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Before last week’s mass overdoses, the mayor’s office had proposed a plan to use $402.5 million in opioid settlements. Now, residents are weighing in.
The departure of Mayor Brandon Scott’s fifth communications director in less than five years has raised new concerns about a pattern of staff turnover at City Hall.
A high-level meeting was held at city hall Monday as some members of our state's congressional delegation had their yearly "Official Sit Down" with the mayor of Baltimore.
Mfume, a former NAACP leader, described Scott as a “true leader” who often speaks “about the best of Baltimore.” ...
"Some people they be fighting the process. For one, they being traumatized while they out here on Earth," he said. “We have ...
Maryland has the nation's second-highest concentration of federal workers, and hundreds have either lost their jobs, taken ...
Maryland lawmakers came together in Baltimore on Monday to discuss some federal priorities that would benefit the city and ...
City data shows that more 911 calls for overdoses were placed in Baltimore on Thursday, the day of a mass overdose event that sent more than two dozen people to hospitals, than on any other day this ...
Residents in Baltimore's Federal Hill are on high alert after 35 cars were broken into in and around the neighborhood this ...
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