Joshua Parker of Windsor Mill Middle School is among 38 educators to receive the California Casualty Award for Teaching Excellence in February.
The Maryland Lottery reported its 15th consecutive year of sales growth, helped along by interest from the $656 million jackpot in March.
The National Weather Service forecast says there's a 90 percent chance of more rain—up to three-fourths of an inch—Friday afternoon, and maybe more before 3 a.m. Saturday.
The schools and a Baltimore County Police Department location have gotten some extra trees planted on their grounds because of a federal program.
A study of the roads around the Solo Cup plant funded by Foundry Row developer Greenberg Gibbons shows that traffic will not worsen, and could improve, with full development of Foundry Row.
Four temporary cameras scheduled to go active today are not operating yet, including the Pikesville locations of Winand Elementary and Bais Yaakov Middle schools.
County: Residents can take tree debris, recyclables, trash and yard materials to one of the county's three drop-off facilities.
Baltimore County: Repairs to a major water distribution line in Baltimore City could continue through the end of July.
The Pikesville pumping station is running on generator power, but city officials still urge conservation during today's heat advisory.
When the Affordable Health Care Act goes into effect in 2014, people who are currently insured could see a drop in what they pay for their health care insurance, according to an expert at LifeBridge Health.
Baltimore Circuit Judge Pamela White sentenced the former member of Shomrim of Baltimore to probation, with the condition that he research and write about Baltimore City's diverse neighborhoods and special interest groups.
Brian Johnson was sentenced to 20 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to drug offenses and conspiring to commit six armed robberies through December 2009.
Baltimore County Councilman Kenneth Oliver asks colleagues to delay rezoning the former Solo Cup manufacturing site to retail, until Reisterstown Road traffic studies are completed.
Pavel Kipnis, 15, of Pikesville, formerly of St. Petersburg in Russia, was one of several children who took the Oath of Allegiance to the United States on Thursday—Flag Day.
About 60 speakers voiced their opinions whether the proposed project would help or hurt residents and businesses in the Reisterstown Road Corridor.
New signs are being set up along the Brooks Robinson Drive access road, and law enforcement of the new 24-hour parking limit will increase.
At about 8 p.m., storms began rolling into Howard County, then into Baltimore County.
C-SPAN will broadcast the Memorial Day ceremony, commemorating the anniversary, at 1 p.m. from the National Mall in Washington D.C.
It's a federal holiday Monday, so county offices and services, as well as the US Postal Service are not operating.
On Monday the governor will be at Garrison Forest Veterans Cemetery, while the president visits two military sites in the Washington D.C. area.
Rep. John Sarbanes hopes to receive 1,000 donations of less than $100.
The rain that's hit Pikesville and the area Monday could continue Monday night, and through Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service forecast.
First Watch The Daytime Cafe earned Pikesville Patch's Readers Choice Award for best breakfast.
Sen. Bobby Zirkin plans to meet with members and guests of the Pikesville Chamber of Commerce to discuss how issues dealt with by the state Legislature could affect businesses.
Rep. John P. Sarbanes continues his tour with a final stop in Pikesville.
The Maryland State Fire Marshal, warning that clothes dryers can cause fires, urges owners to clean lint from filters and vents and to never leave home when a dryer is operating.
"In my heart I didn't want to testify," 16-year-old Corey Ausby, a witness for the state, and the alleged victim in the state's case against two Upper Park Heights brothers, said in court Wednesday.
April 19 is Holocaust Remembrance Day in the United States, held during the Days of Remembrance from April 15-22.
An anti-abortion advocacy group was awarded $385,000 in a settlement from the state as a result of a federal lawsuit against the state police.
Work at I-695 at Liberty Road, and some patching on the I-83 Jones Falls Expressway and at I-95 between Baltimore City and the Howard County line, are among the 115 road work projects throughout the state, officials said.
Local branches of the state comptrollers office will be open extra hours on Saturday for taxpayers.
Maryland's General Assembly is poised to approve a bill to increase the state's minimum dropout age from 16 to 17, and gradually to 18.
On Monday, Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz honored Windsor Mill residents Dr. Cyril O. Byron, Sr. and Lemuel Arthur Lewie Jr.—the only two remaining Tuskegee Airmen who reside in Baltimore County.
The Maryland Move Over Law requires that, if you see emergency lights at the side of the road, you must slow down or move over into another lane, away from the emergency scene.
The town hall at the American Legion post is the GOP hopeful's only appearance in the state before the April 3 primary.
Here are Pikesville Patch readers' comments about issues we care about: Beth Tfiloh sends students to a PAC conference; a lost dog finds his home, and in a poll, the majority of Patch readers say the U.S. should back Israel on a strike on Iran.
Experts say they have found a nuclear explosives site in Iran.
Alex Simone, 23, of Pikesville is serving in the Israel Defense Forces, and writes about his experiences.
The new 3rd Congressional District begins in Pikesville and extends into Baltimore City, Howard, Anne Arundel and Montgomery counties, which is an odd shape, one federal judge has said.
The National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives presented the event, held at the Pikesville Volunteer Fire Company hall.