Too late

“I’ll get that information to you next week,” the advocate told me.

“Next week will be too late,” I responded. “The session ends on Monday.”

If you don’t get it done by midnight Monday, it’s wait ‘til next year.

Just before the start of the day’s session is the best time to chat with a senator on the Senate floor. As a delegate, I have access to the chamber then.

However, the House and Senate have not begun our sessions at the same time the last two days.

I prefer to lobby people in person, but I do know how to text. That’s what I did this afternoon with a senator on a committee that heard my bill last week.

Regardless of the legislative outcome on the Preakness, the two weeks between the Kentucky Derby and this year’s race will be a good opportunity to make the case for keeping the race at Pimlico.

I already have a list of bills I want to work on for 2020, but they can wait, I remind myself.

Long-term best interests

What is in the long-term best interests of the people we serve?

That’s the question government officials – both elected and appointed, have to answer daily.

It’s the question we will need to answer correctly between now and the end of the session next Monday evening at midnight.

March 26 – Duty called

I could have been in the courtroom.

I had a seat for the oral argument at the Supreme Court today on the constitutionality of Maryland’s Congressional districts.

But duty called in Annapolis.

As the House chair of the Joint Committee on Legislative Ethics, I summarized our recommendations for a group of legislators.

A resolution to reprimand Delegate Jay Alisi for his abusive behavior toward staff will be considered by the full House later this week.

At a meeting to discuss Pimlico and the Preakness, I made the following point.

The bill introduced by The Stronach Group would prohibit the use at Pimlico of an existing source of funding for capital improvements.

It’s the equivalent of cutting Pimlico off at the knees.

“When a horse gets a serious injury like that,” I stated, “they put him down.”

PS If the Supreme Court holds that our lines are unconstitutional, I’ll revisit the issue at a special session in Annapolis this summer.

An oral argument and a fireside chat

On Tuesday, Governor Larry Hogan and former California Governor Arnold Shwarzenegger attended the oral argument at the Supreme Court on the constitutionality of the boundary lines for Maryland’s 6th Congressional District.

Today, the Governor introduced legislation that would redraw those lines, based on the recommendations of a bipartisan commission that he appointed.

The nine Justices will meet in their conference on Friday to vote on the case.

Their opinion, which will be binding on how the district should be drawn, will be issued in late June.

The Governor and the General Assembly would then be able to act in a manner consistent with the Court’s holding.

—-

During our floor debate on the minimum wage, I quoted another federal official, Franklin Roosevelt.

In his Fireside Chat the night before he signed the first federal minimum wage law, he said:

“Do not let any calamity-howling executive with an income of $1,000 a day, who has been turning his employees over to the Government relief rolls in order to preserve his company’s undistributed reserves, tell you – using his stockholders’ money to pay the postage for his personal opinions — tell you that a wage of $11.00 a week is going to have a disastrous effect on all American industry.”

Know the answer

You don’t ask a question to which you don’t know the answer.

I learned that in law school.

Nowadays, you don’t ask a question to which Google doesn’t know the answer.

But you have to ask the right question.

The deplorable conditions of the living quarters for people who work and live on the backstretch of the Maryland race tracks owned by the Stronach Group has come to light recently.

I remembered that Jim Rouse, the developer of Columbia and Harborplace, had been involved in building these living quarters a while ago.

However, I didn’t know the name of the builder for the project. For Google to know the answer, I would need to know the builder’s name.

So I spoke with a housing activist, hoping that his memory would be better than mine.

It was. Jim Ryan was the builder.

Nearly 30 years ago, he was instrumental in building new facilities.

They haven’t received much attention since.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1992/10/21/after-backstretch-charity-ryan-back-in-owners-box/f50e77f0-fd1a-42b5-926d-75b8cc528576/?utm_term=.a3254c4b3921

Pre-K In the Morning

I went to school this morning.

A pre-k class at Wildwood Elementary Middle School.

I had not been in the school since it was renovated and expanded as part of the 21st Century Schools program.

The expected enrollment was 600 students, but currently there are 800, the principal Sherelle Barnes informed me.

That’s a positive sign. I’ll try to learn more about why that’s the case.

I lead the class for a little while – alphabet, numbers, and some civics.

Overwhelmingly, the kids joined in eagerly. Some were incredibly shy. I wondered what made them so.

“I teach for five hours to law students in the fall,” I told the teacher. “You teach five hours five days a week for nine months. I admire what you do.”

Reasonable Adult Conversations

Nothing concentrates the mind like a bill hearing.

Ditto for a lawsuit filed by the City of Baltimore asserting that the bill introduced by the owners of Pimlico Race Track is unconstitutional.

City Solicitor Andre Davis said it more lawyerly: “We are going all the way to the extent we need to in order to have reasonable adult conversations about what is best for Baltimore.”

