The Most Important Person

I don’t care why a colleague is voting the right way.  That support helps us get to 71, the number needed to pass a bill.

That was my thinking as we gradually (over seven years) reached  the majority to repeal the death penalty.

Peter Schmuck’s column in yesterday’s Sun makes that point about moving the Preakness to Laurel – in the DC suburbs.

There already is a real question about how much excitement the Preakness — under any circumstances — will generate in the Washington area. Obviously, the hardcore horse racing fans in the Mid-Atlantic region will show up anywhere, but does anyone seriously believe the parochial affinity for the race and infield festival that generates annual six-figure crowds at Pimlico will somehow shift from Baltimore to Laurel?  

http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/horse-racing/bs-sp-why-moving-preakness-a-bad-idea-20190508-story.html

That’s not one of the arguments we’ve been making, but we will now.

This comes on the heels of the decision by Pimlico’s ownership to close a portion of the facility for safety reasons while refusing to make public the engineer’s study that prompted this action.

I went to Pimlico yesterday, the first day of the abbreviated spring meet.

I ran into a classmate from Pimlico Junior High.  He said that a horse trainer had told him that the racing surfaces at Pimlico – both dirt and grass, were superior to those at Laurel.  I had heard something similar from friends in the industry.

When I went to bet on the favorite in the sixth race, the teller recognized me from the polls for early voting.

It reminded me of Black Eyed Susan Day several years ago.

Waking through the crowd with a friend from college, I spoke with several people I knew from the legislature.

On the parking lot as we were leaving, someone I didn’t recognize thanked me for coming to his community meeting a few weeks earlier.

Afterwards, I turned to my college friend and said, “That’s the most important person I saw today.”

Disruption at City Hall

The Mayor of Baltimore will not seek reelection.  After Thursday’s raid by the FBI, that is even more evident than when the members of the City Council and the City delegation in the House of Delegates, myself included, called upon Mayor Pugh to resign earlier this month.

Not running for a second term will be the case for three consecutive mayors.

That disruption at City Hall is not good.

But the work of governing goes on.

On Thursday, I attended the Maryland Racing Commission  meeting to urge that the public release of the engineer’s report which prompted the Maryland Jockey Club to announce that it was closing the Pimlico north grandstand for the Preakness for safety purposes.

I joined the Howard Park community at the Baltimore City Liquor Board, where an agreement to post a “No Loitering” sign outside the 4G’s liquor store was submitted to the Board.

I attended a fundraiser for Planned Parenthood and did not know most of the people there. That’s a good thing. The organization has broadened its base of support.

An asset that benefits the community

Transforming Pimlico Race Course into an asset that benefits the community and region year round  and providing a quality education for all of our children.  These are my priorities – for the past 90 days in Annapolis and for the next four years. We made significant progress on these issues and others during this year’s legislative session.  I welcome your thoughts on what we achieved and what issues matter most to you.

As you know, Speaker Mike Busch passed away just before the session ended.  I was honored to offer a prayer before the House of Delegates in his memory.  I said, in part, “As this House, his team, his state evolved on issues, he did more than adjust to that change, he understood it.”

My full session summary is at http://www.delsandy.com/2019-session-summary/

Discussions

Whatever happens in the remaining days of the legislative session, discussions about the future of Pimlico and the Preakness must take place afterwards.

That’s what the Maryland Stadium Authority study recommends.

That’s what the bill I testified for, House Bill 1190, would require.

That’s what I wrote a Baltimore Sun reporter this morning after reading this paragraph in an online article this morning.

But in a statement, the company indicated the city’s plan was a non-starter: “We don’t believe that hypothetical scenarios are in the best interest of the City, State or the thoroughbred racing industry as this just perpetuates delaying decisions.”

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-triple-crown-plan-20190401-story.html

I responded to the reporter:

To the contrary, further discussion of this Triple Crown proposal during the interim is an opportunity to transform the Pimlico property into a major economic, health care, and recreational hub, which would benefit all of the surrounding neighborhoods; keep the Preakness in Baltimore, which bolsters the region’s economy; and enhance Maryland’s racing industry,  which would thrive from public and private investment in Pimlico, Laurel, and Bowie. 

This afternoon, I was asked to participate in a program about the proposed Preakness move to Laurel.

The Stronach group is available for this panel discussion, the email said.

I hope the track owners are also available for discussion with the City and the State.

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.

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 thirty miles down the road

“Listen, they moved Yankee Stadium, the House That Ruth Built.”

An official of the company that owns Pimlico Race Track, Tim Ritvo, said that to the New York Times during Preakness Week of 2016.

I emailed him: “The Yankees moved across the street, not thirty miles down the road.”

I will recount that conversation when I testify tomorrow on House Bill 1190, which would create a work group to study how to finance the redevelopment of the Pimlico Race Track property, as proposed by a study commissioned by the Maryland Stadium Authority.

