Senator Wants Patients to Know When Medical Devices Are Reused

ANNAPOLIS – Curbside recycling and phone book collection points are becoming more common, but medical device reuse is one recycling program that may come as a surprise, especially because many of the devices are labeled “For single-use only

Educators Highlight Successes, But Maryland School Performance Dips

BALTIMORE – State educators downplayed a slight drop in state average performance on school assessment tests and applauded schools that boosted their scores after releasing 1999 figures Wednesday

Legislator Pushes Law to Put Helmets on In-line Skaters

ANNAPOLIS – Students at the Hannah More School in Baltimore County have joined forces with their senator, Paula Hollinger, to pass a law in memory of a classmate who died after a rollerblading accident

Federal Payments to Maryland Outweigh Federal Taxes Taken, Study Shows

WASHINGTON – Maryland residents received $1

Black & Decker, Consumer Product Agency Settle Over Fiery Toasters

WASHINGTON – Black & Decker has agreed to pay the Consumer Product Safety Commission $575,000 to settle charges that the company failed to report fire- causing defects in an under-the-cabinet toaster it began selling in 1994

Medical Savings Accounts Fail to Snag Buyers

ANNAPOLIS – Congressional Republicans have touted medical savings accounts as the way to provide coverage for millions of Americans without health insurance, but a pilot program initiated by Congress in 1997 has had few takers in the nation or in Maryland

Federal, State Officials Appeal to Hispanics Leaders for Census Help

SILVER SPRING – State and federal officials met with Hispanic community leaders from around the state Tuesday in an effort to head off problems that led to massive undercounts of minority groups in the 1990 census

Restraining Order Loophole Enrages Committee

ANNAPOLIS – Lisa Spicknall sat quietly in the hearing chamber with family, each member wearing a photo button of her two slain children

Supreme Court Rejects Rockville Attorney’s Petition for a Second Time

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on Monday rejected a Rockville attorney’s appeal of his suit against a bankruptcy court that he said “demonized” him and his former client

Lung Cancer Becomes an Equal Opportunity Killer, As Women Smokers Increase

BALTIMORE – She wheezes a little when she walks, even the few steps from the living room to the front door of her middle-class Baltimore home