Friday, November 22, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Columbia barbershop marks 100 years of haircuts — and mentoring Black barbers

Years ago, when Warren’s Barbershop was located in the Snowden River Shopping Center, David Clark walked into the shop. He was new to the area and working as a door-to-door salesman. Shop owner Julius Warren Jr., commonly known as Mr. Julius, asked Clark if he knew how to cut hair. Clark had cut hair a little in college, but nothing too extensive. Still, Mr. Julius brought him under his wing.

 

a red sports car is parked in front of a bank of america
Bank of America tops estimates on better-than-expected trading revenue

Bank of America topped analyst estimates for third-quarter profit and revenue on better-than-expected trading results. Here’s what the company reported: Earnings: 81 cents vs. 77 cents LSEG estimate; Revenue: $25.49 billion vs. $25.3 billion estimate; The bank said Tuesday that net income fell 12% from a year earlier to $6.9 billion, or 81 cents a share, on higher provisions for loan losses and rising expenses.

Read More: CNBC
Labor secretary warns state is ‘dependent’ on federal workforce development funds

The state needs to be “smarter” about how it funds workforce development programs after a $4.7 million cut in federal funds this year with more cuts expected next year, Maryland Labor Secretary Portia Wu told lawmakers Tuesday. “We’re very dependent on the federal funds,” Wu told a virtual meeting of the Joint Audit and Evaluation Committee. “So we are in a situation where state investments in workforce are going to be critical in the coming years.”

Chase is donating $4 million to tackle vacant housing in Baltimore.

Nine nonprofits across Baltimore will receive grants from JPMorgan Chase & Co. to tackle the city’s vacant housing crisis. The bank will distribute roughly $4 million to nonprofit organizations and bring them together to create what it is calling the Baltimore Housing Innovation Cohort. The cohort‘s goal is to increase the housing supply in the city and make home ownership more affordable.

United Airlines plans $1.5 billion share buyback, forecasts fourth-quarter earnings above estimates

United Airlines said Tuesday that it is starting a $1.5 billion share buyback as the carrier reported higher-than-expected earnings for the busy summer travel season and forecast strong results for the last three months of the year. United expects to earn an adjusted $2.50 to $3.00 a share in the fourth quarter, compared to $2.00 a share a year earlier and the $2.68 analysts polled by LSEG estimated.

Read More: CNBC
HCC workforce development, skilled trades center meets growing need

Maryland is continuing to make strides in the fast-growing cyber and skilled trades industries. In January, Gov. Wes Moore announced the establishment of the Maryland Cybersecurity Task Force in response to rising threats within the state and in September Howard Community College (HCC) broke ground on a Workforce Development and Trades Center.

Beautiful summer day in Baltimore's Inner Harbor
Baltimore’s latest plans for the Superblock go super-bust

Two decades after Baltimore first solicited plans to redevelop a shopping district west of downtown, the Superblock has once again gone bust. The Baltimore Development Corp., or BDC, said Monday that it canceled its contract with Westside Partners, after the group couldn’t show it had obtained financing for a mixed-use development. President and CEO Colin Tarbert said the BDC plans to start a new bidding process and solicit fresh ideas for the Superblock early next year. It’s the latest delay for a city-led redevelopment that formally began in 2003.

Proposed Maryland legislation would make solar companies pay counties when building on farmland

The Maryland Association of Counties (MACo), a nonprofit, nonpartisan voice for all 24 counties in the state, is proposing that solar companies with state approval to build solar farms on agricultural land, be required to pay $3,500 to $5,000 per acre to the county where farms are located. The money would be used in that county for conservation or agricultural preservation. “MACo has been having discussions with all the state agencies and with the solar industry and so on, recognizing that next spring there’s more than likely going to be a push for further solar legislation,” Chris Heyn, Carroll County’s Department of Planning and Land Management director said at a solar work session last week.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Public company wants to help build bigger data centers

A Hanover company has created a product that could change how data centers are built. Ciena Corp. has developed a new product that will enable companies to build bigger data centers by better connecting the millions of computers inside them. The telecommunications and cloud services company (NYSE: CIEN) expects the product will be ready by the end of 2025. Helen Xenos, senior director of portfolio marketing for Ciena, said the company developed the product – called the 1.6 terabyte coherent-lite pluggable — because the existing technology supporting data centers is reaching its limits.

Health-care costs hit a post-pandemic high. These moves during open enrollment can help

About 165 million Americans get their health insurance through work, and yet most don’t spend much time considering what their employer is offering in the way of benefits and what it will cost. In fact, employees only spent about 45 minutes a year, on average, deciding which benefit options suit them best, a report from Aon found. Open enrollment season, which typically runs through early December, is an opportunity to take a closer look at what’s at stake.

Read More: CNBC

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