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Captain Fred Pomeroy, who has recorded nearly 100 episodes of 'Becoming a Waterman" on Radio Chesapeake, stars on a Maryland Public Television special.
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District 37B Delegate Tom Hutchinson says Maryland managed to put a budget in place that didn't force new fees or taxes - but warns that may not be the story next session.
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Cambridge, Dorchester County and Maryland officials expressed exasperation with a lack of progress by CWDI and urged the board to accept a contract for a 90 room hotel at Cambridge Harbor.
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After years in the making, the bid to create Cambridge Harbor is in the final stages for the most critical test – to see if the market will make it a reality.
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Millions of Americans turned out Saturday for the third No Kings Day demonstration, including several hundred in Cambridge.
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Baltimore Banner reporter Bria Overs explains how data centers, transmission lines and the political system under which power companies operate contribute to the rise in residential rates.
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Cambridge City Council recently approved over $6 million for a new wastewater pumping station in the city's effort to overcome sewage overflow onto West End streets.
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Randi White, a Salisbury radio professional and Kamala Harris campaign worker, is vying against a field of Democratic challengers to take over the congressional seat of incumbent Republican Andy Harris.
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Dan Schwartz, a banking and consumer policy specialist from Talbot County, says incumbent congressional Rep. Andy Harris has failed the first district.
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The Cambridge City Council passed a pair of ordinances Monday that target vacant residential and commercial buildings, requiring owners to register or face hefty fines.
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Cambridge City Council is planning to allow the Rescue Fire Company to keep its Train Garden in place at the old city hall on Gay Street, sources told Radio Chesapeake.
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The model train garden, a beloved Cambridge community winter display for generations, has occupied prime space in the vacated City Hall building for nearly 20 years. Now that the city plans to rehabilitate the historic building and move back in, city administrators and officials from the Rescue Fire Company Inc. which operates the train garden have reached an impasse.