Ellicott City, MD|News|
Seasonal Flu Comes Early This Year
State Health Officials Confirm four children from the Baltimore metropolitan area are the first recorded flu cases for 2012.

I'm a child of the eastside of Baltimore County and have lived here most of my life — first in Middle River then in Perry Hall, where I graduated from high school. I now live in Towson.
I'm a county history junkie and have a fondness for all the places that make my "hometown" special. You'll frequently find me hiking around Oregon Ridge with my dog or grabbing a slice at Pizza Johns in Middle River.
Over the years I've worked for a number of area publications including The Times in Perry Hall, The Avenue and The Journal Northeast as well as writing for Reuters news service.
For much of the last decade I was a reporter for Patuxent Publishing Co.'s community papers in Baltimore County as it's senior politics and government reporter.
I've won numerous state, regional and national awards for coverage of stories such as the Joseph Palczynski spree killings and hostage standoff in 2000, coverage of Hurricane Katrina, as well as state and local government coverage.
I've also been honored for my investigative work which includes stories involving the Community College of Baltimore County, the hiring of a health officer who was not licensed to practice medicine in Maryland and an investigation that led to the indictment of a sitting county councilman for theft from his campaign finance account.
While at Patuxent, my political blog was honored as the best in the Maryland-Delaware-DC region. I continue to blog about politics for Patch.
I appear each Thursday morning in the 7 o'clock hour where I talk about local politics on WBAL 1090 AM. I've appeared regularly on a number of that station's programs and have made guest appearances on Midday with Dan Rodricks on WYPR 88.1 FM.
I also co-hosted the "All Politics is Local" radio show on WCBM 680 AM.
You can find me on Facebook and on Twitter.
State Health Officials Confirm four children from the Baltimore metropolitan area are the first recorded flu cases for 2012.

Four children from the Baltimore metropolitan area are the first recorded flu cases for 2012.
State Del. Eric Bromwell and Councilman David Marks trade comments over a vote on a county pension bill.
The money will go toward new equipment.
The award was among $6.3 million given to Maryland's state and local governments by the U.S. Department of Justice.
The money will go to traffic enforcement, training and more.
The county executive is expected to cite budget constraints and continue to request money for MARC-oriented development in Middle River and intersection upgrades near the Solo Cup property in Owings Mills.
The funds will be used for crime prevention efforts in the city.
The money will go to salaries for six police officers and a criminal records clerk.
Councilwoman says she expects retaliation for opposing a bill that would change how employees appeal pension decisions made by the county.
Comptroller says Maryland "is the poster child for gerrymandering" and urges voters to vote no on Question 5.
The Court of Special Appeals decision is the latest to go against the county in its case against former County Auditor Brian Rowe.
County officials say borrowing the money will save county taxpayers $260 million in pension costs over the next 30 years.
First deadline for turning in signatures closes at the end of business Monday.
Group needs nearly 29,000 verified signatures of registered county voters to place zoning issues in the 2nd and 6th Council Districts on the 2014 ballot.
Community colleges and four-year universities could lose revenue and might have to reduce the number of classes offered or increase tuition.
State Board of Elections mails 8,000 Maryland Voters postcard citing voter registration problems.
State Board of Elections mails 1.1 million Maryland Voters in an effort to increase voter registration across the state.
Community leaders claim referendum on zoning decisions would "render the work of communities and the council vote meaningless."
A county employees union collects the signatures of 27 of 29 legislators who want a delay on a vote on a bill that changes a pension appeal process.