Not so fast

I was expecting a quick hearing.

House Bill 428 would require disclosure if a component of an election system – hardware or software, had been manufactured in a foreign country.

Identical legislation passed the House last year.

However, as I noted in my testimony today, this Senate committee amended the legislation to provide for cost sharing between state and local governments on another election expense.

After I spoke, a committee member asked why HB 428 singled out foreign manufacturers.

“That’s where the problem exists, so far as we know,” I responded.

I was asked questions for 10-15 minutes by several senators.

As soon as I returned to my office, I emailed Senator Cheryl Kagan, who had chaired the committee meeting, “Let’s discuss my bill.”

Way up South in Baltimore

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson has been nominated to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States.

Several Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee hope to be nominated for President by the Republican Party.

Their questions for Judge Jackson were directed more to the Republican base than to her.

Thanks to Senator Ben Cardin, I attended an hour of Judge Jackson’s nomination hearing this afternoon.

When she was asked provocative questions about controversial legal issues or about issues that are very unlikely to come before the Supreme Court, such as critical race theory by Senator Cruz, her answers were very brief.

She seemed to find her voice when queried by Senator Amy Klobuchar.

Hearings for Supreme Court nominees were not always this way.

When Thurgood Marshall was nominated by President Lyndon Johnson to be the first Black on the Supreme Court, Senator James Eastland, chair of the Judiciary Committee and an arch segregationist, asked him, “Are you prejudiced against white people in the South?”

Justice Marshall responded, “Not at all. I was brought up, what I would say way up South in Baltimore.  I don’t know, with the possible exception of one person that I have any feeling about them.”

Crossing Over

Today was the Crossover deadline.

As you may recall, if my bills cross over from the House to the Senate by the close of business today, they are guaranteed a public hearing.

I have bills that are:

New to the Senate, meaning it’s my job to make the case for the bill from scratch;

Unlikely to be voted on because the Senate version is still in the chairman’s desk drawer and not on a voting list;

Amended onto a related bill and not opposed by the affected industry, residential rental property owners;

Before a committee that passed the bill last year but with amendments that were unacceptable to the House; and

Identical to a bill that has already passed the Senate.

In one instance, the Senate President will be testifying for the identical bill at a House hearing on Tuesday; and

Two other bills did not pass the House, but there will be language included in the budget advancing the issue.

From AOL to unanimous

Cybersecurity is not one of my areas of expertise.

After all, I still use AOL.

But the subcommittee I chair is responsible for government operations, which includes cybersecurity.

To compensate for my shortcomings, we asked Delegate Pat Young, the sponsor of the bills, to attend today’s voting session.

I listened intently and asked questions about aspects of the bill that do not require an engineering degree.

Most importantly, Del. Young had explained the legislation beforehand to the members of the subcommittee.

The bills passed unanimously.

A model abortion statute

Should a Maryland court be required to penalize a Baltimore resident who helps a woman from Texas obtain an abortion that is legal in Maryland?

That is not a hypothetical question.

As you may know, the restrictive Texas abortion law relies on individuals to sue anyone who assists a woman in obtaining an abortion after the first six weeks of pregnancy.

If the Supreme Court is going to permit this practice, could the Maryland General Assembly prohibit it?

Yesterday, I asked one of my legal mentors for advice.

Today, I read an op-ed which began to answer my question.  https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/13/opinion/missouri-abortion-roe-v-wade.html

I wrote the authors, “Have you drafted a model statute for a state to prohibit its courts from cooperating with out-of-state orders like those in the Texas law and its law enforcement from cooperating with out-of-state investigations?”

They are working on model language.

This is a bill for next year.

Reducing the Risk From Lead

I’ve been working to reduce lead paint poisoning my entire career.

I dealt with two related issues today.

Every rental property must pass the state’s lead risk reduction test.

Nonetheless, the absence of a certificate of compliance is not an issue of fact in housing court.

I have reached agreement with advocates for tenants and property owners that will allow evidence regarding the lead reduction test to be used in court.

There is money in the federal bipartisan infrastructure law to address sources of lead in drinking water.

I began working on this issue last fall with the Maryland Department of the Environment.

