Monday, November 17, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Now is our chance to fix Baltimore’s ‘Highway to Nowhere’

For decades, the stretch of roadway known as the Highway to Nowhere has split West Baltimore in half. Its origins date back to the 1950s, when the Federal-Aid Highway Act incentivized towns and cities across America to build out the growing interstate highway system. With federal highway funds nearly guaranteed, and later secured, Baltimore officials moved forward with a plan to link Interstate 70 and Interstate 95 with a crosstown expressway. Project leaders broke ground on the west side of the city and bulldozed through Black neighborhoods to make room for the new highway — razing 971 homes, destroying 62 businesses, and displacing 1,500 residents.

Hogan: Maryland’s free and fair elections must be respected

Early voting has begun in Maryland. As Marylanders head to the polls to exercise their fundamental right to choose their elected leaders, they can be confident in the integrity of our elections. A recent nonpartisan report found that Maryland ranks second in the nation in election integrity. Despite weeks of headlines, campaign rhetoric and lawsuits surrounding the process, our elections remain free and fair. When the results are counted — whether we like them or not — we must accept them.

Meet The Banner’s new opinion editor

My family moved during my teenage years to the neighborhood of single-family and semi-detached homes known as Ednor Gardens-Lakeside, which sits at the foot of where Memorial Stadium once stood. My mother was always proud to mention that the developer of Ednor Gardens-Lakeside was also the developer of the Guilford neighborhood, with its stately homes and beautifully-landscaped yards.

Haunted asylums are a Halloween staple. Does the fictional gore undermine psychiatry’s good?

As a holiday of contrasts, Halloween celebrates sweetness and superstition — trick or treat. Traditions range from pumpkin carving and candy eating to the personification of werewolves and ghosts. Yet as adults seek thrills in haunted houses and horror movies, one common and disturbing motif is the “gorification” of the seriously mentally ill. Haunted houses across the country leverage settings, actors and props around the theme of mental illness.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Hopkins v. CareFirst: A resolution has been reached, but not before significant damage was done

Imagine for a moment that you were one of the several hundred thousand Marylanders who gets their health insurance coverage from CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield and you received a letter from Johns Hopkins Medicine informing you that your longtime provider may no longer accept your coverage because the two entities have thus far failed to reach a deal on certain payments.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Opinion: Lessons from the destruction of the old Nice-Middleton bridge.

Memo: To the next governor. After learning of your (and it doesn’t matter who wins, both gubernatorial candidates voiced the same position) interest in considering the re-use of the old Nice-Middleton Bridge as an outdoor recreation asset for bicyclists and pedestrians — a position shared by our congressional leadership — Gov. Larry Hogan and Maryland Department of Transportation Secretary Jim Ports sped up the process of not just opening the new bridge, but also doing enough damage to the old bridge to deny you the option of repurposing it.

10 myths about American politics

The media frequently justify their election coverage with claims that a vital democracy needs a well-informed public. Unfortunately, their coverage often repeats long-standing myths about politics that undermine this worthwhile goal.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
doctor hand in gloves holding coronavirus vaccine, close u.
Opinion: A new immunity-evading virus variant looms. Here’s how to fight it.

Get ready: Another covid wave is on the horizon because of a new immunity-evading subvariant, BQ.1, and its offshoots. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says, based in part on models, that BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 now account for nearly 17 percent of infections in the United States, up from zero a few weeks ago. The prevalent BA.5 variant is starting to fade. Especially at risk are the unvaccinated and those who have not gotten a shot of the new boosters. Right now, the pandemic in the United States is in a lull, and overall levels remain relatively low. There are 260,808 new reported cases a week and 2,566 weekly deaths, the CDC said, partially based on modeling. Covid-19 has been one of the leading causes of death in the United States, but the numbers are far smaller than during the omicron surge last winter.

Remaking Baltimore: City should position itself as a remote work hub

Recently we met an entrepreneur who had built a successful financial technology company in the Bay Area. She, her husband and their young children had just moved to Wheeling, West Virginia, drawn by the lower cost of land and what she described as the “hip” cultural scene. They are early pioneers in what will be a decades-long migration of remote workers out of high-cost cities like San Francisco. This restructuring of the U.S. economy creates a once-in-a-generation opportunity for Baltimore. The city should position itself as a remote work hub, a place where white-collar workers no longer tied to corporate headquarters can find cheaper housing, cheaper living, great food, vibrant arts and beautiful outdoor spaces.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Goldberg: Where have all the English majors gone?

It’s not exactly news that the humanities are in decline and college students are turning toward skills-based and career-focused fields of study. In fact, 2021 was the ninth straight year, according to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, that the number of students graduating with a major in the humanities has fallen. According to federal data, the number of English majors dropped by a third from 2011 to 2021, and students majoring in religion, area studies and history fell even more. Academic fields such as anthropology, sociology and philosophy are also shrinking. But nursing, criminology and public administration keep growing. The number of computer science and engineering majors has exploded.

The Morning Rundown

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