The inspector general finds eye-popping new costs in the overhaul of the city’s website that, strangely, has it running on a soon-to-expire content management system.
Grassroots groups had pushed for a task force to craft a fair formula for payments. But the mayor cut his own deal, and Baltimore’s spending board signed off on it today.
Now we know why absorbing city sanitation workers’ Local 44 and other Council 67 units was so important to AFSCME leadership.
Telling the story of how a furious storm last week filled his North Baltimore dry cleaning business with brown floodwaters – soaking equipment, clothing, computers and pretty much everything – ...
The case was filed back in April 2024 in the Baltimore County Circuit under the name “Baltimore County, Maryland v. Employee A,” and the court file was immediately sealed by Judge Keith R. Truffer at ...
In his zeal to cover up a gang rape by college athletes, Baltimore County State’s Attorney Scott Shellenberger sent police to the victim’s house to threaten her with arrest if she continued to try to ...
Fern Shen and Mark Reutter were recognized for the value of their journalism to present-day readers and future historians.
A Baltimore Department of Transportation employee arrested and incarcerated for attempted carjacking and second-degree assault was kept on the city payroll and received about $2,000 in paid leave, ...
As Scott gets ready for a sponsored trip to Savannah, Georgia, his aides and underlings head for San Francisco, Las Vegas, Texas and across the pond. The costs add up.