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Commentary

A Beautiful Home in North Carolina
When the largest asset of low-income Marylanders is held hostage

A woman who is the head of a multigenerational household lives in the East Baltimore home that has been in her family for 66 years. She has been struggling to afford her property taxes and home repairs, but she doesn’t give up. Her grandparents worked so hard to keep this house with the family. So, she is going to fight to keep it.

Peter G. Angelos: a slayer of dragons, real or perceived

Decades before Peter G. Angelos, multi-millionaire baseball team owner, came off as ruthless, headstrong and too eager to pick a fight, he was known to Baltimoreans in 1959 as a 29-year-old, fresh-faced City Council member who could be ruthless, headstrong and eager to fight.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Marylanders deserve comprehensive anti-discrimination protections

Marylanders are now without legal protections for many forms of discrimination, leaving them exposed to serious harms with no state-level legal recourse. This past August, the Maryland Supreme Court issued a troubling ruling in John Doe v. CRS. The decision weakened the statutory protections afforded to all Marylanders under every state anti-discrimination clause.

Hubbard Hall, aka the Naval Academy boathouse, Annapolis, Maryland, at midday on Saturday, February 4, 2023.
First female Naval Academy superintendent says curbing sexual harassment is her top priority

The Naval Academy admissions office is deep into 15,147 applications, sorting through the fleet dreams of young men and women from almost every U.S. congressional district. And the competition is fierce. There are only 1,170 spots in the class of 2028 — that might match up well with Vice Adm. Yvette Davids.

 

A road map for confronting the climate crisis in Md.

The climate crisis isn’t on the horizon — it’s already upon us. Its effects are evident daily, impacting our communities, economy, and even national security. It’s imperative that we push our leaders to take decisive action. Gov. Wes Moore, who has championed environmental causes, and has repeatedly demonstrated his commitment to working with and listening to communities throughout our state, can take action today to help our state, and the nation, address this crisis at the size and scope needed. He can do so by making plans to take advantage of a new rule that was recently issued by the Biden administration.

 

Cost of education Blueprint is adding up, and money isn’t there

The Maryland General Assembly is a bit like two parents who gave the kids every toy they wanted for Christmas, charging everything on credit cards. Now, they are wondering how they will pay the bills. It is always easier to spend than to pay, just as it is easier to vote for spending than it is to vote to tax people to get the money. The problem is rearing its ugly head now in the General Assembly, with the House of Delegates and the state Senate at odds.

Md. deserves its first death care update since the Civil War

Our legislators have a chance this session to dramatically reframe the choices for more than 50,000 Maryland families coping with planning funerals each year. The “Green Death Care Options Act” — cross-filed as House Bill 1168 and Senate Bill 1028 — would respond to an estimated two-thirds of funeral consumers looking for new choices. It also carries a no-nonsense promise to reduce greenhouse gas emissions without spending a dime of Maryland taxpayer money.

Horse racing
Maryland’s revamped $400M bet on Pimlico deserves the go-ahead

It may have been a bit slow out of the starting gate, but legislation to upgrade Pimlico Race Course at a cost of $400 million is picking up speed in Annapolis. At a hearing Tuesday, lawmakers debated the price tag and the practicality of a last-minute bill introduced last week in the General Assembly meant to help secure the future of the Preakness Stakes and thoroughbred horse racing in Maryland, and to revive an economically challenged section of Northwest Baltimore.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Unpaid water bills could again cost Baltimoreans their homes

It shouldn’t be controversial to think that absolutely no one deserves to lose their home or be evicted due to an unpaid water bill. Yet, Maryland lawmakers are trying to return to a practice that disproportionately impacts and displaces Black people, who are already underrepresented as homeowners and disproportionately impacted as renters.

USM chancellor: Fill out the FAFSA

Students’ federal financial aid data has begun slowly trickling out to U.S. colleges and universities. That means our University System of Maryland (USM) schools — 12 public universities across the state — should finally get their hands on the amount of federal aid their prospective and returning students will qualify for. Normally, this information would have come in January, but the problematic rollout of a “new” federal financial aid form, the simplified FAFSA, caused significant delays.

The Morning Rundown

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