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Commentary

Preventing another Joppatowne: Start by rejecting gun violence as ‘fact of life’

Until last week, Joppatowne High School wasn’t especially well known outside Harford County. It is small, with fewer than 900 students, and serves a working-class, majority-minority community. Nearly three-quarters of students there are classified as economically disadvantaged. The most recent newsletter sent home by school administrators featured a warning to follow the county’s restrictions on student cellphones in school (they have to be deactivated during instruction time).

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Kamala Harris channeled Clair Huxtable to counter Donald Trump’s debate falsehoods

Who you consider the winner of the consequential first presidential debate between former president Donald Trump and current Vice President Kamala Harris is likely based on who you liked before the two even took the stage tonight in Philadelphia. But after watching the two spar on ABC, I would give the win to Harris, mostly because she managed not to tell wild bold-faced lies about her opponent’s positions, and because she maintained a silently strong visage that evoked Gen X’s favorite fictional lawyer and mother — “The Cosby Show”'s Clair Huxtable.

Voted printed papers on white surface
Trump, Hogan and other nightmares keeping Maryland Republicans awake

I wondered where all the Trump signs and flags around Annapolis had gone this summer. Now I know. Route 50 between the Bay Bridge and Ocean City is peppered with them. The new ones, “Trump Vance 2024,” are next to the classics, “Trump: Make America Great Again.” They’re in front of businesses and homes, stabbed into the edge of soybean fields and hanging from at least one very tall crane.

Montgomery County shouldn’t pave over a Black community’s past

Today, the strip of River Road that was the subject of a recent ruling by the Maryland Supreme Court is known to most visitors for its cheap gas, fast food and hulking apartment complexes. But tucked between an 18-story condominium building and an auto repair shop is a tiny white church with a long history. When the Macedonia Baptist Church opened more than a century ago in Bethesda, its presence there was far from incongruous.

Despite struggles, it’s back to school for Maryland’s homeless, too

Two brothers with big dreams were among the more than 15,500 children identified as homeless in Maryland’s public schools last school year, 1.7% of the student body. Together with their parents, they lived in Anne Arundel County, one of the state’s wealthiest jurisdictions, showing homelessness can happen anywhere. “I never imagined in a million years that we would be homeless,” their mother told me. “Life suddenly changed for all of us. We lived out of bags and suitcases.”

Maryland must protect rights of child sex abuse victims

Few horrors in the world rival the pain, fear, shame and guilt felt by children who are sexually abused by adults who have been entrusted with their care. For decades, hundreds of children, if not thousands, in Maryland’s juvenile detention facilities were sexually abused and raped by staff hired by the Department of Juvenile Services.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Pharmacy price-setting boards help big business, not patients

Maryland policymakers have touted the Prescription Drug Affordability Board (PDAB) as their solution to high drug prices. Instead of tackling the root causes, these price-setting boards could exacerbate the dominance of pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) owned pharmacies at the expense of community pharmacies. PBMs are supposed to help lower patient costs but often enrich themselves at the expense of patients and community pharmacies.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Harris can win the debate by making it about who’s hopeful — and normal

Just days before what might be the only debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump, business leaders and local officials here at the Eastern Montgomery County Chamber of Commerce luncheon were not eager to talk about the choice before the country. They gathered on a sunny Thursday afternoon to hear from their Democratic member of Congress, Rep. Madeleine Dean.

West Baltimore residents are right. Parts of proposed bike trail are dangerous.

As a relatively new Baltimore resident and a dedicated cyclist, I read your story regarding bike trails in western Baltimore with interest and after reading, decided to ride out and see the area for myself. That made for an interesting morning. The ride from my apartment in Federal Hill to Druid Hill Park is not a very bicycle-friendly ride, but traffic was light, so no problems.

Let’s make Maryland’s energy future a success

Maryland is facing an unprecedented energy challenge. Our state’s growing dependence on aging infrastructure, coupled with rising demand from new industries like data centers and electric vehicles, has put enormous pressure on our power grid. As we grapple with these realities, the Maryland Piedmont Reliability Project (MPRP) has been proposed as a stopgap solution to shore up our grid’s reliability.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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