Vaccines, Stimulus Payment, and a Lawyer

      The 2021 General Assembly responded to the pandemic by making vaccines available to you and your family and providing financial assistance to Marylanders in need.  We also passed major legislation.

 

  • Vaccines were made available at Sinai, now at Northwest Hospital, and  at CHAI’s senior apartment communities throughout Park Heights.  Testing was conducted at Pimlico Race Track.Stimulus Payment, and a Lawyer
  • If you still need to be vaccinated, you can call 1-855-MD-GOVAX, pre-register at https://onestop.md.gov/govax, or try the Vaccine finder maryland.gov. You must register in advance at the Baltimore Convention Center 443-462-5511 and M&T Bank Stadium https://www.baltimoreravens.com/stadium/covid-19-vaccinations/ or 1-855-634-6829.
  • At the outset of the pandemic last year, I sponsored emergency legislation that greatly expanded access to telehealth. My bill this session adds access to school health centers, which many students rely on for essential health care services.
  • A single person with an income of $15,000 will receive $831 from state and local government, in addition to the money from the federal government. A married couple with two children and an income of $25,000 will get an additional $1,527. To see if you’re eligible, go to https://interactive.marylandtaxes.gov/Relief
  • For people who lost their job, my Constituent Director, Jackie Greenfield, has helped dozens of people obtain their unemployment benefit.  We passed laws to correct major flaws in the system.

 

       The pandemic made us aware of the inequality and injustice in America’s past and present.  My efforts in this regard are longstanding.

I served on the Task Force to Study Implementing a Civil Right to Counsel in Maryland. I introduced legislation to implement the recommendations of the task force in 2015.

This session, I was a leader in the effort that passed House Bill 18, which establishes access to counsel in eviction cases.  After bills are enacted in Annapolis, a tenant’s future is decided in a courtroom.  The landlords are represented by someone who knows the law 96% of the time; the tenant only 1% of the time.  Those are bad odds.  We have begun to address that unfairness.

Funding legislation did not pass.  The morning after the session ended, I started lobbying to pay for lawyers with federal stimulus dollars.

Not comparable to the Holocaust

We were debating a bill that would allow a medical professional to provide mental health care to a child as young as 12 years old without informing the child’s parents – if that disclosure would lead to harm to the child or deter the child from seeking care.

Delegate Dan Cox compared the legislation to the evidence at the Nuremberg trials that Nazi medical professionals interfered with parental rights. He also said that the bill was unconstitutional.

I rose to explain my vote.

“Telford Taylor succeeded Justice Jackson as the Chief Prosecutor in Nuremberg, and I was privileged to have him as a constitutional law professor.

              “And among the many things that he taught us were that one does not lightly make a comparison to the Holocaust and one does not lightly make an assertion that a legislative act is unconstitutional.

             “I’m very proud to vote for this bill.”

 

 

Appropriate middle ground

“This bill is appropriate middle ground.  It will do some good.”

We were debating the same legislation as yesterday, the police reform bill.

The speaker was not myself or another Democrat asserting that House Bill 670 was a reasonable compromise – that the bill would reduce the likelihood of unlawful acts by police officers without affecting their ability to protect the public from criminal acts.

The speaker was the minority Leader, Delegate Nick Kipke.

Time will tell if the bill struck that balance, “the appropriate middle ground.”

We already know that Nick Kipke voted his conscience.

Failed floor amendments that may reappear

Republican delegates offered ten amendments to the Maryland Police Accountability Act of 2021 at this morning’s floor session.

All failed on votes that were overwhelmingly based on party affiliation.

If you’re a Republican, the place to get an amendment adopted is when the committee is considering a bill.

The unwritten rule of the Democratic majority is to defer to the work product of the committee.

Your colleagues support the legislation that you and your committee have reported to the full body.

You do the same for them.

However, some of the amendments that failed on the floor may reappear in Republicans’ campaign literature next year.

Thurgood Marshall’s client/Speaker Jones’ aunt

Margaret W. Rose, was denied the opportunity to attend high school in Baltimore County because of her race.

Her lawyer was Thurgood Marshall.

