Monday, November 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Baltimore baristas unionize the first Starbucks in Maryland

Starbucks baristas in Baltimore’s Mount Vernon neighborhood voted Monday to unionize, becoming the giant coffee chain’s first Maryland workers to organize amid a fast-growing national movement. Workers at the North Charles Street coffee shop voted unanimously to join Workers United, an affiliate of SEIU. The vote was 14-0, said Stephanie Hernandez, an organizer with Workers United.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore’s Avenue Market will undergo $9.6M redo after securing federal funding

Baltimore’s Avenue Market is slated to undergo a $9.6 million redevelopment to improve the historic structure and bring healthy food and business growth opportunities to the city’s Upton neighborhood and surrounding areas. The project was announced Monday along with a new $2 million federal investment secured by a team of government leaders that include U.S. Senators Chris Van Hollen and Ben Cardin and Congressman Kweisi Mfume.

BWI Roundtable continues to work toward solution for airplane noise after General Assembly study bill fails

Despite overwhelming support from the DC Metroplex BWI Community Roundtable, a state bill designed to create a commission to study the health effects of the airport on the surrounding community failed to pass the General Assembly during this year’s session. Ever since the 2015 implementation of the Federal Aviation Administration’s Next Generation Air Transportation System, airplane noise has been an issue in Anne Arundel, Howard and Baltimore counties, said Mary Reese, of the BWI Roundtable, a liaison group between BWI Marshall Airport and the surrounding community.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Continental Realty sells Dundalk shopping center for $11.9 million

Continental Realty Corp. has sold Merritt Manor, an expansive shopping center on Dundalk’s busy Merritt Boulevard, for $11.9 million. The buyer, Columbia-based Abrams Development Group, picks up an 88,332-square-foot retail center that is 96% leased. The property is anchored by a Gold’s Gym and counts GNC, Chicken Rico and Hair Cuttery among its tenants. Continental acquired the center at 1119-1211 Merritt Boulevard in 2013 when it was 83% leased, the company said in announcing the deal Monday.

#DaysBetween: Looking Forward

As we look forward to James Rouse’s birthday, we also look forward to the future of his vision in both Columbia and the Inner Harbor. Downtown Columbia is finally beginning to realize how this urban center fits into his oasis. Gazing at the transformation in the #MerriweatherDistrict, one can still see Rouse’s imprint on this core of the city. It’s a place for everyone, a place to come together, a place to inspire each other. As Michael Chabon said in the New York Times Magazine 10 years ago, Columbia was, “avowedly utopian in its aims, transformative in its ambitions.”

Against the Odds, Sports Wagering Panel Offers More Help for Minority Businesses

Maryland gambling officials hope to bring mobile betting to the state in time for the kickoff of the National Football League’s 2022 season. If regulators are successful, fans will be able to bet on professional and collegiate events on their phones, an advance that is certain to super-charge the state’s new, and still relatively sleepy, sports betting industry. In virtually every state that has legalized sports gambling, mobile has left bricks-and-mortar betting in the dust, accounting for approximately 90% of the handle. Also true just about everywhere: The big-name firms, those with the massive advertising budgets, rake in the lion’s share of the action — and, therefore, the profits.

This tax break costs Baltimore taxpayers millions each year. The city wants to make it bigger.

The city of Baltimore wants to renew and expand an expiring tax break for developers and businesses that costs tens of millions of dollars annually. A quarter of Baltimore — about 13,500 acres — is considered within an “enterprise zone,” meaning that developments and businesses in those areas are eligible for certain tax breaks from the city and state. The tax breaks hinge on improvements to the property and hiring benchmarks. Developers and real estate brokers say the program can attract business to Baltimore and generate more tax revenue over the long term.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Charm City Run’s expansion strategy fueled by Covid running boom

Josh Levinson wasn’t sure Charm City Run was going to make it during the Covid-19 pandemic shutdown. But over the tumultuous two-year period, a resurgence in running, Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans and loyal customers not only kept the running retailer afloat but spurred an expansion. Charm City Run celebrates 20 years in business with the planned June 4 opening of a new store in the Kentlands development in Montgomery County. The Baltimore chain will now have seven stores — one each in Baltimore City, Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Howard, Harford and Frederick counties.

Condor Airlines will bring its seasonal flights to Germany back to BWI Airport this summer

Condor Airlines is bringing back its seasonal service between Frankfurt, Germany and Baltimore Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport this summer after a two-year, pandemic-related pause. Nonstop flights will be available three times per week on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday beginning on June 4. Condor’s hub at the Frankfurt Airport also offers connecting service to more than 100 destinations in Europe and beyond. Condor has offered its Baltimore-Frankfurt service seasonally since July 2012, but did not offer the flights in the summers of 2020 or 2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

#DaysBetween: The Lakefront District

While the Howard Hughes Corporation is taking James Rouse’s vision for Columbia, and creating the destination he had always dreamed of with an urban core where one can live, work and play. The latest project turns to the redevelopment of the Lakefront District with a state-of-the-art health and wellness center alongside housing and retail. The investment falls directly in line with the Downtown Columbia Plan which calls for “bringing community life and activity back to the water’s edge.”

The Morning Rundown

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