Monday, November 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Big Tech could be forced to pay for online news under legislation aimed at helping local publishers

The newspaper industry, which has been struggling with deep ad revenue declines in the digital age, is backing proposed legislation that would force Big Tech to pay publishers for aggregating their news stories online. The Journalism Competition and Preservation Act seeks to level the playing field by allowing local newspapers, broadcasters and other online publishers to negotiate collectively for an annual content fee from Google and Meta/Facebook, which dominate the digital advertising market.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Planned warehouse district threatens wetlands, Chesapeake Bay, residents and environmentalists say

Jeanna Tillery said it feels like she’s going through a spell of heartbreaks. An African American woman in her 70s, Tillery is a retired health professional and Baltimore City native. She and her husband moved to Maryland’s Harford County in 2014, lured by its country feel and a vast forested area next to their three-story single-family home in a neighborhood called Pomeroy Manor.

Rifkins donate $5.7M to Hopkins’ spine oncology program

Founder of Real Time Medical Systems, Provider Partners Health Plans and long-time health care entrepreneur Dr. Scott Rifkin and his wife Frances Rifkin, R.N. Monday pledged $5.7 million to The Johns Hopkins University and The Johns Hopkins Health System to support research and treatment in the institution’s neurology spine oncology program. The gift, to be paid in full by June 30, 2024, is personal to the Rifkins. A close family member has and continues to be treated in this program led by Dr. Nicholas Theodore, director of the Johns Hopkins Neurosurgical Spine Center with whom they now have a close relationship.

Drew Vetter | Schwartz Metz

Andrew “Drew” Vetter, Esq. has joined Annapolis law and lobbying firm Schwartz, Metz, Wise & Kauffman. Vetter served as deputy administrative officer in the Office of Baltimore County Executive John A. Olszewski Jr. from 2018 until July 2022. In that role, he was responsible for oversight of a portfolio of operational departments of county government, including in the areas of policing and public safety, as well as economic development and land use. Vetter also served as the administration’s lead on labor negotiations and labor relations issues.

Maryland unemployment rate dips below 4% for first time since pandemic

Maryland’s unemployment rate dipped below 4% last month for the first time since the start of the pandemic as a strong labor market helped quell fears of an impending recession. New figures released by the U.S. Department of Labor on Friday show Maryland’s unemployment rate was at 3.9% in July, a slight drop after holding steady at 4% in May and June. The state’s unemployment rate has now dropped 1.5 percentage points since January but remains above the national rate of 3.5% and higher than Maryland’s pre-pandemic mark of 3.3% in February 2020. Maryland is one of 10 states and D.C. that have unemployment rates higher than the national rate.

Baltimore County announces plans to acquire former Sears property at Security Square Mall in Woodlawn

Baltimore County announced plans Friday to acquire the former Sears property at Security Square Mall as part of an effort to revitalize the 40-year-old Woodlawn center. Under the $10 million contract with property owner TF Baltimore MD LLC, Baltimore County will acquire about 18 acres of land that includes a 202,653 square-foot building directly connected to the mall, according to a Friday news release from Baltimore County. “The Security Square Mall site is a critical anchor for the communities on the west side of Baltimore County, and our administration is committed to revitalizing the area and making sure it will serve as a vibrant community hub for years to come,” County Executive Johnny Olszewski said in a news release.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Beloved southern fried chicken restaurant Raising Cane’s coming to Gambrills

Beloved southern-style chicken finger joint Raising Cane’s is opening a location in Gambrills in January, a restaurant spokesperson said. The restaurant, known for its chicken fingers, crinkle-cut fries and Texas toast, will employ about 115 people at the new location near the intersection of Crain Highway and Johns Hopkins Road, spokesperson Julia Doyle said. A Towson storefront will open this winter. And a third site in Bowie on Crain Highway and Heritage Boulevard will follow in early 2024.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
iphone, smartphone, apps
Sinclair Broadcast reports strong start to sports streaming service

Sinclair Broadcast Group’s new sports streaming service, Bally Sports+, is on track to grow to as many as 10 million subscribers and expects to draw a young audience interested in interactive features, the head of the Hunt Valley-based company said Thursday. Sinclair subsidiary Diamond Sports Group launched a limited version of its direct-to-consumer service in June, offering access to Major League Baseball teams in five markets. The broadcaster plans a full launch across all 19 of its Bally Sports regional sports network brands Sept. 26.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Health, economic disparities continue to affect coronavirus hot spots

A few yards from Isabel Espinoza’s Langley Park apartment, the area shows signs of the labors of this working-class immigrant neighborhood: Carpet-cleaning trucks sit in parking lots, corner street vendors sell fruit cups with chile and lime, and men walk into three-story brick buildings, their jeans stained with paint. Then Espinoza pointed to the windows.

Defunct coal-fired plant towers to be ‘imploded’; Baltimore County weighs proposal to replace with almost 300 townhomes

The 300-foot-tall smokestacks that have towered over the Gunpowder River and its creeks for over a half-century are expected to fall Friday morning in Bowleys Quarters as demolition crews tear down the remaining structures of a shuttered coal-fired power plant. The planned destruction will remove the last remaining structures at the defunct Charles P. Crane Generating Station, and comes as Baltimore County planners are weighing a request by property owner Forsite Development Inc. to extend public water and sewer lines to the property.

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