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Tag: maryland senate

  • ‘291 pages of changes’: Advocates for developmentally, intellectually delayed individuals speak out in Annapolis – WTOP News

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    Advocates for developmentally and intellectually delayed individuals voiced concerns about changes that will affect caring for those individuals during a public hearing in Annapolis

    Advocates for developmentally and intellectually delayed individuals voiced concerns about changes in Maryland that will affect the care provided to those individuals during a public hearing in Annapolis on Tuesday.

    Maryland Sen. J.B. Jennings sponsored a bill that would require the Deputy Secretary for Developmental Disabilities to provide a 90-day public comment period before changes could be made to policy, the Self-Directed Services Manual or waivers.

    This follows changes the administration announced in a newsletter on Feb. 4 that would affect the nearly 4,000 people who receive self-directed services.

    Self-directed services are an alternative to traditional services for those who are developmentally and intellectually delayed.

    Instead of going to a center or attend a daily program, these individuals have a team they meet with to plan the best course of action so they can improve their lives. The administration provides them with a day-to-day administrator, which, in many cases, may be their parent or a sibling.

    Anne Vlearbone, co-leader of Concerned Citizens of Self-Directed Maryland, told WTOP that earlier this month she saw a tiny link at the bottom of the administration’s newsletter that said “policy changes.”

    “It’s 291 pages of changes that went into effect upon publication,” Vlearbone said. “Drastic changes.”

    According to Vlearbone, they include changes to billing, who qualifies to work, how you qualify to work and documentation.

    “I’m 60 years old. My son is 35. He’s perpetual movement. I don’t have time to document every time he goes to the bathroom and every time he got up to sneeze or wipe his nose,” Vlearbone said. “It’s physically impossible.”

    Vlearbone said the self-directed program has been wonderful for her son, Michael.

    “My son, because of his history of behavior problems, would not be accepted into most of the traditional agencies,” Vlearbone said.

    Not only does Vlearbone credit self-directed services for helping her son learn job skills at a farm, but she also said that, along with the time he spends volunteering at a pickleball facility, he has a meaningful life.

    “One of the joys of this program is he’s in the community daily. He’s a meaningful member of the community,” Vlearbone said.

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    © 2026 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jimmy Alexander

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  • Maryland House OKs new congressional map, but Senate will likely prove a roadblock – WTOP News

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    The Maryland House pushed forward with mid-decade redistricting at the urging of Gov. Wes Moore. However, leadership in the state Senate has said the bill doesn’t have enough support to advance in that chamber.

    ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — The Maryland House approved a new congressional map Monday that could enable Democrats to win the state’s only Republican-held U.S. House seat, but leadership in the state Senate has said since October the bill doesn’t have enough support to advance in that chamber — largely due to concerns it could backfire.

    The Maryland House pushed forward with unusual mid-decade redistricting at the urging of Democratic Gov. Wes Moore in response to redistricting in other states.

    Democrats now hold a 7-1 advantage over Republicans in the state’s U.S. House delegation. The new map would make it easier to defeat Republican Rep. Andy Harris and enable Democrats to win all eight seats.

    President Donald Trump launched mid-decade redistricting efforts last summer, when he urged Republican officials in Texas to redraw maps to help the GOP win more seats in hopes of preserving a narrow House majority.

    Maryland Democrats spent much of the four-hour debate on Monday criticizing Trump’s presidency. Del. C.T. Wilson, a Democrat who is the sponsor of the bill containing the map’s new boundaries, said the measure is needed “to help ensure that this administration finally has a Congress that puts his power in check.”

    Republicans who oppose the new map focused on how Harris’ district, which is mostly on the state’s largely rural Eastern Shore, would jump over the Chesapeake Bay to include more Democratic voters to help oust Harris.

    “It is about nothing except party politics,” Del. Jason Buckel, a western Maryland Republican who is the House minority leader, said.

