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Sports Business Baltimore, D.C. to discuss merging bids for 2026 World Cup

Baltimore and D.C. are considering merging their bids for the 2026 World Cup in the hopes of ensuring the national capital region gets to host the world’s largest sporting event. Terry Hasseltine, who has been coordinating Baltimore’s World Cup bid as president of the Sport and Entertainment Corp. of Maryland, told the Maryland Stadium Authority board about the possible merger during a meeting on Tuesday. He also said he expects FIFA, the governing body of soccer, to make a decision about host cities around May 15.

Moderna co-founder joins board of Baltimore surgical robot startup

A big name in the medical field is joining the board of Galen Robotics, a biotech startup in Baltimore. Robert Langer, one of the co-founders of pharmaceutical giant Moderna, said the Pigtown company’s robotic arm could change the way surgeries are done. A big name in the medical field is joining the board of Galen Robotics, a biotech startup in Baltimore. Robert Langer, one of the co-founders of pharmaceutical giant Moderna, said the Pigtown company’s robotic arm could change the way surgeries are done.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Nonprofit Aims To Improve Baltimore’s Playgrounds
Baltimore City has partnered with KABOOM! to ensure that children have access to playspace equity at schools in underserved communities. KABOOM! is a non-profit organization that helps build playgrounds for children. It aims to end playspace inequity in 25 places within the next five years by raising $250 million. The organization plans to work with Baltimore City Schools and Baltimore City Recreation and Parks to ensure that “every child in Baltimore has access to places to play where they live and learn,” according to KABOOM! staff.
Read More: WJZ-TV
Baltimore developer to acquire and ‘re-imagine’ Harborplace as centerpiece of revitalized waterfront

Baltimore developer P. David Bramble and his MCB Real Estate firm have struck a deal to acquire Harborplace, the struggling one-time centerpiece of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor redevelopment in the 1980s, out of receivership. The deal, if approved by the Baltimore Circuit Court judge overseeing the receivership, would pave the way for what Bramble described as an extensive redevelopment effort to “completely re-imagine” the faded retail attraction and revitalize the city’s downtown waterfront.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Ascension Saint Agnes Names MedStar Health Philanthropic Veteran To Leadership Role

Ascension Saint Agnes on Monday announced the addition of Aaron Piccirilli to the health system’s executive team. Piccirilli joins Ascension Saint Agnes as its newest vice president who will also serve as executive director of the health system’s foundation, overseeing its philanthropic initiatives. Piccirilli comes to Ascension from MedStar Health, where he has served as vice president of philanthropy initiatives since 2006.

Read More: WJZ
UMBC names its first female president, Valerie Sheares Ashby, as replacement for long-serving Freeman A. Hrabowski III

The University of Maryland, Baltimore County announced Valerie Sheares Ashby will serve as its new president starting Aug. 1, becoming the first female to fill this role at the university. Ashby, who currently serves as the dean of Duke University’s Trinity College of Arts & Sciences, received her appointment as UMBC’s sixth chief executive from the University System of Maryland Board of Regents. She will take over for Freeman A. Hrabowski III, who is retiring from the university after 30 years as president.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
With Ever Forward still stuck in Chesapeake Bay, officials to begin two-week process of removing containers

The next step in the Ever Forward saga is one that officials have wanted to avoid from the beginning: container removal. The 1,095-foot cargo ship has been stuck in the Chesapeake Bay off the coast of Pasadena since missing a turn March 13 and running aground in shallow waters. A week later, two clamshell dredges began digging up the mud that surrounded the ship’s hull and then twice last week, Tuesday and Wednesday, at least five tugboats pushed and pulled on the ship, hoping to free it. Those tries were unsuccessful.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
This MoCo biotech just raised another $20M to get its superbug-killing therapy through the clinic

Gaithersburg’s Adaptive Phage Therapeutics Inc. has raised another $20 million in funding, less than a year after securing nearly $41 million to advance its therapy for superbugs. The new funding brings the Series B total to $61 million, allowing the company to accelerate clinical trials for two programs: prosthetic joint infection and diabetic foot osteomyelitis, in which soft tissue infections can spread to the bone and require amputation.

Anne Arundel Economic Development Corps gives out nearly $33 million in COVID, disaster relief grants since 2020

The bulk of the Anne Arundel Economic Development Corporation’s work involves lending money to local businesses and helping them flourish. But, when the pandemic hit and federal and state money started funneling into the county, the quasi-governmental organization had an added mission: distributing funding to businesses most in need. AAEDC’s work delivering nearly $33 million in grants to businesses was critical in getting the county economy through the recession brought on by COVID-19 and keeping unemployment rates from skyrocketing, Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman said.

Baltimore Symphony Orchestra appoints Mark C. Hanson, ‘a giant in the industry,’ as its next president

The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra on Tuesday appointed Mark C. Hanson, the former head of the San Francisco Orchestra and a leader one musician described as “a giant in the industry,” as its next president and CEO. Hanson, 48, who already has lead two orchestras larger than the BSO, will begin his new job April 21. He succeeds Peter Kjome, who announced his resignation as the BSO’s president and CEO in the spring of 2021. His contract expired at the end of January.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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