Sunday, February 23, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

When the Key Bridge fell, women rose up to play important roles in response, recovery

Ninety-nine days after the Francis Scott Key Bridge fell, Robyn Bianchi’s job was finally complete. On July 3, the assistant salvage master for New Jersey-based Donjon Marine lingered on a pier to watch a container ship pass through the channel where she had worked seven days a week, sometimes 18 hours a day, directing divers’ underwater efforts to cut and clear away the bridge’s wreckage.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore City residents desperately need tax relief

Renew Baltimore, the organization behind a widely discussed ballot initiative aimed at significantly reducing the city’s property tax rate, has submitted over 23,000 signatures — more than double the amount required to place the measure on the ballot. However, the Maryland Supreme Court recently blocked the proposed charter amendment from appearing on Baltimore City’s 2024 Election Day ballot.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Kamala Harris is working around the mainstream media and it’s brilliant

Howard Stern does not know it, but we have had a one-sided beef since 1997. This dates back to his obnoxiously crude days, when I covered a remote news conference announcing his then-terrestrial radio show’s debut on a local York, Pennsylvania, station. Stern, talking to us via satellite from New York, discovered I was a young Black woman and demanded that the men in the room determine if I was hot (they said I was), asked me graphic questions about whether Black or white men were better lovers, and then queried the next female reporter at the microphone if she would make out with me.

Day to night in the inner harbor of Baltimore
With Harborplace, it’s time to move past nostalgia and embrace progress

Harborplace and I share a history. Born the same year it opened, I spent summers downtown with my family, enjoying crabs at Phillips and taking in the Inner Harbor’s energy. It was a symbol of Baltimore’s pride. Later, when I started my career at Baltimore Development Corp., I became the Inner Harbor coordinator, serving the very place that shaped my memories and those of countless Baltimoreans.

Questions we’d like the Senate candidates to answer during their TV debate

What’s likely to be the only televised debate of the Maryland Senate election is scheduled to air on multiple platforms Thursday evening. As if we needed further proof that the contest between Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks (D) and former Gov. Larry Hogan (R) is a big deal — and is attracting national attention — Chuck Todd, the former host of “Meet the Press” and chief NBC News political analyst is serving as the moderator.

houses surrounded with water under cloudy sky
Helene’s powerful lesson on the importance of flood insurance

Even for Americans with memories of deadly East Coast storms like Katrina in 2005 or Maria in 2017, there continues to be something jarring about witnessing the terrible destruction wrought by Hurricane Helene with its record-breaking size and storm surge. This wasn’t about the Bahamas and Gulf states like Katrina, or U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and other Caribbean islands like Maria.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Vending machines are another way to combat opioid overdoses

You may notice them around the county, vending machines that do not dispense candy and snacks, soda or cigarettes.Rather, they offer, for free, a drug that can save lives. The Frederick County Health Department set up distribution boxes in four locations this past spring — three in the city of Frederick and one in Thurmont.

Hogan is no friend of Maryland teachers

I’ve taught Spanish in Baltimore County Public Schools for six years. This is only the second year that I’ve worked in a fully staffed department, and still, we have classrooms with too many students to get the individualized attention they deserve. My school, Overlea High, is designed for 1000 students but serves 1,500. Eleven trailers are used for classrooms, and special educators without offices sometimes have to use the faculty lounge to assess students.

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