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Politics

A $641K DoD grant reinstated Maryland’s DefTech Center for defense innovation

Entrepreneurs seeking to innovate in the mid-Atlantic’s aerospace and defense sector now have some extra consolidated support thanks to the State of Maryland and federal government. The U.S. Department of Defense’s (DoD) Office of Local Defense Community Cooperation granted the Maryland Department of Commerce $641, 573, with part of the funds being used to restart the Defense Commercialization (DefTech) Center. The resurrected program will now be administered by the Maryland Technology Development Corporation (TEDCO), the state-connected investment vehicle for tech companies across the state.

Crayons beside child coloring
Moore’s promise of free pre-K looks to balance cost, resources and quality learning

Gov-elect Wes Moore (D) has a laundry list of plans for Maryland. Moore wants to give students an option to be paid to complete a year of service after high school, raise the minimum wage to $15 this year instead of the scheduled increase in 2025 and support small businesses through modernizing the regulation process. One of his focuses, which he discussed repeatedly during his campaign, is to provide free pre-kindergarten for all of the state’s three- and four- year olds in need.

Maryland AG files suit against St. Mary’s sewer authority over continued spills; one sickened oyster eaters in Virginia last year

The Maryland Attorney General’s office filed suit Thursday against the St. Mary’s County Metropolitan Commission — the county’s sewer authority — over continued sewage spills, requesting a financial penalty and a court order requiring sewer system upgrades. “We have charged MetCom with multiple violations of the most fundamental laws that protect public health and the environment,” Attorney General Brian Frosh said in a statement. “Releasing raw sewage could not be more dangerous. We will hold them accountable.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan teases presidential bid, reflects on tenure

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan further teased his presidential ambitions Wednesday, throwing himself a fundraising party with supporters at a casino and taking a victory lap on his two terms as a popular Republican governor in a deeply Democratic state. At an event that celebrated his past eight years and contemplated his political future, the governor laid out his case for a White House run before 1,500 people packed into a ballroom at Maryland Live Casino and Hotel, but he stopped short of declaring a candidacy.

Baltimore judge reprimanded for political contributions, failing to cooperate with disciplinary authorities

The Maryland Commission on Judicial Disabilities has issued a reprimand to a Baltimore judge for making political contributions and failing to cooperate with disciplinary authorities. District Judge Flynn M. Owens donated $50 in 2021 to Maryland Comptroller Peter Franchot, who ran for governor and lost. Owens then contributed $100 in 2022 to Thiru Vignarajah, a former Maryland deputy attorney general who unsuccessfully ran for Baltimore state’s attorney, according to campaign finance disclosure reports.

Divided OC Council Approves E-Bike Rentals

A divided council this week agreed to drafting an ordinance that would, if approved, allow for the rental of electric bicycles, or e-bikes, in the resort. For the last couple of months, the Mayor and Council have been wrestling with several issues related to the proliferation of e-bikes. In 2020, the Mayor and Council narrowly passed an ordinance prohibiting all classes of e-bikes on the Boardwalk at all times, including the hours when regular bicycles and other pedal-assisted vehicles are allowed.

Mayors of Hagerstown, Ocean City join Moore-Miller transition team

A pair of Maryland mayors, one from the Eastern Shore and one from Western Maryland, are helping Wes Moore as he prepares to be the state’s next governor. Hagerstown Mayor Emily Keller and Ocean City Mayor Rick Meehan are the only two current mayors on the 26-member steering committee, comprised of an assortment of individuals from both the public and private sectors. Keller said the committee held its first meeting on Nov. 21.

Read More: Herald Mail
Baltimore mayor vetoes bill that would make city officials pension-eligible after 8 years instead of 12

Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott has vetoed a bill that would make the city’s elected officials eligible for a pension after eight years instead of the current 12. The veto, only Scott’s second since taking office, was delivered Wednesday, shortly after the city’s Board of Ethics implored him via a letter to delay making a decision on the matter until the board could issue an ethics opinion. The board cited a possible violation of the city’s ethics ordinance by the members of the City Council.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Jessica Haire spent more than $2.2 million in failed bid to win Anne Arundel County executive seat

Republican County Council member Jessica Haire spent more than $2.2 million over the past two years on her failed bid to defeat incumbent County Executive Steuart Pittman, according to campaign finance documents. Pittman, a Democrat, spent about $1.6 million on the race over the same period, from January 2021 through Nov. 15, the finance reports show. He won reelection by more than 15,000 votes over Haire, a first-term legislator from Edgewater, thanks to a wave of support among mail-in voters. He will be inaugurated for his second four-year term on Dec. 5 at Crownsville Hospital Park.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
‘Very little hope at this point’: Protests against proposed Johns Hopkins armed police force continue but with less steam

“A few minutes after 1 p.m. we’re going to start marching,” a faculty member announced to a crowd of about 50 on the Johns Hopkins University campus Wednesday afternoon. The group had gathered to protest the proposed creation of a private armed university police force. “Who wants the bullhorn?” she asked. “I don’t want it.” The group followed a path around the Homewood campus, occasionally chanting and stopping to invite protesters to speak through the megaphone.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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