Wednesday, March 12, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Funding for U.S. 15 project remains a critical need

U.S. 15 runs like an artery through the heart of the city of Frederick — and everybody who drives on it knows the road has a severe blockage. Every day, in the morning rush and again from 3 p.m. until at least 6 p.m., drivers encounter stop-and-go traffic — or sometimes stop and no-go. Both the northbound and southbound lanes are prone to heavy traffic, often at the same time.

A letter from the LaPere family: Thank you for remembering and honoring our daughter

I went to bed on Sept. 24, 2023, knowing that something was not right. It was a Sunday, and our daughter had not called. The next day, one year ago this week, I received the worst phone call — one that any parent would hope they never get. It was from a Baltimore Police Department detective who informed me that our daughter and Nico’s sister, Pava Marie LaPere, was found deceased. We flew to Baltimore the next morning. (Photo: The Baltimore Banner)

Passage of signature zoning reform proves that ‘local control’ isn’t a third rail anymore

On the evening of Aug. 28, Gov. Wes Moore headlined a fundraiser for Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz – hardly an unusual event for a popular governor with a growing national profile. What was unusual, was that the group hosting the event, YIMBYs for Harris, was streaming the fundraiser live to an audience of 30,000 who raised over $130,000 for the ticket.

The time is now to transform neglected Inner Harbor

Baltimore stands at a pivotal crossroads, with opportunities abounding like never before. Statewide elected leaders are aligned with the vision that a strong Baltimore makes for a stronger Maryland. Citywide leaders, emboldened by recent primary elections, understand the art of the possible. And our business community is prepared to lead on affordable housing initiatives, technology investment and new infrastructure planning.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Captured in a metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia primary school, this photograph depicts a typical classroom scene, where an audience of school children were seated on the floor before a teacher at the front of the room, who was reading an illustrated storybook, during one of the scheduled classroom sessions. Assisting the instructor were two female students to her left, and a male student on her right, who was holding up the book, while the seated classmates were raising their hands to answer questions related to the story just read.
Baltimore City students need later start times

So much of the discussion around how to improve educational outcomes for students centers around what happens in the classroom: what students are being taught, how they’re being tested, and what the school environment looks like. But a large and growing body of research shows that how students start their day, before they even leave their homes, has major implications for how they’ll perform in school.

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Surrounding first-generation students with support is the key to college success

This fall, residence halls and classrooms are filling with new students eager to start their academic journey. Many of them are “first generation” students — the first in their family to be able to pursue higher education. The thrilling feeling of accomplishment and pride these students feel upon entering college, however, is often accompanied by less helpful emotions like anxiety and self-doubt. And, unlike students for whom college-going is a family tradition, first-generation students often lack the structural and emotional supports to overcome the real and perceived barriers they face as they enter academia.

Two referendums show bad ideas on education from both sides of the aisle

Two very different ballot measures in two very different states this year teach the same lesson: Bad ideas on education can come from either side of the partisan divide. In Florida, a referendum asks voters whether they want to change local school board elections from nonpartisan contests to races between candidates identified by party affiliation.

Baltimore’s Father Mike Murphy is leading a peace-building revolution

Southwest Baltimore is undergoing a peacebuilding revolution thanks to Father Mike Murphy and the Archdiocese of Baltimore. In coordination with the Baltimore Police Department, Father Mike’s two archdiocesan gun buybacks removed 646 unwanted firearms from our community, including 281 handguns and 314 rifles and shotguns. Some voluntarily turned over had been stolen. (Image: Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun Staff)

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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