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Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman sworn in to second term at Crownsville Hospital Center

County Executive Steuart Pittman was sworn-in to a second term Monday at Crownsville Hospital Memorial Park, a location specifically chosen to represent what the Democrat hopes to achieve over the next four years. Thanks to Pittman’s leadership, the long-abandoned hospital buildings, riddled with toxic chemicals, were transferred to county ownership and are set to become a hallmark project of his second term. Pittman plans to transform the property — after extensive remediation — into a nonprofit incubation center, a hub for behavioral health resources and a memorial to those who were mistreated at the site.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Cassilly comes home to serve as Harford County executive

Former state Sen. Robert Cassilly (R) said one of the first notes he received Monday before his swearing-in ceremony as Harford County executive was a congratulatory text message from Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City). “Well, I’m not a senator. I’m not even the county executive. I’m not a soldier. I’m not a diplomat. I’m just Bob,” the lifelong Republican recalled when talking to his wife Monday morning. “I’m going to enjoy this for like three hours” before the inaugural ceremony at Harford Community College.

After narrow win and a super-short transition, Fitzwater readies an aggressive agenda in Frederick

The next phase of Frederick County’s relatively young experiment with charter government began on Monday, with the swearing-in of new County Executive Jessica Fitzwater (D) and the seven members of the county council. Fitzwater, 39, becomes the second county executive in Frederick history, taking over from Democrat Jan Gardner, who was termed out after eight years on the job. Frederick is the only county in the state to have elected women as county executives back-to-back — though Baltimore City had three women serve consecutive terms as mayor from 2007 to 2019.

In school board races, Wicomico County led surge of social conservatives with final tally

Five socially conservative school board candidates in Maryland who were leading just after election night ended up losing when the counting of mail-in and provisional ballots was concluded this week. Those changes meant that 20 of the 41 socially conservative candidates identified by Capital News Service came out ahead in their races, down from 25 right after last month’s election, according to unofficial results posted on the Maryland Board of Elections website.

Read More: Delmarva Now
Nick Mosby releases letter to Mayor criticizing veto of council pension bill

Baltimore City Council President Nick Mosby released a letter to Mayor Brandon Scott on Monday that criticized his veto of a bill that would allow City Council members to be eligible for pensions in eight years rather than 12. Mosby said the veto represented a missed opportunity to attract qualified people to run for office. He noted that it would have aligned the pension system with the term limits question passed by voters in November.

Read More: WBAL
After 8 years, Baltimore hoping to have a reliable ally in Annapolis with Democrat Wes Moore as governor

Since the start of his campaign, Gov.-elect Wes Moore has stood firm in his call to be a partner to Baltimore as he prepares to move from his adopted home to the state capital early next year. If Democrats statewide relish having one of their own occupying the state’s most powerful office after eight years of Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, Baltimoreans in particular see an advantage in having a governor from their city. Moore, 44, was the only Baltimore resident in this year’s nine-person Democratic gubernatorial field. His victory in the general election set the stage for the first Baltimore governor since Martin O’Malley left the office in 2015.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Columbia leaders show support for Columbia Association CEO Lakey Boyd as rumors swirl about her job security

A petition to keep embattled Columbia Association President and Chief Executive Officer Lakey Boyd in office has received more than 570 signatures as of Friday morning, the latest development in a monthslong drama at the nonprofit that serves as the de facto government of Maryland’s second-largest city. Columbia Association board member Dick Boulton, who represents the village of Dorsey’s Search, said Friday that he had been “misquoted” in reports stating the association is conducting an ethics investigation into Boyd’s actions. “[Boyd] is not being investigated by the board for an ethics violation,” Boulton told the Howard County Times on Friday, declining to comment further on personnel matters.

New era set to begin for Baltimore County school board

Baltimore County’s school board will not only have five new members on Tuesday but get new leadership as well. However, the options for experienced leadership are limited. Board members will elect a new chair and vice chair at the beginning of the meeting. Julie Henn and Rod McMillion, who both ran unopposed in the Nov. 8 election, currently hold those positions, respectively. And Henn, who has been the chair for the last year, said on Facebook that she no longer wants the job. In a Nov. 18 post, Henn said she told her colleagues that she’d neither pursue nor accept a nomination to be chair or vice chair.

Political notes: Inauguration dates, more on Lierman’s transition, and women in legislatures

It’s fairly well known that Inauguration Day for Gov.-elect Wes Moore (D) and his running mate, Aruna Miller (D), is Jan. 18, and there will be an inaugural ball and other festivities. But what about Attorney General-elect Anthony Brown (D) and Comptroller-elect Brooke Lierman (D)? Brown is scheduled to be sworn in on the morning of Jan. 3 in the House of Delegates chamber in the State House — where Brown served as a delegate from 1999 to 2007 and as lieutenant governor from 2007 to 2015. There will also be a celebration for Brown, but details have not been finalized. Lierman will be sworn in on Jan. 16, at a time and place to be announced.

Inflation is cutting into states’ big infrastructure windfall

When Ohio transportation officials got the bids back in spring for the next phase of an expansion of Interstate 75 north of Cincinnati, they had a rude awakening. Inflation had driven up the mega-project’s cost by about $100 million above the $171 million state engineers had estimated. Officials decided to redesign the project, break it up into smaller phases and rebid it, putting off construction until the fall of 2023. Ohio transportation officials are getting nearly $2 billion over five years from the $1.2 trillion federal bipartisan infrastructure law. But so far, the money they’ve received “has largely been gobbled up by inflation,” said Matt Bruning, spokesperson for the Ohio Department of Transportation. “It didn’t take all of it, but we’re pretty close to a net sum zero because of it.”

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