Speaking of sports

Baltimore is a small town.  Everybody knows everybody.

So is Annapolis.  I was reminded of that today.

I was about to get up from lunch at Galway Bay when in walked Terence Smith.

Smith was a reporter for the New York Times, CBS, and the Public Broadcasting System.

I had met him at environmental receptions over the years, but our paths had not crossed since the pandemic.

He knows David Rubenstein, the new Orioles owner, from his work at the Carter White House.

The first person I’ve met who knew David from his post-City College days.

Terence remembered me and the fact that I was working to save Pimlico Race Track.

I was very impressed by his recall of my efforts.

He may have attended his first Preakness before I did.

His father, Red Smith, was a noted sports columnist.

Session Summary: Abortion, Public Safety, Pimlico Race Track, Handguns, Red Line, Voter Access

At this year’s General Assembly session, as the Supreme Court considered the fate of reproductive rights, I was a leader in expanding access to safe abortions. Additional crime-fighting resources will be provided in 41st District neighborhoods.

Senator Jill Carter, Delegates Dalya Attar, Tony Branch, and myself obtained construction  funds for the Ambassador Theatre; Enoch Pratt Library Park branch in Park Heights; the intersection at Northern Parkway and Falls Road; Cross Country Elementry/Middle School; Ahavas Chaim; Allendale Recreation Center; and Hillside Park in Roland Park.

As a legislator, my policy and moral judgment is that abortion is a medical and moral decision for a woman to make in consultation with her physician and any others that she chooses.   The voters of Maryland agreed in 1992, approving by a 62-38% margin the law that protects a woman’s right to choose.

Unlike other states, which are restricting legal and safe abortions, this year’s General Assembly broadened access to the procedure, reducing the medical risk to a woman.

After a triple homicide, I joined my 41st District colleagues in working to increase police presence in Howard Park.  With more funding for police in the Governor’s budget, we will secure this protection in more neighborhoods.  We have also reduced the hours of operation of problem liquor stores.

A person who carries a gun will use it.  That’s the lesson I learned from the acquittal of 18-year old Kyle Rittenhouse.

Under Maryland law, individuals seeking to carry, wear, or transport a handgun must apply for a permit from the Maryland State Police and renew it annually.  Appeals are now heard by administrative law judges, who already decide appeals from decisions by several state agencies.    I played a key role in the passage of this legislation in 2019.

However, our system is jeopardized by a Supreme Court case where a similar New York law is expected to be found in violation of the 2nd Amendment.  I will work with Attorney General Brian Frosh to determine how Maryland can protect us from handguns after this case is decided.

It was my idea for the Maryland Stadium Authority to evaluate whether Pimlico could remain the home of the Preakness. In May 2016, that study concluded that a rebuilt facility could host a Triple Crown race.  I will continue to work with the communities surrounding the race track, the horse racing industry, and my legislative colleagues to make this site a major asset for the Park Heights community and the Baltimore region.

At this session, the General Assembly made it clear that design, architecture, engineering, and permitting for this redevelopment are to begin by September 1.  We also appropriated $10 million dollars to begin the work at Old Hilltop.  The Preakness will continue to be run at Pimlico while construction is underway.

In his first year in office, Governor Hogan withdrew state funding for the Red Line.  He called it a “boondoggle.”  In the bipartisan infrastructure bill, federal funding to revive this mass transit system was made possible by Senators Cardin and Van Hollen and Congressmen Mfume, Ruppersberger, and Sarbanes,.

I successfully introduced House Bill 632 to require an update of studies and surveys on this needed system.  My legislation will also prohibit anyone’s home from being condemned to build the Red Line, unlike the case with the “Highway to Nowhere,” the unfinished interstate in West Baltimore.

For over two decades, opioid manufacturers unleashed a scourge of addictive and deadly pills.   Maryland joined the lawsuit against them.  Our portion of the $26 billion-dollar settlement is approximately $492 million. We obtained a higher share than our population would indicate because the opioid crisis has hit Marylanders harder than in other states.

Under my legislation that passed last year, this money will be used for a variety of authorized opioids abatement programs, such as treatment for substance use disorders and overdose reversal medicines.  Two bills that I successfully introduced this session provide for the allocation of these funds among the state and local governments and create an advisory council that will include people who have firsthand experience with opioid addiction and recovery.

