Wednesday, November 5, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Hang up on this flawed argument about the Telephone Solicitations Act

In his op-ed (‘‘Maryland businesses under threat,’ March 26, 2024), Doug Gansler grossly misrepresents the effects of a recent Maryland Supreme Court decision as it relates to the Maryland Telephone Solicitations Act (MTSA) and its application to calls from customers to businesses. In addition, Mr. Gansler has found someone to introduce an amendment to pending legislation, House Bill 1228, that would effectively overturn the Supreme Court’s decision and put Maryland consumers in harm’s way.

Electric morning
Support for critical infrastructure bill is a vote for economic growth

The bipartisan Critical Infrastructure Streamlining Act of 2024, Senate Bill 474, accomplishes a simple but important task that will ensure Maryland’s economy is poised for growth in essential sectors like technology, health care and national security. It clarifies and streamlines red tape to ensure that critical facilities have emergency backup power, while maintaining our state’s strict environmental standards.

Welcome to UB Law, Dean Reed

LaVonda N. Reed will become the new dean of the University of Baltimore School of Law beginning July 1. We would like to take this opportunity to welcome UB law’s first woman dean to Baltimore, and we wish her all the best in her new endeavor. Reed is currently the dean of the Georgia State University College of Law in Atlanta, where she has served since 2021.

Despite fears, supply-chain crisis from Key Bridge collapse can be averted

The haunting videos and images of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsing into the Patapsco River are powerful and terrifying. The world will never be able to unsee them. Combined with the 2021 snapshots of container ships lining up at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California, these images will become iconic tools in teaching supply-chain management for years to come.

O’s new owner can lead Baltimore to victory

Not to put too fine a point on it, but boy, does Baltimore need the good feelings that come with an Orioles Opening Day right about now. From Tuesday’s traumatic bridge collapse to the more everyday challenges of concentrated poverty, drug addiction, crime and urban blight, today’s home opener against the Angels — assuming weather permits — looms large. And not just as a distraction from unhappy circumstances.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
The Key Bridge butterfly effect lands on the Bay Bridge first. Where will it go next?

Jim Moran is worried about the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. Like all of us, he sees the tragedy of the Francis Scott Key Bridge disaster — the loss of life, the major disruption to traffic and the gigantic injection of chaos into the local economy. Moran is a Queen Anne’s County commissioner, though, and his vantage point across the Chesapeake puts the Bay Bridge at the forefront of his “what-ifs.”

a close up of a police car with its lights on
Three recommendations for holistic juvenile justice reform

Like many states and local jurisdictions, Maryland has experienced a spike in auto thefts, carjacking, possession and use of firearms, and other violent and nonviolent offenses. While the data reflects that adults still represent the bulk of arrests for violent crimes, a significant number of these offenses have been perpetrated by juveniles..

Read More: Baltimore Sun
The Key Bridge vanishes, and Maryland suddenly loses another landmark

We all drive, or at least most of us do. Here’s a funny thing about that. In the age of the automobile, when a car is an extension of ourselves, where you drive is probably a bigger part of what defines you than what you drive. If you crossed the Francis Scott Key Bridge daily on your way to work and back, the 1.6-mile erector set confection that served as an entrance to the outer harbor was a frame of reference on the world.

Youth ‘Thrive’ in new Maryland violence reduction initiative

In early 2023 an increase in serious crime by young people was creating panic in Baltimore and throughout Maryland. While the hysteria may have been somewhat exaggerated, data from the first quarter of the year did show a significant uptick in some kinds of youth crime, including serious offenses like juvenile-involved shootings and armed robberies.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland energy efficiency program must evolve with the times

For nearly two decades, the EmPOWER program has served Maryland well. By helping residents and businesses access and install more efficient appliances in their homes and buildings, the popular program has saved ratepayers in the state more than $4 billion, helped thousands of low-income households lower their utility bills, reduced strain on the power grid and created thousands of jobs.

The Morning Rundown

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