Babette Hecht Rosenberg, 1924-2022

My mother passed away peacefully Thursday afternoon.

She had hoped to come to Opening Day in Annapolis with my brother Bruce, as was her custom.

Mother was my Election Day coordinator when I first ran for the House of Delegates in 1982.

Her handwritten charts of who was volunteering in each precinct are atop a book case next to the desk where I am writing this tribute to her.

Mother was also my editor. he reviewed my drafts – from high school essays and a sermon to my summaries of my first 39 legislative sessions.

More importantly, she and my father taught me some lessons.

I drove to Amherst College in Massachusetts with Jean Fugett.  Jean’s parents would bring him from their house on Mosher St. to ours on Wallis Av.

As Jean and I drove away, my parents had invited his parents into our house.

That did not often happen among white and Black families in Baltimore in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.

I went to Amherst for two reasons: Harvard said no, and my mother went to Smith College, 20 minutes away from Amherst on Route 9.

My parents’ lessons also had an impact on my course selection at law school.

I took Sex Discrimination and the Law. The class was taught by Professor Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

My mother said that her crucial role in getting me elected was one of the highlights of her life.

Professor Ginsburg paved the way for women to take pride in what they accomplished on their own, as well as for their children.

May Mother’s memory be a blessing.

Steve Sachs, A Consummate Lawyer and a Very Good Friend

With Steve’s passing today, some stories where our paths crossed.

He argued a case before the Maryland Court of Appeals seeking to establish a civil Gideon – a right to counsel in civil cases comparable to that right in criminal cases.

After the oral argument, a reporter asked Steve’s client for her thoughts.  “Mr. Sachs speaks for me,” she replied.

When the General Assembly enacted an access to counsel bill in landlord-tenant cases last year, I told Steve that “Mr. Sachs still speaks for his clients.”

The very last step in the repeal of the death penalty was for Governor O’Malley to reduce the sentences of the five men on death row to life without the possibility of parole.

We asked the office of Attorney General Doug Gansler if the bill had given the Governor this authority.

Who better to make that legal argument to AG Gansler than former AG Sachs.

We met in Steve’s home to prepare him for his meeting.

That morning, I said it was the law firm of Sachs, Millemann & Rosenberg.

Steve was persuasive.

The AG agreed with our legal analysis, and the Governor commuted the sentences.

I will think of Steve often in the coming months –

At the July 4th parade in Roland Park where I am honored to read the Declaration of Independence and Steve would refer to me as Thomas Jefferson.

At an Orioles game, where no one will know the roster of the 1944 Orioles, the minor league champions, as Steve did.

January 11 – Acting Before the Supreme Court Does

Del. Samuel I. Rosenberg (D-Baltimore City), the longest-serving current member of the General Assembly, said the level of activity in any legislative session — including in election years — is often dictated by outside forces.

He observed that even though the legislature is expected to take action on abortion rights and gun control legislation this session, pending Supreme Court rulings on abortion and guns, depending on when they’re delivered, could galvanize lawmakers into more aggressive action.

 “I think the circumstances are such that a lot of issues will get an airing this year and we may be addressing more than we would normally do in an election year,” Rosenberg said.

(Above is from article in MarylandMatters.org)

It’s not until June that the Supreme Court usually issues its opinions in the most important and controversial cases.

Our 90-day legislative session in Annapolis ends on April 11.

Consequently, our bill drafting on abortion and guns has to anticipate what action we should require after we adjourn.

This year, those decisions will also have an effect on the state-wide elections.

Maryland General Assembly Set to Convene in Another Session Shaped by COVID

 

 

Preserving Our Democracy

Our democracy is being tested.

What was routine is now in question.

Will the winner of a fair election assume the office?

For the last two sessions, my response to January 7 was legislation criminalizing domestic terrorism.

But even my liberal friends had problems with the term.

Would a misguided prosecutor indict people for engagining in civil disobedience?

A few weeks ago, I learned that Maryland law already makes it a crime for a person “by threat, force, or corrupt means, [to] obstruct, impede, or try to obstruct or impede the administration of justice in a court of the State.”

My bill would extend that prohibition to the other two branches of government, the executive and the legislative.

The legislation would make no change to what action constitues the crime nor the penalty for a violation.

I’m not reinventing the wheel.

I’m trying to preserve our democracy.

 

Bipartisanship 

The Baltimore Country Club property is precious open space in Roland Park.
I sledded down this hill with my brother Stewart.
I drove past the site on my way to City College.  To this day, we call Hillside Avenue “Snake Lane.”
In 2008, I joined the community in opposing the construction of a retirement facility on the property.
Two years ago, I got a phone call from the chair of the Roland Park Community Foundation, Mary Page Michel, “Can the State help us buy the property?”
We quickly agreed that state funding was doable if part of the property was dedicated to use by the students at Poly-Western across the street.
I spoke with Delegate Maggie McIntosh, chair of the Appropriations Committee, and she agreed to allocating $250,000 in Program Open Space funds.
Yesterday, an agreement was announced for the Foundation to purchase the 20-acre property to create a new public park.
It’s not often that a City graduate does something that benefits Poly, our arch rival.
In Baltimore, we call this bipartisanship.

A running mate, a seat mate, and a sidekick

Hard work.  Real results.

When Maggie McIntosh first ran for the House of Delegates in 1994, we ran together, along with Senator Barbara Hoffman and Delegate Jim Campbell.

That was the slogan we used.

Early Monday morning, I read the op-ed where Maggie announced that she would not be running for reelection next year.

I texted her.

          Hard work.  Real results.  A real friend.  Whose wise counsel will still be a (virtual) seat away. 

(We sit next to each other on the House floor.)

Maggie responded.

