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‘A work in progress’: The ‘Citation Docket’ meant to reduce Baltimore’s petty crime is off to slow start

It was around midday that Dallis Glover walked along North Eutaw Street, just past Lexington Market in downtown Baltimore, carrying a 25-ounce can of Natural Ice beer in late June. Glover, 59, was a block from his home in the Paca House Apartments, which provides supportive housing for residents with low incomes. He had quit his job while grieving the recent deaths of his mother and fiancee, and found himself relying on alcohol to dull his pain.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Chesapeake Conservancy buys West Street building for $2.5 million after failed office project near Quiet Waters Park

After backing out of a proposed project near Quiet Waters Park in Annapolis, the Chesapeake Conservancy has purchased a property in downtown Annapolis to serve as its new office. The office space at 1212 West St., formerly the Maryland Municipal League building, was purchased for $2.5 million by the conservancy via a donation from local philanthropists James and Sylvia Earl.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland attorney general releases investigative report of 2022 Anne Arundel police shooting that killed a man

An investigative report from the Maryland Attorney General’s Office offers new information on what led up to a September 2022 fatal police shooting in Anne Arundel County. The county police department at the time said officers killed 48-year-old Anthony Hopkins Sr. on Sept. 17 after he raised a gun toward them outside his home in Harwood. The report from the attorney general’s office, released nearly a year later, largely tracks with that narrative and contains additional details.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Officials eye ‘new playbook’ to decide state funding for local transportation priorities

Growing strains on the state’s ability to pay for transportation projects across Maryland could result in changes to how local projects are prioritized. The Maryland Department of Transportation lays out funding for projects around the state in a rolling six-year plan that is updated annually. A new commission tasked with reimagining how the state prioritizes and pays for projects could recommend changes to a system that is both familiar and not always transparent.

 

Female hands puts fruits and vegetables in cotton produce bag at food market. Reusable eco bag for shopping. Sustainable lifestyle. Eco friendly concept.
Prince George’s officials aim to improve access to healthy foods. It won’t be easy.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture defines food insecurity as “a lack of consistent access to enough food for an active, healthy life.” Large swaths of Greater Washington faced some level of food insecurity in 2021, according to the Capital Area Food Bank’s 2022 Hunger Report — no jurisdiction more than Prince George’s County.

Baltimore submits bid to become a federal tech hub

Baltimore’s bid is in, and now the waiting begins. The region, led by a consortium of business and technology leaders, is competing a federal designation as a national tech hub that comes with hundreds of millions in funding. A group of area businesses, colleges and universities, workforce development experts and state and local government officials officially unveiled plans Thursday at Morgan State University to develop such a hub.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
When will Baltimore exit its police consent decree? ‘Burden of proof’ on the city, judge says

The federal judge overseeing the Baltimore Police Department’s consent decree urged the agency’s leadership to push harder for progress on several fronts, including producing long-awaited reports about officers’ pedestrian stops and the resulting searches. The comments came in the first quarterly review of the department’s progress with its consent decree since the abrupt departure of former Police Commissioner Michael Harrison, who continues to be credited with ushering the agency through the process at a quicker and more efficient clip, and more than 6 1/2 years after BPD first entered court supervision.

Council ‘missed opportunity’ to pressure MCPS for independent investigation, members say

The Montgomery County Council whiffed this week on a chance to pressure the school board into a truly independent investigation of the sexual harassment allegations against longtime principal Joel Beidleman, several council members told MoCo360. Five councilmembers reported feeling blindsided and rushed by a letter circulated Monday by Councilmember Dawn Luedtke (D-Dist. 7) calling for a higher-level investigation into allegations of sexual harassment against Beidleman and the school district’s handling of those claims.

Read More: MOCO360
At fifth town hall, Baltimore residents prod at police commissioner nominee’s history with department

At a town hall-style meeting on Thursday evening, Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott and his pick for the city’s top police post, Richard Worley, fielded questions scrutinizing the latter’s time with the department, probing how the candidate can reform the agency from the inside. Speakers at the community engagement meeting prodded at the 25 years Worley has worked for the Baltimore Police Department, a period when several of the agency’s internal scandals and unconstitutional policing practices came to light.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Fifth graders in their classroom at school
Health care, construction, tech among biggest school expenses in Maryland

With employee health care costs leading the way, Maryland’s public school districts spent $21.1 billion between fiscal years 2019 and 2022 — not on teacher and staff salaries — but on everything else that keeps the schools running. That’s the bottom line if you add up all 26,000-plus vendor payments of $25,000 or more made by Maryland’s school districts between the 2018-2019 and 2021-2022 school years.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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