Three filings since mid-January and three orders by U.S. District Court Judge Lydia Kay Griggsby are not viewable on the court’s online PACER system.
The family of Ronald Silver II presses the Scott administration for answers, armed with the state’s issuance of a serious safety violation and a damning report by the Baltimore Inspector General.
When Ronald Silver II died, no statewide workplace heat standard was in effect. And MOSH can’t fine public sector employers for safety violations. Legislation pending in Annapolis aims to change that.
Trump Administration plans to shrink by half the federal agency that was created to tackle substandard and deteriorating housing.
Tonight the Council balanced the city’s 2024 budget – as required by law – by appropriating $56,516,660 in surplus revenues ($2 million more than expected last October) to offset the agency deficits, ...
City failed to protect Ronald Silver II from deadly conditions on a day when the heat index was 108.6 °F, Maryland Occupational Safety and Health (MOSH) finds.
Teachers at the nearby Baltimore Design School have been reporting this urban waterfall to the city since the beginning of the school year but it hasn’t stopped yet.
Project led by the South Baltimore Gateway Partnership aims to revive a degraded urban riverfront and lift up the often neglected neighborhoods nearby.
Worried about an icy hazardous street and a future sinkhole, a Baltimore resident had made seven reports to the city but still the water flowed, 24/7, up from a hole and down the hill ...
With water breaks that cause road collapses a regular occurrence in the city, a resident asks why DPW hasn’t stopped this “river in my street” after her many service requests warning about it.