logo
Underground fire prompts emergency response in Downtown Baltimore; Residents urged to avoid the area

Underground fire prompts emergency response in Downtown Baltimore; Residents urged to avoid the area

CBS Newsa day ago

Baltimore City Office of Emergency Management has advised residents, visitors, and patrons to avoid the area of E Baltimore St and Guilford Ave due to an underground fire that occurred Saturday afternoon.
Baltimore City Residents, Visitor's, and Patrons -
BCFD is currently responding to a call of fire activity in the area of E Baltimore St & Guilford Ave. Please AVOID the area, and identify alternate routes of travel. pic.twitter.com/rvziG070OW — Baltimore City OEM (@BaltimoreOEM) June 28, 2025
Just before 4 p.m., the Baltimore City Fire Department reported no visible fire and smoke had died down.
BGE has responded to the scene to isolate and deenergize the area.
The Maryland Transportation Authority has also been notified, per the BCFD.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Search Has Ended for Plane That Disappeared Over Lake Michigan in 1950 — Worst Airline Disaster in U.S. History at the Time
Search Has Ended for Plane That Disappeared Over Lake Michigan in 1950 — Worst Airline Disaster in U.S. History at the Time

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Search Has Ended for Plane That Disappeared Over Lake Michigan in 1950 — Worst Airline Disaster in U.S. History at the Time

A 20-year search for a flight that disappeared over Lake Michigan in 1950 has been called off Northwest Orient Flight 2501 was carrying 58 people and was the deadliest U.S. aviation disaster to date at the time While researchers did not find the plane, they believe they have uncovered new details about the cause of the crash and its aftermathThe decades-long search for a passenger plane carrying 58 people that disappeared over Lake Michigan 75 years ago has been called off. Northwest Orient Flight 2501 took off from La Guardia Airport in New York the evening of June 23, 1950. The plane was scheduled to make two stops — Minneapolis and Spokane, Wash. — before reaching its final destination in Seattle. However, the plane lost contact with air traffic control after encountering rough weather and never made its scheduled flyover near Milwaukee's Mitchell Field, according to The Detroit News. The tragedy was the worst aviation disaster in U.S. history at the time. Michigan's South Beach was closed for nine days as body parts and plane debris washed ashore, but no victims were ever positively identified, and the ensuing investigation did not yield a cause for the crash. No further investigation was done into the matter until 2004, when adventure writer Clive Cussler became interested in the crash. Cussler reached out to the Michigan Shipwreck Research Association and offered to fund an investigation into the cause of the disaster, per The Detroit News. Researchers with the organization scanned 700 miles of Lake Michigan using sonar technology and used models to recreate the weather patterns that Flight 2501 would have encountered the night of the crash. "With all of our research and by connecting with Northwest personnel, we came up with information never publicly shared," said the organization's executive director, Valerie van Heest, while talking to The Detroit News. She added, "We feel quite confident the plane entered the storm front, unaware the storm front had shifted south. We feel quite confident that a downdraft, also called a microburst, hit the plane. And we say that based on the debris that came ashore and that the Coast Guard collected ... We know this plane hit the water with great force, and we know there was no way to survive this." Researchers additionally believe that the plane was ultimately destroyed into many pieces of debris, much of which has since sunk to the depths of the lake floor. Van Heest — who has since authored a book and curated a traveling museum exhibit about the crash — said that family members of the victims have reached out to her over the years, making her realize that the tragedy was still alive for many. "I had heartbreaking conversations with seniors who would cry over [the] phone talking about this, so it was still so raw," she told The Detroit News, adding, 'My interest was a feeling of responsibility of bringing closure to the families, and I feel like I've done it with the book, the exhibit and knowing details that they didn't have in 1950." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Van Heest also told the outlet that she has mixed emotions about officially calling off the 20-year search effort. "It's a hard thing to have to say because part of me feels like we have failed, but we have done so much to keep [the] memory of this accident and these victims at [the] forefront … I feel like we've done better for them than if we'd found the wreckage," she said. The organization also helped locate two unmarked mass grave sites at Michigan cemeteries that contained the remains of flight victims. Stone markers commemorating the victims and the crash have since been placed at both sites. Read the original article on People

