In a surprise move, the Scott administration will ask for a 15% hike in sewer rates starting February 1, 2025.
Restrictions remain at three other buildings at Baltimore’s State Center complex and at two district courthouses.
For those trying to flesh out the family history of the accused killer of an insurance executive, this 35-year-old Washington Post story adds details ...
Once little-known in city circles, the Office of the Inspector General has become a trusted source of objective investigations of government waste and fraud.
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 ...
Workers are still being told to come to work, but not to drink the water. Bacteria findings may spread beyond Baltimore as officials now plan to test state office buildings across Maryland.
The outgoing City Council President tapped a grants program that allows lawmakers to earmark funds to organizations of their choice, free of competitive bidding or a merit-based allocation process.
Still unresolved: issues of employee health, safety and “arbitrary” management practices that spurred the establishment of the AFSCME-affiliated union in 2022.
Maryland officials decree more cleaning and teleworking as union members decry unsafe conditions. A BREW EXCLUSIVE.
Reutter has been reporting and writing on Baltimore since 1970, when he started as a 19-year-old summer intern covering cops for The Evening Sun. He worked on a wide range of beats for the Sunpapers, ...