Fallen Heroes Day ceremony returns in-person at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens capitalgazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capitalgazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Baltimore County Executive John Olszewski, Jr. (seated) signed an executive order last week that moves the county to rely on clean energy sources for 100 percent of its energy demand by 2026, and 125 percent through 2030. Also last week, Olszewski announced a partnership with SunPower Corp., a company that specializes in installing solar power sources. These sources will be installed at two landfills no longer in use. Screen capture taken from Baltimore County Government YouTube⢠channel
Last week, County Executive John Olszewski, Jr. outlined an aggressive goal for energy independence for Baltimore County in less than five years.
Olszewski shared his vision for this goal during a press conference on April 21. The project, the first of its kind for the county, consists of installing solar panels at two County landfills. These panels are expected to produce around 35 percent of the electricity needed to power the county. Baltimore County beg
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Those on the front line who are working to keep our community safe as they respond to the coronavirus will receive special recognition. (Shutterstock)
MARYLAND In honor of police, firefighters and emergency medical/rescue personnel who died in the line of duty, the 36th annual Fallen Heroes Day observance will be live-streamed May 7 at 1 p.m. on the Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens Facebook page.
The annual event is the only statewide ceremony in the nation that brings together all segments of the public safety community. Fallen Heroes Day, which is held each year on the first Friday in May, also is an opportunity for the public to show their appreciation for those who risk their lives every day to protect the citizens of Maryland. Including this year s observance, the ceremony has honored 190 Maryland first responders.
MIDDLE RIVER â Lockheed Martin, a titan of the aerospace and defense industries, will downsize operations at its Middle River location over the next two years, requiring 465 employees to relocate or transition to telework.
The company, which has roots in the area stretching back nearly a century to the opening of the facility in 1929, plans to keep as many employees as possible during the process of winding down, which should wrap up between March and June of 2023.
A spokesperson for Lockheed Martin described the decision to close its Middle River operations as a difficult one born of a need to remain cost-competitive.
Fate of Maryland Gov Larry Hogan s veto on medicines rests with House laosnews.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from laosnews.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.