Thursday, November 14, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Politics

Congress rolls out $1.7 trillion spending deal in race to Friday deadline

Congress unveiled a $1.7 trillion spending package early Tuesday that would fund the federal government for the rest of the fiscal year, completing the annual process that began this spring when President Biden sent lawmakers his budget request. Biden’s chief budget official in a statement urged Congress to speedily pass the massive measure before a Friday deadline and send it to the president. The omnibus, as it’s known, is likely to be the last significant piece of legislation lawmakers will push through during the 117th Congress.

Federal court invalidates 50-year license for Maryland’s Conowingo Dam, a win for environmental groups

Environmental groups won a victory Tuesday in their fight for more pollution controls on Maryland’s Conowingo Dam. when a federal court invalidated a 50-year license for the hydroelectric dam. By voiding the license, issued last year by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals is sending it back to the agency for further review. Local environmental groups, including Waterkeepers Chesapeake and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, considered the license a missed opportunity to regulate how the dam’s operator manages the polluted sediment trapped behind the dam, which bridges the Susquehanna River between Harford and Cecil counties.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
What is Johnny Olszewski’s political future?

Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski will not pledge to complete his second four-year term, which he won in a landslide election last month. The Dundalk Democrat’s future looks promising, with nearly $1.7 million in his campaign coffers. Olszewski swept into his second four-year term last month with 64% of the vote, handily defeating Republican Pat McDonough, a former delegate. Political observers have raised the possibility that Olszewski may not complete his second term, and may run instead for Maryland’s 2nd District congressional seat if the Democratic incumbent, Rep. C. A. “Dutch” Ruppersberger chooses not to run for reelection in 2024.

Maryland State house with city in Annapolis
Long list of applicants for Luedtke’s seat, plus Md. Dems’ new leadership team and a new lobbying hire

Eleven Democrats have applied for the vacancy representing Montgomery County’s District 14 in the House of Delegates. The seat is about to become vacant now that House Majority Leader Eric Luedtke (D-Montgomery) has been tapped by Gov.-elect Wes Moore (D) to be his chief legislative officer. The governor — and depending on the timing, it’ll either be Moore, who takes office on Jan. 18, or outgoing Gov. Larry Hogan (R) — will appoint the new delegate based on a recommendation from the Montgomery County Democratic Central Committee.

Environmental groups file suit over Maryland’s new stormwater permit for industrial facilities, arguing it’s inadequate

Several regional environmental groups have filed suit against the Maryland Department of the Environment, arguing the latest iteration of its stormwater permit covering hundreds of industrial facilities statewide is insufficient. In three separate suits filed Friday and Monday in Baltimore County Circuit Court, the nonprofits argued that Maryland officials failed to adequately consider factors such as increased rainfall due to climate change while drafting the new permit — and that it won’t do enough to slow pollution flowing into state waterways.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Catholic Church in Maryland concedes to some reforms about priest abuse

The lobbying arm of the Catholic church in Maryland is making a partial concession to legislative reforms that would help victims of priest sexual abuse sue the church decades later. The Maryland Catholic Conference, which represents the Archdiocese of Baltimore, the Archdiocese of Washington and the Diocese of Wilmington, Del., announced Monday it will support legislation to erase the statute of limitations for future victims to sue the church.

Gov. Hogan declares Friday a state holiday; Maryland state offices will close

Gov. Larry Hogan has declared this Friday will be a state holiday for Maryland state government agencies and offices. “This year, I am declaring Dec. 23 as a holiday so that our hard-working employees can spend more time enjoying the holidays with their loved ones,” the outgoing governor said in a news release. “This is just another way to show our appreciation to our dedicated state workers who have worked tirelessly to serve their fellow Marylanders and help us to truly change Maryland for the better.”

With 30 days left in office, Maryland Gov. Hogan reflects on his record and where to go next

Surrounded by pictures, knickknacks and a guitar signed by country music star Alan Jackson in his second floor State House office, Gov. Larry Hogan took stock of his dwindling time as governor. “It’s not that I’m counting, but my calendar has a countdown on it,” Hogan told The Baltimore Sun in an interview Monday. “It says 30 days today.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
On historically diverse Montgomery council, tensions over transparency

Following a historic election in Maryland and across much of the nation, the Montgomery County Council welcomed its most diverse group of incoming members ever this month. At the council’s inauguration, speaker after speaker hailed the history-making slate of council members, who have said they are excited to work with one another, especially on issues that affect marginalized communities in the county. But by the next morning at the all-Democratic new council’s opening session, disputes over equitable representation, transparency and who gets to control policymaking discussions had already emerged, inflamed by backroom disagreements about leadership that ultimately left the council’s two Black members with little structural power.

Banner political notes: New names for Maryland’s top courts; Honors for departing Mosby, Anderson; More people join the Moore administration

Maryland’s two highest courts have new names, as of this week: the Appellate Court of Maryland and the Supreme Court of Maryland. The new names replace the confusing names of the Court of Special Appeals and the Court of Appeals. The Court of Special Appeals was the first level of appeals court in the state, and the Court of Appeals was the highest court — not that it was easy for non-lawyers to tell which was which. Maryland voters overwhelmingly approved the name switcheroo in November’s general election. The new names went into effect at 12:01 a.m. on Wednesday. Along with the courts getting new names, the judges who serve on the highest court got new titles. They’ll be known as justices.

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