Maryland’s highest court ruled in 1937, “Admission to the white school could be required only upon a showing that the equality of treatment is not obtainable separately.”

Ms. Rose was the aunt of Speaker Adrienne Jones.

Speaker Jones spoke of her aunt’s case today at the rededication of the Marshall statue outside the State House.

That case was one of the first brought by future Justice Marshall on the legal path to Brown v. Board of Education, where he persuaded the Supreme Court to strike down the separate but equal standard.

The Speaker was too modest.

She could have added that a settlement of a lawsuit asserting that Maryland’s historically black colleges and universities are underfunded, in violation of the Brown decision,  was announced last month.

That lawsuit was filed in 2006.

What prompted the settlement was House Bill 1, Historically Black Colleges and Universities – Funding.

The sponsor of that bill was Speaker Jones.

Opening Day

On Opening Day in 1975, Frank Robinson hit a home run in his first at bat as the player-manager of the Cleveland Indians – breaking the color barrier as Jackie Robinson had done in 1947.

I saw that game on tv.

Despite its historic significance, It was not on cable.  There was no such animal.

The Indians were playing the Yankees, and I was a law student at Columbia University, living in Manhattan.

On Opening Day in 1992, Rick Sutcliffe pitched a nine-inning shutout for the Orioles in the first game at Camden Yards.

The game ended on a called third strike.

I saw that 27th and final out on tv.

I was in the Senate Lounge in Annapolis.  It was the last day of the session.

No time off to go to the ball game.

This was supposed to be Opening Day of the 2021 season for the Orioles, but their game was postponed due to rain at Fenway Park.

The Green Monster awaits tomorrow.

Ultimately local and more likely later

All federally funded capital projects are ultimately local.

Biden’s infrastructure bill will include $137 billion for public schools, community colleges, and child-care facilities.  

After I read that this morning, I shared it with a City Schools administrator, the chair of the Baltimore City delegation in the House of Delegates, and an alumnus of a school in my district.

The sooner we begin discussing the schools that should be modernized, the better.

Projects that are shovel ready are more likely to get funded.

My 41st District colleagues and  discussed this before today.

As you likely know, Baltimore City already has a 21st Century Schools construction program.  It’s a joint effort between the school system and the Maryland Stadium Authority.

Taking steps now means federal money is more likely later.

NIMBY

One of the most difficult parts of my job is representing a neighborhood when a group home or a drug treatment center moves in.

NIMBY – Not In My BackYard is the slogan.

At the same time, these facilities provide a valuable service.

Senate Bill 96 was heard in my committee today.

It would require a behavior health program to establish and implement a safety program for the benefit of the individuals it serves.

My list of bills for next year now includes expanding this requirement to additional community providers.

I will be here next year.

“If something is not to be, and you can’t get it done, then you look for the way in which it can partially get it done,” Congresswoman Rose  DeLauro said. “What are the things can you get, so it’s not my way or the highway? That’s not what the legislative body is all about.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/28/us/politics/patty-murray-rosa-delauro-stimulus.html

Congresswoman DeLauro is the chair of the Appropriations Committee.

She is quoted in an article that discusses the major role that she and Senator Patty Murray played in having an increase in the  child tax credit included in President Biden’s American Recovery Plan.

This victory was preceded by more than a decade of effort.

It will be the law for only one year.  However, efforts are already underway to make it permanent.

I had a phone conversation with an advocate this morning about whether we should support a bill that has been significantly amended.

“I will be here next year,” I concluded our discussion.  “And beyond then, if the voters are willing.”

 

Water

“Before I had finished speaking in my heart, behold, Rebekah came out with her jar on her shoulder, and went down to the spring and drew, and I said to her, ‘Please let me drink.’  Genesis 24:45

“All those who drink this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. John 4:7-31

“nor shall any person give, offer to give, or participate in the giving of any money or gifts,       including, but not limited to, food and drink, to an elector.”  Georgia Senate Bill 202 (Act 9)

  • My Key Issues:

  • Pimlico and The Preakness
  • Our Neighborhoods
  • Pre-Kindergarten
  • Lead Paint Poisoning