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Hogan will allow bill banning seclusion to become law

A bill banning seclusion in Maryland public schools will become law without Gov. Larry Hogan’s signature, he announced Friday. House Bill 1255 will take effect July 1. It will place strict limits on the use of seclusion in nonpublic schools and institute more stringent requirements on how all districts track and report instances of physical restraint.

Md. Court of Appeals set to hear arguments over redistricting

Maryland state elections officials say Aug. 16 is the latest possible date for this year’s primary election, if the state’s highest court decides to accept challenges to the legislative redistricting map. The Court of Appeals has scheduled arguments for Wednesday. The court will consider a Republican challenge to the Democratic-drawn map of 47 districts in the state House of Delegates and state Senate.

Read More: WTOP
Maryland General Assembly’s final hours of the 2022 session counting down to midnight

The General Assembly passed bills raising the minimum age for marriage without parental consent and banning many uses of chemicals known as PFAS as they began the final day of this year’s 90-day legislative session Monday. Lawmakers convened at midday for a last push to pass bills before the legislature adjourns amid celebrations at midnight and most of them strike out on the campaign trail ahead of upcoming elections.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Maryland legislature enters last day, most priorities done

Maryland lawmakers enter the last day of their legislative session on Monday with most high-profile measures already passed into law, including tax relief, a paid family leave program and an extensive measure aimed at slowing climate change. Democrats, who control the legislature, and Republican Gov. Larry Hogan already have signed a bipartisan budget deal with nearly $1.86 billion in tax relief over five years for Maryland retirees, small businesses and low-income families in a year of enormous budget surplus for the state’s $58.5 billion budget.

Explore the major changes to Maryland’s congressional map

As a tight battle nears for control of the U.S. House, Maryland has passed a significantly changed congressional map that changes the outlook for its midterm races — and moves thousands of voters into new, more compact districts that no longer “look like prehistoric animals,” as one anti-gerrymandering group put it. After a legal fight stymied a previous Democratic map, Gov. Larry Hogan (R) approved this redrawn version, which keeps one safe Republican seat and seven Democrat-held districts. But one of those seven now promises to be much more competitive, leaving some Democrats worried.

With Laurel Park over budget, lawmakers seek to expedite Pimlico redo

The already-delayed redevelopment of Laurel Park faces additional questions about how it will move forward as costs have risen and pushed the project over budget. Maryland lawmakers now intend to pass legislation that seeks to expedite the redevelopment of Pimlico Race Course while the Maryland Stadium Authority prepares a study to determine how much it will cost to get Laurel Park done. A deal ratified by Maryland lawmakers in 2020 aimed to have redevelopments of both Pimlico Race Course and Laurel Park completed by 2025.

Alan Klein running for CA Board after being removed for ethics violation

On October 14, 2021, Ashley Vaughan became the Harper’s Choice representative on the Columbia Association (CA) Board of Directors, replacing Alan Klein, who was removed from the CA Board following an ethics violation. Now, six months later, Klein is challenging to win back the director position – Klein and Vaughan are the two Columbia Council candidates in the Harper’s Choice election to select a representative to sit on the CA Board member for a two-year term.

Challengers to Legislative Map Push Back on Special Magistrate’s Report

Opponents of Maryland’s legislative redistricting plan filed challenges on Friday to a high court adviser’s recommendation to keep the boundaries drawn by the General Assembly. Special Magistrate Alan M. Wilner, a former Court of Appeals Judge, said in a Monday report that the legislative maps should stand. Four petitions were filed objecting to that map, which was enacted by lawmakers in January. All of the petitions argue that the legislative map violates the Maryland Constitution’s requirement that legislative districts be compact and respect natural and political boundaries.

Without a national solution, Maryland Democrats squeezed into uncomfortable spot on redistricting

Bill Ferguson wore a detached expression and spoke in a monotone. One after another, General Assembly Republicans pressed the state Senate president to specify which Democratic lawmakers or staff drafted the latest map of Maryland’s congressional district lines and what their priorities were. Ferguson’s demeanor suggested he wanted to be anywhere but the livestreamed hearing. “I answered the question,” he replied to one delegate who was insistently seeking more details about how the map was redrawn after a judge rejected an initial version as extremely partisan.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
With Legislative Overrides, Paid Leave and Abortion Access Bills Become Law in Maryland

The Maryland General Assembly voted on Saturday to override Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr.’s vetoes of abortion access and paid leave bills, enacting the measures into law. The bills were among 10 measures a Democratic supermajority in the legislature enacted over the Republican governor’s objection on Saturday. House Bill 937, titled the Abortion Care Access Act, was overridden in the House of Delegates by a vote of 90-46, and in the Senate by a vote of 29-15.

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