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Local officials hailed the allocation of $6.6 million to replace the crumbling Choptank River fishing pier, but said millions more are required to actually get it built.
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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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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.
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The midshore community learned last week that Patrick and Charlie Boyd of Easton were convicted of defrauding the government and other crimes in a scheme to sell counterfeit HIV medicatiuons for millions of dollars. For one mom with an iPhone, though, the finding confirmed years of research into a shady world.
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Comptroller of Maryland Brooke Lierman and Radio Chesapeake’s Mike Starling review the latest report in her State of the Economy Series: Housing and the Economy
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Saturday October 18 was No Kings Day across America, as millions turned out to protest the Trump administration and rally for American Democracy.In Cambridge and Easton, hundreds demonstrated.
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For over two years Dorchester County has operated without a credit rating, due to overdue financial audits. Now, Maryland law imposes sanctions, and Finance Director Karen Tolley is in a race to fix problems and catch up the missing annual reports.