19. The retailer has another store at 300 W. Lexington St. and two others in Baltimore County.

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