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Author: delmarvatimes.com
On three specific dates this summer, fishing enthusiasts in Maryland can cast their lines without the need for a fishing license. The Maryland Department of Natural Resources has set aside June 1, June 8, and July 4 as license-free fishing days that are open to all residents and visitors. During these days, individuals can explore various fishing locations across the state without having to purchase a fishing license, trout stamp, or registration. The department organizes these license-free fishing days annually on the first two Saturdays of June and on the Fourth of July to coincide with the peak fishing season…
Information from this article was partially sourced from: WHO in our schools – STAND FOR HEALTH FREEDOM Please follow us on Gab, Minds, Telegram, Rumble, Truth Social, Gettr, Twitter Most of us have to admit that we knew little of the World Health Organization prior to 2020. We may have heard a vague reference to the WHO when an outbreak of disease occurred in some small country. We’ve learned a lot about them since then. Covid showed us the WHO as they really are, tyrannical thugs paid off by the pharmaceutical companies to implement authoritarian vaccine mandates and health practices…
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration has allocated nearly $1 billion to help around 530 school districts in 47 states and the District of Columbia purchase clean school buses as part of the Clean School Bus Program rebate competition led by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The funding aims to replace diesel-fueled buses with cleaner alternatives, with a focus on electric buses, accounting for 92% of the new purchases. Five Maryland counties, including Allegany, Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Charles, and Prince George’s, are set to receive a total of $16.7 million from the program. Notably, Baltimore and Prince George’s counties will…
In a memo released on May 8th, Xavier Becerra, Secretary of Health and Human Services under President Biden, unveiled a new initiative aimed at addressing disparities based on race in the organ transplant field. The plan, which applies to 90 out of 257 transplant hospitals across the United States, introduces a scoring system to evaluate these hospitals. According to this scoring system, a hospital is awarded one point for each successful kidney transplant, and 1.2 points for a transplant involving a recipient from a low-income background, as part of a “health equity performance adjustment.” Although the system is said to…
May 30, 2024 – Delmarva Parent Teacher Coalition The MSDE recently released student arrest data across all school systems throughout the state. This is just arrest data (not incidents), which are much greater in numbers. There are cases where arrests should have been made, but were not. Wicomico County had the most recorded arrests as compared to other counties in the state. When we see large numbers, it’s a positive that some districts appear to be cracking down. The negative is the number of occurrences to prompt why things are so bad. In attempt to alleviate the negative appearance, schools often…
May 28, 2024 LOUISA COUNTY, VA — A man from Louisa County, Virginia, has been sentenced on Tuesday without facing prison time after he was discovered with ammunition in his luggage in Turks and Caicos. Tyler Wenrich was found to have ammunition at a security checkpoint upon his arrival in Turks and Caicos while on a bachelor party cruise, as reported by ABC News. Wenrich explained that he had forgotten about the ammunition in his bag from a previous visit to a gun range with friends. It is important to note that Turks and Caicos imposes a mandatory minimum sentence…
BALTIMORE — May 30, 2024 A Maryland native is gearing up for a historic swim in Baltimore’s inner harbor this summer as part of the “Bay-to-Baltimore” event set to make waves in June. Katie Pumphrey, an ultra-marathon open-water swimmer and Maryland local, has announced her ambitious plan to tackle a 24-mile swim from the Bay Bridge across the Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore’s inner harbor. This challenge comes on the heels of the recent “Harbor Splash” event in May, marking the first public swim in four decades. “The Bay-to-Baltimore swim is, in essence, my personal tribute to Baltimore City,” expressed Pumphrey.…
On May 24, 2024, the Honorable S. James Sarbanes, Administrative Judge of the Circuit Court for Wicomico County, sentenced Nicole Bochenek, 46 years of age, of Mardela Springs, Maryland, to Fifty-Five (55) years of incarceration. Bochenek previously pleaded guilty on March 21, 2024, to First Degree Child Abuse, First Degree Assault, and two counts of Second Degree Child Abuse. Sentencing had been deferred pending completion of a pre-sentence investigation. Investigation into this case revealed that Bochenek physically abused three children in her care while operating an unlicensed daycare center out of her home. On June 7, 2023, emergency medical services…
May 27, 2024 Dr. James Thorp and attorney Maggie Thorp on Monday published an article in America Out Loud News exposing the U.S. government’s scheme to suppress ivermectin and push COVID-19 shots using some of the nearly $200 billion in “provider relief funds” allocated to hospitals and pharmacies during the pandemic. Please Follow us on Gab, Minds, Telegram, Rumble, GETTR, Truth Social, Twitter By John-Michael Dumais A “cartel” led by the U.S. government allegedly bribed large pharmacy chains like Walgreens and CVS with billions of dollars in contracts to promote COVID-19 vaccines and not fill prescriptions for ivermectin. Dr. James Thorp and attorney Maggie Thorp on Monday published an article in America Out Loud News…
Slave Auction in town square of Easton, MD in 1850’s (Public Domain) I always heard that the auction of human beings in Easton occurred in front of the court house, and it looks like that story was fairly accurate. But while Maryland was a “slave state” there were a great many African-American “freemen” living on the Eastern Shore, working alongside white people in the various industries. Slavery did exist here, however. Before the 1700’s white people, mostly Irish and Scots, worked as indentured servants which meant that after a certain amount of time they might be freed. Sometimes they were,…