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Bank of America awards $200,000 to two Baltimore nonprofits supporting workforce development

Bank of America recently awarded two local organizations with a $200,000 multi-year award. Baltimore-based Innovation Works and Per Scholas were the recipients of the 2022 Neighborhood Builders grant for their efforts to provide greater Maryland community members with equitable access to workforce development and job training. Aside from the capital, the nonprofits’ executive directors will receive leadership training from Bank of America on financial sustainability, human resource development and strategic storytelling, among other topics to bolster their projects..

Read More: Afro
Founder of Baltimore-based marketing firm Profiles turns over CEO role

Profiles, a Baltimore-based marketing firm, has announced a change in leadership, with the firm’s president, Amy Burke Friedman, taking over as CEO from founder Amy Elias. Elias founded Profiles in 1990 as a one-person agency with a single client, advertising firm W.B. Doner & Co. Profiles has expanded to serve businesses, nonprofits, associations and individuals in media relations, communications, crisis management, social media, event planning and branding.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
State presence at Back River Wastewater Treatment Plant extended through April 30 under new agreement

Staffers from the Maryland Environmental Service will remain at the troubled Back River Wastewater Treatment Plant through April 30 under a new agreement between the state and Baltimore. Under a previous agreement, the state agency’s tenure at the plant was poised to end Dec. 31. But now, the Environmental Service will remain into the spring, as long as the city’s Board of Estimates agrees. Its next meeting will take place next Wednesday.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Airlines resume flight departures at BWI Marshall Airport after FAA computer outage

Airlines have resumed flights at BWI Marshall Airport on Wednesday after a computer outage at the Federal Aviation Administration grounded departing flights across the country. “Residual delays can be expected,” the airport said in a tweet late Wednesday morning. “Please confirm your flight status with your airline.” The FAA tweeted that normal air traffic operations are gradually resuming across across the U.S., after the agency ordered airlines to pause all domestic departures until 9 a.m. Eastern Time.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Kite announces Urbana facility expansion, 100 new jobs

An expansion to Kite’s Urbana cell therapy facility is expected to add 100 new jobs, the Gilead-owned biopharmaceutical company announced Tuesday morning. The addition is a 70,000-square-foot warehouse that will provide storage space for raw materials used in the company’s existing facility, according to a company press release. Construction on the warehouse, which will be adjacent to the existing facility, will begin later this year. Kite’s Urbana facility produces chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapies, also called “CAR T-cell therapy,” a form of cancer treatment that trains a patient’s immune cells to find and kill off cancer cells. The new warehouse will centralize the materials required for this manufacturing process and streamline operations, Chris McDonald, Kite’s global head of technical operations, said in the press release.

Maryland sees $478 million in first full month of mobile sports betting

Maryland saw more than $478 million in mobile sports bets in December, the first full month where gamblers could place wagers from their phones. According to Maryland Lottery and Gaming data, gamblers placed a total of $497,121,656 worth of mobile and in-person bets at the state’s nine retail and seven mobile sportsbooks, with the vast majority coming from wagers placed from bettors’ mobile devices. Last month, the state reported a total of roughly $219 million in total sports bets, but mobile sports betting was only available for nine days at the end of the month.

Inflation Peaking Is Great for Us, Terrible for Grocery Stores

Inflation isn’t killing food retail. But prices peaking this year might prove to be the bigger challenge. J Sainsbury Plc on Wednesday confirmed that the food retailers were the big winners this Christmas, with third quarter same-store sales excluding fuel up 5.9%. They enjoyed a boost from the World Cup and then a run into the holidays whereby consumers were more likely to eat at home given the cost-of-living crisis and rail strikes. But they were also helped by rising food prices. Sainsbury said inflation in its shopping basket was running well below the 14.4% reported by data provider Kantar for December, as it concentrated on keeping prices low for customers. Even so, making everything from coffee to cereals more expensive inflates the value of supermarkets’ same-store sales.

Raising Cane’s jumping into Md. restaurant arena

Chicken finger restaurant chain Raising Cane’s will make its Maryland debut Thursday when it opens its first location in the state in Towson. Located at 4 Towsontown Blvd. E, the new restaurant will host a grand opening celebration with an official ribbon-cutting ceremony hosted by the Towson Chamber of Commerce at 9:30 a.m. The Plano, Texas-based chain is planning to open 100 new franchises in 2023, including two more in Maryland. Raising Cane’s will open a location in Gambrills at 1070 MD-3 North as its second location in Maryland, joining its inaugural site in Towson. Later in March, the chain will open another restaurant in Westminster at 400 Englar Road.

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Emergent BioSolutions initiates layoffs, leadership and structural changes to cut costs

Emergent BioSolutions Inc. is reshuffling leadership, consolidating certain functions and laying off about 5% of its workers in a bid to cut costs and focus on key business units. The Gaithersburg company said Monday it’s initiating an “organizational restructuring plan” that will position it to focus on its commercial and medical countermeasures products — its drugs and vaccines that protect against public health threats — as well as its contract development and manufacturing services.

Baltimore City Council bill could raise penalties on businesses violating curfew rules for minors

Councilman Kristerfer Burnett introduced a bill Monday that will raise penalties for businesses that violate a curfew policy for minors, following a shooting last week at the Edmondson Village Shopping Center that left one Edmondson-Westside High School student dead. A portion of city code prohibits minors under the age of 16 from being in “any public place or any establishment” between 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m., when they should be in school. It also establishes a nighttime curfew.

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