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 ...
By a close margin, after passionate testimony, the City Council last night advanced sweeping changes supporters said would help Baltimore grow and opponents said would drive Black residents out.
Calvin Young, point man for the unpopular Sisson Street relocation plan, will “shift” from mayor’s chief of staff to an interim deputy mayor.
The National Aquarium is in violation of its 2004 agreement with the city of Baltimore that called for it to complete the $35 million first phase of a $110 million aquatic life center campus in South ...
Councilman Ryan Dorsey and Mayor Brandon Scott are instituting a sweeping overhaul of Baltimore zoning rules that will hurt residents of this “city of neighborhoods.” [OP-ED] ...
Three other city agencies have been hit by senior staff departures in the wake of the sudden firing of Baltimore Housing Commissioner Michael Braverman and resignation of his top aide 2½ weeks ago.
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 ...
Longtime residents made their way to City Hall once again to decry the Scott administration’s zoning deregulation bills, with speakers saying a North Baltimore neighborhood is already reeling from ...
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 – ...
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.
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.