Hundreds of neighbors rally to give a 9-year-old with cancer one last Christmas
Hundreds of neighbors rally to give a 9-year-old with cancer one last Christmas

Washington Post

timean hour ago

  • Washington Post

Hundreds of neighbors rally to give a 9-year-old with cancer one last Christmas

Kelley Zocks doesn't usually go all out for Christmas. She might hang some twinkly lights, maybe put up a wreath on the red door of her home. But on the last Saturday in June, following a week of dangerously hot temperatures in the D.C. region, Zocks dotted her walkway with glowing luminaria, set up a red inflatable shopfront announcing 'cookies for Santa,' propped open lawn chairs and put on a Mrs. Claus costume and wig before loading up a cooler with dozens of chocolate ice pops. Frozen hot cocoa, if you will. Hers was one of hundreds of households that signed up to celebrate Christmas in June for a little girl with cancer who might not make it to December. For miles, in the thick heat and humidity, neighbors dressed in holiday apparel gathered to watch the girl and her family wind through streets alight and glowing, like a scene out of a Christmas card. At a time when crises, global and local, feel constant and far beyond any one person's control, several community members said they felt grateful to be able to do something tangible to help one family find a moment of happiness in the face of certain tragedy. It started with an email to neighbors from Alyssa Zachmann, whose 9-year-old daughter Kasey was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer four years ago. 'Kasey loves Christmas,' Zachmann wrote last weekend, 'and we want to give her a chance to experience some Christmas joy, so we are hoping some houses in the neighborhood would be willing to put up Christmas lights next Saturday.' Zachmann knew this week was going to be a scorcher. She didn't expect anyone to go too far out of their way. Maybe some lights here and there, a few decorations on a front lawn or two. The houses nearby, in the Brookdale and Westbrook neighborhoods, would be more than enough to make Kasey feel like Christmas had come early, she thought. She made a spreadsheet to keep track; so the family could make sure to drive by each household that volunteered. But as the days passed, the number of names multiplied. A dozen people signed up. Then 100. By Saturday afternoon, the list had exceeded 270 homes from 11 neighborhoods up and down the D.C.-Maryland border. In 2021, when Kasey was just 5 years old, she was diagnosed with medulloblastoma, a type of brain cancer. Kasey underwent months of chemotherapy as she attended first grade. At first, Alyssa Zachmann said, the family wasn't as public about Kasey's diagnosis. They held onto a quiet hope that she could beat back the disease and become one of the 6 in 10 children who, according to the National Institutes of Health, go on to survive a medulloblastoma diagnosis. For a few months in 2022, the cancer appeared to be in remission. But then, Alyssa Zachmann said, it returned. 'When you feel helpless in the face of something like this, people channel that in different ways. We channeled it into advocacy and raising money for pediatric brain cancer research, which means we had to start talking about it,' she said, noting their work with the nonprofit Lilabean Foundation for Pediatric Brain Cancer Research. 'I think deep down we thought, 'What if we can raise enough money to find a cure for Kasey before it's too late?'' Over the last four years, Kasey has endured 10 surgeries, dozens of rounds of radiation and an aggressive regimen of medication, including two clinical trials. In that time, Zachmann said, the community has gotten to know Kasey and her story. When the Zachmanns announced they would be participating in Children's National's annual Race for Every Child, dozens of neighbors signed up to donate money or run in the 5k. In the last three years, Team KVZ has been one of Children's National's top fundraisers for the event. In 2022, Kasey's team had 64 members and raised more than $55,000. The next year, Team KVZ had grown to 90 people and brought in more than $60,000 in donations. Last year, the biggest turnout yet, had 139 team members who helped raise nearly $70,000 in donations. 'This family is so fantastic — just the grace they've shown in sharing their story and being so open about everything they've gone through over the course of this,' said Dana Rice, a neighbor who lives in Brookdale community and worked as the Zachmann family's real estate agent. 