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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.
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Parker Welch and Jeb Burchick of the Maryland Farm Bureau review the list of issues Maryland farmers hope to get through the state legislature in Annapolis this session.
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A break-through bill in Congress restores - and extends - funding for the Horn Point oyster hatchery previously threatened by the Trump administration.
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For five years since the storming of the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters, NPR has been tracking the criminal cases - and the events - that the Trump administration removed
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Radio Chesapeake has learned that Cambridge Waterfront Development Incorporated chose Mackenzie Commercial Real Estate to find developers for Cambridge Harbor, and Hilton's Tapestry hotel brand will operate the proposed hotel there.
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Hear the top stories from 2025 - including some newsy updates.
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Baltimore Banner reporter Adam Willis shares the findings from his recent story revealing some fading aspirations among advocates and officials who have long sought a cleaner Chesapeake Bay.
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Cambridge City Police and investigators from the Maryland State Police closed an intersection in downtown Cambridge after an M-DOT truck struck a pedestrian, who police said was seriously injured.
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Pulitzer-Prize-winning reporters Carol Leonnig and Aaron C. Davis share the sobering findings of their new book, 'Injustice,' with Radio Chesapeake.
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Cambridge Waterfront Development Incorporated announced November 13 that the long-awaited hotel contract it has designated as its top priority for Cambridge Harbor is on the verge of completion.
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Sian Radaskiewicz King, a 32-year-old transgender woman, has been held without bail 34 days in the Talbot County Maryland detention center after local parents said they feared she was dangerous.