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Adam Willis

Adam

Adam Willis is a city government reporter for The Baltimore Banner. He covers intersections of business and government in Baltimore, in addition to examining the impacts of the city's recent infusion of hundreds of millions of dollars in federal pandemic aid. He has worked as a historical researcher in Washington, D.C., a freelance reporter for national magazines and most recently spent two years reporting on energy, the environment and rural issues for the Fargo Forum in North Dakota.

Latest content by Adam Willis

The sun rises over the Chesapeake Bay at the Susquehanna Flats. A report out Wednesday found that the bay’s dead zones returned to near-normal size this summer after shrinking to historic lows in 2023.
Chesapeake Bay ‘dead zones’ grew this year to near average after waning to historic low
The new survey comes as advocates for the bay are gearing up for a potentially pivotal meeting next month.
Water flows through Chinquapin Run in north Baltimore near Woodbourne Avenue and The Alameda a few years after a stream restoration and stabilization project was completed.
Why the city says work to restore a Northeast Baltimore stream went $14M over budget
The work on Chinquapin Run, a tributary of Northeast Baltimore’s Herring Run, is required under a long-standing U.S. Environmental Protection Agency mandate that the city address backups and overflows.
The exterior of the Rawlings Conservatory and Botanical Gardens in Druid Hill Park.
Firefighters respond to burning woodpile in Druid Hill Park
Crews had contained the blaze by 7:30 AM but needed heavy equipment to remove debris and access the bottom of the pile.
A boater in the Susquehanna Flats heads out toward the Chesapeake Bay. Some fear the incoming Trump administration will go after funding for the bay’s cleanup again.
Trump tried to cancel Chesapeake Bay funding. Could he succeed this time?
Trump attempted to slash funding for the Annapolis-based Chesapeake Bay Program in all four years of his presidency. Though Congress ultimately blocked those proposals, Maryland environmentalists are preparing to go on the defense again.
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.
Voters cast their ballots for the 2024 general election at Wise High School in Upper Marlboro.
4 things we learned from election night results in Maryland
Being popular doesn’t guarantee victory, and other lessons from Tuesdays election results.
The ballot measure would have reduced Baltimore the City Council’s size by six members.
Baltimore rejects smaller City Council — and Sinclair’s David Smith
City officials had made a late push against Question H, warning residents that approving the measure, which sought to cut the City Council to eight members from 14, would reduce representation and mean poorer constituent services.
The exterior of Baltimore City Hall as seen on Monday, Feb. 13, 2023.
Democrats on track to again sweep Baltimore City Council
Democrats appeared poised to sweep contests for the City Council, an expected outcome of Tuesday’s election that would cements a younger and potentially more progressive panel of legislators to represent Baltimore for the next four years.
A wind turbine spins and generates power for the U.S. electric grid at the South Fork Wind farm in the Atlantic Ocean, 35 miles east of Montauk Point, New York, in 2023.
A second Trump term could threaten Maryland’s budding offshore wind industry
Former President Donald Trump has already made clear that he’s willing to take aggressive steps to curb the country’s nascent offshore wind industry.
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.
Spectators hold signs opposing the bill that would reduce the size of City Council during a press conference in Zeke’s Coffee Shop on September 15, 2024.
Baltimore almost always approves ballot questions. Can City Hall win this time?
Whether the David Smith-financed effort to shrink the City Council is approved or rejected has big implications for the future of politics in Baltimore.
An aerial shot of Ocean City, Md. near the inlet, showing the Atlantic Ocean at right, the beach center and the city at left.
Ocean City, others sue federal government over offshore wind project
The tourist town’s lawsuit, filed Friday, comes after months of threats and as seaside communities in other parts of the East Coast have waged an offensive against a nascent U.S. offshore wind industry.
The RESCO trash incinerator no longer needs the tax credits to remain viable, top lawmakers said.
State may extinguish green energy subsidies for Baltimore trash incinerator
The companies no longer need the subsidies to remain viable, top lawmakers said.
Baltimore City Hall.
Head of David Smith-backed ballot measure defends proposal against critics at forum
A ballot measure to cut the size of Baltimore’s City Council nearly in half is financed almost exclusively by Sinclair exec David Smith. Though it is broadly opposed by city leaders, Baltimore voters almost always approve ballot measures.
6/28/22—the exterior of the Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr. Courthouse.
Want a gym membership? The sheriff’s office can help
Under Sheriff Sam Cogen, the law enforcement division has started offering memberships to a private gym for 100 employees.

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