A measure ending the requirement for apartment projects to include parking and another allowing rowhouses to be built closer to the property line are coming before the council for a preliminary vote ...
AFSCME Maryland officials won’t say why they have reportedly nullified the August 23 election – and ordered another vote next month. UPDATED. The August 23 election in which Stancil McNair and other ...
The Baltimore Board of Ethics says Inspector General Isabel Mercedes Cumming did not violate “prestige of office” or other ethical laws when she posted information about the AFSCME Local 44 election ...
Community leaders howled in 2022 when they discovered a Dollar General store was coming into the heart of Waverly, the north Baltimore neighborhood they’d been working hard to uplift by encouraging ...
Two City Council zoning bills that have been a high priority for the Brandon Scott administration – one to loosen lot restrictions in residential districts and another to eliminate parking ...
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 ...
The inspector general finds eye-popping new costs in the overhaul of the city’s website that, strangely, has it running on a soon-to-expire content management system.
The Waterfront Partnership and others today posted photos of what’s become an increasingly familiar waterfront scene – mounds of small, silvery menhaden floating in Baltimore Harbor from downtown to ...
Brew: Why are these buses so crowded and late and the # of them assigned to the 13 route apparently quite inadequate? Shepard: Every metro transit system experiences occasional overcrowding and/or ...
Grassroots groups had pushed for a task force to craft a fair formula for payments. But the mayor cut his own deal, and Baltimore’s spending board signed off on it today.
Now we know why absorbing city sanitation workers’ Local 44 and other Council 67 units was so important to AFSCME leadership.
The public employees’ union AFSCME Maryland Council 3 paid out $1 million to an apparently fictitious Washington, D.C., law firm three years ago – losing all of the money but never admitting the loss ...