That would not be the first time such conversations take place.

The owners of Pimlico, the State, and the City of Baltimore paid for and were full participants in the Maryland Stadium Authority’s study of the future of the Pimlico site.

The study concluded that a work group consisting of those three parties should discuss how to finance the redevelopment of the property.

That’s been the City’s position since we introduced House Bill 1090, Maryland Stadium Authority’s Pimlico Race Course Study Workgroup.

A Baltimore Sun editorial also discusses the lawsuit.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bs-ed-0321-pimilico-lawsuit-20190320-story.html

Not reading or misleading

House Bill 317 would amend Maryland’s civil rights law in the area of public accommodations, such as restaurants.

The subcommittee I chair had amended the bill. Consequently, I was the floor leader when it was debated yesterday.

This is what was said.

Delegate Fisher: Mr. Speaker, I just want to remind the body that this is a bill where you are paid for making a complaint and you actually receive the funds from a business when you make a compliant. Thank you.

Delegate Rosenberg: You are paid if your civil rights have been violated not merely if you make a complaint. So if harm is done to you, you are entitled to compensation. Thank you.  

Either my colleague had not read the bill or he was deliberately misleading the House of Delegates.

The bill passed, 97-39. It was a party-line vote.

“We just want to feel safe, period.”

A disturbing account of Baltimore’s murder rate and the relationship between the Police Department and the African-American community was the cover story in yesterday’s New York Times Magazine.

This is how the article ends:

The meeting was standing room only. “We just want to feel safe, period,” Monique Washington, president of the Edmondson Village Community Association, told Harrison. “Our people are in fear, and we’re tired.”

An hour into the forum [with new Police Commissioner Harrison], a neighborhood resident named Renee McCray stepped up to the microphone. She described how bewildering it had been to accompany a friend downtown, near the tourist-friendly Inner Harbor, one night a few months earlier. “The lighting was so bright. People had scooters. They had bikes. They had babies in strollers. And I said: ‘What city is this? This is not Baltimore City.’ Because if you go up to Martin Luther King Boulevard” — the demarcation between downtown and the west side — “we’re all bolted in our homes, we’re locked down.” She paused for a moment to deliver her point. “All any of us want is equal protection,” she said.

It was a striking echo of the language in the Department of Justice [that resulted in a consent decree governing police conduct] the activists’ condemnations of the police following Gray’s death. Back then, the claims were of overly aggressive policing; now residents were pleading for police officers to get out of their cars, to earn their pay — to protect them.

You could look at this evolution as demonstrating an irreconcilable conflict, a tension between Shantay Guy and Tony Barksdale never to be resolved. But the residents streaming into these sessions with Harrison weren’t suggesting that. They were not describing a trade-off between justice and order. They saw them as two parts of a whole and were daring to ask for both.

 

I represent neighborhoods where people have babies in strollers. I represent Monique Washington and her neighborhood, where the residents live in fear.

I represent constituents whose primary concern is the injustice of unconstitutional police tactics. I represent constituents whose primary concern is the crime in their community.

What am I doing to address these problems?

I will continue to go to bat for a constituent or a neighborhood group with a complaint about police conduct or public safety.  I will advocate for additional resources to make our neighborhoods safer – more police, better policing, and other safety programs.

This session, I supported legislation allowing  Johns Hopkins  to hire police at a time when there are 500 vacancies  in the City police force. The future of the Police Training Academy in Northwest Baltimore is uncertain. My 41st District colleagues and I have written Mayor Catherine Pugh about this matter.

I opposed placing armed police officers inside school buildings because we must invest in our students instead. The long-term solution is public education. I’ve written before about the Kirwan Commission recommendations. I will redouble my efforts to see that additional money is spent wisely in our public schools.

Baltimore’s future is at stake.

I welcome your thoughts.

Last hearings and a scandalous indictment

My last bill hearings in the House were today.

Numbers 27 and 28.

No more early mornings making final edits to my written testimony, which I submit to the committee but never read when I testify.

As I tell my students, it’s better to speak off the cuff, even if you stumble, than to look down at your testimony, instead of looking at the delegates who will be deciding the fate of your bill.

—-

I’m already thinking about legislation for next year.

At the height of the Great Recession, Rahm Emanuel, then President Barack Obama’s chief of staff, said, “You never let a serious crisis go to waste.”

It’s an opportunity to get things done that you might not otherwise be able to accomplish.

Ditto for a scandalous indictment, like the college admission bribery case.

It prompted me to ask some friends who are knowledgeable about college admission: “Any thoughts on what should be done in Maryland to expand access to the higher education admission process for first generation college applicants from the lower and working classes?”

  • My Key Issues:

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