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For nearly four hours, Baltimore city council members and residents sounded off as Baltimore Gas & Electric defended the controversial conduit deal, Thursday.
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Baltimore City’s Senate delegation, held a virtual meeting with Comptroller Bill Henry, City Council President Nick Mosby, and the City’s Deputy Solicitor, on the controversial matter.
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Baltimore City’s Board of Estimates approved the conduit deal with Baltimore Gas and Electric Wednesday morning despite some city council members asking for more time to evaluate the agreement. Two voting members did not attend the meeting in protest.
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Baltimore City’s Lexington Market is back in business as more than 40 vendors returned to the renovated building downtown.
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Baltimore City Council members voted in favor to shorten the years of service required to become eligible for pension benefits in response to voter's approval of term limits.
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Baltimore’s ethics board asks Mayor Scott for more time to review bill reducing pension requirementsBaltimore City Council voted to roll back pension eligibility requirements in recent weeks but before Baltimore City Mayor Brandon Scott reviews it the ethics board wants to step in.
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Mosby, without Counsel, is asking a judge to review The Board's finding he violated rules by indirectly soliciting donations to a legal defense fund that took money from two city contractors.
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Residents argued the more than $560 million Mayor Brandon Scott has proposed for the Baltimore Police Department for fiscal year 2023 can be put to better use.
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The amendment would remove elected officials and their designees from the board.
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