          Thank you, see you soon sidekick. 

There were two very special moments we shared on the House floor.

Enactment of marriage equality and repeal of the death penalty.

We frequently discussed legislative and political strategy.

As chair of the Appropriations Committee, Maggie can secure funding for Baltimore City and my legislative district.

As a campaign chair for Senator Barbara Mikulski and many other candidates and issues, her advice is invaluable.

My day ended yesterday evening at a meeting to discuss the closing of the George W.F. McMechen High School in the Garrison Hill community.

My job is to advocate for the community regarding the future use of the building.

Hard work.  Real results.

Now the work begins

All infrastructure is local, as Speaker Tip O’Neill might say.

What impact will the Biden infrastructure law have on Baltimore City and the neighborhoods I represent?

I started emailing our professional staff in Annapolis on Saturday morning.

The Red Line could be reconsidered under specific language in the new law..  What steps does the General Assembly need to take to help bring that about?  I was already drafting a bill before this weekend.

Infrastructure improvements are needed for the new housing awarded in the Park Heights community, several blocks south of Pimlico Race Track.  Is the new bill a source of funds, or is the more likely source the Build Back Better legislation, next on the Congressional agenda?

Aging water pipes are a source of lead poisoning.  There’s money in the bill to replace these pipes.  What’s the best way to get this done in Baltimore?

Money is allocated for specific projects.  In Washington, there are called earmarks.  In Annapolis, we call them worthy legislative initiatives.  Is the Ambassador Theatre in Howard Park funded?

The bill has passed the Congress.  Now the work begins at home.

Diversity: A Continued Strength

The neighborhoods I represent are determined by the lines drawn during redistricting by the Governor and the General Assembly.

A group of community leaders in the 41st District submitted the following statement to a public hearing of the Legislative Redistricting Advisory

Commission this past Tuesday.

 

Testimony of 41st District Community Leaders

Submitted to the Legislative Redistricting Advisory Commission

Chairman Aro and Members of the Commission:

The 41st District has been a diverse community of Baltimoreans for twenty years.

That diversity has been a continued strength of the district and allowed for all communities within it to be heard and represented in Annapolis.

We come before you as representatives of a wide range of communities within the 41st District.

There can be no understating the importance of representing a plurality of opinions in a healthy democracy. State legislative districts are some of the most basic building blocks of our representative democracy. They can ensure that every community has a say in the way our government functions.

The redistricting process should foster this diversity of views. Our state senator and delegates have done a stellar job of representing the diversity within the 41st District and brought us together when needed to benefit our neighborhoods and the whole district.

Our legislators have brought substantial benefits to our district – from the once in a generation revitalization of the Pimlico Race Course. to renovations at the Mary Rodman Recreation Center. (A listing of neighborhood projects will be provided in the near future.)

We urge the Commission to add the necessary population to the 41st District that would maintain its diversity.

Anita Catchcart Allendale Community Association

Betty Cherniak Glen Neighborhood Improvement Association

Mary Page Michel Roland Park

Jay Newman Poplar Hill Association

Cynthia Shaw Lyndhurst Improvement Association

Shirlene Littejohn Uplands Homeowners Association

Sandy Johnson Fallstaff Improvement Association

Community association names are provided for identification purposes only and should not be read as an endorsement of this testimony. October 12, 2021

It’s never too early

You need to start working on your bill months before you introduce it.

I’m currently in the drafting stage.

Bills that failed last session need to be revised.

Under House Bill 499, if a property owner violates the consumer protection law, any monetary penalty would be deposited in a fund for rental and housing assistance.

Last session, House Bill 18 created a right of access to legal counsel in certain eviction cases.

I’m modifying HB 499 to reflect that.

Before Gov. Hogan nixed the Red Line, I passed a bill mandating a study of the impact of the Red Line on adjacent communities.

The infrastructure and budget reconciliation bills in Congress could revive an East-West transit line.

Last night, the City met with the neighbors of Druid Hill Park to discuss how to make the streets adjacent to the park more neighborhood friendly.

https://www.baltimoresun.com/politics/bs-md-ci-baltimore-druid-hill-traffic-plan-20211008-3x2mhtt3ojbg3ecgkihkhhcnie-story.html

I’ve asked that a similar study be required for the Edmondson Avenue corridor and other areas in my bill for next session.

Will Roe v. Wade survive?

With a restrictive Mississippi law before the Supreme Court this fall, Roe is in danger.

As you likely know, Maryland voters approved on referendum a law that wrote the Roe protections into our law.

That statute should be unaffected by the Supreme Court’s decision.

Nonetheless, access to reproductive health care, regardless of income, needs to be addressed.

I’m working with several colleagues on a bill draft.

But in Maryland, We Did

“You can’t plan for a blatantly false or unconstitutional court ruling like this [Supreme Court decision on the Texas abortion law],” said Representative Conor Lamb of Pennsylvania, a Democrat who is running for his state’s open Senate seat next year.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/02/us/politics/scotus-abortion-decision.html

Pro-choice health care providers, activists, and legislators are now responding to the Supreme Court’s decision late Wednesday night.

How can the White House, the Congress, and state legislatures preserve a woman’s right to choose?

In Maryland, we did so thirty years ago.

Anticipating a case where the Court would weaken or eliminate the constitutional protections for abortion, we passed legislation that preserved the holding of Roe v. Wade in Maryland law.

Before a fetus is viable – capable of sustained survival outside the womb, the government may not intervene.

When the fetus is viable, an abortion can be performed in only a limited set of circumstances.

I was one of the leaders of this effort in the House of Delegates.

Next year, we will continue to protect the right to choose for all women, whatever their economic status.

  • My Key Issues:

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