tom quirk
- A2Z Environmental Group hired by Simkins Industries to begin demolition in February
- First District Baltimore County Councilman Tom Quirk appeared before the group and talked about construction projects slated to begin in our neighborhood this year. He expressed pride in recently having been elected chairman of the council.
- After being elected by a unanimous vote on Jan. 7, 1st District Councilman Tom Quirk has quite a to-do list for 2013 in his first term as chairman of the Baltimore County Council.
- Walls will be going up this summer and that's good news for faculty and parents at Halethorpe Elementary School. The construction means the end of six open-concept classrooms at the school on Maple Avenue.
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- Baltimore County Council members on Monday unanimously elected Councilman Tom Quirk as their chairman, and the Catonsville Democrat pledged to collaborate with County Executive Kevin Kamenetz and work to make local government cost-effective.
- A Catonsville developer pleaded guilty today in Baltimore County Circuit Court to five counts of election law violations on allegations that he illegally funneled money to a county councilman's campaign and exceeded political contribution limits.
- County Executive Kevin Kamenetz's campaign committee does not plan to return a $4,000 donation from a Catonsville developer who was charged Thursday with contributing more than he was allowed to in an election cycle, its treasurer said.
- State prosecutors charged a Catonsville developer Thursday with channeling $7,500 in illegal campaign contributions to a county councilman and exceeding campaign contribution limits for individuals.
- Facility in Baltimore Highlands to pay fee per unit
- Free event includes warm meal for all and gifts for kids
- Company's application approved for plans for western Catonsville property
- Catonsville, Dundalk, Pulaski Highway area and Parkville-Overlea seek designation
- Paths must be considered in future construction projects
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- By a unanimous vote of all 10 members present Nov. 15, the Baltimore County Planning Board shifted more than 195 acres off Gun Road near Patapsco Valley State park from one side of the Urban Rural Demarcation Line (URDL) to the other.
- State investigators have asked Baltimore County officials for a broad range of information in their inquiry related to a planned Catonsville medical building, including communications between county employees and a developer, zoning files, and a councilman's correspondence.
- The final hearing on the construction of a 140-unit senior residence facility along with the further expansion of the Catonsville Y on South Rolling Road is scheduled for Thursday, Nov. 8, in Towson.
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- Leader at Wilkens Police Station since 2004 promoted to detective captain
- Baltimore County officials say they can close a gap in pension funding while saving taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. But their strategy is one that carries considerable risk, experts say.
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- First harvest festival celebrates community cleanup efforts
- Repaving main street next step for Arbutus businesses
- Explanations of actions regarding zoning approval don't ring true
- Prominent businessman helped reinvigorate Catonsville business district
- Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz wants to borrow $255 million and repay it over the next 30 years to help fund the county's retirement system, a move that would carry risk but that the administration says could benefit taxpayers in the long run.
- Community leader compliments efforts during CZMP
- While the fight over redevelopment of the former Solo Cup property overshadowed other issues in Baltimore County's comprehensive zoning review, County Council members made nearly 300 land-use decisions last week.
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- In the last three decades, Catonsville developer Steve Whalen has risen to local prominence. People have mixed thoughts on how he did it. Now, multiple county agencies have been subpoenaed to provide documents on one of Whalen's projects by the Office of the State Prosecutor, raising still more questions about his approach to local development.
- The lawyer for a Catonsville community association tried unsuccessfully again Thursday to delay a Baltimore County hearing on a proposed medical office building, saying state prosecutors' requests for information on the project have raised questions about the county's development process.
- A dozen members of the Kenwood Gardens Community Association gathered in Towson Thursday morning before a hearing to protest the planned unit development proposed by developer Steve Whalen.