Racing facilities would be modernized, and commercial, medical, housing, and recreational facilities would be built on the rest of the property.

It was my idea for that study to be undertaken.

I did so after another Pimlico official said, “Right now, I’d say Laurel is in the lead [to host the Preakness].”

The owners of Pimlico are no longer masking the fact that they want to move the Preakness thirty miles down the road – to Laurel.

Track officials met with neighborhood leaders last weekend.

Their pitch: we will help you redevelop the property after we close the race track.

The community’s response: a unanimous no. We want to implement the Stadium Authority plan.

I will let the committee know of that statement as well.

A Pimlico bill

Nothing concentrates the mind in Annapolis like a bill hearing.

We now have a Pimlico bill. In a few weeks, we’ll have a hearing.

Senate Bill 800 has been introduced by Senator Antonio Hayes. I will be introducing an identical bill in the House.

Our legislation would finish the work of the study undertaken by the Maryland Stadium Authority.

A seven-member panel would propose how this redevelopment project could be funded.

An article in the Baltimore Business Journal quotes me accurately and, if I may say so, effectively.

https://www.bizjournals.com/baltimore/news/2019/02/06/maryland-bill-backed-by-pugh-would-extend-pimlico.html

 

“It’s magical in here.”

“The Preakness isn’t going anywhere. I’m for keeping it here in Baltimore.”

I was quoted extensively in the media this past week, but I’m not the person who said that.

It was Governor Hogan.

He wasn’t the only big name supporter of keeping the Preakness at Pimlico.

“To me, it’s magical in here. There’s something about it. I’ve been watching it since I was 10, 11 years old. You think of Jim McKay. You think of the Preakness. There’s so much history here,” said Bob Baffert, the Hall of Fame trainer of Justify, the Preakness winner.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/horse-racing/bs-sp-bob-baffert-is-still-charmed-by-charm-city-20180516-story.html

Last year, the conversation was about whether the State and City should spend more than $250 million for a one-day per year return on its investment.

Now there are serious discussions about both renovating the track and making the rest of the site a 365-days per year asset of economic and community development.

Our goal is redevelopment that benefits Maryland, the Baltimore region, the track’s neighbors, and the track’s owners.

If that’s our objective, I like the odds.

And I won’t stop working to attain that result until we cross the finish line.

A quality education, gun violence, and a 21st Century Pimlico

Whether it’s providing a quality education for all of our children, protecting us from gun violence, or building a 21st Century Pimlico Race Track that will benefit the entire community, Baltimore City and the 41st District need effective representation in Annapolis. I achieved significant progress on these issues and others during this year’s legislative session and throughout my career.

Universal Pre-K and Seven New Schools

Race to the Tots was the name Senator Bill Ferguson and I gave to our 2013 legislation creating a competitive grant program to stimulate innovation and expand access to high-quality early childhood education. The next year, the Prekindergarten Expansion Act of 2014 was introduced by the O’Malley Administration. Public and private providers could bid for $4.3 million in grants to stimulate innovation and expand access to high-quality early childhood education.

Our efforts helped set the stage for the recommendation of the Kirwan Commission on Innovation and Excellence in Education that the state provide universal access to public and private prekindergarten for all four-year olds and low-income three-year olds. This year, we passed legislation mandating that the Governor maintain funding for pre-k expansion at $23 million when a federal grant and state match expire in the next fiscal year.

I look forward to attending the reopening of the new Lyndhurst Elementary School. Arlington, Cross Country, Forest Park, Pimlico, Mary Rodman, and Calvin Rodwell will also be rebuilt under the 21st Century Schools Program, which my City delegation colleagues and I fought for in 2013. We must now ensure that the instruction in these schools is also of the highest quality.

Parochial schools also play a vital role in the education of many children in our community. My advocacy helped bring about a $1.5 million funding increase for these low-income students.

Reducing Handgun Violence

We must reduce the risk of gun violence. It’s become too easy to get a handgun license because of Governor Larry Hogan. In Maryland, if you want to wear, carry, or transport a handgun, you must obtain a license from the State Police. If your application is rejected, you can appeal to the Handgun Permit Review Board, whose members are appointed by the Governor.

That system has worked for over 40 years. However, the current members, all appointees of Governor Hogan, have reversed far more license denials by the State Police than did any of their predecessors.

House Bill 819 will send appeals from the Review Board to administrative law judges, subject its hearings to the Open Meetings Act, and require an annual report on the Board’s decisions. I joined Delegate Vanessa Atterbeary in sponsoring this bill. It passed both houses of the General Assembly with bipartisan majorities. We will continue to monitor the Board.

