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Commentary

Brooklyn Homes aftermath: Let the accountability begin

It comes as no surprise that the after-action report regarding the Brooklyn Homes mass shooting on July 2 offered evidence of police indifference toward the community. Clearly, some individuals responsible for public safety in this city demonstrated a stunning level of disinterest as crowds gathered for Brooklyn Day, an annual event for which the Southern District was ill-prepared.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Why I won’t miss summer

Remember when you couldn’t wait for the first day of summer? “No more pencils, no more books. No more teacher’s dirty looks.” Suddenly the stress of exams and the burden of homework were gone. There was no alarm clock, no rush to catch the school bus. Instead of dodging that scary bully on the recess yard, you’d leap at trips to the beach, the local pool or the amusement park.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Three baseballs sit in a field of turfgrass at Camp Nubability's annual kids camp for limb different children. This image was taken by one of the camp coaches, Caitlin Conner.
Jon Meoli: Inside how the Orioles’ minor league pitching program is developing major league arms

Armed with reams of minor league pitch data, Lance Brozdowski sat down last month and dug into a season’s worth of emerging trends. The Orioles’ full-season minor league pitchers, he found, were among the leaders in ERA and led all organizations in fielding-independent pitching (FIP), a statistic that replicates a pitcher’s ERA based on facets of performance within his control—strikeouts, walks, and home runs allowed.

Maryland Democrats press advantage; Republicans must rebuild

Labor Day marked the unofficial end of summer and the start of a patently uneven election season for Democrats and Republicans in Maryland. On their end, Democrats enter the fall still enjoying their electoral mandate and regained single-party rule. Their power is bound only by the limits of voter preferences, the looming structural deficit and their own political will.

Cameras are worth having in special education classrooms

After hearing about resistance from teachers and opposition from the system’s top staff, the Frederick County Board of Education has postponed a decision on the proposal to install cameras in some special education classrooms. This is not an easy decision, but installing the cameras is one the board should support. Having cameras in classrooms would help reassure the parents of special education students that their children are being protected by the system from potential abuses.

BGE investment in natural gas, and accompanying rate increase, a hot mess

This week’s record-setting heat wave — with the potential for triple-digit high temperatures in Baltimore — would seem the perfect backdrop to ponder Baltimore Gas and Electric’s proposed three-year rate hike, which is projected to hit consumers by an average of $810 annually per household by 2026. Energy prices are rising generally, of course, but it’s fair to question the estimated $1.8 billion BGE intends to invest in natural gas and whether a multiyear approach to rate-setting is even appropriate.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Dan Rodricks: Bullets, bicycles and more of Baltimore’s dissonance over Labor Day weekend

Was there ever a weekend like this? On Friday evening, gunfire erupted in Baltimore again, this time stopping a high school football game between a private school team from Baltimore County and one of the city’s best public school teams. It was a sudden horror, traumatizing for anyone who was there, and another setback for the city.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Enhancing Ben Cardin’s cancer-fighting legacy

In the battle against cancer, every victory counts, and Ben Cardin, Maryland’s Senior U.S. senator, is perhaps more familiar than anyone with these triumphs. Over his three decades on Capitol Hill, Sen. Cardin has been a tireless advocate for establishing and expanding access to cancer screenings. We know that prompt detection can make the difference between successful treatment and premature death — that’s why it is not an exaggeration to say that the senator’s legislative efforts over the years have saved countless lives, and why his latest effort holds the promise to save many more.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore and the birth of organized labor: a Labor Day story tradition

The history of organized labor in the United States is one of struggle against seemingly hopeless odds, with victories often decades in the making. It’s a history in which Baltimore plays a proud part. In fact, the city can lay some claim as the birthplace of the national organized labor movement, more than 150 years ago. We recount the tale each year, our own Labor Day tradition.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
If gun violence is a disease, Annapolis is about to get its shot

A 16-year-old was shot to death in Annapolis over the summer. The death of Robert Clark on a July night near his home in the Bywater neighborhood remains unsolved. It is a tragedy for those who knew and loved him, but also for Annapolis as a whole. Maryland’s state capital is not an overly violent place, most days. There are about 11 shootings a year, with an average of one homicide every three months. Sometimes the pace is slower, sometimes faster.

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