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T. Rowe Price lays off 2% of its employees in ‘targeted’ cost-cutting move

T. Rowe Price Group Inc. has laid off 2% of its employees across the globe, citing an “exceedingly challenging year” for the industry and company. The Baltimore investment firm’s management committee sent a memo to employees to let them know that the company was downsizing. “We made targeted expense reductions across the enterprise, including further reducing our third-party spending and eliminating roles, with approximately 2% of our associate population departing the firm,” a spokeswoman said in confirming the contents of the memo.

Starbucks workers plan strike on ‘Red Cup Day’ over stalled labor talks

Employees from more than 100 Starbucks stores plan to walk off the job Thursday, hoping to shutter shops for the day in protest of the company’s approach to union contract negotiations as the coffee giant launches holiday products. Leaders of Starbucks Workers United, which represents nearly 7,000 employees at hundreds of stores, say the company has not bargained in good faith and needlessly delayed talks on labor contracts. The company has countered that certain conditions for negotiations — namely, allowing union members to silently observe proceedings on Zoom — are impermissible.

Baltimore biotech Haystack Oncology raises $56M, plans move to City Garage

The Johns Hopkins University researchers behind two of Baltimore’s most successful biotech firms have founded a new company that has now raised $56 million to create a new diagnostic tool for cancer. Haystack Oncology plans to use the funding from its series A round to kickstart a move into a large lab inside of City Garage in Port Covington, which was recently renamed Baltimore Peninsula.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Port Covington’s ‘Baltimore Peninsula’ project expects to sign two tenants before 2023

The rebranded $5.5 billion Port Covington development — now “Baltimore Peninsula” — will sign two tenants by the end of the year, said Tony Gross, who’s heading leasing at the sprawling development. One of those leases — CFG Bank’s plan to move into 100,000 square feet of the seven-story 2455 Banner St. building — is no longer a secret. The bank, which last month reached a deal to sponsor the Baltimore Arena, had already disclosed it was in negotiations for the space that will become the $3.2 billion-asset bank’s headquarters. The bank will join Baltimore interior design and architectural firm Chambers Co., which has already signed a 9,000-square-foot lease.

Baltimore Marriott Waterfront workers walk out to demand better wages

A crowd of unionized Baltimore Marriott Waterfront hotel workers participated in a work stoppage on Tuesday, taking to the sidewalks to demand higher wages they say are in line with other hotel providers. At approximately 12 p.m., a couple dozen workers at the Harbor East hotel participated in the roughly hour-long work stoppage, advocating for pay increases they say will keep up with the increased cost of living. The walkout was part of an effort by Unite Here Local 7, the union behind the workers, to address what it says has been an impasse at the bargaining table.

Baltimore vodka maker Lytos expands sales to DC, Delaware

Lytos, a Baltimore-based company that specializes in making a patent pending, gluten-free premium vodka with added electrolytes, Tuesday announced it has expanded sales into liquor stores and bars in Washington and Delaware. Lytos, manufactured in Columbia, was originally sold throughout greater Baltimore and the Eastern Shore. The company has plans to expand sales into other states, targeting New York, Florida, Arizona and California. After debuting in November 2020, Lytos Vodka is now sold in about 400 bars, restaurants and liquor stores throughout Maryland, Washington and Delaware. Lytos calls itself the first-ever vodka marketed and sold with added electrolytes.

One of Baltimore’s most aggressive homebuyers declares bankruptcy

Two months ago, Jay Walsh was comparing Baltimore’s housing market to crack cocaine for investors. On Tuesday, his company filed for bankruptcy. ABC Capital Investment LLC has been one of the most aggressive homebuyers in Baltimore in recent years. In an investigation published in October, The Baltimore Sun identified more than 140 homes purchased by ABC Capital since 2019. Walsh said his firm has actually bought about 1,200 homes since 2015, selling most of them to foreign investors and using third-party companies to manage them.“If you wanted to give investors a drug, Baltimore’s the drug,” Walsh said. “Some people, they think it’s easy. It’s not easy. It’s not easy at all. But if you’re willing to put in the work, I think it’s a diamond in the rough, even with the rats.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Bray & Scarff signs lease to expand presence in Laurel Business Center
Winning bet on sporting event, money in sport and sports betting conceptual idea with american football ball and wads of cash isolated on green background
After drawn-out process, mobile sports betting might launch in Maryland by Thanksgiving

Mobile sports betting could launch in Maryland by Thanksgiving, as officials said Monday that they slightly accelerated what has been a drawn-out process. Voters in the state approved sports gambling in a 2020 referendum, and in 2021, Republican Gov. Larry Hogan signed a bill allowing in-person and mobile sports betting. In-person betting began that year, but the launch of online gambling has taken longer. To place bets now, Maryland bettors must either go to a betting facility or drive across state lines and place bets on their cellphones once there, which has frustrated gamblers.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Philanthropist MacKenzie Scott donates $15M to Baltimore’s Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service

Billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott continues to make good on her promise to give away billions, donating $15 million to Baltimore-based Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service — the largest gift from an individual donor in the nonprofit’s 83-year history. The Lutheran nonprofit found out about the donation weeks ago but had to keep mum until Scott was ready to divulge the news. She did so on Monday in a post on Medium, an online publishing platform, where she said she has given $1.99 billion to 343 organizations “supporting the voices and opportunities of people from underserved communities.”

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