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State law prohibits open containers with any amount of alcohol within the passenger area of a motor vehicle. [7] Passengers of a vehicle are similarly prohibited from consuming alcohol in the passenger area, but the law provides exceptions for non-drivers in the back of hired vehicles such as taxis, limousines, and buses, as well as in the living areas of motor homes.
Full map including municipalities. State, territorial, tribal, and local governments responded to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States with various declarations of emergency, closure of schools and public meeting places, lockdowns, and other restrictions intended to slow the progression of the virus.
A Maryland law passed in 1978 prohibited chain and discount stores from having alcohol licenses. The same law said that only a Maryland resident could have an alcohol license and that each person could only have one alcohol license. [9] [10] The chain-store law was enacted in the early 1980s after a push from small, local retail businesses.
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BALTIMORE —For the third time in less than a week, Maryland has reported a record high number of hospitalizations resulting from coronavirus infections. Sunday, the state reported that 1,950 ...
Maryland’s governor announced Monday that he has tested positive for the coronavirus, but is feeling fine at the moment. Gov. Larry Hogan tweeted that he received a positive rapid test Monday ...
The COVID Tracking Project was a collaborative volunteer-run effort to track the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.It maintained a daily-updated dataset of state-level information related to the outbreak, including counts of the number of cases, tests, hospitalizations, and deaths, the racial and ethnic demographic breakdowns of cases and deaths, and cases and deaths in long-term ...
The baby's case marks the first infant to contract the virus in the state. A 5-year-old girl and a teenager are the only other two individuals under the age of 18 with COVID-19 in Maryland, according to Governor Hogan. [66] On the evening of March 20, Governor Hogan announced via Twitter the second death in Maryland to COVID-19. [67]