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Metro’s next rail cars to be built at new $70 million Maryland plant

Metro’s next series of rail cars will be built at a $70 million plant in Maryland that will employ nearly 500 people and supply rail cars for the Washington-area system and transit agencies across the country. Hitachi Rail announced Monday it has chosen Hagerstown as the home for an assembly plant that will release Metro’s eighth generation of rail cars starting in late 2024. Metro selected the company about 18 months ago to build 256 cars for its 8000 series, with an option for as many as 800 cars this decade.

Report: Wide pay gap persists between gender, ethnic groups among Md. doctors

There is a wide pay gap between male and female physicians in Maryland, and doctors in the state earn less on average than those nationwide, a recent survey has found. The study conducted by Merritt Hawkins, a national physician search and consulting firm and a company of AMN Healthcare, on behalf of MedChi, The Maryland State Medical Society, tracks compensation, benefits and practice metrics of Maryland physicians and compares them to physicians nationally.

How one community group is addressing Baltimore’s vacant housing

It easy to spot the vacant houses in so many of Baltimore’s older neighborhoods. It’s far more difficult to spot ongoing renovation of the city’s housing stock. In the last decade there is a bright spot — the 1700 block of E. Biddle Street, near Broadway and just north of the Johns Hopkins medical campus. The homes are in the Broadway East-Eager Park neighborhood. The catalyst for this encouraging transformation is ReBUILD Metro, a community initiative not as well known as it should be.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Rent hike caps in Montgomery County unsustainable for business, companies say

Continued blanket restrictions on raising rents in Montgomery County, imposed during the pandemic, are biting into landlords’ cashflow and may discourage investment, more than a dozen companies connected with rental housing said in a letter to the county’s elected leaders.

One-third of UMMS hospitals now led by women

Think women in health care and you probably think of nurses, nurse practitioners and doctors. You probably don’t think CEOs and there’s a good reason for that: Female CEOs are few and far between in the field. A study published in November 2021 in JAMA Network Open, a monthly open-access medical journal published by the American Medical Association, found that only 15% of CEOs in the U.S. health care industry were women. At the University of Maryland Medical System, however, women lead four of the system’s 12 hospitals.

Curio Wellness Giving Away $40K In Gift Cards To Help Customers Pay For Gas

Curio Wellness, a Maryland-based medical cannabis company, is giving away $40,000 in Royal Farms gift cards to help patients save a little green at the pump. Over the last four months, patient purchases have consistently declined, which the company attributes to the rising costs of consumer goods, particularly gas. “We know that one of the barriers to accessing healthcare and medicine is transportation, and we want to ease the burden many of our loyal patients are experiencing right now,” said Wendy Bronfein, the company’s co-founder, chief brand officer, and director of public policy.

Read More: WJZ
BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport Set Cargo Record In 2021, Hogan Says

Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport handled more than 618.8 million pounds of cargo in 2021, setting a new airport record, Gov. Larry Hogan announced Thursday. In July 2021, the airport set a new mark for monthly shipments, transporting 56.3 million pounds of cargo, the governor’s office said. The new benchmarks come amid growths in e-commerce during the pandemic.

Read More: WJZ
Rent hike caps in Montgomery County unsustainable for business, companies say

Continued blanket restrictions on raising rents in Montgomery County, imposed during the pandemic, are biting into landlords’ cashflow and may discourage investment, more than a dozen companies connected with rental housing said in a letter to the county’s elected leaders. “We appreciate the good intentions of passing legislation to help residents through the Covid-19 pandemic,” the letter said, referring to Bill 30-21, which the Montgomery County Council passed unanimously in November, doubling down on a rent increase cap emplaced during the early days of Covid.

Exclusive: Rockville biotech expanding, ‘on the prowl’ for talent ahead of planned IPO

Rockville’s Immunomic Therapeutics Inc. is on track to go public later this year, after Covid-19 threw a wrench in the vaccine maker’s initial timeline. But a few things must happen first. So while juggling clinical trials, the immunotherapy company is hiring aggressively, expanding its Montgomery County footprint and eyeing more funding ahead of an initial public offering slated for the second half of this year.

Ever Forward’s hull undamaged after Chesapeake Bay grounding

A cargo ship’s hull was not damaged when it ran aground in the Chesapeake Bay and there is no fuel leakage, the ship’s operator said in an update Thursday, four days after the Ever Forward got stranded as it left the Port of Baltimore. Evergreen arranged for divers to inspect the ship after Sunday’s accident, and its propeller and rudder are fully functional, the company said in a statement Thursday.

Read More: Star Democrat

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