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Commentary

Talking 911, Elections and Scrabble with State Senator Cheryl Kagan

Maryland State Senator Cheryl Kagan joins The Lobby to discuss her efforts to update Maryland’s 911 system. She talks about being the first elected official outside of Baltimore to endorse Gov. Wes Moore when he was at 1% in the polls. Senator Kagan represents District 17 in the Maryland General Assembly, serves as Vice Chair of the Education, Energy, and the Environment Committee, is active in the music community, and a nationally ranked Scrabble player.

 

The Morgan State attack and what an entire community needs to do about it

The week began with the release of the annual safety report at Morgan State University, the so-called Clery Report, which must be issued on Oct. 1 by all colleges and universities that receive federal funds. “When you review the statistics, you will note that Morgan State University is a safe campus,” Lance Hatcher, Morgan’s police chief, wrote. But two days later — before most people had even looked at the email that announced the availability of the report, let alone glanced at the document itself — Morgan officials were scrambling to assure students, their parents and a global media audience that “Morgan” and “safe” belong in the same sentence.

Dan Rodricks: At Oriole Park, that sound we had almost forgotten

We had almost completely forgotten that sound — the skull-rattling roar of 46,450 men, women and children inside Oriole Park when one of our guys gets a base hit or one of theirs strikes out. And it’s a bigger, brighter sound in October than in any other baseball month. We had almost forgotten what that’s like. The Orioles were last in the American League Division Series in 2014, but it feels longer-ago than that.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
What Maryland needs to know about cannabis company valuations

Recreational cannabis sales show no signs of slowing down in Maryland. They reached $92 million in August, up from the previous month, and state officials believe they will continue to increase in excess of a billion dollars by 2025. This trajectory shows cannabis has tremendous potential to help drive the state’s economy through job creation and by injecting revenue into neighborhoods. Also, as we’ve seen in other states, the tax revenue from cannabis can be immensely beneficial for community investment, education programs, and social services.

MoCo education can’t be decided by conservative activists

Montgomery County is ground zero in the education culture wars. However, the incursion by conservative activists has been so subtle that people may not see it. The battle is happening in the courts and in attempts by nationally-funded conservative groups to influence local public opinion in advance of the 2024 Board of Education elections. In 2023, three families filed suit against MCPS over a list of approved supplemental texts featuring LGBTQ+ characters.

Read More: MOCO360
Baltimore Skyline
Time to turn up the heat on worker protections

One year ago, Maryland OSHA published a proposed rule for a standard to protect both indoor and outdoor workers from heat stress on the job. The standard was a long time coming. It was required by legislation passed by the General Assembly in March 2020, just as the legislature was shutting down due to COVID. Despite the lengthy runup to the proposal, the proposed rule was sorely inadequate, based on little input from stakeholders and practically unenforceable.

Dogfighting charges reveal a cult of cruelty hidden in plain sight

The dogs fought and died on a bloodstained piece of carpet. I was confused by the word “hooked” as I read through court documents unsealed this week detailing what federal prosecutors said was a long-running dogfighting ring. Then I realized it describes a fight and how an animal plunges its teeth into an opponent after charging onto the carpet square. Combat sometimes lasts more than an hour.

50 years later, Spiro Agnew’s fall deserves to be raised

On a second floor wall of the Baltimore County Historic Courthouse, not far from the men’s restroom, visitors can view a portrait of Spiro Theodore Agnew. This is because the Republican was elected Baltimore County executive in 1962 serving one four-year term. There is no attached explanation of his time leading the county, nor of his subsequent election as Maryland’s governor in 1966 and certainly not of his time as vice president of the United States under Richard Nixon.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Dan Rodricks: Birds and bubbly, Moore and Angelos, carry-on chaos and five other things nobody asked about

Nobody asked me, but nobody in Birdland should be even mildly upset with baseball experts who predict that the Houston Astros — and not the Orioles — will represent the American League in the World Series. The Birds are underdogs, and Orioles fans should be fine with that. Better to be underestimated than overrated, I always say.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Fifth graders in their classroom at school
Kalman Hettleman: State Board of Education hits a grand slam

If you think the Baltimore Orioles are the year’s biggest turnaround surprise, you haven’t been following the fortunes of the Maryland State Department of Education. It was only about four months ago that the State Board of Education was singing the praises of the beleaguered state superintendent. All the while, as I’ve reported in these pages, implementation of the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future was lagging, and Maryland was continuing to fall behind many states in the most critical element of school reform: early literacy.

 

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