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Jhpiego and the Center for Communication Programs, global aid groups affiliated with Johns Hopkins University, have begun layoffs and a reorganization as millions in federal funding from USAID is cut off.
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The Maryland General Assembly committees that oversee energy issues join a growing chorus of lawmakers and consumer advocates alarmed by rapidly rising utility bills.
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Workers at Baltimore's Hilton Inner Harbor ratified a new union contract after months of negotiations.
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“We don’t have a sense of when it may happen again, we don’t have a sense of what to do differently,” Councilman Mark Conway said.
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The Public Service Enterprise Group unveiled a planned route for new transmission lines that the company says would address resident concerns.
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A five-alarm fire early Tuesday affected at least eight rowhomes and drew a large response from the Baltimore City Fire Department.
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The Sparrows Point logistics hub and community leaders were considering an agreement to trade $40 million for a dredging site on the little island that houses a state park, but plans fell through after forceful community pushback.
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The agency will also rework testing requirements following a two-year investigation by the federal government into hiring practices.
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More than 100 people gathered along outside marine terminals at the Port of Baltimore after midnight, calling for higher wages and to stop automation at the ports.
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Conspiring with a neo-Nazi leader, Sarah Beth Clendaniel put together a plan to take out power substations around the Baltimore region.
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A rooftop pool leak lead to the evacuation of the Axel Brewers Hill Apartments, fire officials said Friday.
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An Anne Arundel County judge ruled Monday to invalidate a ballot question asking Baltimore City voters to rezone the Inner Harbor for development on the grounds that it’s not proper charter material.