Higher Up the Food Chain and Modest Changes

Negotiating by email has its virtues.

You don’t give anything away with your facial or body reaction to the other person’s proposal.

You can draft your response and send it to someone higher up the food chain for approval before you reply to your negotiating partner.

Eventually, however, you’re likely to discuss the bill the old fashioned way – in person or over the phone.

 

 

If your legislation fails, you can still create momentum for it for next year with language in the report accompanying the budget bill.

Last year, my legislation would have required that a certain percentage of state funding for the environment benefit distressed communities.

My bill did not pass, but I had committee narrative added to last year’s budget bill requiring the Maryland Department of the Environment to study this issue.

In response, Secretary of the Environment Serena McIlwain has written that she is taking several actions to prioritize and coordinate environmental justice issues in her department and across state government.

Today, I spoke with someone who has some concerns about language that’s been proposed for this year’s budget.

If this modest change is accepted, his organization is no longer likely to oppose the language.

A Change For the Better

Very few bills pass without being amended.

At the same time, the fewer amendments your bill needs the better.

The committee may think you didn’t put enough thought into drafting the bill before you introduced it.

Two examples today:

A state law can preempt an area of law.  The statute prevents local governments from legislating on that specific topic.

To make sure that my bill is worded correctly to achieve my objective, I asked the Attorney General’s Office to review my draft.

Funding in low-income communities would be the highest priority for state programs that address clean energy and energy efficiency under a bill from last session that I’m reintroducing.

This would address the environmental neglect in these areas over decades.

The Biden-Harris Administration will be increasing such spending.  I’ve requested language to broaden this priority to include federal money that comes to Maryland.

We can do this if the federal law does not preempt a state from doing so.

 

 

Getting to Progress From No

One of the many things Pete Rawlings taught me when he was chair of the Appropriations Committee:

“You have to learn how to say ‘no’ to people.”

No doesn’t always mean nothing.

In the give and take of the fiscal limits of the budget, of the differing views on an issue, compromise is needed.

What does that mean today?

Speaker Jones has created a Work Group To Address Police Reform

and Accountability.

Senator Will Smith, chair of the committee that considers such legislation in his body, has outlined the reforms that the bill he’s introducing.

This means that legislation making major changes is certain to be enacted.

The Speaker has appointed me to the work group.

I am concentrating on applicant screening so that biased people are not accepted, a duty to intervene when another officer is violating the law, and how best for police to work with mental health and social workers in crisis situations.

Governor Hogan has suspended evictions until later this month. If he does not extend that prohibition, there could be a flood of homeless people.

I am drafting legislation that would protect the rights of tenants to a lead-safe home and working with Attorney General Frosh on funding for lawyers for tenants so that the laws we pass are put into effect.

“We will support locally-driven economic development and commit to directing a significant portion of clean energy and sustainable infrastructure investments to historically marginalized communities to help create local jobs and reduce energy poverty.”

That’s not part of the Green New Deal. It’s a policy statement resulting from negotiations between the Biden and Sanders campaigns.

It’s the basis for legislation that I have requested.

Some believe we should go further in the changes we make in the three areas I’ve discussed today.

My goal is to make serious progress.

  • My Key Issues:

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