Saturday, November 16, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Politics

Montgomery Co. wants to hear from residents about long-term pedestrian plan

According to results from a survey by the Montgomery County Planning Board, just over half of residents surveyed said they are satisfied with conditions as they walk around the county — be it taking their dog for a walk, running errands or waiting for a bus. However, there are proposals to improve what planners call “the pedestrian experience” in the Maryland county.

 

Read More: WTOP
Maryland State Capital Building.
General Assembly bills approach ‘crossover day’ with some ahead of the game, others hanging in the balance

Maryland lawmakers will hit a key deadline Monday that kicks off the final stretch of their annual 90-day session and makes much clearer which bills are likely to pass — or fail — before time runs out. With hundreds of bills in the works, “crossover day” marks the deadline for the House and Senate to pass bills to each other. After Monday, if a bill is still in its first chamber, it will face additional hurdles to be sure of a hearing in the second chamber in the session’s three remaining weeks.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Aerial panorama of Chesapeake Bay Bridge at sunset. The Chesapeake Bay Bridge (known locally as the Bay Bridge) is a major dual-span bridge in the U.S. state of Maryland.
Gov. Moore requesting federal assistance in protecting the Chesapeake Bay from invasive fish species

Governor Wes Moore is federal assistance for the Chesapeake Bay, amid concerns of an increase in invasive fish species, the Governor’s office said Thursday. According to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, the population and value of Maryland’s most important commercial fish has decreased since 2012, which hurts the state economy,

Bill removing marijuana smell as probable cause clears House hurdle

The House of Delegates on Thursday gave preliminary approval to legislation that would bar police from detaining individuals simply because they smelled of marijuana. Following its voice vote, the House could vote as early as Friday on passage of the bill, which states that marijuana’s odor alone gives police neither reasonable suspicion nor probable cause to suspect someone of criminal activity. The smell, however, could still be a factor in an officer’s reasonable suspicion during a traffic stop that a person was driving while impaired by marijuana.

 

Gov. Moore replacing health care provider at Charlotte Hall Veterans Home after reports of abuse and neglect

Gov. Wes Moore on Wednesday blasted a private health care contractor for abusing and neglecting veterans residing in a state-run assisted living and skilled nursing facility, announcing the state has taken steps to terminate the 21-year relationship. The state has paid HMR Maryland LLC hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funds to oversee management and operations of the 454-bed facility going back as far as 2002. The governor said the state will look to hire a contractor to replace HMR.

 

 

Maryland parents call on lawmakers to fix college savings plan

A plan is moving forward to help Maryland parents caught up in the problems with the state’s 529 College Savings plan. The state’s 529 college savings plan, which is a state-sponsored investment plan that enables users to save money for a beneficiary and pay for education expenses, had an error that left hundreds of people unable to take money out of their accounts, due to an interest calculation glitch within the program. Some parents said they were not able to tap the money they saved for years, while others said they lost tens of thousands under the plan.

Read More: WTOP
Del. Reznik leaves General Assembly for Moore administration in Human Services

Del. Kirill Reznik (D-Dist. 39) is leaving his seat in the Maryland House of Delegates to join Gov. Wes Moore’s administration as the new assistant secretary for inter-departmental data Integration for the state Department of Human Services. His vacancy will represent the fourth time this year that Montgomery County’s Democratic Central Committee will select a nominee to fill a General Assembly seat for the vast majority of a four-year term.

 

Read More: MOCO360
Senate to vote on bill opening lookback window for childhood abuse lawsuits

Maryland’s Senate is expected to pass a bill Thursday opening a retroactive “lookback window” that would allow childhood sexual abuse survivors to bring lawsuits even if their claims already expired under a previous statute of limitations. Senate approval would mean the long-sought legislation is likely to pass the full General Assembly this year; the House of Delegates has repeatedly voted in favor of versions of the bill in the past.

 

Gov. Moore’s team projects optimism for his priorities as ‘crossover’ approaches

As a key deadline approaches, many of Gov. Wes Moore’s priorities are making their way through the General Assembly, although several have been altered — some significantly. The Democratic governor’s office is calling their efforts a success, and they believe that by the time the legislature adjourns in early April, they’ll have passed more bills than recent governors did in their first year.

 

Handgun in the holster
Maryland House, Senate advance concealed carry gun bills in response to U.S. Supreme Court ruling

With less than a month left to reshape Maryland’s gun regulations, state lawmakers have advanced bills with differing approaches as they grapple with a U.S. Supreme Court decision that effectively struck down the state’s requirements for a permit to carry a concealed firearm. The court in June issued its decision in New York Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. Bruen, which rendered the concealed-carry policies in New York, Maryland and five other states unconstitutional.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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