    But Del. Marc Korman, a Democrat in the Montgomery County suburbs of the nation’s capital, argued that the district has extended over the bay several times since the 1960s — including once by court order — and five different Republicans still won the seat when it did, including Harris.

    Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat, has consistently said the redistricting effort aimed at flipping the seat held by Harris could jeopardize at least one seat now held by Democrats.

    Ferguson has pointed out that a congressional map adopted in 2021 was ruled unconstitutional by a judge who described it as “a product of extreme partisan gerrymandering.” That map also would have made it easier for a Democrat to defeat Harris. Maryland passed another map in 2022, and the parties dropped their legal fight. Redrawing districts again would prompt new legal challenges and potentially allow a court to impose districts, Ferguson has noted.

    Changing the map could be disruptive to the state’s election calendar, as well, due to expected legal challenges, the Senate president has said. Maryland has a Feb. 24 candidate filing deadline and a primary scheduled for June 23.

    Ferguson’s opposition to mid-decade redistricting has not changed, his spokesperson, David Schuhlein, said Monday.

    At the national level, the redistricting battle has resulted so far in nine more seats that Republicans believe they can win in Texas, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio, and six that Democrats think they can win in California and Utah.

    Democrats hope to fully or partially make up that three-seat margin in Virginia, though a judge recently ruled that their redistricting efforts were illegal. Lawmakers have appealed the case.

    As in Virginia, redistricting is still being litigated in several states, and there is no guarantee that the parties will win the seats they have redrawn.

    Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis plans to call a special session on redistricting in April.

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    © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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    WTOP Staff

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  • Md. Senate panel advances bills to ban agreements with ICE, face coverings for law enforcement – WTOP News

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    The Maryland Senate could be taking up bills as early as this week to ban agreements between local police and federal immigration authorities and to prohibit masks on law enforcement agents

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.

    The Maryland Senate could be taking up bills as early as this week to ban agreements between local police and federal immigration authorities and to prohibit masks on law enforcement agents, after the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee approved both Tuesday.

    The committee vote came less than a week after hours of testimony on the two bills, and the same day that the House Judiciary Committee was holding its own combative hearing on a companion bill to do away with the so-called 287(g) agreements between Immigration and Customs Enforcement and local sheriff’s departments. Nine Maryland counties have entered into such agreements, that require their jails to hold undocumented suspects to hand over to ICE for deportation proceedings.

    Both the House and Senate committee hearings took place against the backdrop of increased scrutiny of increasingly aggressive immigration enforcement, after federal agents fatally shot Alex Pretti, 37 in Minnesota. That shooting came weeks after an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Good, also 37, in Minneapolis.

    The Trump administration policies were never far from the discussion in Annapolis Tuesday.

    “We need to just get out of this business right now,” said Sen. William C. Smith Jr. (D-Montgomery), chair of Judicial Proceedings and lead sponsor of Senate Bill 245, which would ban 287(g) agreements.

    The committee voted 8-3, on party lines, to approve the bill that would prohibit local police or any “agent of the state” from entering into an agreement with the federal government to enforce civil immigration law.

    The vote came after the committee rejected an amendment from Sen. Mary-Dulany James (D-Harford) that would not have banned the agreements, but would have would have prohibited certain immigration enforcement activities by local police “unless an individual has been charged with or convicted of a felony.” Her amendment would also have required correctional facilities to report that and other information to the Governor’s Office of Crime Prevention and Policy.

    “I have a sheriff who I have a lot of respect for who’s been running a 287(g) jail-based program, as have some other jurisdictions in Maryland,” James said. “I’m impressed with how it’s run. They [ICE agents] are nothing like the people that I’m seeing on the [TV] screen in the streets.”

    But Smith urged the committee to reject the amendment because of how the immigration enforcement is being handled by federal agents.

    After about 30 minutes of debate, the committee rejected James’ amendment by a 7-4, with all three committee Republicans – Sens. William G. Folden of Frederick County, Chris West of Baltimore and Carroll counties and Mike McWay of Western Maryland – joined James in support.

