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From sports to music, the downtown workhorse Baltimore Arena has seen it all

On opening night, Oct. 23, 1962, the Baltimore Arena was called the Civic Center. Mayor J. Harold Grady threw out a ceremonial first ice puck at 8:33 p.m. for the contest between the Baltimore Clippers and the Providence Reds. A capacity crowd of more than 10,000 was expected; 7,760 showed up. Baltimore won, 5-4. The workhouse arena is about to undergo a refurbishment to renew the place that hosted Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., The Beatles, Luciano Pavarotti and decades of returning circus elephants and lions in its six decades.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
5 key takeaways from Novavax’s Covid-19 vaccine hearing

The Gaithersburg biotech is now a step away from potentially getting its first product to market, after the Food and Drug Administration’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee gave its nod to Novavax’s experimental Covid-19 vaccine at its meeting Tuesday. The FDA, which typically listens to the advisory committee’s recommendations, must now decide whether to greenlight the protein-based shot for emergency use authorization for adults in the U.S. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would then have to endorse its use.

Ministry of Brewing will open a production facility on Greenmount Avenue

It seems the Ministry of Brewing gospel is spreading. The Upper Fells Point brewery will open a new production facility on Greenmount Avenue by the end of the year, according to plans approved Tuesday by the city’s Board of Municipal and Zoning Appeals. The extra space will allow Ministry of Brewing to ramp up production and can more beers for distribution without infringing on sacred taproom space.

Frontier Airlines to add daily nonstop service between Baltimore, Las Vegas

Baltimore travelers will soon be able to “Viva Las Vegas” with the addition of daily, nonstop flights between the two cities via Frontier Airlines. The Denver-based airline announced Tuesday it will launch the new service at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport on Aug. 9. The roundtrip flights will also serve Buffalo, New York, Hartford, Connecticut and Kansas City, Missouri.

PG Executive Alsobrooks: ‘Our county is at an unprecedented crossroads’

At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, 48,000 Prince George’s County residents — more than 5.0% of the county’s population — lost their jobs. But now, Prince George’s County is months away from bringing its employment rate back to pre-pandemic levels, said Angela Alsobrooks, Prince George’s County executive.  Alsobrooks, a Democrat, lauded the state’s recovery from the economic effects of the pandemic on Tuesday morning at the county’s 2022 State of the Economy Breakfast and Address, an annual fundraiser for the Prince George’s County Economic Development Corporation and the Greater Prince George’s Business Roundtable that hasn’t been held in person in over three years due to the pandemic.  

Gaming Innovation Group signs gambling platform deal with Crab Sports in Md.

Gaming Innovation Group Inc. (GiG) on Tuesday announced it has signed a head of terms agreement with Maryland-based sports betting brand Crab Sports to provide its award-winning Platform and Sportsbook solution in the state. This is the first deal in the U.S. for the new and expanded offering of GiG and Sportnco. Powered by its leading technology and flexible architecture, this turnkey solution includes the technical platform, CMS and the recently acquired Sportnco Sportsbook, all powered by GiG’s unique data and GiG Logic rules-based solutions.

Cecil County hotel property near Great Wolf Lodge site hits market

The 109-room Days Inn by Wyndham hotel about a mile from the new Great Wolf Lodge in Perryville is up for grabs. The 43,274-square-foot, two-story hotel will be auctioned on June 22 by a group of substitute trustees. The eight-acre property sits in a sweet spot of Cecil County now in the midst of a development boom. The site at 61 Heather Lane is just off Interstate 95 and Route 222 near the abandoned suburban outlet mall, Perryville Outlets.

Margaritaville Moves Ahead After Three OC Council Approvals

After much debate, resort officials this week approved three separate proposals inching the Margaritaville project closer to fruition. The Mayor and Council on Monday had before them one request from the Margaritaville developer to convey a portion of the Baltimore Avenue corridor to them in order to meet the minimum lot-size requirements for a planned overlay district (POD). The council also reviewed the conveyance of air rights over a city-owned alley, and another that would allow for a comprehensive parking management system, or valet service, allowing tandem, or stacked, parking in order to meet the minimum number of spaces required.

Read More: The Dispatch
After rough run, Kohl’s surges on potential takeover

The Wisconsin chain said it was in a three-week exclusive takeover period with the owner of Vitamin Shoppe for $60 per share. The potential buyer, the Franchise Group Inc., which focuses on franchise companies, will make final financing arrangements and complete due diligence before signing off on the deal during that period. Last month Kohl’s CEO Michelle Gass said that the company had received multiple offers from parties looking to buy the business. At the time the department store chain said that its board was working with Goldman Sachs to explore strategic alternatives, which had included engaging with 25 parties. The board had requested fully financed final bids to be submitted.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland’s seafood industry needs more visas for foreign workers. Will Congress help?

Crabs are a summer tradition for many Maryland families, but prices may be up this year, depending on whether the state’s seafood businesses win a federal lottery for visas for foreign workers. That visa system, local restaurant owners say, “needs an update.” Jack Brooks, co-owner of the J.M. Clayton Co., is a veteran of the Maryland seafood industry. His family has been in the business since his great-grandfather started the Cambridge-based company in 1890. Staffing shortages because of a national visa system for international workers, which Brooks calls “broken,” are putting the bay’s businesses in jeopardy, seafood industry members say.

Read More: Delmarva Now

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