Brooklandville
Second serious dirt bike accident in as many days proves fatal for riderfoxbaltimore.com1 day ago
'No Way This Time': New Senate Ad Features Former Hogan VotersYahoo!7 hours ago
Harford Road Shooting Victim Reports to Baltimore County Hospitalbaltimorewitness.org1 day ago
70-Mile Transmission Line Proposal Raises Eminent Domain Concerns.foxbaltimore.com4 hours ago
LATEST NEWS
Remembering the Rev. Dr. Cecelia Williams Bryant
The Rev. Dr. Cecelia Williams Bryant, a spiritual force in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, was celebrated for her contributions to faith and family, as well as her commitment to youth and education in Africa. The post Remembering the Rev. Dr. Cecelia Williams Bryant appeared first on The Washington Informer.
With billions of dollars coming, Baltimore and Maryland leaders prepare to ramp up acquisition of vacant houses
The first steps of a new $3 billion effort to acquire and repurpose thousands of vacant homes across Baltimore have begun with a state pledge and a package of bonds being considered by city lawmakers aiming to undo blight. Maryland is pledging more than $75 million per year as the city gets to work on its latest attempt to rehabilitate thousands of vacant homes with state funding as well as ...
Armed carjackings by juveniles up in Baltimore, new data shows
As a Baltimore native, Becky Hamm has lived in the Wyman Park neighborhood for over five decades and has heard of only two instances of a carjacking or robbery on her block. One of those occurred Wednesday, when police say a group of people attacked two bystanders just down the street. “It’s crazy that it happened here because usually it never happens on this street,” Hamm said. “The only ...
Baltimore leaders vote to ban gas-powered leaf blowers. Here's when it starts.
BALTIMORE - Baltimore's city council voted on Monday to ban gas-powered leaf blowers in the city. The vote passed 10-5, according to councilmember Ryan Dorsey, who introduced the bill.The bill now heads to Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott to sign.The legislation applies to residents, private contractors, and city workers in Baltimore. Dorsey said Baltimore City and its contract workers will no longer use gas-powered leaf blowers after Dec. 15. Private use, including for landscaping professionals, will be limited to Oct 15 to Dec 15 of 2025 and 2026, and no more after that.Dorsey says the bill follows a national trend of addressing pollution."Thank you to everybody who supported and advocated for this," Dorsey said. "It's a good day for the environment, health, and peace of mind."
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.