Thursday, October 23, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Captured in a metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia primary school, this photograph depicts a typical classroom scene, where an audience of school children were seated on the floor before a teacher at the front of the room, who was reading an illustrated storybook, during one of the scheduled classroom sessions. Assisting the instructor were two female students to her left, and a male student on her right, who was holding up the book, while the seated classmates were raising their hands to answer questions related to the story just read.
2024 session presents opportunities to advance public education goals

The 2024 Maryland General Assembly session presents exciting and important opportunities to continue partnering with a pro-public education governor and to build on the legislature’s commitment to public schools. Educators across the state are dedicated, passionate, professionals daily trying to navigate a historic educator shortage that not only has an effect on academic achievement but also emotional wellness and safety in our schools.

A master plan for Downtown Baltimore

If you were to walk around downtown Baltimore today, you may feel a little uncomfortable. With foot traffic noticeably sparse and storefronts empty, many streets feel somewhat abandoned and unsafe. The environment is missing the level of activity you would expect in a dense urban setting, all of which is the inevitable result of decades of economic decline.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Climate change must be on top of the General Assembly agenda this year

The state budget is likely to be foremost in the minds of Maryland lawmakers, as they head back to Annapolis for their annual 90-day legislative session Wednesday. Not simply because state lawmakers, unlike their counterparts in Congress, are required by law to approve a balanced budget, and increased spending is expected to outpace tax revenue growth, but because so many other popular initiatives are linked to the state’s fiscal health, including Blueprint for Maryland’s Future K-12 education spending and the state’s transportation budget (which faces a potential $3.3 billion imbalance all by itself).

Read More: Baltimore Sun
A riot, not an insurrection: it’s time to stop the hyperbole

An article from the Baltimore Banner in Maryland Reporter’s State Roundup Monday was headlined: Prison and probation: A look at the Marylanders involved in the Jan. 6 insurrection. There is that word again – insurrection. I know this is the favorite tool of the Democrats to try and convince the rest of us that an insurrection took place on Jan. 6, 2021.

Doctor with a stethoscope
Maryland policymakers must protect rare disease patients

Patients living with rare and chronic illnesses are all too familiar with unknowns. Only about 5% of the more than 7,000 known rare diseases have an FDA-approved treatment, meaning that the vast majority of patients, including myself, are living with no treatment for their condition. Many patients in the rare disease community are holding out hope that we’ll be able to access new treatments and cures as they’re researched and developed. Yet, several state and federal policies intended to lower drug prices can have disastrous consequences for rare disease patients.

Two writers find the same story — the Naval Academy in a time of change

Two writers could not be more different than Bruce Fleming and David Poyer. Fleming is a professional rebel, a Naval Academy professor and nonfiction author who tells anyone who will listen how his institution is broken and desperately needs change. Poyer, who graduated from Annapolis in 1971, is best known for a long-running series of naval fiction thrillers about the derring-do career of his Navy hero, Dan Lenson.

Exploring the facts — not the feelings — of single motherhood

When you’re deeply immersed in a project like I am in this one about single motherhood, you find yourself frequently falling down Google rabbit holes, some completely random and others more fruitful. It was during one of the latter that I came across “The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind.”

Busing immigrants to sanctuary cities has gone from gimmick to act of aggression

The increasingly absurd and grossly inhumane conflict over immigration reached a new height of idiocy in recent weeks with the reports that border states are now changing tactics as they continue to ship busloads of undocumented immigrants north to sanctuary cities. As cities like Chicago and New York — their resources to house and feed new arrivals stretched woefully thin — attempt to limit such traffic by regulation or lawsuit, bus operators are being directed by their overseers to drop off their human cargo in the suburbs.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Steuart Pittman: A more equitable housing future for Anne Arundel County

Housing instability is the primary portal to poverty for families in our region. Prices are soaring, and so are evictions. Small business owners can’t fill jobs if no housing is accessible to their workers. Local governments must act. I worked in housing advocacy from the mid-’80s to the mid-’90s and know it’s a frustrating story: same problems, same solutions and same political obstacles to implementing the solutions.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

The Morning Rundown

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