BALTIMORE (AP) — Using $2 million in federal grant funding, Baltimore officials will start developing a plan to reconnect Black neighborhoods by potentially demolishing a stretch of thoroughfare that ...
City officials say Baltimore is slowly digging out from a 15-year state funding shortfall that left roads, bridges and ...
BALTIMORE (AP) — Using $2 million in federal grant funding, Baltimore officials will start developing a plan to reconnect Black neighborhoods by potentially demolishing a stretch of thoroughfare that ...
VIOLATION. RIGHT NOW, ABOUT 200 MILES OF BALTIMORE CITY NEED TO BE REPAVED. FUNDING CUTS AT THE STATE LEVEL MAY PUT THOSE PROJECTS IN JEOPARDY IN THE STATE HOUSE, SENATE LAWMAKERS APPROVED A BILL THAT ...
In a major announcement out of D.C., as $85 million in federal funding has been approved for the redevelopment of Baltimore’s “Highway to Nowhere.” U.S. Senators Chris Van Hollen and Angela Alsobrooks ...
This article originally appeared in Nexus Media News and Next City and was made possible by a grant from the Open Society Foundations. Growing up in Rosemont, a once vibrant Black neighborhood on ...
There are many radial highways in and out of Baltimore whose construction divided neighborhoods, regardless of race, creed or religion. Interstate 83, the Jones Falls Expressway, divided Medfield and ...
The first step toward redeveloping West Baltimore’s “Highway to Nowhere” will begin with $85.5 million in federal funding aimed at improving mobility and accessibility in neighborhoods that were split ...
The failed project displaced hundreds of families in the 1960s, 1970s. BALTIMORE (AP) — Using $2 million in federal grant funding, Baltimore officials will start developing a plan to reconnect Black ...
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