    During a briefing with reporters Tuesday morning, Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) defended Smith’s bill, calling the operations of ICE and the Department of Homeland Security under the Trump administration “unconstitutional and unlawful.”

    “I’m very cognizant that we could see something happen in Maryland, and we want to make sure that we’re prepared as possible for whatever surge could happen,” he said. “The partnership with an organization that’s operating with the procedures that it has right now is undermining faith in law enforcement.”

    If approved, Maryland would join several Democratic-led states including DelawareIllinois and New Jersey to ban such agreements. California legislature is working to also approve limits on the agreements.

    ‘Storm troopers’

    The Judicial Proceedings Committee spent about 70 minutes on the face-covering legislation sponsored by Sen. Malcolm Augustine (D-Prince George’s) before voting 7-4, with James joining the three Republicans, to move the bill to the full Senate.

    Senate Bill 1 would prohibit face coverings on law enforcement officials working in the state, including ICE agents who are typically masked. The bill would ban items such as a balaclava, ski mask or neck gaiter for officers on duty. Exceptions would be made for officers “actively engaged in an undercover operation,” someone wearing a motorcycle helmet, a garment worn for religious purposes or when health-related matters are involved.

    The committee approved a couple of amendments, to require that the Maryland Police Training and Standards Commission develop a uniform policy prohibiting face coverings, versus a model policy. Violations would now be civil offenses, not criminal ones, and the penalty would be a fine up to $1,500 instead of up to $2,000 and possible two years imprisonment.

    Even with those amendments, opponents were not completely satisfied.

    West said he agrees that law enforcement officers should not be wearing masks resembling “storm troopers in Star Wars,” but he said there could be future conflicts between state officers trying to enforce the law on federal officers doing their duties under federal law.

    “The local officers are going to say, ‘Well, then you are obstructing justice. I’m putting you under arrest.’ And the ICE officers are going to respond by saying, ‘You’re obstructing federal officers, I’m putting you under arrest,’” West said. “Each trying to put the other squadron under arrest. This is bad. It’s not going to end happily.”

    Sen. Jeff Waldstreicher (D-Montgomery), vice chair of the committee, said after the voting session that the committee “made a statement today that the actions of the federal government are unacceptable to our Maryland values, and we as a legislature have a duty to respond. The committee had a legitimate debate, both on the underlying policies and the constitutionality of those policies, and we sent it to the floor of the Senate to continue that conversation.”

    Ferguson said both measures could be debated on the Senate floor as early as Thursday.

    287(g) in the House

    About two hours before the Senate committee’s vote on its 287(g) bill, the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on a House version sponsored by Del. Nicole Williams (D-Prince George’s).

    Williams said ICE isn’t providing public safety in communities, even in those Maryland jurisdictions that have signed on to them.

    One day after Wicomico County Executive Julie Giordano (R) testified against the Senate version of the bill last week, she announced on social media Friday that the county signed a 287(g) agreement, the ninth in Maryland to do so.

    “Officials who signed these agreements claim that there are means of enhancing public safety, but that’s false,” Williams said. “These agreements drain taxpayer dollars from the real work of local law enforcement, and while ICE does provide training equipment and some oversight, it offers no reimbursement for the staff and overtime required by these additional responsibilities.”

    Del. Lauren Arikan (R-Harford), whose county has the state’s second-longest 287(g) agreement, asked Williams if she’s prepared to push a bill to have President Donald Trump (R) send ICE teams to the state to replace the eliminated 287(g) agreements.

    “There will be blood on the hands of people that move this when folks die, because there’s no longer a jail model in place. So are you ready to do that?” Arikan said.

    “First of all, ICE shouldn’t be randomly engaging in shooting individuals,” said Williams, who summarized there have been federal agents and ICE activity in her legislative district where there’s no 287(g) in place.