Expanding access to the ballot and preventing deceptive attempts to affect the outcome of an election are among my highest priorities.  I introduced legislation to expand early voting to the Sunday before Election Day.  This issue will be studied.

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was a public defender before she became a judge.  The origin of the public defender: the Supreme Court held in Gideon v. Wainwright that a criminal defendant has a constitutional right to counsel. Providing a lawyer in civil proceedings, like rent court, for a person who can’t afford an attorney extends the Gideon principle.

Last year, the legislature enacted a right to counsel in eviction cases.  This year, we funded it.  I was a leader in both of these efforts, introducing legislation and creating our budget strategy.

Maryland is a national leader in preventing lead poisoning because all properties built before 1978 must have a lead inspection at each change of occupancy.  However, a landlord’s failure to comply with this law is not an issue of fact in an eviction case.     That evidence can be introduced because of legislation that I introduced this session.

Thanks to my parents,  I was able to enter public service with no academic debt. It has meant a great deal to me as a legislator to create public service internships and fund loan forgiveness programs.  This year, I expanded service opportunities that match 21st century needs of participants and communities with legislation that Senate President Bill Ferguson and I jointly introduced.  A Maryland Civilian Conservation Corps is one example.

Our goal is to attract talented young people to the state and entice others to stay here and be part of the work force, by offering in-state tuition to students who perform a service year.

This is an election year. I will be running with my colleagues, Senator Jill Carter and Delegates Dalya Attar and Tony Bridges.

I hope that we have earned your support.

Senator Barbara Hoffman

Barbara Hoffman was my Senator for 19 years.

There was no policy issue where we disagreed.

Our most prominent joint effort was writing the holding of Roe v. Wade into Maryland law.

We realized that our bill needed to be supported by 29 members of the Senate (to end a filibuster) and 71 members of the House of Delegates, signed by Governor William Donald Schaefer, and approved by 50.1% of the voters on the referendum that was sure to follow.

To broaden support for the bill, we included a parental notice provision if a minor chooses to have an abortion.

When reporters spoke with me this week for Barbara’s obituary, I always discussed this legislation.

These interviews reminded me that  she played a key role in another current issue.

After Frank DeFrancis bought Pimlico Race Track, he wanted to add Sunday racing.

The surrounding neighborhoods, which are in our legislative district, were opposed.

A compromise was reached.  Sunday racing would be permitted, and the law would require that the Preakness be run at Pimlico.

I was not in the room where it happened when that compromise was struck.  Senator Barbara Hoffman was.

Working For the 41st District – From Pimlico to SLAPPs

First class.  Every aspect of the redevelopment of the Pimlico Race Course site must meet that standard.  My leadership kept the Preakness at Pimlico.  I will continue to work on behalf of all of the track’s neighbors as this project progresses.

The firms chosen to prepare the architectural and engineering plans for the race track and the clubhouse, which will also serve as a community center, are first class.  Ayers Saint and Gross is a local firm that  specializes in work for colleges, universities, and cultural facilities, including the Johns Hopkins Homewood campus. Populous, its partner, has done work at Churchill Downs and Ascot, the leading racing facility in England.

Sports wagering is coming to Maryland.  When House Bill 940 was introduced, this would have been permitted at Pimlico only on live racing days. This was expanded to year-round wagering, as I worked with the community and my 41st District colleagues, Senator Jill P. Carter and Delegates Dalya Attar and Tony Bridges.

A community compact ensures that the neighborhoods surrounding Pimlico will be consulted about the redevelopment.  I worked with residents and the City government to bring this about.

 

I work with my 41st District colleagues on many issues, especially those that affect the neighborhoods we represent.  The list below demonstrates the diverse needs and interests of these communities.

  • The Poly-Western complex and Cross Country Elementary/Middle School will be modernized under the 21st Century Schools program. What will be the future use of the Grove Park Elementary School, the Roland Patterson Middle School, and the Westside Skills Center?
  • The learning that takes place inside our schools took a great step forward with the enactment and funding of the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future. The BOOST scholarship program for students in private and parochial schools was funded at Governor Hogan’s requested level of $10 million.  All of our students deserve a quality education.
  • Planning for major improvements to the Mary Rodman Recreation Center is nearly completed.
  • A problem bar in the Irvington neighborhood will now close at 9 p.m., instead of 2 a.m. under House Bill 256.
  • The intersection at Northern Parkway and Falls Road is dangerous. I brought about a study of possible improvements.  The question now: how to fund those changes.

