The Board of Estimates – including Leach herself, filling in for Mayor Scott – approved the spending as part of a larger contract awarded to a small D.C. consulting firm.
The late Joseph “Turkey Joe” Trabert, connoisseur of all things Baltimore and a titan of trivia, years ago challenged me to “name in alphabetical order the streets of the A to K neighborhood.” I ...
Telling the story of how a furious storm last week filled his North Baltimore dry cleaning business with brown floodwaters – soaking equipment, clothing, computers and pretty much everything – ...
A New Jersey-based developer has emerged as the potential buyer of the iconic United Methodist Church on Mount Vernon Place, and local residents are raising questions about what he wants to do with it ...
We need to grow . . . the solution is to try more stuff, to do more things, to listen to people from other places and see what happens.” ...
Sinclair Broadcast Group, chaired by David D. Smith, made headlines earlier this month when the media conglomerate forbid the television stations it owns across the country from airing Jimmy Kimmel’s ...
MCB and two other investors purchased the deactivated Norfolk Southern rail yard for $2.95 million in 2019 and have since used the 8.3-acre lot, best viewed from the 28th Street Bridge, as storage for ...
Thirteen smoke shops have popped up in a three-block area of his East Baltimore district, says Councilman Antonio Glover, some selling fentanyl-laced marijuana products, threatening to “create the ...
Audience members waved “Democracy over Developers” signs, and a councilman said Black citizens were being ignored. But as expected, the mayor’s rule-relaxing, density-promoting legislation passed.
Baltimore City is destroying homeless encampments without ending the homelessness of their residents. These actions are inhumane and ineffective. Homelessness can only be ended through the provision ...
It starts with fairness and honesty – elements missing from the zoning and housing legislation now being pushed through the City Council. [OP-ED] ...
Opponents of two key bills in the mayor’s housing package – narrowly approved in a preliminary vote by the City Council – seek to flip votes at tomorrow’s meeting.
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