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Hopkins offers one of the most valuable business degrees in the country, study finds

One of Johns Hopkins Carey Business School’s graduate programs is ranked among those with the best returns on investment, a recent study from Georgetown University found. The study calculated net earnings based on median salaries two years after graduation compared to average amounts of debt at a given school offering associate’s, bachelor’s or master’s business degrees. Over 5,500 degree programs at more than 1,700 institutions were reviewed and ranked as part of the study.

Dangerously Delicious Pies closes doors after two years on West Street

Dangerously Delicious Pies, one of the best-known pie shops in the region, is shutting down its Annapolis location two years after it opened on West Street. Owners Christopher and Kimberly Miller announced the closure of the shop in a social media post on Sunday. The location opened in May of 2020 shortly after the COVID-19 pandemic struck the city, emerging into a difficult climate with indoor capacity restrictions and other limitations that set the business back.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Bits & Bites: Watching ‘The Bear’ in Baltimore, Atlas expands in Harbor East, The Hanover takes a break

FX Network’s ‘The Bear’ feels perfectly suited for our times, tackling topics like mental health, toxic kitchen workplaces and the clash of elevated and casual-dining worlds. Atlas Restaurant Group, which operates high-end establishments like Maximón and Bygone in the Four Seasons Hotel Baltimore is at the polar opposite of the dining spectrum from greasy spoons like “The Beef.” This week, spokesman Joe Sweeney announced the company will be taking over a 10,000-square-foot space next to the Waterfront Marriott that was previously occupied by Fleming’s Steakhouse, which shuttered in 2020.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
This was captured well waiting for the doctor who was busy at the time
As violence rises across Baltimore, new LifeBridge center offers hope and services to victims

When people in Baltimore become victims of violence they often have to tell their stories over and over — to police, forensic investigators, doctors, social workers, therapists. And they often need to find their own way to all of those professionals if they want help after the traumatic event. But as violence climbs across the region, a new center in Northwest Baltimore has begun providing all the follow-up services to survivors under one roof. “When we do the warm handoff, it’s down the hall,” said Adam Rosenberg, executive director of the center and vice president of violence intervention and prevention for LifeBridge Health, which runs the center, and has several hospitals in and around the city.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Four nonprofits on track to renew $1 leases at the historic Stanton Community Center in Annapolis

A quartet of local nonprofits are slated to renew leases at Stanton Community Center on Washington Street. For $1 a year, the Annapolis Arts District, Luminis Health, Anne Arundel Workforce Development Corporation and We Care and Friends all plan to continue renting from the City of Annapolis and offering services at the former school for Black residents, which was rededicated as a community center in 1975. Two more nonprofits — Street Angels Project and Community Action Agency of Anne Arundel County — also were lined up to receive nearly-free space, but the city has put their leases on hold after learning of a dispute between the two organizations.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Annapolis-based Trident Marina Group acquires four more DMV marinas

Annapolis-based Trident Marina Group has bought out a smaller local maritime firm, transferring the ownership of four marinas in Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Virginia to a company owned by Annapolis mega-developer Jeremy Parks. Trident announced Friday in a news release that it completed a merger with Coastal Properties Management, Inc. last month. The four marinas now in Trident hands are Bowleys Marina in Middle River, Fort Washington Marina on the Potomac River in Prince George’s County, Diamond Teague Piers on the Anacostia River in Washington, D.C. and Belmont Bay Harbor on the Potomac in Woodbridge, Virginia.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
3rd-largest employer in St. Mary’s to leave county — but jobs likely to stay

St. Mary’s County’s third-largest employer, a defense contractor that employs more than 900 people in the county of just under 114,000 residents, is leaving the area. DynCorp International, which was acquired in late 2020 by Amentum, a Germantown-based federal contractor, had served the Patuxent River Naval Air Station for more than 48 years, according to Amentum’s website. But few, if any, jobs will be lost; the company’s contract in the area, doing maintenance on five squadrons of aircrafts known as the Naval Test Wing Atlantic, has been taken over by another contractor, The Vertex Company, that county officials anticipate will maintain all 937 employees. 

 

A New Yorker bets big on Baltimore’s vacant homes. ‘It’s going to be crazy down here.’

Members of a community development group gathered outside a vacant West Baltimore rowhouse on a cloudy winter morning, preparing for an auction, when a stranger in his 20s showed up with a New York accent and slicked-back hair. As the auctioneer called out bids for the six vacant homes in the 2700 and 2800 blocks of West North Avenue in Coppin Heights, the man began bidding aggressively, and the community development group members grew worried.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
A Baltimore nonprofit that houses vulnerable tenants stopped paying rents. Now, some may face eviction.

A Baltimore nonprofit that develops, maintains and manages affordable housing properties for city residents who are at risk of homelessness stopped paying rents for several clients enrolled in a federally funded housing assistance program. Labeled as a highly complex and unusual case of missing money among those impacted, the situation involves as much as $2.2 million in grant funding administered via the Mayor’s Office of Homeless Services from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development during the coronavirus pandemic.

Mutual interest between Baltimore, USL in bringing pro outdoor soccer teams to city; 10,000-seat stadium potential home

The future of soccer in Baltimore could include a 10,000-seat stadium and United Soccer League men’s and women’s professional teams. Mayor Brandon Scott requested the Maryland Stadium Authority conduct a study to “determine the feasibility of a potential soccer facility,” the Mayor’s Office said in a statement Thursday. The study, which was approved by the stadium authority’s board Tuesday, is just the first step in what would likely be a yearslong process to bring the venue and teams to Charm City. Port Covington is one potential site.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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