Federal money from the American Rescue Plan will be a significant source for capital projects, as would the Biden infrastructure plan.  My colleagues and I have already begun working on securing that assistance for worthy initiatives in the 41st District.

A $25 million lawsuit was filed against the residents of Clipper Mill by a developer after they testified against his proposal at the Planning Commission.  Fells Point residents were threatened with a similar suit by a restaurant after they signed a petition opposing the renewal of its liquor license.

These abuses of the legal process are called Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation – SLAPP suits.  You shouldn’t live in fear of these actions if you get involved in your community.  The bill I introduced would remove the requirement that the people being sued demonstrate to a judge that these suits were filed in “bad faith.”  House Bill 308 passed the House but was not voted on in the Senate.  I will reintroduce it next year.

 

The Building Block

For the bill hearing on the redevelopment of Pimlico, my 41st District colleagues and I have expressed our support.

We wrote, “What is now essentially a vacant property, except for the third weekend in May, will become an attraction for Park Heights, northwest Baltimore communities, city residents, and countless visitors.”

The full text of our letter is at https://drive.google.com/open?id=1UOKyRh-HbUmDCtftGH8MkE2oVpNYdpgu

In my individual letter to the chair of the House committee that’s considering the bill, I wrote, “It will save the Preakness.  It will be the building block for the Park Heights community.”

 

Dear Chair Kaiser:

The Maryland Stadium Authority is highly regarded for building Oriole Park and M&T Bank Stadium.

That’s why I met with Tom Kelso, chair of the Authority, in December 2015 to discuss a study of the future of the Pimlico Race Course site.

That study was funded by the City, the State, and the Maryland Jockey Club.  It is the forerunner of the redevelopment project for Pimlico and Laurel that your committees will consider tomorrow.

As I was walking to the Preakness last May, I saw Michael Gaines, running the barbeque for Manna Bible Baptist Church, right across Belvedere Avenue from the entrance to the Pimlico parking lot.

Michael’s brother is the pastor of the church.  They want to develop Belvedere Place, a mixed-use project including 150 units of mixed-income rental housing.  My 41st District colleagues and I are working with the church to obtain state funding.

The benefits of House Bill 1056, the Racing and Community Development Act of 2020, are twofold.

It will save the Preakness.  It will be the building block for the Park Heights community.

I urge a favorable report on this historic proposal.

Yours truly,

Samuel I. Rosenberg

 

Valuable Questions and a Small Step

The committee chairman’s questions are very valuable.

They are asked after my supporters and I have testified and all other members of the committee have asked their questions.

The chair’s questions provide insight into his or her thinking on my bill.

House Bill 457 would require schools to test more frequently for the presence of lead in each drinking water outlet more frequently than is currently required.

“I understand why the Maryland Association of Boardsof Education submitted written testimony,” noted chairman Kumar Barve. (A comment in this instance instead of a question.)

Unsaid was the fact that the association wanted to avoid having its representative testify in front of the committee and be asked tough questions.

I will ask the chair tomorrow what steps he wants to take next on my bill.

Peter Diamandis may not have been to Baltimore until last night, when he spoke at the Stevenson University Lecture Series at the Meyerhoff Symphony Hall.

The founder of Xprize Foundation. Diamandis predicted that the next decade will witness faster rates of positive change, fostered by tehnological advances, my brother Bruce wrote me.

I responded: “I agree with Peter D’s insight.  Public attention is focused on the actions of the powerful, but there are countless Sergeys [Sergey Brin co-founded Google.]out there.

And on a day when people are justifiably bemoaning the loss of Legg Mason, I am heartened by the fact that we are on the verge of taking a small step in a positive direction for the City by preserving the Preakness and redeveloping the Pimlico site.

 

No fence

“The fence comes down.”

The fence surrounds Pimlico Race Track.

It’s been there for quite some time.

I drive past it on Rogers Av., when I’m coming home from my district office.

I walk past it on Belvedere Av., coming from my house to the track on Preakness Day.

