sequestration

6-11-13: A Nobel Laureate on Sequestration and Science Research, Remembering Homer Favor, and Baltimore Children's Authors

It took two decades, but molecular biologist Carol Greider won a Nobel Prize in 2009 for work she did as a graduate student. Now, thanks to sequester budget cuts, graduate students have been cut from her  lab at Johns Hopkins. We talk with her about the sequester’s impact on her research.

Then, civil rights leader and retired Morgan State professor Homer Favor died this past weekend. We'll hear part of a conversation we taped with him less than two months ago and we’ll talk about his life and work with Ray Winbush, director of the Institute for Urban Research at Morgan State.



4-10-13: Layoffs due to sequestration, Zelda Fitzgerald in novel form, and poet/rocker Paul Muldoon.

Across-the-board federal spending cuts called “sequestration” were put in place March 1st.  They've already caused layoffs in Maryland. We talk with a federal public defender dealing with furloughs, and a government contractor that has laid workers off due to spending cuts at Fort Meade.

Then, Erika Robuck blends history into fiction in novels about famous authors. Her latest imagines an intense friendship between Zelda Fitzgerald and a psychiatric nurse in Baltimore.  We talk with Robuck ahead of her appearance Saturday at the Annapolis Book Festival.



How Sequestration is Forcing Layoffs in Maryland

April 10, 2013

The across-the-board spending cuts known as sequestration went into effect more than a month ago.  Some have been delayed—the Federal Aviation Administration announced it’s waiting until mid-June to close air traffic control towers around the country, including five in Maryland.  And the number of furlough days for civilian employees of the Department of Defense has been reduced by about a third.



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