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Featherstone Foundation awards $90K in college scholarships to 30 Baltimore-area students

The nonprofit William & Lanaea C. Featherstone Foundation awarded 30 scholars with $3,000 merit-based scholarships during an awards ceremony Sept. 23. Travis E. Mitchell, senior vice president and chief content officer at Maryland Public Television, gave the keynote address. Catalina Rodriguez Lima, director of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, was presented with the Featherstone Changemaker Award, a prize that honors an influential leader who drives social change and makes a positive impact in the community.

gray metal Transmission tower
Amid a massive American clean energy shift, grid operators play catch-up

For the better part of the past century, the American electric power system evolved around large, mostly fossil fuel power plants delivering electricity to residences, businesses and industry through a network of transmission and distribution wires that collectively came to be called the electric grid. But as the threat of climate change driven by carbon pollution becomes more dire and as technological advances make wind, solar and battery storage ever cheaper options for powering homes and business, states, corporations and voters are increasingly pushing to aggressively decarbonize the grid. Power generation resulted in more than 1.7 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions in 2020, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, and accounted for about a quarter of all U.S. carbon emissions.

Kushner-owned apartment company agrees to penalty in Md. consumer protection case

An apartment management company owned by Jared Kushner, the son-in-law of former President Donald Trump, has settled with the Maryland Attorney General’s Office over claims the company mistreated renters by ignoring serious maintenance issues and charging illegal fees. The settlement includes a $3.25 million penalty and the requirement that the company, Westminster Management LLC, pay restitution to current and former tenants. Attorney General Brian E. Frosh said at a news conference that Westminster used its “vastly superior economic power” to take advantage of tenants who often struggled to pay rent and support their families.

Baltimore Sun to leave Port Covington, seeks new space for newsroom

Baltimore Sun reporters and editors will soon move to another workspace as the storied newspaper shuts down its Port Covington newsroom at Sun Park this year. Owners of the 185-year-old newspaper did not renew the paper’s lease with Sagamore Ventures, MAG Partners and McFarlane Partners at the site, said MaryAnne Gilmartin, CEO of MAG, and will leave by late December. The move follows the shutdown of the Sun’s printing operation at the 250,000-square-foot plant off Interstate 95 this year, with the giant presses dismantled and sold off. Under Armour founder Kevin Plank, whose Sagamore Ventures is one of Port Covington’s developers, acquired The Sun property in 2014 for $46.5 million.

Towering office buildings and pricey residences: the transformation of downtown Bethesda

Marriott International held a grand opening this week for its new global headquarters, a towering 21-story building that forms just one part of the changing landscape in downtown Bethesda, Maryland. The gleaming new office-hotel complex and other tall new buildings in the central core of downtown Bethesda on Wisconsin Avenue include the Wilson, a 23-story office tower which houses the headquarters for local television channel Fox 5 DC, and the 22-story Avocet Tower, a space for offices and a hotel. While the towering commercial buildings stand out among the multiple construction projects recently completed or now underway, it is residential construction that seen the biggest investment.

Read More: WTOP News
Port Covington to get new name, branding in January

The $5.5 billion Port Covington project is poised to get a marketing makeover. The 235-acre redevelopment’s new partial owners said Thursday the project will be renamed and rebranded come January just as the first major office and multifamily buildings open up. “One year from now, we won’t be calling it Port Covington,” said MaryAnne Gilmartin, CEO of MAG Partners, the New York developer that bought into the project in May. “You will be excited when we reveal the new name. It’s a refresh.” The move is the latest by the new group of master developers who were brought in to advance the Port Covington project in May by Under Armour founder Kevin Plank.

Northrop Grumman’s Baltimore-area campus expands amid the journey back into space

In some ways, NASA’s journey to send humans back to the moon and beyond runs through the Baltimore region. Adjacent to Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, a three-story, 55,000-square-foot complex sits on the grounds of Northrop Grumman’s company site, with offices and production areas equipped with environmentally controlled 10K- and 100K-class clean rooms, remote sensing, robotic technology and augmented reality devices. It’s the company’s newest — and largest — Maryland Space Assembly and Test facility.

Sinclair dismisses report its sports broadcasting unit could be bought out by sports leagues and says it will launch new streaming platforms next week

Sinclair Broadcast Group, a Hunt Valley-based TV station owner, dismissed as “speculation” a report that it’s trying to sell its Diamond Sports unit to three professional sports leagues, even as plans were confirmed Thursday for the launch of new regional sports streaming services around the country next week. Sinclair bought the regional sports networks for $10.6 billion in 2019, but they were hit hard by pandemic-related disruptions and “cord cutting,” in which many fans have abandoned traditional cable TV.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Transurban finds firm to build I-495/I-270 toll lanes, but timing questions remain

After a nearly two-year search, the consortium tapped to spearhead an ambitious toll lanes project in Montgomery County has found itself a construction partner. AM Partners, a conglomerate led by Transurban, announced on Wednesday that it has taken on Los Angeles-based Tutor Perini to design and build toll lanes along portions of the Capital Beltway and I-270. The project is a top priority for Gov. Larry Hogan (R), though it has roused opposition locally. Early last year, the Transurban group outbid two other conglomerates, despite the loss of its original construction partner, Archer Western, which separated from AM Partners for reasons that have never been made public.

From pivot to permanent: Two tales of how unprecedented times led to unexpected rewards

The COVID-19 pandemic hit small business owners hard, forcing virtually every business to explore new ways to reach their customers. For many, the challenges to keep the lights on led to some surprising results. The term “pivot” emerged as a buzzword to describe how businesses were changing the way they operated. Some of those changes were so impactful, they have become permanent fixtures. Here’s how two Maryland companies incorporated their pivot into daily operations.

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