Baltimore Metropolitan Council

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BMC Newsroom

BALTIMORE, MD (July 31, 2018) – The Baltimore Regional Transportation Board (BRTB) welcomes comments through Friday, August 31, on updates to Maximize2040: A Performance-Based Transportation Plan and the 2019-2022 Transportation Improvement Program (TIP) for two Maryland Transportation Authority (MDTA) projects. BRTB proposes amendments for:

• Funding updates to the I-95 Express Toll Lane Northbound Extension project; and

• The addition of a new project, I-95 Port Covington Access Improvements.

The BRTB is scheduled to vote on these amendments on Tuesday, September 25, at 9 a.m.



Maximize2040 is this region’s $12.5 billion long-range transportation plan developed by the BRTB.Maximize2040 serves as the blueprint for fiscally constrained transportation planning in the Baltimore region from the year 2020 to 2040. The plan also establishes the region’s broad transportation goals and performance measures, which now serve as guiding principles as the region plans and carries out projects.



The 2019-2022 TIP is the list of regional transportation projects requesting federal funding in the near term. It includes more than $3.2 billion in proposed federal, state and local money for highway, transit, bicycle and pedestrian projects during the next four years. The funding goes towards maintaining, operating and expanding the transportation system. The TIP is fiscally constrained.



Updates occur in Maximize2040 and the 2019-2022 TIP because of changes to project scope and funding or changes to federal documentation policies. Public comment periods and meetings aim to keep communication open regarding these changes.

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COG Quarterly September 2018 Magazine

By 2030, all of the Baby Boomers – those born between 1946 and 1964 – will be ages 65 or older. The U.S. Census Bureau points out that they’ll outnumber children for the first time in U.S. history.



While 2030 may seem like a long time from now, it’s only 12 years away, and will be here before we know it.



Our COG Quarterly cover story, “Aging Reimagined,” highlights the efforts underway throughout the Baltimore region to meet the current and future needs of this rapidly maturing population. Together, we're collaborating to make sure that Baby Boomers can age in place.

Read the September 2018 Issue of COG Quarterly

In addition - believe it or not - this is our twelfth issue of COG Quarterly in three short years. We want to make sure that we’re providing you, the reader, with interesting, relevant content. So please take a quick few minutes to complete our reader feedback survey.



Thank you for reading our magazine. We look forward to hearing your thoughts on how we can make it even better.

BMC Newsroom

BALTIMORE, MD (October 16, 2018) – The Baltimore Metropolitan Council (BMC) and Baltimore County will host the tenth annual Meet the Primes networking event, which connects small- and minority-owned businesses with prime contract bidders, on Wednesday, October 17. The event will take place from 8 a.m. until noon at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in the Exhibition Hall, located at 2200 York Road in Timonium.



More than 800 people from small- and minority-owned businesses are registered to attend the Meet the Primes event. Likewise, more than 100 exhibitors from government, public education, private companies and other entities will be there to make connections.



"For the last 10 years, we've worked with our partners around the Baltimore region to facilitate opportunities for small- and minority-owned businesses to network," said Michael B. Kelly, executive director of the Baltimore Metropolitan Council. "Local governments have significant buying power in our region, and Meet the Primes serves as a way to connect business owners so that they are able to compete for public dollars."



Meet the Primes serves as an invaluable stepping stone for small- and minority-owned businesses to make connections, find work and grow. The prime bidders who will attend the event represent millions of dollars in annual contracts for many industries in the Baltimore region.



“We envision a very personable, low-pressure networking event," said Robert Ball, of Baltimore County Public Schools. "Meet the Primes is a way to maximize business prospecting efforts by communicating current and upcoming projects, presenting credentials, and seeing if there is a good fit."



The event also will feature one-on-one meetings between business owners and government agencies and/or a prime company. The intent of the five-minute one-on-one meetings is to provide business owners with exclusive time to discuss products and services with procurement officials/buyers/decision makers. Those interested should review the one-on-one meeting schedule on the registration page and email requests to events@mwmca.org.



For more information about Meet the Primes, contact Robert Ball by email at rball@bcps.org or by phone at 443-809-4334; or contact Carla Tucker by email at ctucker@baltimorecountymd.gov or by phone at 410-887-3119.

COG Quarterly December 2018 Magazine

The appeal that brings million-dollar performances and therefore hundreds of thousands of patrons annually to spend time and money in Downtown Columbia is the result of a strategic planning effort by Howard County and the Howard Hughes Corporation, working with multiple partners, such as Columbia Association. The city center is in the midst of a redevelopment effort designed to enhance life in Downtown Columbia by giving people options to move easily between work, home, school, running errands, eating and drinking, as well as experiencing art and culture.

The Baltimore Metropolitan Council (BMC) serves as a vital resource to ensure that Downtown Columbia’s transportation and fair housing planning efforts, in particular, resonate throughout the Baltimore region. We invite you to read our December 2018 cover story, "Planning Columbia," which details the progress of redeveloping Downtown Columbia.

 

 

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