    Del. Susan McComas (R-Harford) said it should be up to individual jurisdictions whether they want ICE or not.

    “That’s the fair way to do this,” she said. “If the community wants ICE, then let them have it.”

    When Del. Nino Mangione (R-Baltimore County) asked why a legal immigrant be worried about immigration enforcement, several people in the audience laughed.

    “Really? I would say basically every news story for the past 12 months would make the case for why legal immigrants, undocumented immigrants would be worried about interacting with ICE,” Comptroller Brooke Lierman (D) said. “Many people are under threat by ICE right now. I think that legal, documented immigrants also have a reasonable fear of interacting with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”

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    Will Vitka

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  • Md. Senate candidate Angela Alsobrooks responds to reports she improperly claimed tax credits – WTOP News

    Md. Senate candidate Angela Alsobrooks responds to reports she improperly claimed tax credits – WTOP News

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    Democratic Senate Candidate and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks is responding to recent reports that she had been improperly claiming tax credits for two homes that she owned.

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    Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks speaks during an interview in Gaithersburg, Md., Friday, Sept. 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Daniel Kucin Jr.)(AP/Daniel Kucin Jr.)

    Democratic Senate Candidate and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks is responding to recent reports that she had been improperly claiming tax credits for two homes that she owned.

    She told reporters Monday night that she was unaware of two tax credits, first reported by CNN, until a few days ago.

    One tax credit was for a townhome in Upper Marlboro that she began renting after moving out into another home in 2008. She received a homestead tax exemption for that house, which is only meant for primary residences.

    “I bought a house and the tax credit didn’t transfer, and I didn’t realize that it hadn’t transferred,” she told reporters at her family barbeque event Monday in Greenbelt.


    Visit WTOP’s Election 2024 page for our comprehensive coverage. 


    The second tax credit she claimed yet was ineligible for was for her grandmother’s home that she took over in 2005 when her grandmother moved out. There she received a senior tax credit until she sold the house.

    “I took over the home and paid the mortgage until I sold the house in 2018 and was never notified,” she said. “Just didn’t know that there that she had taken a senior tax credit.”

    She likely saved thousands of dollars over the years because of the two tax exemptions, it’s money she said she plans to pay back.

    “We’re correcting it right away, so we reached out. I found out about it a few days ago, reached out, and it looks like it can be corrected pretty easily,” she said.

    Alsobrooks is in a competitive senate race with former Republican Gov. Larry Hogan.

    A spokesperson for his camp said, “She claims to be unaware of tax laws it was her job to enforce.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Luke Lukert

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  • Md. Senate approves several renter-focused bills on Saturday before Sine Die – WTOP News

    Md. Senate approves several renter-focused bills on Saturday before Sine Die – WTOP News

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    In the Senate chamber, lawmakers moved swiftly through dozens of bills in a Saturday afternoon session.

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.

    In the Senate chamber, lawmakers moved swiftly through dozens of bills in a Saturday afternoon session.

    The legislative flow was only disrupted occasionally, due to brief technical errors, confusion over which bills were being discussed, or senators away from their seats when they were supposed to lead floor discussion on legislation.

    As the Senate churned through legislation ahead of the last day of session on Monday, several bills involving renter protection and housing affability received approval from the chamber and will soon head to the desk of Gov. Wes Moore (D), including some of the governor’s priority legislation.

    One of his priority bills, which works to increase affordable housing opportunities, received a last-minute change Saturday.

    House Bill 693, known as the Renters’ Rights and Stabilization Act, would create an Office of Tenants and Landlord Affairs in state government to help tenants know what protections they have under Maryland law and what legal actions they can take to defend themselves, along with other measures.

    Senate Minority Leader Stephen S. Hershey Jr. (R-Upper Shore) offered an amendment to the section of the bill that raises a fee required for a landlord to issue an eviction notice.

    Currently, it costs landlords $8 to issue an eviction notice for failure to pay rent. Moore initially wanted to raise it to $93, which is closer to the national average for such a fee.

