Wednesday, December 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Residents sue Maryland Department of Labor over unpaid unemployment benefits dating to the beginning of the pandemic

The Unemployed Workers Union is back in court battling the Maryland Department of Labor to settle unpaid unemployment benefits for a group of people who have lost their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic. The union filed around 20 lawsuits in Baltimore City Circuit Court on Monday asking for the labor department to be reviewed for how it’s handling unpaid benefits. Plaintiffs are also seeking various remedies, including specifics about why they were denied benefits and in some cases looking for upward of $3,000 in unpaid benefits.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
‘Overenforcement’: Black Baltimore restaurant owners say they’re harassed and subject to spurious 311 complaints

With challenges ranging from the uncertainty of what the latest wave of the coronavirus pandemic means for their business to worker shortages, some of Baltimore’s Black-owned restaurants say they also deal with harassing behavior and spurious complaints rooted in racism. That can be manifested in repeated calls to the city’s nonemergency line, 311, about their businesses, actions they say affect them financially and emotionally. In a city that is 57% Black, numerous Black restaurant owners say some people try to shut them down.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Constellation Energy forms partnership with Microsoft to help companies track clean energy use

Baltimore-based Constellation Energy has joined forces with Microsoft to create technology to help large commercial customers reach clean energy goals. The technology will allow commercial customers and others to match their energy needs with locally produced clean energy. The technology will work 24 hours a day to match a customer’s power needs with local, carbon-free energy sources.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
University of Maryland, Baltimore spent more than $2.9M to cover losses at student apartment building downtown

The University of Maryland, Baltimore needed to spend more than $2.9 million to cover losses at a downtown apartment building as vacancies rose and revenue plummeted during the pandemic. The University Suites at Fayette Square apartment project is a 337-bed complex at 518 W. Fayette St. intended for students at UMB, which includes the university’s medical, nursing, pharmacy and law schools. The Maryland Economic Development Corp. financed its construction, issuing $34.4 million of bonds in 2003.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
CBRE Investment Management acquires 672k s.f. warehouse in Aberdeen

A fund of CBRE Investment Management has just increased its portfolio along Maryland’s Interstate 95 corridor. The Los Angeles-based private investment firm recently acquired its fifth warehouse in the Harford and Cecil County submarkets, a 672,000-square-foot facility at 511 Chelsea Road. The warehouse is fully leased to Bob’s Discount Furniture as a mid-Atlantic distribution center.

UMMS board chairman, who saw the hospital system through COVID and past ‘Healthy Holly,’ steps down

James “Chip” DiPaula Jr. has stepped down as chairman of the University of Maryland Medical System after nearly three years in the position that was punctuated by the coronavirus pandemic. DiPaula, however, may be best remembered as taking the helm of the 13-hospital system’s board in the wake of a major scandal involving lucrative contracts for board members. That included former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh, who made hundreds of thousands of dollars selling her “Healthy Holly” children’s books in a sole-source deal with UMMS.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland Tech Council launches 2 new regional organizations

The Maryland Tech Council (MTC), the state’s largest technology and life sciences trade association, Tuesday announced it has launched two new regional tech councils to leverage its statewide impact locally in the Baltimore region and Prince George’s County. The Baltimore Regional Tech Council and Prince George’s County Tech Council each seek to fulfill in their communities MTC’s mission.

Developer plans to transform Bethesda office building into housing

A Bethesda office site that recently traded hands now appears to be headed toward a transformation into a residential and retail complex, in line with Montgomery County’s vision for the neighborhood. The property, located on about 1.4 acres at 4405 East West Highway, is currently home to a 65,000-square-foot office building and a surface parking lot in Bethesda’s central business district, just a few blocks from the Red Line’s Bethesda Metro station. Perseus TDC, which recently acquired the property from Klinedinst Management for an undisclosed price, plans to replace the office space with some 320 multifamily units over 8,000 square feet of ground-floor retail, beginning in 2024.

Area 405 artist hub near Penn Station purchased by local developer, nonprofit

A Greenmount West building just blocks from Penn Station has been purchased by a local developer and nonprofit who plan to preserve its long-standing status as a hub for the city’s arts community. Area 405 was bought by a partnership consisting of the Central Baltimore Partnership and Baltimore real estate developer Ernst Valery for $3.8 million, the organizations announced Tuesday. The 120-year-old, 71,744-square-foot building was listed for sale last summer and is located at 405-417 E. Oliver St., near Penn Station, which is in the midst of a massive overhaul.

UMB, Terran Biosciences forge exclusive licensing deal

Terran Biosciences Inc. has entered into an agreement with the University of Maryland, Baltimore for a worldwide exclusive license to develop and commercialize a portfolio of UMB’s patents and data to support a novel approach to the treatment of neurological and psychiatric illnesses with psychedelic therapeutics. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

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