Get your morning news in your e-mail inbox. Get all the top news and sports from the baltimoresun.com.
Friday, Nov 30 Proposals to crack down on the Wheelabrator Baltimore trash incinerator, the city's largest single source of air pollution, are gaining momentum. A majority of lawmakers in the City Council and Maryland General Assembly support the environmental measures, citing government climate change reports. More: Read today's eNewspaper | Listen to the news now | | |
| Leaked video shows Baltimore Police homicide detectives interviewed an informant who described the death of Det. Sean Suiter as a homicide and identified a lead on a possible suspect. |
|
| |
| A substitute teacher at Lake Shore Elementary School in Pasadena taped a second-grade student to a chair this week, according to a letter sent to parents by the school’s principal. |
|
| |
| Baltimore water rates would rise 9 percent each of the next three years under a Department of Public Works proposal. It also creates a new assistance program for poor customers that would help with their monthly bills. The proposal will go before the city's spending board on Jan. 9. |
|
| |
| A trio of violent events in Baltimore schools has revived discussions about school safety and the debate over how students are punished. |
|
| |
| A man was found dead inside a burning home in Baltimore’s Belair-Edison neighborhood Friday morning, the fire department said. |
|
| |
| Downtown Partnership “ambassadors” in florescent green vests have been deployed to key Baltimore intersections at morning and evening rush hours to monitor interactions between “squeegee kids” and motorists. |
|
| |
| Former Baltimore Police Commissioner Darryl De Sousa is scheduled to appear in court for a rearraignment hearing next month, court records show. |
|
| |
| The Ravens and Falcons play Sunday in Atlanta. |
|
| |
| The Baltimore Museum of Art announced Friday that it will receive the third largest donation in the institution’s history aimed at bringing more minority artists, curators and visitors of color to Maryland’s largest museum. |
|
| |
| For a second time this month, racist graffiti targeting specific individuals has been found on Goucher College campus in Towson, according to officials at the college. |
|
| |
|