Tuesday, November 26, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

To fix our juvenile justice system, we need accountability for offenders

At our Oct. 30 County Council Public Safety Committee briefing on juvenile justice and crime, I discussed a recent case in which a teenager allegedly stole vehicles on more than one occasion, was apprehended by County Police multiple times, and each time was released by the State’s Department of Juvenile Services back into the community. Too often when considering juveniles who are alleged to have committed a crime, we attempt to minimize the community impact of these incidents.

Read More: MOCO360
My college memories at Morgan State University will always include the shootings

As a Morgan State University graduate with the spring class of 2023, I’ve asked myself whether the gun violence that occurred on or near campus in recent years ruined my student experience. I can’t truthfully say it did. I still successfully pursued my studies, made friends, made professional connections, found my place in the community and followed my passion in starting a journalism career.

War overseas has local repercussions

On a nice fall day, the people of Frederick were going about their businesses as usual. All of a sudden, the news hit like a bolt from the blue: Hamas attacked Israel and killed 1,400 men women and children and took nearly 300 as hostages. It was alarming. The United States has been helping to stop aggression in Ukraine. Both Ukraine and Israel are democracies. Their leaders are voted in and out by their people, free to criticize their political leaders.

 

In the midst of bounty, too many Marylanders go hungry. Here’s how you can help.

At the Mt. Moriah Baptist Church food pantry in Walbrook Junction, special care was taken to have at least 130 turkeys ready for distribution one week before Thanksgiving, with some whole chickens as a backup. Such was the certainty that neighbors would need help for the holiday. As retired kindergarten teacher Twelvatine Nesbitt, the pantry’s manager, will tell you, there is no shortage of need.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Dan Rodricks: Organizing Baltimore’s Christmas parade, the Kerrs go above and beyond the call of civic duty

Tom Kerr was 30 years old in the spring of 1973 when the legendary William Donald Schaefer, then in his first term as mayor of Baltimore, called and told him he wanted Kerr to organize a Christmas parade. “And you didn’t say ‘no’ to Mayor Schaefer,” Kerr says, reminding me — not that I needed it — that WDS was a strong-willed and demanding mayor who could explode into shards of nasty if you crossed him.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland, learn from Colorado: Price controls on drugs can do more harm than good

In May 2019, Maryland became the first state to establish a board to set drug prices. But nearly five years later, the board still hasn’t determined which medicines deserve limits or how to apply them. Maryland was smart not to rush. There’s a distinct danger that cutting prices by government decree through a politically appointed Prescription Drug Affordability Board (PDAB) will do more harm than good. That’s certainly what Colorado is learning.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore architect offers Harborplace option: more park space, less-obtrusive towers

I have wanted to be an architect since I was a kid. More than 60 years later, I am proud to have chosen this profession because I believe that each of us should do whatever we can to leave the world better than we found it. And architects naturally envision a better future and balance that vision with reality to create positive change. I have had the great honor to work with amazing creative people and enlightened clients to improve life in our beloved city through design. I am proud of our legacy as architects and hopeful for the future of our city.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Business travelers: Board the next train instead of plane to significantly lower carbon emissions

Not since the glory days of the B&O Railroad has Baltimore been so much in the limelight of railroading as it has recently. Last week, it was President Joe Biden’s announcement of $16.4 billion in spending on Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor, a big chunk of which is headed to Charm City. On Monday, top Biden administration officials were back to talk with Gov. Wes Moore about a secondary benefit of all that spending including the $4.7 billion committed to create a new Frederick Douglass Tunnel through Baltimore — the chance to put a lot of young people on the right track toward high-paying transportation jobs (as a “workforce hub”) connected to such public investment.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Student board member’s power should be local decision

State Sen. Karen Lewis Young said she plans to propose a bill giving student members of county school boards in the state a much broader baseline for voting rights. Lewis Young, a Democrat, said she and Democratic Del. Kris Fair want to propose legislation to require all student members of local school boards to have at least the same voting rights as the student member of the Maryland State Board of Education.

Wes Moore’s Efforts to End Racial Gap Earn Him the NUL President’s Award

“The racial wealth gap is intentional. It was created. It was created by the Homestead Act. It was created by urban redlining. It was created by the inequitable distribution of the GI bill. It was created by unfair appraisal values. It was created by racist procurement policies. The racial wealth gap was created by the misguided choices of people in power.

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