Wednesday, October 23, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Apple store employees in Towson move to unionize, first in Maryland to announce organizing efforts

Employees at Apple’s store in Towson Town Center have launched a drive to unionize, becoming one of just three Apple store locations and the first in Maryland to announce organizing efforts. The Apple workers there have formed the Coalition of Organized Retail Employees with the backing of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, the machinists union said.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
MICA staff votes to unionize, following in adjuncts’ path

It was a little under a year into the pandemic when Julia Clouser, then a part-time employee in the Maryland Institute College of Arts’ Graduate Research Lab, traveled to Utah with her family over Christmas break. “It was one of those COVID vacations where you rent an Airbnb house and don’t leave,” she recalled. Clouser, who is now a graduate admissions counselor at MICA, wanted to isolate for 14 days following her trip in order to protect the lab’s other two employees and the students who picked up equipment and prints from the lab.

doctor hand in gloves holding coronavirus vaccine, close u.
Maryland-based Novavax missed its moonshot but is angling to win over mRNA doubters with its COVID vaccine

Novavax hitched its wagon to the coronavirus pandemic. Before most Americans truly grasped the scope of the danger, the small Maryland biotech startup had secured $1.6 billion in U.S. funding for its COVID vaccine. Its moonshot goal: deliver 2 billion shots to the world by mid-2021. Although the U.S. commitment eventually expanded to $1.8 billion, hardly any Novavax shots have found arms due to manufacturing problems, and most of the world has moved on. Novavax stock has plummeted from $290 a share in February 2021 to around $50 recently.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
COVID-19 likely to make health insurance more expensive for many in Maryland

People who buy their own health insurance in Maryland may find again that they must pay more next year, likely due to costs from the coronavirus pandemic. The three carriers offering policies on Maryland’s health exchange or directly to consumers under the Affordable Care Act requested rate increases from state insurance regulators averaging 11%.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore-area business leaders plan to hire a ‘public safety advocate’

The Greater Baltimore Committee plans to hire a “public safety advocate” who will track crime statistics, monitor data on prosecutions, and make monthly reports on violent crime in the area. Chair Calvin Butler, a top executive at Exelon, made the announcement Wednesday night at the Greater Baltimore Committee’s annual meeting of regional business, civic and nonprofit leaders at the Renaissance Hotel in Baltimore.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore Medical System awarded grants for new community health center

Baltimore Medical System (BMS), the largest Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) system in Maryland, Wednesday announced it was awarded significant grants from two prominent foundations to support the development of its newest community health center in Baltimore. The France-Merrick Foundation has awarded $250,000 and The Middendorf Foundation has awarded $100,000 for the construction of BMS at Yard 56 – a modern, state-of-the art community health center currently being developed on Eastern Avenue in Greektown.

Rockville accounting firm to be acquired after 60 years

Glass Jacobson PA, an accounting firm that has slowly expanded over the years in Montgomery County, has ended a two-year search for a merger partner with a deal to sell to a regional Virginia firm that President Edward J. Jacobson called a mirror image of his firm. “This is us but a bigger version of us,” Jacobson said Tuesday in disclosing the deal to sell to Winchester, Virginia-based Yount, Hyde & Barber or YHB. The deal, which involves Glass Jacobson’s partners selling their equity stake to YHB, is expected to close July 1. The firm’s six principals and 54 employees will stay on but the name will go away.

YHB acquires tax firm Glass Jacobson, expands Md. presence

Yount, Hyde and Barbour (YHB) will acquire Glass Jacobson, PA, a Maryland-based tax, accounting, and management consulting firm, the company announced Wednesday. The takeover will become official July 1. Glass Jacobson was established in 1962 with a rich history of serving clients throughout the Baltimore-Washington metro area.

Mt. Washington Pediatric Hospital CEO Sheldon Stein to retire after 20 years

After serving as CEO for 20 years, Sheldon “Shelly” Stein is retiring from Mt. Washington Pediatric Hospital. Stein, the longest serving leader in the hospital’s 100-year history, will step down in November 2022, the hospital announced Tuesday. MWPH’s Board of Trustees will be hiring a firm to conduct a national search for Stein’s successor. “It’s hard to put into words what this hospital means to me, but it has been an honor and a privilege to serve so many children from Baltimore and beyond alongside our committed staff,” Stein said in a statement.

Pimlico, Laurel Park planning and design efforts get additional $1.6M

The Maryland Stadium Authority awarded a fresh round of money Tuesday to planning and design efforts at Pimlico Race Course and the Laurel Park race track as officials try to push through delays and get both major renovation projects moving forward. The Stadium Authority’s board voted to approve nearly $1.6 million in additional funds for a contract with Ayers Saint Gross, the Baltimore architecture firm that was selected last year to supply architecture and engineering services for the overhaul of both race tracks. Before Tuesday’s vote, the contract was valued at $992,735.

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