The controlled demolition of the largest remaining steel span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has been postponed because of weather conditions, officials said Sunday afternoon.
The controlled demolition of the largest remaining steel span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has been postponed because of weather conditions.
The controlled demolition of the largest remaining steel span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has been postponed because of weather conditions.
The controlled demolition of the largest remaining steel span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has been postponed because of weather conditions.
The controlled demolition of the largest remaining steel span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has been postponed because of weather conditions.
The controlled demolition of the largest remaining steel span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has been postponed because of weather conditions.
The Johns Hopkins University and pro-Palestinian protesters occupying an encampment on the Homewood campus have agreed to end the demonstration immediately. In exchange for dismantling the encampment and not restarting it, Hopkins will…
Crews are preparing to conduct a controlled demolition of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Maryland, collapsed after a container ship impact. The ship is stuck among the wreckage, blocking Baltimore’s port. Six roadwork crew members died in…
The recordings offer a snapshot of the incredulity of officers from the Maryland Natural Resources Police as they approached the site where the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed.
The Port of Baltimore expects to resume most operations next week following a controlled demolition this weekend to free a containership from the wreckage of the Francis Scott Key Bridge.
Crews will begin removing a portion of Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge that collapsed on top of a Dali cargo ship. CBS News Baltimore's Mike Hellgren has more.
Two Maryland nonprofits are making sure workers at the Port of Baltimore are getting needed financial assistance in the form of one-time payments of $1,000.