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Sheppard Pratt plans to build a children’s hospital in Towson

Sheppard Pratt is hoping to create a new model for the mental health care of young people by building a new children’s hospital in Towson. The hospital is in the very early stages of development, with officials hoping to make more detailed plans public after first securing funding. Currently, Gov. Larry Hogan’s preliminary budget plan calls for $100 million in state funding to go toward Sheppard Pratt to be used toward the creation of the hospital, a global training center for workforce development and other projects. It will be up to Gov.-Elect Wes Moore to decide whether to include the allocation in his budget once he takes office in January.

Maryland Board of Pilots to consider cellphone policy after phone usage contributed to grounding of Ever Forward in March

In 48 U.S. states, it is illegal to text and drive a car. An airline pilot can’t use a cellphone for personal reasons while flying a plane. But there is no policy forbidding such a practice when it comes to guiding 1,100-foot ships through the narrow channels of Maryland waters. That could change soon. In March, the Ever Forward, a container ship as long as three football fields and weighing about 130,000 tons (for comparison, the average car weighs about 2), steamed out of one of those channels into the shallows of the Chesapeake Bay, getting stuck for more than a month.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Microsoft set to battle FTC over $68.7 billion Activision Blizzard deal

Microsoft and Activision Blizzard, a gaming company famous for hits like Call of Duty, disputed the Federal Trade Commission’s challenge to their proposed $68.7 billion merger on Thursday, writing in a court filing that the U.S. regulator’s concerns that the deal would undermine fair competition in the gaming industry are “unfounded” and “absurd.” The rebuttal foreshadows a coming legal battle between Microsoft, a tech giant that has largely avoided close regulatory scrutiny from federal authorities in recent years, and the FTC, whose chairwoman Lina Khan is a well-known skeptic of big tech.

The city of Baltimore wants to give $1 million to Harborplace developer

The city of Baltimore said in legal filings that it wants to give $1 million to the private developer that will soon own the troubled Harborplace in the Inner Harbor, making good on comments made by Mayor Brandon Scott earlier this year. In a May speech to the Downtown Partnership, Scott said his administration would commit $1 million to David Bramble, whose firm MCB Real Estate has spent months lining up the purchase of Harborplace. The twin mall-like pavilions have been losing money for years under out-of-state ownership. As restaurants and stores fled, Harborplace defaulted on a $76 million loan in 2019 and fell into receivership, a legal process typically used to avoid bankruptcy.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Under Armour names Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz as new CEO

Stephanie Linnartz, president of the hotel chain Marriott International, will become the next CEO of Under Armour, the company announced Wednesday. Linnartz has worked at Marriott for 25 years, rising through the ranks to become the company’s president in 2021, the Baltimore-based athletic apparel brand said in a news release. “She is a proven growth leader with a distinguished track record of brand strategy, omnichannel execution, talent acquisition and development, and passion for driving best-in-class consumer connectivity, experience, and brand loyalty,” Under Armour founder Kevin Plank said in a statement.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Sinclair signs deal to add regional sports networks to FuboTV lineup

Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc. is bringing its 19 regional sports networks back into the streaming space with a new agreement with FuboTV. The carriage agreement to get the networks back on FuboTV, which was for an undisclosed figure, comes as there have been fewer ways to watch the RSNs online and as the networks have struggled financially. The RSNs have been dropped by a host of online TV providers including YouTube TV, Sling TV and Hulu TV.

Shore United bulking up in Maryland with deal to merge with Community Bank of the Chesapeake

Shore United Bank will expand its footprint in Maryland and Virginia with a $254 million deal to merge with a Southern Maryland-based bank. Easton-based Shore Bancshares Inc. (NASDAQ: SHBI), the fourth largest bank in headquartered in Maryland, is combining with the Community Financial Corp. (NASDAQ:TCFC), the parent company of Waldorf-based Community Bank of the Chesapeake, in a merger of equals. The all-stock deal, which still needs regulatory and shareholder approval, would make the combined bank the 11th largest operating in Maryland with$4.8 billion in combined deposits and $6 billion in assets.

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Southwest will top pre-pandemic summer flights at Maryland’s BWI

Southwest Airlines, the airline with by far the most departures and arrivals at BWI Marshall Airport, has released its summer schedule for the Maryland airport and it will be operating slightly more flights that it was in summer 2019. In the peak summer period for 2023, Southwest will operate 219 daily departures from BWI Marshall. At its Denver hub, Southwest will surpass 300 flights daily, the most departures for the airline at any airport. “That’s another positive sign as the airline industry continues to recover and airlines continue to boost their service levels at BWI Marshall Airport. There remains a strong demand for air travel. We expect to see continued recovery and growth in the New Year and well into 2023,” the airport said in a statement.

Read More: WTOP News
Pandora to scale back Baltimore office space as it moves North American HQ to New York

Pandora plans to reduce its space in downtown Baltimore — and take its name off the city skyline — as the company finalizes the move of its North American headquarters to New York City. The Danish jewelry giant announced earlier this month that it will move into 27,000 square feet in the 1540 Broadway building in Times Square in early 2023. While it will keep its Baltimore office at 250 W. Pratt St., Pandora plans to downsize this spring to just 18,237 square feet and take its name off the tower but will stay in the city until at least 2026, a company spokesperson said. Pandora previously had 250 employees and occupied nearly 90,000 square feet in the building, where it has been located since 2015 when it moved its headquarters from Columbia.

Mayor Scott taps new Baltimore Convention Center executive director

A former Baltimore Convention Center executive who worked under its longtime executive director is returning to the city to take over the center’s top post. Matthew “Mac” Campbell is leaving the Strathmore in North Bethesda to fill the executive director role left vacant by the September retirement of Peggy Daidakis, who led the Convention Center since 1986 and served as Campbell’s mentor. Mayor Brandon Scott on Tuesday announced the nomination of Campbell for the city-owned and operated facility. Campbell’s nomination must be approved by the City Council. Campbell takes over at a challenging time for the convention industry, with business still trying to pick up after Covid-19 put an end to conventions and meetings nationally for almost two years.

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