MDE informed me today that this money can be used to address lead in the water system of Baltimore City schools.

I wrote school officials about this.

I asked them to keep me in the loop.

4 > 1

Four is greater than one.

Four legislators working together as a delegation are more effective than a single senator or delegate.

On Saturday night, there was a triple homicide in Howard Park, a neighborhood in the 41st District.

When I learned about this horrible event, I wrote the leaders of the neighborhood association.

My email read, in part, “The 41st District delegation stands ready to introduce legislation if that would address the problems…at that intersection” where the murders took place.

An emergency community meeting will be held Thursday afternoon.

Senator Carter, Delegates Attar and Branch, and myself will not be able to leave Annapolis.

However, my chief of staff will attend the meeting.

He will speak (and listen) for the four of us.

Rachel, Liv, and Ivy

We passed two abortion bills on the House floor yesterday.  My remarks follow.

First Statement

I rise to explain my vote.

When we as a body last considered this momentous issue thirty-one years ago, my niece, Rachel, was six years old; she is now the mother of two wonderful kids, Liv and Ivy.

But the issue before us is the same fundamental issue that we faced – and the voters then faced – thirty years ago:  who decides?  Should it be a decision, this momentous decision . . . should it be a decision that the woman makes in consultation with the people whom she chooses to seek advice from?  Or should the State intervene at any stage . . . whenever?

We reached a balance, as the Court did in Roe.  We said that prior to viability, this is a decision for the woman to make.  And it is very restrictive after that.  It is not abortion on demand.

The one thing that has changed is our health care system.  One of the things that I’ve learned serving on HGO [the Health and Government Operations Committee], is that our health care system today provides far more access to most women – most Marylanders – than it did thirty years ago.  What this bill does is try to address that gap, so that every woman in this state is treated equally.

I, once again, urge a green vote.

(Note:  I spoke of Rachel, Liv, and Ivy but I was also thinking of being in Grandma’s hotel room in NYC the night that Cronkite announced that Roe v Wade had been handed down; my aunt’s 60th birthday party in 1991, where she announced to her friends that I was the floor leader for the vote to codify Roe the next day; and, of course, Mother’s influence on my thinking.)

 

Second Statement

If I may make two points regarding the comments by my friend the Minority Whip.

First, the key phrase in this proposed constitutional amendment is that the state can intervene, can restrict, the abortion only if it’s furthering a compelling state interest.  Well, if there’s ever a compelling state interest, it’s the First Amendment and free speech.  And if I heard my colleague correctly, he indicated that this amendment would inhibit free speech, so that is not the case.

I would also say that the basis of the decision in Roe is not from out of nowhere; the basis of the decision is the privacy right, which was first articulated by then Professor Brandeis, future Justice Brandeis.  So it is protecting that right and furthering that right at a time at a time when there are now members of the Court who believe that we should go further and then strike down Roe, but to enshrine as a constitutional right, the right to life of the fetus.

So this constitutional amendment is before you in light, as well, of that real prospect.

Bada Bing and Legislative Drafting

I have driven through The Block countless times.

I haven’t been inside any of the strip clubs since I was in college.  And hopefully of age.

I am familiar with the Bada Bing club from watching The Sopranos.

And now I know how to draft a bill if there’s an enforcement problem with a liquor store in my district.

You may have read about the legislation that would close the bars on the Block at 10 pm, instead of 2 am.

As was no doubt the intent of the bill’s sponsor, Senate President Ferguson, the bill’s introduction prompted discussions and a compromise.

The amended bill was considered by the Alcohol Subcommittee of the Baltimore City House Delegation today.  I voted for it.

The next time I’m drafting a bill to address a problem with a liquor store in my district, I will begin by looking at the enforcement provisions in today’s bill.

Counting to 85

The Abortion Care Access Act was debated on the House floor today.

Ten amendments were offered by pro-life members.  All failed.

What’s newsworthy is that the votes in opposition ranged from 83 to 88.

Fifteen delegates were absent or did not vote.

That means it’s very likely that there will be at least 85 votes for the bill when the final House vote is taken on Friday.

If Governor Hogan vetoes the bill, that would be enough votes in the House to override.

  • My Key Issues:

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