Wednesday, October 30, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Opinion: Upon further review, let’s not be paranoid about Baltimore Orioles leaving

The public statement issued Monday by John Angelos, chair and CEO of the Baltimore Orioles, offered no ifs, ands or buts about the future of the baseball franchise: “As I have said before, as long as Fort McHenry is standing watch over the Inner Harbor, the Orioles will remain in Baltimore.” He goes on the explain his family’s deep roots in the city and how hundreds of millions of dollars in new state investment in Oriole Park at Camden Yards approved just two months earlier is a key factor to keeping the ballclub here for “generations to come.” The message is clear, the logic is sound, and Mr. Angelos is likely sincere.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Gerson: How the gay rights movement found such stunning success

In D.C. — and everywhere else, I suspect, with a Bohemian pulse — Pride celebrations are in full swing. Some people who are gay have come to resent the relentlessly commercial aspects of the season, reflected in Pride bocce ball sets from Target and Pride dog bandanas from Walmart. But nothing important in America is not monetized. And gay rights are easily the most dramatically successful social movement of the past few decades. This is not to say gay life in America is all rainbows. Many LGBTQ youths still face homelessness and are drawn to the false, cruel consolation of suicide.

juneteenth, slavery, emancipation
Dayhoff: Juneteenth Independence Day, a jubilee to be celebrated

Next weekend, on June 18, festivities are planned at the Carroll Arts Center, 91 West Main Street, in Westminster, to celebrate Juneteenth in Carroll County. From noon to 4 p.m., there will be music, entertainment, food, activities for children, panel discussions, history and informational programs. The Juneteenth festival will take place within walking distance of the annual Westminster Beer and BBQfestival. It will be a day not to miss coming in Westminster with your friends, family and neighbors.

Maryland’s next governor will have resources to upgrade transit

A recent editorial in The Baltimore Sun suggested that Gov. Larry Hogan left the door open to reviving the Red Line in Baltimore but asserted “there is no pot of cash sitting around” to pay for such a project. We say, don’t give up so easily (”Surprise! Gov. Hogan opens door to Red Line revival (but only slightly),” June 6)! Maryland spends about $5 billion annually on transportation using a combination of state and federal funding. Maryland’s next governor will have wide discretion in how we allocate that transportation budget and we will urge the next administration to reprioritize transit, including rejuvenating the Red Line, the planned east-west rail line in Baltimore.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Balaji: Maryland must take action to support women seeking abortion

Following the leak of a draft Supreme Court order overturning Roe v. Wade, 26 states are expected to ban or restrict abortion. This reversal would increase the number of unsafe abortions, resulting in complications and an estimated 21% increase in pregnancy-related deaths in the U.S. To combat this, Maryland must not only maintain access to safe and legal abortion for its own citizens, but also support those who may travel from other states to seek an abortion within its borders.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Personal finance class should be required in high school

One of the best gifts state and local lawmakers and teachers can give graduating high school students is a solid financial education. Michigan is poised to become the 14th state to mandate a personal finance course before students graduate high school. This should be a requirement around the country. Every student graduating from a public high school should have to take at least one semester of basic personal finance.

Police officer putting handcuffs on another person
It’s getting dangerous out there – for politicians seen as coddling criminals

Tuesday’s recall of District Attorney Chesa Boudin by voters in San Francisco, one of the nation’s most liberal cities, may be the best demonstration yet that a lot of Americans, including progressives, are frustrated by crime or at least a perception that criminals are not being prosecuted aggressively. That may not bode well for Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, who has been dogged by a slew of controversies including, just to name the most recent, a severely understaffed team of prosecutors.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Winegrad: Badmouthing and falsehoods part of the environmental fight

Even though I grew up an urban kid in downtown Annapolis, I was fascinated by wildlife. Spurred by accidentally learning about the Holocaust in sixth grade, I wanted to become an attorney and fight injustices. After graduating from law school in 1969, this led to my first real job with the National Wildlife Federation in Washington as an environmental advocate. Since then, I’ve engaged in a lifelong crusade to protect the natural world and all of God’s creatures. It has not been an easy path. Working for change, especially against entrenched economic interests, is fraught with difficult challenges.

Private meetings on seclusion, restraint would undercut trust

A Blue Ribbon Task Force, created to examine the disgraced special education programs in Frederick County Public Schools, has made an understandable but tragic mistake. The group has decided that its meetings will not be open to the public. This is a group specifically formed to restore public confidence in the district’s special education programs after the U.S. Justice Department exposed severe problems in the way children were treated. The district was forced to sign a consent decree, pledging to improve.

Minnich: Today’s youth will carry forward social justice, enlightenment

This is the part of year for time travels of the personal sort as graduations, recitals, weddings, and other transitions take us into the moment, back down roads of memories, and forward into the hopes of those we care about. For a suspended few hours, we leave the world of today’s tumult and wander along paths almost covered with the weeds of history. Memories applied in the context of the dreams of an emerging generation sprout new blooms of hope in even the most worn and neglected gardens.

The Morning Rundown

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