Monday, November 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
Baltimore, MD
55°
Cloudy
FOLLOW US:

Commentary

We’ve come a long way in HIV health care, but much more is still needed

I came to Baltimore as a medical student in 1995 in the midst of a raging deadly syndemic of substance use (heroin and crack cocaine), syphilis, hepatitis C and HIV infection. Toward the end of my four years of medical school, early, effective antiretroviral treatment “cocktails” became available, and the near certainty of death became less the norm and more an exception. For nearly two decades as an adult and pediatric infectious diseases specialist, I have provided HIV care to a majority Black patient population, spanning from infants to seniors, in Baltimore.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Conditions and conscience, fishing less because of climate change

My old friend Calvert Bregel, gone 12 years now, used to treat me to trips on his great boat, the Miss Demeanor, to fish for Chesapeake striped bass — rockfish, as they are known around here — and we had many merry times on the bay. With Bill Burton, who was for decades the outdoors writer of the bygone Evening Sun, we caught lots of fish and released most. Now and then, we took a rockfish home for supper, but the idea was more camaraderie than consumption.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Biden’s infrastructure law 2 years in

Nov. 15 marked the second anniversary of the signing into law of the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. The scale of this infusion of federal funds — $1.2 trillion – brings to mind major historic investments in the nation’s past: the building of the Erie Canal early in the 19th century; the rural electrification program during the Great Depression; the Interstate Highway System initiated in the 1950s.

Dan Rodricks: Harborplace history, holiday shopping, homemade dog food and other things nobody asked for

Nobody asked me, but people who claim that the late James Rouse faced virtually no opposition when he set out to build Harborplace 40-plus years ago are just plain wrong. I’ve seen this claim made in defense of Baltimore-based developer David Bramble and his plan to remake Harborplace with four large buildings, including apartment towers. “Bet y’all didn’t ask or question Jim Rouse and his vision,” a woman wrote on Facebook.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Dangerous Maryland gun ruling deserves full (4th) court press

In the next week, Maryland Attorney General Anthony G. Brown is expected to decide how best to deal with the Nov. 21 federal appeals court decision overturning key provisions in a decade-old gun safety law requiring handgun purchasers be fingerprinted, trained and face a waiting period of up to 30 days. A three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit ruled that these restrictions failed the standard set by the U.S. Supreme Court in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen last year that such limits must be “consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore Skyline
The lesson for Baltimore of inclusionary housing: Location matters (a lot)

It’s been observed before, but it’s worth noting again: Many of Baltimore’s worst problems stem from concentrated poverty. There are broad swathes of the city where a high percentage of people live below the poverty threshold. The effect? People become isolated. Businesses do not thrive, so it’s difficult to find employment. Social cohesion suffers. Health problems manifest. There is increased crime, gun violence and addiction. Schools become places of potential respite for youngsters instead of places of learning.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Incremental change is sound approach for FCPS redistricting

When confronted with a vexing and evolving problem, managers are sometimes tempted to go for the big solution, to bite the bullet and create a plan that will fix the problem for several years, rather than make incremental change. When the problem is simply a matter of numbers, that can sometimes be the right path. But when the problem involves people, the big idea can be disruptive and divisive.

Josh Kurtz: A sobering analysis for Democrats helps illuminate some of the party’s internal strife in Md.

One of the great things about working at Roll Call, the Capitol Hill newspaper, was the constant stream of candidates for U.S. House and Senate who would come by for interviews. When I was there, from 2002 to 2010, Roll Call shared offices with The Rothenberg Political Report. Getting grilled by our reporters and the Rothenberg folks became part of the ritual for congressional contenders on their visits to Washington, D.C., along with meetings with party leaders, campaign strategists, interest groups, lobbyists, and donors.

How Baltimore students feel about poor classroom conditions

Students tell Hopkins researchers about impact on their lives and education And I know, maybe, it’ll probably be a little bit more expensive, but at the same time, it’s, “How much do you care about the student?” That comment came from Kendra, an 18-year-old Baltimore City Public Schools student who participated in one of 187 interviews conducted and analyzed by the Nobody Asked Me research team in the School of Education at Johns Hopkins University.

Can elected officials resist the lure of more online betting to balance Md.’s budget?

For anyone suffering from addiction, denial is the easiest way to avoid unpleasant truths. Unless one admits to an addiction, it will never be addressed. So it is with gambling addiction, but so it also is with the Maryland General Assembly’s desire to find the easiest possible fix to help balance projected budget deficits. And, unfortunately, the two circumstances may soon align as lawmakers return to Annapolis in January with a need to fill some budgetary holes.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

The Morning Rundown

We’re staying up to the minute on the issues shaping the future. Join us on the newsletter of choice for Maryland politicos and business leaders. It’s always free to join and never a hassle to leave. See you on the inside.