Wednesday, October 23, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Marriott pledges $50 million to support women, diverse hotel owners

Marriott International Inc. is committing $50 million to help more women and diverse entrepreneurs own and develop hotel properties under the Marriott banner. Under the three-year program, the Bethesda-based hotel giant will offer financial and other incentives to owners and franchisees from historically underrepresented groups who will have a controlling equity interest in select projects within Marriott’s portfolio of 30 hotel brands.

man playing soccer game on field
Baltimore not among 16 host cities for 2026 World Cup held in U.S., Canada and Mexico

When Boston and Philadelphia were announced, it was obvious what was to come. And by the time New York was selected — the final nail in the coffin — Baltimore officially had been eliminated as a 2026 World Cup host. Baltimore, vying to host World Cup matches at M&T Bank Stadium as part of a joint bid with Washington, came up short as FIFA, the global governing body of soccer, selected 11 U.S. cities but did not pick Baltimore during its televised selection show Thursday evening.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Howard Hughes’ Fitchitt: CareFirst’s big lease in Downtown Columbia was years in the making

CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield’s move into a large Columbia satellite office in 2024 will end a years-long dance by developer Howard Hughes Corp. to persuade the Baltimore-based health insurer to expand its suburban presence. And for that, you can thank Covid-19. CareFirst said Tuesday it would grow in the Howard County market with the first of its new satellite offices. The insurer will occupy two floors of the new 12-story 6100 Merriweather, a Class A trophy tower that is anchored by tech giant Tenable. CareFirst will also stretch its offices into parts of the first and second floors.

FIFA To Announce 2026 World Cup US Sites, Paring From 17

As FIFA prepares to announce the 2026 World Cup sites on Thursday — and make high-profile cuts — Alan Rothenberg thought back to when stadiums were picked for the 1994 tournament he headed in the United States. “They gave the rights to the host country, and the host country basically ran the whole thing,” he said. “Here, everything is done in-house by FIFA. So it’s been a really long and arduous process. The terms have been incredibly difficult for cities to cope with.”

Read More: WJZ
Speculation That Orioles Could Leave Baltimore ‘False’ & ‘Intentionally Divisive,’ Georgia Angelos Says

Georgia Angelos, the wife of Orioles majority owner Peter Angelos, released a statement Wednesday saying there is no truth to speculation that the team could be leaving Baltimore. “In light of the false and painful claims that have been alleged in the lawsuit that my son Louis has brought against me and my older son John, I want to set the record straight,” said Angelos’ statement, which comes in response to suggestions by her younger son, Louis, that his brother could move the Orioles to Tennessee.

Read More: WJZ
Downtown Baltimore office tower hits auction block in foreclosure

Another downtown office landmark — an office tower built as part of the city’s Charles Center renaissance in the 1960s — is heading to the auction block. The 28-story Class A tower at 201 N. Charles St. will be sold in foreclosure on the front steps of the Clarence M. Mitchell III Courthouse on June 29 at 11 a.m. The 303,841-square-foot tower has been a mainstay downtown since it first opened in 1968 and has several law offices as tenants with ground-floor retail. Last year, law firm Silverman, Thompson, Slutkin & White moved from the tower into 400 E. Pratt St. near the waterfront, where its name now adorns the building.

Why employers are hungry for workers now in Wicomico County

After a two-year drought in nationwide employment, employers across Maryland are eager to recruit more workers and get their businesses back on track. John Hickman, director of BEACON at Salisbury University, has noticed more advertisements in recent months. Perdue Farms, a long-standing top employer in Wicomico County, has begun advertising sign-on bonuses on billboards as a way to entice incoming employees. Similarly, Chesapeake Shipbuilding Corp. displays a large, orange sign that reads, “Hiring now!”

Read More: Delmarva Now
100 us dollar banknotes
Bankrupt Md. company’s $4.7M debt for damages likely can’t be discharged, 4th Circuit says

A Savage-based supplier of packaging products likely cannot discharge through bankruptcy the $4.7 million in damages owed a competitor for intentional interference with contracts and tortious interference with business relations, a federal appeals court ruled last week. In its published decision, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Cleary Packaging LLC’s actions if found on remand to have caused “willful and malicious injury” to Cantwell-Cleary Company Inc. would not be a dischargeable debt under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. “This fight is not over,” said Cleary Packaging’s attorney, Paul Sweeney. “We have options in the bankruptcy court that we are considering.”

Marley Station mall in Glen Burnie sold to New York partnership

Marley Station mall in Glen Burnie has been sold to a New York-based partnership that says it plans to move quickly to fill vacancies. The ownership group includes Mason Asset Management and Namdar Realty Group. The partners, based in Great Neck, New York, manage shopping centers across the country. The purchase price and seller were not disclosed. State assessment records list the owner as YAM Marley Station LLC of Scottsdale, Arizona.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Gula Tech Foundation gives $1M in effort to increase cyber expertise on boards

Tenable co-founders Ron and Cyndi Gula’s charitable foundation gave out $1 million in grants to nonprofits that focus on boosting cybersecurity expertise on company boards of directors. The Women Business Collaborative won the $350,000 first prize out of seven finalists. The other three winners of the June 2022 round of funding included the GRF Foundation and the National Cybersecurity Society, which each won $250,000. The third-place winner, the Center for Cybersecurity and Privacy Protection at Cleveland State University, won $150,000.

Read More: MarylandInno

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