Black Eyed Susans and a Green Facility

The Preakness is our Super Bowl. Every May, our economy gets a huge boost from visitors and locals celebrating the second jewel of the Triple Crown. An abandoned Pimlico would be a major blow to Northwest Baltimore, the City, and the metropolitan region.

It was my idea for the Maryland Stadium Authority to conduct a study of Pimlico’s future. The final phase of that this review has just begun. The study will include “visioneering and concept development of an ‘ideal’ Preakness venue…and assessing the site’s ability to accommodate various non-racing functions on a year-round basis.” It should be completed by December.

A 21st Century Pimilco must be environmentally friendly. I have asked for a review of alternative paving methods to reduce water runoff and green storm water mitigation facilities. LifeBridge Health expects to use its Preakness Way property on the eastern end of the site as a destination campus, including an outpatient care center.

My top priority for next year’s session will be to keep the Preakness where it belongs – at Pimlico – and to do so in a way that benefits all neighborhoods near the track. The site of the second Triple Crown race will be a jewel in Baltimore’s crown.

See https://marylandmatters.org/2018/03/22/guest-commentary-keeping-the-preakness-at-pimlico-what-are-the-odds/

A Leg Up from Start-ups to Amazon

Whether it’s Amazon HQ2 or a start-up company in shared work space, a well educated work force is essential for Marylanders to compete in the 21st Century economy. The first foot in the door for many young people is an internship.

In 2014, I worked with Freeman Hrabowski, President of UMBC, to create a tech internship program, where the State of Maryland pays part of the salary for a summer internship with a start-up. This session, I worked with Governor Hogan to fund the program and expand it to larger companies, like Amazon, as well as state and local governments.

Not Political Grandstanding

Every day I cringe at the damage being done by the Trump Administration to our democracy and our well being. Last year I introduced the bill which gave Attorney General Brian Frosh the authority to sue the federal government without Governor Hogan’s approval. Whether President Trump is unconstitutionally profiting from his business dealings while in office is the issue in one of the suits the AG filed as a result of this law. A trial judge recently allowed this case to proceed.

When Republicans tried to eliminate funding for the lawyers needed for this litigation, I declared on the House floor, “It is imperative that our Attorney General, on behalf of the people of Maryland, defend the rule of law. It is not tomfoolery to defend the rule of law. It is not political grandstanding to defend the rule of law. That’s what we asked our Attorney General to do.” This funding was not cut.


First Response to Online Dirty Tricks

I was a key player in our first-in-the nation response to the Kremlin’s disruption campaign during the 2016 election. As a result of my introduction of House Bill 768, when such ads target our state or local elections in the future, online platforms will be required to retain copies of campaign material and to disclose who paid for political ads.

Several of the provisions in my legislation were amended on to House Bill 981, which has been enacted. Maryland is the first state to adopt such a law.

Safe Streets and Hate Crimes

The Safe Streets program stops the spread of violence in communities by using the strategies associated with disease control, the Abell Foundation concluded. It detects and interrupts conflicts, identifies and treats the highest-risk individuals, and changes social norms. Mayor Catherine Pugh wants to expand this program, and I supported the bill we passed requiring a $3.6 million funding increase.

A constituent met with me about juveniles who had threatened to rob him. What could be done to impose the appropriate penalty on young but serious offenders? The failure of witnesses to appear, I found out, is a major problem. I worked with Delegate Luke Clippinger on House Bill 1023. A judge can now ensure a witness’s attendance by issuing a court order directing that a witness be brought before the court.

The Weinberg Park Heights JCC was evacuated twice last year due to bomb threats. I sponsored the bill that made hate crimes a felony in Maryland. I introduced House Bill 246 to make a threat to commit such a crime a felony as well, even if there was no attempt to carry it out, as happened at the JCC. HB 246 did not pass, but we did enact a law expanding hate crimes to include illegal actions directed at a group of people, not just an individual. This reflects the harm that such crimes can have on the greater community’s sense of security.

E-cigarette Vaping and Crisis Services

My work has reduced teen smoking. This session, I focused on electronic cigarettes. There is much evidence that this is now the entry point to smoking for many youth. I introduced House Bill 1094, which will impose the same penalties for the sale of electronic cigarettes to minors as we already do for the illegal sale of tobacco products. HB 1094 was enacted.

The demand for mental health and substance abuse services, such as opioid addiction, keeps growing, but treatment resources have not expanded to meet that need. This care can significantly reduce preventable behavioral health crises and offer earlier intervention to stabilize a situation more quickly and at the lowest level of care appropriate. House Bill 1092 will fund a program for local jurisdictions to apply for state grants to establish or expand these services.

I was able to pursue measures this session to improve the health, safety, education and economic prosperity of the City of Baltimore and the State of Maryland. There is much still to be done. With your support for myself and Delegate Angela C. Gibson, I promise to continue this vital work for the residents of the 41st District.

  • My Key Issues:

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