Recent comments in /f/baltimore

saltyjohnson t1_j25te68 wrote

Ok so these articles and resources always tell you how to acquire and use naloxone, and people say they never leave the house without it. Great. I want to carry some, too. But the thing these articles always leave out is how to identify somebody who might be experiencing opioid overdose. Tap on their shoulder to see if they're responsive, sure, but if everybody can't do that to every person napping on the ground.

What can I look for, in passing, to tell the difference between somebody experiencing an overdose and a houseless person just trying to get some damn sleep?

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gothaggis t1_j25sb2d wrote

I closed in April of 2021. Due to backup, I didn't receive the application until October 2021, I applied. However, if I look up on REal Property Search, it says no application on file. Anyone know how long that takes to update correctly? Sent a message to the tax assessment office, but who knows if I will ever hear back.

My house was not accessed at the correct value for a long time - and now with this assessment I just got, its going up an additional 4k/year. They are assessing it now at the purchase price I paid (which I overpaid by about 50k) - which obviously is going to sting. Not sure how to contest it when its what I paid for it.

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TheOtherTJOrtenzi t1_j25nb7r wrote

Banner editor here — just a heads up that we removed the paywall on this story as a public service.

Also, this link is important: It's a county-by-county list of overdose response programs that give out naloxone for free (in case you don't have insurance or it's not covered).
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1AL4WsGJNsBElDHCi-fZZFyEPnOxg59_izGuctQw7goQ/edit

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SisqoEngineer t1_j25jny2 wrote

I bought my house 12 years ago for 185 and it's been assessed at 125 until now. It's only going up to 165 which is comparable with the few neighbors that are similar and recently sold in the weird area I'm in.

I'm still going to appeal just to see what happens and see their data.

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