Bethesda Magazine | Page 2 of 1190

UPDATED: Local restaurants taking Montgomery County to court to reinstate indoor dining

Dozens of county restaurants have joined as plaintiffs
Coronavirus dept of health photo

Montgomery County has had more new COVID-19 cases this month than in all of November

425 new cases reported in county on Friday

Bethesda condo development gets early approval

70 units proposed on Chevy Chase Drive
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Hospitals might need six weeks to administer vaccine to all employees, Gayles says

No timetable yet for other health care workers, nursing homes

UPDATED: About 40 weather-related crashes reported during eight-hour period of snowstorm

Bethesda area got up to 2 inches of snow; parts of county got 4 inches

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Montgomery College will continue virtual classes in the spring

No events on campus until April 1

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County considers $8M fund to preserve, develop affordable housing

Focus will be on ‘areas at risk of rent escalation’

Montgomery County alcohol official says it was his decision to leave

Dorfman will work for county until Jan. 2, then get $89K payment

morning-notes

Franchot launches run for Maryland governor in 2022

Plus: Child predators increase efforts as kids spend more time online; Blair student is co-winner of Congressional App Challenge

6303 Broad Branch Road

Sold in Bethesda, Chevy Chase and Potomac: Dec. 8-15

Notable homes sold in the past week

‘A sense of peace’

Before the pandemic, hospice volunteers could hold patients’ hands and talk with them face-to-face. They’re still finding ways to keep patients comfortable—and that connection helps the volunteers, too.

An unforgettable year

Quiet streets, an empty football field, a protest against racial injustice. Two photographers from Bethesda captured the fear, uncertainty, hope and raised voices of 2020.

Cool for school

Three homes with stylish spaces for distance learning

Getting in

A Chevy Chase author sheds light on how decisions are made on college admissions

Re-union?

Once dominant, Montgomery County’s public employee unions have seen their clout wane. Leaders are plotting a comeback.

Signing off

In his 18 years at The Universities at Shady Grove, recently retired Executive Director Stew Edelstein embraced students’ diversity and determination and helped create a unique model of education

A time to give

In one of the wealthiest counties in the country, some families are struggling like never before. Amid the pandemic, about 100,000 Montgomery County residents don’t have enough to eat. Nonprofits are helping, but they’re facing tough times, too.

Holiday hounds

Many local families welcomed new dogs into their homes in 2020. This season, pamper the pooch with creature comforts from local stores.

Extra, extra

A Kensington sixth grader is trying to help keep local journalism alive with his own weekly newspaper

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