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Mayor Scott plans to enforce Baltimore’s youth curfew. Here’s what you need to know

Baltimore plans to resume enforcement of an evening curfew on young residents, a response from Mayor Brandon Scott to surging youth gun violence and the most violent start to a year for teens since at least 2015. The controversial tool has been on Baltimore’s books for more than 20 years but enforced only sporadically. Since the mayor’s announcement Sunday night that the city is “going back to the old days” to enforce curfews, the decision has drawn fire from numerous angles – from advocates for criminal justice reform to the police union to high school students.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore makes minimum wage increase, tax credits, Child Victims Act first bills signed into law

Gov. Wes Moore, in his first act of signing bills into law, officially pushed measures over the finish line that will raise the state minimum wage to $15 ahead of schedule, expand tax credits for families with low incomes and allow more survivors of child sexual abuse to sue those who abused them. Moore’s signature on those and dozens of other bills Tuesday marked the completion of some of the first-year Democratic governor’s top priorities and one, the Child Victims Act, that advocates and lawmakers had pushed for aggressively after years of coming up short.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Md. Republicans demanded the speaker step aside. Black lawmakers demand an apology.

Ten minutes before midnight on Monday, the decorous Maryland House of Delegates veered into disorder. Republicans in the minority, furious the Democratic House speaker would not let them talk, demanded that she cede control of the chamber. More than two dozen GOP members marched to the room’s exit in protest, and one yelled into his microphone.

Gov. Moore to court philanthropists in U.K. during first overseas trip

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) will take his first international trip as governor this week, leaving for London for unspecified trade meetings and to give a keynote speech at forum for global philanthropists, his office said Tuesday. Moore’s speech to the Skoll World Forum in Oxford will be Thursday evening, followed by meetings with companies Friday, his staff said.

Lawmakers grant new powers to Maryland Attorney General’s Office

The Maryland Attorney General’s Office is set to receive broad new powers, including the authority to prosecute police-involved deaths, under a set of bills that passed out of the General Assembly this session. The office will also be able to investigate and sue over civil rights violations in housing, employment, public accommodations and leasing of commercial property, which was another legislative priority for Attorney General Anthony Brown when he took over the office this year.

 

Governor announces $92 million in grants to expand broadband access

Governor Wes Moore last week announced that Maryland is awarding nearly $92 million to expand high-speed internet access to an estimated 14,500 households and businesses across the state through Connect Maryland, an initiative to close the digital divide through the Office of Statewide Broadband. The Connect Maryland Network Infrastructure Grant Program made 35 awards to Internet Service Providers and local jurisdictions to construct new broadband networks to service unserved households.

 

Scenes from sine die: Seersucker, smiles and swift voting

Maryland lawmakers showed up to their final official day of work on Monday, a marathon of last-minute lawmaking as a midnight deadline to adjourn approached. The last day of the 90-day Maryland General Assembly session is generally a chaotic affair, as lawmakers go in and out of sessions in their chambers, punctuated by quick and impromptu committee voting sessions. Lobbyists and advocates make last-minute pushes for bills that still hang in the balance.

Legislators pass gun control, cannabis bills in last day; parties at odds in House’s final moments

The General Assembly wrapped up its session Monday with a marathon of lawmaking, passing hundreds of bills mostly with ease, though there were spurts of tension right at the midnight deadline, as well as earlier in the day, around proposed laws to control gun ownership and grapple with the impending legalization of recreational cannabis. Entering the final day, the Democratic supermajorities in Annapolis had already approved landmark bills on topics like abortion access and civil remedies for victims of child sexual abuse.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland House erupts in chaos with just moments left in session as disgruntled Republicans shout at speaker

After a 90-day session largely devoted to Democratic priorities, the Maryland House of Delegates devolved into a Republican-led shouting match with just six minutes before the General Assembly adjourned for the year. With a fresh term, an ally in Democratic Gov. Wes Moore and new seats gained by the party following the 2022 general election, the members of the party in control of the General Assembly had focused their eyes on their priorities this session.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Farmers would get green boost with composting bills headed to Wes Moore’s desk. Here’s how

For farmers like Keith Ohlinger, composting has been a way of life on his 22-acre property, and now a bill awaiting Gov. Wes Moore’s signature aims to expand a zero-waste future. As the owner and operator of Howard County’s Porch View Farm LLC, reusing nearly all waste he and his family creates for the good of his tree and livestock farm has centered on compost created through a process of balancing nitrogen-rich, or “green” items, like some food scraps and used tea bags, and carbon rich, or “brown” items, like dry leaves and plants along with paper products.

Read More: DelMarvaNow

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