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Emily Opilo

Emily

Emily Opilo covers City Hall for The Baltimore Banner. Before joining The Banner, she spent five years on the same beat for The Baltimore Sun and was named Baltimore Magazine’s City Hall reporter of the year for 2024. A Pennsylvania native, Emily previously covered city politics for The Morning Call in Allentown.

Latest content by Emily Opilo

David Smith is the sole funder of the group working to shrink city council.
David Smith wanted to cut Baltimore City Council. He united it instead.
“It was kind of a gift that David Smith and the proponents of the bill gave this city,” said Zac Blanchard, who unseated a Smith-backed candidate in May.
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott and wife Hana Pugh are expecting a girl next year.
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott to welcome baby girl
The baby girl will be Scott’s second child with wife Hana Pugh, whom he married in August in a private ceremony.
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott answers questions during an election night event for Angela Alsobrooks held in College Park, MD on November 5th, 2024.
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott sails to victory and rare second term
The anticipated win sets the stage for another four years leading Baltimore, a city that has not returned a mayor for a second term in almost two decades.
Here’s a roundup of how votes were cast on some of those down ballot questions.
Baltimore appears to approve cannabis fund, local control of police
Here’s a roundup of how votes were cast on some of those down ballot questions.
Mail-in ballots are sorted for counting during canvassing at the Anne Arundel County Board of Elections.
Maryland election results delayed with voters still in line
As of 8:45 p.m., lines of voters were still in place at multiple polling places, particularly at Bowie State University and University of Maryland, College Park, officials said.
A ballet drop-box outside of the Randallstown Community Center.
Surge in Maryland’s unaffiliated voters could reshape future elections
The shift likely has major implications on who is nominated in future elections as more voters opt out of participating in closed primaries and partisans gain power.
A question on Baltimore voters’ ballots will help guide how the city spends its share of cannabis taxes.
What is Baltimore’s Question G? It’s your chance to direct cannabis tax money
Baltimore’s share of state cannabis taxes will be more than $7 million, and Question G is meant to prepare the city for that new revenue stream.
Shannon Wright
Republicans haven’t won a citywide race in 6 decades, but they’re not giving up
During their brief moments in the sun, some Republican candidates have managed to raise money and bring attention to issues like deficits or property taxes that might otherwise be ignored in heavily Democratic Baltimore.
Stop Sinclair is part of a network of groups opposing a ballot measure to reduce the size of City Council.
Sinclair TV says cease and desist to opponents of City Council size ballot measure
“While we respect your constitutional rights to urge voters to adopt your preferred position, dragging Sinclair into a contentious election jeopardizes our position of trust in the community,” company attorneys wrote.
DPW had inadequate training, no heat illness procedures before worker death, report finds
The 15-page analysis, released Thursday, recommends, among other things, a “stop-work trigger” for especially hot days and the creation of a safety ombudsman.
Attendees visit the Black Burner Project exhibit by Erin Douglas at Artscape.
BOPA v. Baltimore: Everything you need to know about the arts fight
If you haven’t been glued to the saga, here’s a crash course on the origins of the dispute and what it could mean for some of Baltimore’s most beloved festivals.

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