Get your evening news in your e-mail inbox. Get all the top news and sports from the baltimoresun.com.
The Maryland House of Delegates has approved a bill that would gradually increase the state's minimum wage from $10.10 per hour to $15 an hour in 2025. The debate now moves to the Senate, which has not yet taken action. | | |
Boosters of Baltimore — from Mayor Catherine Pugh to longtime residents of Park Heights — urged a different, brighter future for Pimlico Race Course before the House Ways and Means Committee in Annapolis. | | |
Ravens running back Alex Collins was arrested Friday morning following a car crash in Owings Mills, according to Baltimore County police. | | |
The chairman of the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland says a Democratic delegate from Harford County who was censured by the House of Delegates for using a racial slur is now a “lame duck delegate” and should resign. | | |
Orioles pitcher Alex Cobb threw just 23 pitches in the first inning of his 2019 spring debut and left without recording the third out. He allowed four runs, including a long homer to Guillermo Heredia. | | |
More winter weather was likely later in the weekend as a pattern of precipitation continued after the Baltimore area saw 1-3 inches of snow Friday. | | |
City Auditor Audrey Askew, the head of a team of professional analysts charged with assessing city agencies and calling out their missteps, has resigned. Askew left after less than a year on the job. The city's comptroller says a search is under way for a replacement. | | |
Lupa, the Foreman Wolf restaurant that replaced Petit Louis in Columbia, will close its doors Saturday after a year in business. | | |
Catonsville-based Erickson Living Management allegedly violated an anti-discrimination law when it fired an employee, according to a lawsuit filed Friday by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. | | |
The Preakness Stakes would generate $52.7 million in economic activity each year if the iconic horse race remains in Baltimore at a rebuilt Pimlico Race Course, according to a new study. More than 90 percent of the activity is projected to occur in the city of Baltimore. | | |
|