At a community meeting last night, Bill Cole said that when the site is redeveloped, “The fence comes down.”

Bill represented the City of Baltimore in the negotiations that resulted in the agreement to keep the Preakness at Pimlico and redevelop 50 acres on the site for housing, businesses, and recreation.

There will be no fence to keep people off the property.

Legislation to implement that plan will be introduced within a week.

We are in the home stretch.

My Priorities

There is no doubt as to my priorities for the upcoming legislative session.

Kirwan.  Crime.  Pimlico.

The future of Baltimore, as a constituent wrote me, is inside our schools.  The Kirwan Commission has proposed investments and reforms that are necessary to give every Maryland child access to a world class education.

I will scrutinize what the commission has proposed for pre-kindergarten, college and career readiness for students, teacher compensation, and accountability.  Enacting these recommendations is the most important vote I will cast this year – indeed this four-year term.

Our students, all of us, need to live in a safe city.  More than three hundred murders in a year is unconscionable.

We need to prevent crime from happening and enforce the law when it is broken.  I will propose incentives for police officers to live in Baltimore to address the crippling shortage of officers on the street.  I will work with my colleagues on other means to reduce crime.

We’re going to save the Preakness and transform the Pimlico race track site into housing, recreation, retail, and job opportunities. “While our communities each face their own challenges,” the neighborhood leaders surrounding the track have said, “we share a common desire to see all of our residents thrive.”

I was instrumental in funding the Maryland Stadium Authority’s study of the future of Pimlico. That study is at the heart of the agreement to transform the race track site.

I look forward to hearing from you as we address these and other issues.

Our living messengers

“We didn’t lose him, mind you – we gained so much knowledge from this man,” Christopher Johnson said of Congressman Elijah Cummings.

https://www.marylandmatters.org/2019/10/18/baltimore-mourns-its-native-son-and-champion/

Elijah Cummings and I were in the 1982 class of newly elected members of the House of Delegates. We knew each other from high school.

Elijah said, “City College was the first time I was in an integrated environment as an equal.”  He became an effective and passionate leader pursuing equality for all of us. We worked together to protect voting rights.

“Our children are our living messengers to a future we will never see.” I heard Elijah say that many times. Perhaps you did as well.

A quality education for all of our children, regardless of their background, is the goal of the Blueprint For Maryland’s future. It’s the work product of a commission chaired by Brit Kirwan, the highly respected former chancellor of the University System of Maryland.

This is the most important issue before the General Assembly. What standards do we set for our public schools and how do we fund them?

As you know, we’ve taken a big step forward in preserving the Preakness at Pimlico and redeveloping most of that land for commercial, residential, medical, and recreational uses.

What I did to bring this about is at http://www.delsandy.com/key-issues/pimlico-and-the-preakness/

 

Neglect it and they will still come.

On Friday, Black Eyed Susan Day, the crowd at Pimlico set records for attendance and wagering.

Peter Schmuck, the Baltimore Sun sports columnist, was impressed by the Preakness Day numbers:

The announced attendance of 131,256 should remind everyone just how important the race is to the city of Baltimore and the record handle of $99,852,653 showed that the Derby controversy might have enhanced the attractiveness of the event — at least to the people that bet on the 14 races.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/horse-racing/preakness/bs-sp-schmuck-preakness-column-20190518-story.html

People voted with their feet and their wallets to keep the Preakness at Pimlico.

Politicians pay a lot of attention to polls. In this instance, they should.

These new records came about despite the closure of the grandstand, resulting in a loss of 7,000 seats. The engineers’ report that prompted this action is still being kept from the public.

After the turnout this weekend, it will be difficult for the Stronach interests to argue in the legislature or a court room that the dilapidated condition of Pimlico constitutes a disaster or an emergency, what’s required under state law to move the race.

After plumbing failed again in women’s bathrooms on Preakness Day, it will also be difficult for the track owners not to repair that problem before next May.

“I’ve said all along I’d rather see it stay here in Baltimore,” Governor Larry Hogan said on Saturday. “We’re certainly hopeful that cooler heads can prevail.”

He then said he was…hopeful that discussions could move forward despite the lingering legal fight between the two sides.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/horse-racing/preakness/bs-md-preakness-mainbar-20190518-story.html

I’m with Governor Hogan.

 

  • My Key Issues:

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