'It makes the rest of us in the community feel like this family belongs to all of us. That this is our story, too.' This month, the Zachmanns learned that the cancer in Kasey's brain had spread to her lymph nodes — a rare progression. Doctors told them that Kasey didn't have much time. Alyssa and Joe Zachmann began to think about what they could do for their daughter to make whatever time she had left as joyful as possible. One idea rose to the top: What if we did Christmas, the family posited. In June. Kasey's love of Christmas has never been contained to the holiday season. She watches Christmas movies devotedly — Macaulay Culkin's 'Home Alone' films are some of her favorites — and sings along to Christmas carols all year round. Her most-loved album, Gwen Stefani's 'You Make It Feel Like Christmas,' is on a near-constant rotation in the family's home. These days, Kasey gets tired quickly. When she's awake, her small body is wracked with pain. Medications help manage it, but make her lethargic and sleepy. To ensure Kasey had 'a few good hours' on Saturday, the Zachmanns planned to manage her medications carefully — and did what they could to make sure Kasey's best window lined up with a visit from Santa. 'I grew up Jewish; I didn't even celebrate Christmas until I met my husband,' Alyssa Zachmann said days before Saturday's event as the list of participants continued to grow. 'But Christmas magic is real, and I'm hoping it's present for my family and the whole neighborhood this weekend.' On Saturday, Santa didn't arrive in a sleigh. The big man in red got driven to Kasey's house in an antique engine from the Rockville Volunteer Fire Department. Firefighters from several departments across the state — from Bethesda Fire to Ocean City Volunteer Fire Company — rode through the neighborhood like they do in December for the annual Christmas parade. But first, they delivered cards and gifts directly to Kasey. 'The volunteer fire service doesn't do anything small,' said Lt. Megan Quinn of the Glen Echo Fire Department. 'They don't do anything halfway.' Neither does the Zachmanns' neighborhood. Houses were draped with banners that read 'Merry Christmas, Kasey!' One house on Jamestown Road spelled out Kasey's initials, KVZ, in lights. Neighbors and local businesses propped up decorations and hung homemade ornaments in the Zachmanns' front yard. Just after 8 p.m., Santa arrived with a 'ho-ho-ho' and a helper at his side. It wasn't an elf, but instead the mascot Dr. Bear from Children's National Hospital, where Kasey goes for treatment. Kasey beamed, and hugged the two before taking their hands and leading them to sit on the porch. Children in elf ears, Christmas pajamas and Santa hats clamored around the trio as Dr. Bear offered up tickles and high-fives. Kasey read her cards aloud and then called her little sister, Zara, over to share in one of the gifts: stuffed animals of the sibling duo Bluey and Bingo, from the popular show. Joe Zachmann, Kasey's dad, wiped away tears. Soon, the parade set off with the Zachmann family car following close behind. As evening fell, the Christmas celebration began to feel more like a summer block party. Alison Goradia, a former registered nurse at Children's National who also lives in the neighborhood, was one of the first people to call the Glen Echo Fire Department and ask that they roll out the usual Christmas pageantry. She also donned the Dr. Bear costume Saturday night. 'This is such great modeling for our kids. It's how to show up, how to actually be present and put everything else aside and say, 'This moment matters more than anything else going on,'' she said. 'This moment matters so much, not just to this sweet little girl who's fighting for her life literally, but for her family, who will have this memory forever.' As the Zachmanns drove past people stretched out on front porches and lawns, several neighbors came up to the back seat to give Kasey gifts and words of encouragement. At the house with the big inflatable display for Mrs. Claus's cafe, Zocks appeared. Under her gray coiffed wig, Zocks wore a white tank top and 1920s-style red-and-white striped bathing suit bottom, glasses with a pearl chain, red lipstick and a watermelon pool floaty around her waist. She offered Zara, Kasey's sister, a fruit popsicle out of a metallic ice cream cart. It went like this, on and on, for miles. The Zachmann family, determined to see every home that put in the effort to deliver Christmas for Kasey, drove around for two hours. Neighbors who spotted them shouted 'Merry Christmas' and cheered. Some stayed outside to greet the family through squalls of rain. Kasey was quiet in the back seat. Her small face looked out, taking in the lights. Every so often, as the family passed another house, another neighbor, another display with Kasey's name draped across front doors and parked cars, Kasey let out a single breathless word: 'Wow.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store