tom quirk
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- District 44B candidates Aaron Barnett, Rainier Harvey, Charles Sydnor and Pat Young address resident issues
- Move brings advanced manufacturing to Catonsville area
- Leon Lineburg dead at age 82
- Newspaper should be pushing Baltimore County's leaders to better protect young athletes
- Encouraged by a constituent who is also a chiropractor for the Ravens, 1st District Councilman Tom Quirk has proposed legislation to establish a Baltimore County Advisory Council on Physical Fitness.
- Continued improvement to commercial revitalization districts the goal
- Lansdowne Elementary to be replaced with new school
- If all goes according to one organization's plan, the Patapsco River Valley will become the 13th certified heritage area in Maryland.
- On Thursday, March 27, Cain will be honored as the 2014 Woman of the Year by the Baltimore County Commission for Women.
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- Both Riverview-Ryerson Circle Communities Association and the Lansdowne Improvement Association have voted to support the new housing community.
- Baltimore County on Tuesday passed legislation to ban cell phone kiosks that enable users to trade in phones for cash.
- The streets were mostly quiet in Catonsville as heavy snowfall blanketed Baltimore County Monday morning.
- Kit Valentine, Tom Quirk, Patapsco Valley Heritage, cancer
- Maryland District 44B, Maryland District 44A, Rainier Harvey, Pat Young, Shirley Nathan-Pulliam, Aaron J. Barnett, Verna Jones-Rodwell
- Complete Street Baltimore County, Tom Quirk, Baltimore County street
- Smoking will be banned in some areas of Baltimore County parks under legislation approved Tuesday by the County Council.
- Playgrounds, athletic fields and other areas of public parks in the Baltimore region could become no-smoking zones under legislation being considered by local officials.
- The Baltimore County School Board's plan to turn Catonsville's community center located at 106 Bloomsbury Avenue into an elementary school has left residents wondering if they will still have a community center.
- After two setbacks in his challenges of Democratic incumbents in the Maryland General Assembly, Albert Nalley has decided to try his hand at unseating incumbent Democratic Councilman Tom Quirk to represent the 1st District of Baltimore County.
- The room was packed in the basement of the Bloomsbury Community Center in Catonsville as Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz discussed public education, public safety and reinvesting in public infrastructure with a crowd of about 50 over coffee and doughnuts.
- Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz is set to unveil legislation today that he says would target the theft of cell phones and other electronic devices.
- Councilman Tom Quirk, a Democrat who has represented the 1st District in the southwest portion of Baltimore County for the past three years, filed for re-election Tuesday with the Baltimore County Board of Elections.
- A 30,000 square foot warehouse at 6159 Edmondson Avenue that once served as a 7-Up bottling plant had fallen into disrepair after years of neglect. When bottling was discontinued at the facility in the early 1990s, the building's condition began to deteriorate, said Rich Beattie, who owns the building with his business partner, Fred Kawa.
- Role involved administrative, as well as political, duties
- Several Baltimore County Council members say they plan to introduce legislation to ban smoking at all county parks.
- The Chicago-based company that runs malls in Towson, Columbia, Owings Mills and White Marsh is removing cellphone-recycling kiosks from its Maryland locations following concerns from some politicians that the machines might contribute to cellphone thefts.
- The Baltimore County Council on Monday approved leasing a valuable piece of land to a Towson developer, over the objections of a councilwoman who said the deal negotiated by County Executive Kevin Kamenetz's administration lacked transparency..
- The Baltimore County Council on Monday approved leasing a valuable piece of land to a Towson developer, over the objections of a councilwoman who said the deal negotiated by County Executive Kevin Kamenetz's administration lacked transparency..
- County Executive Kevin Kamenetz's administration is asking the County Council to lease a desirable piece of downtown Towson real estate to a high-profile developer without a bid process, drawing questions from some council members and from a businessman who has sought to buy the property for two years.
- The Baltimore County Council on Monday approved selling three taxpayer-owned properties to developers, despite protests from residents who oppose the deals.
- The Baltimore County Council is poised to block a low-income housing project planned in Rosedale by turning down state funding, citing fears the development would lead to increased crime and crowd the local elementary school.