Maryland
Telling the history of horse racing business in Maryland – Baltimore Positive WNST
Maryland
MM 5.16: Maryland men’s basketball set to host Marquette in 2024-25 season
Maryland men’s basketball announced a home-and-home series with Marquette Wednesday. The Terps will host the Golden Eagles on Nov. 15, 2024, and then travel to Milwaukee during the 2025-26 season.
November will mark just the second time the two programs have met, with Maryland winning the first matchup, 84-63, in 2019 to win the Orlando Championship.
Marquette ended the 2023-24 campaign ranked No. 12 in the AP Top 25 poll and slotted as a No. 2-seed in the NCAA Tournament, but ultimately lost to N.C. State in the Sweet 16.
Meanwhile, Maryland completely missed the NCAA Tournament after a disappointing season, finishing with a 16-17 record.
Maryland already announced another nonconference game for this season against Villanova in the Saatva Empire Classic at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, on Nov. 24, 2024.
In other news
Ben Messinger previewed Maryland baseball’s weekend series against Penn State.
Messinger also analyzed Maryland baseball’s offensive struggles following the loss of last year’s stars.
Maryland softball’s Courtney Wyche earned a Big Ten All-Tournament team selection.
Maryland baseball moved the start time for Thursday’s game against Penn State up to 4 p.m.
Maryland
Maryland rockfish season begins May 16 – with regulations
ANNAPOLIS, Md. – Maryland rockfish season begins May 16, but with regulations, the state’s Department of Natural Resources announced.
Emergency regulations for rockfish, also known as striped bass and striper, were approved earlier this year to bolster the species’ spawning population.
According to DNR, emergency regulations extend periods of closure to recreational striped bass fishing in the Maryland portion of the Chesapeake Bay.
Striped bass season in the mainstem of the Chesapeake Bay will be open May 16. The remainder of Bay waters, including its tidal tributaries will open June 1 through July 15.
Maryland Department of Natural Resources biologists survey and tag striped bass in the Chesapeake Bay as part of the annual survey of the population. (Photo: Maryland DNR)
All areas of the Bay will be closed to any targeting of striped bass from July 16 through July 31, and will reopen August 1 through December 10.
Anglers may keep one striped bass per person, per day, with a minimum length of 19 inches and a maximum length of 24 inches, the DNR says.
Targeting of striped bass has been off-limits in the Chesapeake Bay since April 1 and will be until May 15, eliminating the Maryland striped bass trophy season.
In the Susquehanna Flats, targeting of striped bass is prohibited through the end of May.
The FULL LIST OF REGULATIONS and STRIPED BASS REGULATIONS MAPS can be found online.
Additional information, including a link to complete regulations on striped bass fishing in Maryland waters, is available on the Department of Natural Resources website.
Maryland
State of Maryland considering legal action in the wake of the Key Bridge collapse
BALTIMORE – With the NTSB preliminary report comes several questions about the legal fallout after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge.
On Wednesday, Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown called on the state board of public works to approve contracting five external law firms to assist in litigation after the collapse. The firms will only be paid contingent on the state winning its case. The funds for that would come from the damages recovered.
“The firms are the right mix of maritime, insurance, conflicts litigation, and other expertise and experience we need to pursue and protect the state’s interests in this critical matter,” Brown said.
The board approved these contracts during a vote Wednesday. The state owned and operated the Key Bridge. The attorney general’s office has not indicated when it will file a claim.
This step comes as several legal fillings have already been sent to federal district court in Baltimore. The city filed a civil claim for damages in April. The Dali owner and operator filed a limitation of liability claim, asking the court to restrict the company’s financial responsibility to the cost of the ship. Separately, the ship’s owner declared general average, asking cargo companies with products on board to chip in for the cost of “voluntary lost cargo”.
While the report provides a clear timeline of events the morning of March 26, it doesn’t answer the question of why the incident occurred.
This will be the key in, what’s shaping up to be, a lengthy legal battle. Sen. Ben Cardin spoke at a press briefing earlier this week, saying this could be a historically large insurance claim.
“Those insurance claims will help to ensure the federal taxpayer gets relief,” Cardin said.
Maritime insurance functions differently than that on land. Large vessels can take out insurance policies from independent insurance brokers, but that can be expensive. Instead, most ships work with a protection and indemnity club, which is a group of vessels that form a mutual assurance organization to provide insurance for large claims. There are 12 leading clubs in the world, and they formed an international group to pool resources for high value claims. Currently, there is $2.1 billion available to support claims in this international group.
This insurance would only be triggered if the ship cannot limit its liability to the value of the vessel, which will be one of the first claims reviewed in court. In order to have a ruling in that case, the court needs to determine why the allision happened. If the court finds that the ship’s owner knew of problems on board, liability will not be limited.
“If it turns out equipment just failed unexpectedly even though the maintenance is up to date or if some ship’s officer simply made a mistake, then that would not be attributable to the owner, and theoretically limitation would be allowed,” Allen Black, maritime attorney at Mills Black LLP., said.
The FBI opened its investigation into the Dali last month. Black says investigators could be looking at criminal charges related to misconduct or neglect of ship officers, also known as the Seafarers Manslaughter statute. Prosecutors would have to prove simple negligence, accusing a member of the crew of neglect, misconduct or inattention to duties, causing the death of the six construction workers who were on the bridge that night.
“I assume that’s exactly what they are looking for is to see if they can find some act of negligence attributable to the crew or the ship’s owner,” Black said.
All cases related to the Key Bridge Collapse need to be filed by September 24 in district court. Then, the court will begin reviewing evidence. This will all begin as the NTSB and Coast Guard safety investigation continues.
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