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Growth and development

    Main channel to the Port of Baltimore now open following Key Bridge collapse
    Reopening the federal channel will restore normal shipping traffic, boost Baltimore’s economy and help thousands of jobs impacted by the disaster.
    Salvage crews successfully removed the final large steel truss segment of the fallen Key Bridge on June 3-4.
    Printing and rap battles: Collaboration overcomes challenges in West Baltimore
    The collaboration supports a variety of small businesses through networking, while also promoting local musicians and artists.
    Daryell Mack in front of his store front, sporting a shirt and hat printed by Mogul Printing. (Miles Grovic/Capital News Service)
    Boring just wanted to keep its bingo hall. Now it’s got a mess.
    A hamlet in Baltimore County is so quiet it is actually called Boring. And neighbors are campaigning to keep it that way, fighting a zoning change that would turn their firehouse and bingo hall into a manufacturing facility.
    Sam and Lola Blum stand in front of the Boring Fire Hall. They and their neighbors are fighting a zoning change that would allow an industrial use there.
    As Baltimore ends deal with Poppleton developer, the community wants a say on what’s next
    West Baltimore residents talk about what they’d like to see in Poppleton, now that the city is terminating its agreement with a New York developer that has struggled to build there.
    A mural on the side of a home in Poppleton reads: “SAVE OUR BLOCK. Black Neighborhoods Matter. ‘Losing my home is like a death to me. Eminent Domain law is violent.’ -Sonia Eaddy.”
    The Baltimore County Council passed a bill to ease school overcrowding. Will it hold?
    The Baltimore County Council has passed a measure that would make it harder for developers to build new housing in communities with crowded schools. But county school officials want to have more input, and the county executive worries it may have a negative impact on the county’s moral and legal obligations to address attainable housing.
    Baltimore Count Public School buses sit in the Northwest bus lot in Milford Mill days before the first day of school.
    Why JPMorgan Chase is betting on Baltimore
    The $8.45 million commitment will support commercial corridors, small businesses and rehabilitating vacant homes.
    Parity, an equitable housing startup, unveiled two rehabilitated homes in Harlem Park. They plan to redevelop nearly 100 more.
    Baltimore County passes measure to relieve school crowding
    The Baltimore County Council on Monday passed a contentious measure designed to reduce overcrowding in schools by adding an approval process for developers who want to build new housing.
    Busses parked outside of Hampton Elementary School during morning dropoff 3/19/2024. Timonium, MD
    Baltimore City terminates NYC developer’s deal to rebuild Poppleton
    Baltimore City is ending developer La Cité’s controversial, nearly two-decade-old agreement to rebuild swaths of the long-neglected Poppleton neighborhood.
    This is a photo of an empty lot where a developer wants to build an age-restricted apartment complex.
    Is $20 million and a Target replacement enough to revive Mondawmin?
    The Mondawmin area and its mall has struggled with outbursts of violence and closures of high-profile businesses, such as Target in 2018.
    A developer launching a reconstruction of the empty Target space and a $20 million federal grant dedicated toward improving the Mondawmin transit hub are giving local business owners hope.
    7 Black-owned shops opening at Harborplace as bigger overhaul looms
    Seven Black-owned businesses supported by the Downtown Partnership of Baltimore are set to open next month at the struggling and soon-to-be-reimagined Inner Harbor shopping center.
    Representatives of the seven Black-owned businesses in the Downtown Partnership's latest BOOST initiative participate in a ribbon cutting ahead of a planned opening next month.
    School overcrowding measure spurs intense debate in Baltimore County. Here are things to know.
    Overcrowded schools can mean students are sometimes eating lunch closer to breakfast time, having their gym class in homeroom, or walking long distances to outside trailers. Sometimes, the school needs to hold an assembly two or three times so everyone can attend.
    Baltimore County Council members met to discuss a proposed plastic bag ban on January 31, 2023.
    Need 25 bedrooms? Old Baltimore hotel up for sale after revival plans fall through
    A preservationist developer wanted to modernize an old 25-bedroom hotel in Mount Vernon. Now, the property sits with a listing price at $1.6 million.
    The Mount Vernon building was built in 1880 and for many years was reportedly used as a boarding house for female students at the Maryland Institute College of Art.
    Letters: Critic of Planning Board reform offered no help
    Baltimore County Council member David Marks says a critic of his approach to reforming the county Planning Board should participate in the council’s reform effort.
    David Marks is a member of the Baltimore County Council representing the Fifth District.
    Will Poppleton ever be rebuilt? City-backed developer blows financing deadline
    La Cité signed its deal during the mayoral administration of Martin O’Malley in 2006 to redevelop Poppleton, a predominantly Black neighborhood a few minutes from downtown.
    This is a photo of an apartment complex in the West Baltimore neighborhood of Poppleton.
    Baltimore youths say a redeveloped Harborplace should be cleaner and drama-free
    Harborplace has a history, and young people are OK with writing a new one.
    Harborplace was an instantly popular destination after it opened in 1980.
    Dali has left Key Bridge wreckage site, but work is far from done, Moore says
    Gov. Wes Moore on Tuesday thanked the Unified Command and other officials for a quick and decisive response to the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. But the mission is far from complete, he said.
    The Dali cargo ship was moved from the Key Bridge wreckage site on Monday. (Wesley Lapointe/The Baltimore Banner)
    Longshoremen celebrate getting back to work at Port of Baltimore
    Baltimore longshoremen held a celebratory picnic at a park in Essex on Sunday to mark progress in reopening the Port of Baltimore. The refloating and move of the Dali, the container ship that crashed into the Key Bridge on March 26, will allow the port to get back to full strength.
    Tulani Hasan, a longshorewoman with Union 333, is shown at a festival held on May 19, 2024 at Renaissance Park in Essex to celebrate progress in reopening the Port of Baltimore.
    Here’s when BCCC demolition downtown is (finally) expected to be over
    Demolition of Baltimore City Community College’s downtown Bard Building is scheduled for completion in early September.
    Demolition of the Baltimore City Community College Bard Building, at the intersection of East Lombard Street and Market Place in Baltimore, on April 13, 2024.
    A Baltimore economic boom from Preakness? Don’t bet on it
    Maryland’s leaders are also placing a bet — and it’s a big one. Thanks to legislation enacted this year, the state will invest up to $400 million revamping the Pimlico Race Course and building a new training center.
    Preakness Stakes brings thousands of fans to Pimlico Race Course each year. How could it not have an economic impact on Baltimore?
    Under Armour prepares for layoffs as sales decline
    Under Armour is preparing to layoff an unspecified number of employees following a drop in sales for North America, the Baltimore-based company’s largest market.
    Kevin Plank, founder and executive chairman of Under Armour, speaks during a press conference at Baltimore Peninsula on Thursday, Oct. 26, 2023.
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