Maryland
Clearway Pain Solutions Selects Lexington Exchange in California, Maryland for Newest Location
Clearway Pain Solutions, a pain management medical practice currently operating in seven states, has chosen Lexington Exchange in California, Maryland as the site of its second location in the St. Mary’s County market.
The group signed a lease with St. John Properties, Inc. for 9,102 square feet of space and intends to open within the 140-acre mixed-use business community by the end of this year.
Mike White of St. John Properties represented the landlord and Lee & Associates | Maryland represented the tenant in this lease transaction.
Clearway Pain Solutions specializes in relieving pain, restoring function, and renewing the quality of life for its patients. The medical practice employs a wide range of therapies and procedures designed to achieve successful and timely outcomes, with each program tailored to address an individual’s unique needs. Clearway Pain Solutions works with patients dealing with arthritis and joint stiffness, back and spine discomfort, oncologic-related pain symptoms, as well as general chronic pain and muscle spasms.
The Lexington Exchange location at 23619 Oak View Drive, which will also include a surgery center, represents Clearway Pain Solutions’ second in St. John Properties’ Maryland portfolio, joining its Annapolis facility at 810 Bestgate Road in Anne Arundel County. The group operates more than 100 locations nationally including a site in Leonardtown.
“Clearway Pain Solutions continues to expand across the country and gain market share, and it is critical to identify high-visibility sites featuring strong demographics to achieve our long-term growth objectives,” explained Dr. Ira Kornbluth, President, Clearway Pain Solutions. “We have been able to scale our practice by consistently providing successful outcomes to our patients, maintaining solid financial backing, and attracting the highest quality physicians to our team. Lexington Exchange provides us adequate space to add a surgery center, which we were lacking at our Leonardtown location, and which will provide another resource for our St. Mary’s County patients.”
Lexington Exchange presently contains five buildings, including approximately 120,000 square feet of flex/R&D space and 65,000 square feet of retail. Located along Three Notch Road (MD Route 235) and within one-half mile from Patuxent Beach Road (MD Route 4), the park is configured to support approximately 700,000 square feet of commercial space. 23619 Oak View Drive is a one-story building containing 45,120 square feet of flex/R&D space.
“Medical and healthcare-related companies continue to migrate to sites meeting patients where they live and work,” explained Andrew Roud, St. John Properties’ Regional Partner, Southern Maryland.
“Clearway Pain Solutions represents the first medical tenant in Lexington Exchange, and this clearly continues a trend in which medical and healthcare groups are choosing mixed-use communities and retail centers to leverage a project’s plentiful parking, high visibility, ease of access, and proximity to residential neighborhoods.”
St. John Properties is presently marketing several pad sites at Lexington Exchange fronting Three Notch Road that can support end-users including big-box and junior anchor retailers, restaurants, financial institutions, or urgent care facilities.
With nearly 45,000 consumers residing within a five-mile radius, and approximately 110,000 consumers within 10 miles, the business community presently contains an ALDI grocery store and 12-screen RC Theatres cinema. 31,170 vehicles pass Lexington Exchange daily via Three Notch.
Founded in 1971, St. John Properties, Inc. is one of the nation’s largest and most successful privately held commercial real estate firms. The company is distinguished by its commitment to customer service, achievements in green building, and top-rated workplace culture.
Throughout St. John Properties’ 53-year history, the company has developed more than 24 million square feet of flex/R&D, office, retail, and warehouse space and has investments in over 3,000 residential units.
The company proudly serves more than 2,600 clients in Colorado, Florida, Louisiana, Maryland, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, Utah, and Wisconsin. For more information about the company, visit www.sjpi.com.
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Maryland
Victory over Maryland caps a successful sweep on USC’s first big East Coast trip in the Big Ten
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — JuJu Watkins and Southern California figured to do a lot of traveling in the Trojans’ first season in the Big Ten.
So far, so good.
No. 4 USC completed a two-game eastern sweep Wednesday night, handing No. 8 Maryland its first loss, 79-74. The victory came after the Trojans decimated Rutgers 92-42 on Sunday.
“We’ve been on the East Coast now for like four days,” Watkins said. “It’s freezing.”
Perhaps that explained Watkins’ spotty shooting. She went 7 for 19 from the field and turned the ball over eight times, eventually fouling out in the final minute. She scored 21 points, her lowest output in nearly a month.
But USC outscored Maryland 18-6 to end the game. Kiki Iriafen also scored 21.
“We just kind of have this unwavering confidence in ourselves,” Watkins said. “It was just a matter of coming together and closing the game out.”
The Trojans have already logged quite a few miles. They beat Mississippi in Paris in November. Last month they traveled to Connecticut and beat UConn.
This trip was a multigame journey that USC handled pretty well. Coach Lindsay Gottlieb said she’s still learning the rhythm of a new league.
Related Stories JuJu Watkins scores 21 as No. 4 USC tops No. 8 Maryland 79-74, handing the Terps their first lossNo. 8 Maryland improves to 13-0 with a 78-61 victory over Rutgers; Iowa and USC up next for TerpsJuJu Watkins scores 21, No. 6 USC downs Oregon 66-53 in Big Ten opener
“The Pac-12 was two games in a weekend, Friday-Sunday and everyone’s doing the same thing. Now we’re like, ‘Wait, who’s playing who when?’” she said. “It’s really different for us, and so as coaches we’re trying to process all that and keep things as normalized for the team as possible.”
It’s also an opportunity for USC to play in areas less familiar with the Trojans. It was their first matchup with Maryland since 1995, and the game drew 14,735.
“It’s just platforms for them that we have never had before, and that’s a really positive thing. It’s up to us and my administration and me to make it as seamless as possible for them,” Gottlieb said. “We’ll go anywhere and play. I think our players have proven that.”
Maryland
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore warns of major budget cuts amid $3B budget deficit
ANNAPOLIS, Md. – Maryland Gov. Wes Moore has warned that massive budget cuts are on the way as state lawmakers try to solve a $3 billion budget gap.
Moore told Maryland residents Wednesday to brace themselves for $2 billion worth of cuts in his soon-to-be-released budget. But that still leaves another $1 billion that lawmakers will have to come up with to close this deficit.
Normally, the first day of a General Assembly session is a cause for celebration but this year it comes with a big challenge.
Moore said that not only does he want lawmakers to come up with a solution to close the budget gap, he also wants still fund priorities like economic growth, public safety and schools but Moore would not endorse the idea of tax hikes.
“We are not going to grow an economy on the backs of working Marylanders, on the backs of middle-class Marylanders. So I’ll work with anybody to be able to come up with a long-term solution but my bar’s high, been high and will remain high when it comes to revenues,” Moore said.
But while the governor says his bar is high for tax hikes, Democrats, who control both houses of the statehouse, and Republicans, who are outnumbered, are already fighting it out.
Republicans say they support the governor’s plan to cut spending but they will hold the line on taxes.
“I believe the Democrats are sending every signal that they are going to raise taxes and we are going to fight it, fight it, fight it,” said Republican delegate Kathy Szeliga, who represents Howard County. “Maryland is already one of the most highly taxed states in the country.”
Democratic lawmakers say no decisions have been made either way.
“You know, people get nervous because they think that automatically means raising taxes. Not necessarily. We’re going to do our job and make sure that we don’t hurt people too, we understand the budget is tight but we don’t have to keep hurting people too,” Democratic delegate C.T. Wilson, the Maryland Economic Matters Chairman.
Moore is set to unveil his budget proposal on Wednesday, Jan. 15. This General Assembly session will last for 90 days.
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