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State offers help for insurance-related losses from Key Bridge collapse

Help is available Tuesday for those with insurance-related questions regarding the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse, the Maryland Insurance Administration said Monday. Virtual “disaster center” sessions will be held Tuesday from noon to 2 p.m. and from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The agency will offer 10-minute presentations followed by breakout sessions with representatives of state and federal agencies.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Big name in pickleball, table tennis equipment moving headquarters to North Bethesda

A Rockville-based manufacturer of pickleball and table tennis equipment will more than triple its footprint when it expands into a new headquarters over the course of the next year. Joola has inked a lease for 35,000 square feet at 915 Meeting St., in North Bethesda’s Pike & Rose mixed-use development. The company currently operates out of 10,000 square feet at 2101 Gaither Road In Rockville.

Containers on a cargo ship
Baltimore port workers ‘nervous’ as more than 2,000 remain out of work

There’s not much work left to do for thousands of port workers in Baltimore, Maryland, as the main shipping channel has now been blocked for more than two weeks due to the deadly collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. According to Scott Cowan, president of the local chapter of the International Longshoremen’s Association at the Port of Baltimore, more than 2,000 people are currently out of work because of the blocked channel.

 

Read More: WTOP
Baltimore Port closure creates uncertainty for businesses

The magnitude of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse and the closure of the Port of Baltimore is beginning to sink in for a variety of business owners in Baltimore, such as Nicholas Johnson from Su Casa Furniture in Fells Point. Before the bridge’s collapse, Johnson wasn’t aware that the Port of Baltimore was a main hub for plywood. He worries how this may affect his furnishing business, but also how the port’s closure may impact Baltimore’s small business economy.

 

Baltimore tech CEO secures investments on ‘Shark Tank’ for all-in-one hairstyling tool

Dawn Myers understands what it takes to style textured hair, and it’s not just because she’s a Black woman, a cancer survivor and a businesswoman. She’s also a problem solver. Myers, 38, said she founded her company, The Most Inc., five years ago when she saw many people — primarily women of color — struggling to manage their hair. All the while, major conglomerates were making money off the same group of customers without understanding them “well enough to solve their problems.”

Sage Health opens Baltimore health center for seniors in Waverly

Sage Health, a value-based health care company that serves seniors with primary care, cardiology and wellness services, opened its third location in Maryland Wednesday. The new Sage Health center, located in the Waverly neighborhood at 1100 E. 33rd St., will be the third in the area, joining already open locations in Halethorpe (3541 Washington Blvd.) and Woodlawn (6660 Security Blvd.).

Lobbying push, policy disagreements derailed MD price caps for ticket resales

Lobbying from national companies and their local representatives, and differences in approach between state Senate and House members, thwarted a push in Maryland this session to cap resale prices for event tickets. State lawmakers, though, say they still passed first-in-the-nation consumer protections against predatory sales practices.

‘Cinema is not dead’: Movie theater returning to old Harford County location

A recently closed movie theater won’t be shuttered for long, and Harford County residents might recognize the new tenant. AMC announced the closure of its Churchville location earlier this week, officially shutting its doors Sunday. On Thursday, Flagship Premium Cinemas revealed it will take over the theater, making its return to the venue more than 20 years after it first opened there.

Read More: WBALTV
Day to night in the inner harbor of Baltimore
Downtown Baltimore sees increase in jobs and residents, but vacancies persist, report finds

The number of people working and living in downtown Baltimore grew last year, thanks to apartment conversions and office relocations, but the central business district still struggled with office vacancies as work-at-home policies expanded, a report released Wednesday showed. The first of thousands of state workers have begun moving from the aging State Center complex in midtown to vacant spaces downtown, lifting employment to 133,950 jobs from 126,047 in 2022, according to the Downtown Partnership of Baltimore’s annual measure of the economy in a one-mile radius of Pratt and Light streets.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore’s port is still mostly shut down. Small businesses are feeling the strain.

William “Billy” Marquez is used to hauling five containers a day from the Port of Baltimore. He owns and operates his truck, often working with Jag Transport Inc. to move goods like furniture and aluminum stock for soda cans. Since the day the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed, blocking most container ships from entering the port, there’s been nothing to move.

 

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