    During the legislative process, the bill was amended to change the proposed fee increase to $83, and was then amended again to $43.

    Hershey’s amendment proposed Saturday “simply says that the court may allow a landlord to deduct this surcharge that’s been assessed from the tenant’s security deposit,” he said.

    “It still provides some protection that says that the deduction can be no more than the security deposit. Obviously, the judgement would have to be in the landlord’s favor, but we do think that it is an amendment that will kind of get things a little bit more towards the middle,” Hershey said.

    Sen. William C. Smith Jr. (D-Montgomery), who chairs the Senate Judicial Proceedings committee, was OK with the amendment, even though there is only one more day in the legislative session.

    “We view this as a friendly amendment,” Smith said, eliciting a chorus of “whoa” from a handful senators who were surprised by his willingness to accept this amendment.

    Hershey’s amendment passed. Shortly after, the Senate approved the Renters’ Rights and Stabilization Act on a 35-9 vote.

    Due to the floor amendment, HB 693 will need to be reviewed by the House of Delegates and see if they agree with the change. If so, the bill would head to Moore’s desk for consideration. If not, the two chambers will need to hastily iron out their differences on Monday.

    Moore has two other bills in his 2024 legislative package that aim to create more affordable housing supply in the state.

    HB 538 also received Senate approval Saturday afternoon. It aims to incentivize developers to add affordable housing options in future developments and would allow certain development projects to exceed typical density limits if the new development incorporates a certain percentage of affordable housing units.

    The Senate approved the measure Saturday on a 31-13 vote, with little discussion on the matter.

    Moore’s other housing bill, HB 599, is ready for his signature. Assuming he approves the legislation, it would create the Maryland Community Investment Corporation, a state entity that would make loans or investments aimed at developing and improving low-income communities.

    Some renter advocates are pleased with the passage of HB 1117 Saturday afternoon, a bill that is not part of Moore’s housing package.

    The bill is called the Tenant Safety Act and would make the escrow process more accessible to renters when landlords do not adequately address life-threatening repairs, by enabling tenants to file a complaint with the local district court and put rent payments in escrow while the complaint is adjudicated.

    The tenant advocacy group Renters United Maryland posted on X, the social media website formerly known as Twitter, in celebration of the bill passage.

    “After yrs of advocacy renters celebrate as the Tenant Safety Act passes in the @MDSenate,” the post says.

    The bill passed 30-11, on party lines. It awaits a final review from the House before it goes to the governor’s desk.

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    Ivy Lyons

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  • Maryland lawmakers debate tax and fee package. Some Democrats worry it may cost party the US Senate – WTOP News

    Maryland lawmakers debate tax and fee package. Some Democrats worry it may cost party the US Senate – WTOP News

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    A push in Maryland’s legislature for hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes and fees has some Democrats concerned that the package may bolster Republican former Gov. Larry Hogan’s campaign for U.S. Senate and cost the party its already-narrow majority.

    FILE – Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan addresses supporters at the Maryland statehouse, Jan. 10, 2023, in Annapolis, Md. A push in Maryland’s legislature for hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes and fees has some Democrats concerned that the package may bolster Republican former Gov. Larry Hogan’s campaign for U.S. Senate and cost the party its already-narrow majority. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)(AP/Julio Cortez)

    ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — A push in Maryland’s legislature for hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes and fees has some Democrats concerned that the package may bolster former Republican Gov. Larry Hogan’s campaign for U.S. Senate and cost their party its already-narrow majority.

    It’s a worry that is being amplified by the need for federal support to rebuild Baltimore’s collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge.

    While a Republican hasn’t won a Senate race in Maryland since 1980, Hogan is widely believed to be the GOP’s best chance in decades. Hogan’s political ascendency resulted in large part from his criticism of tax increases that resonated with a tax-weary electorate in his upset victory in 2014.

    “If you go back to 2014 and 2018, I think it’s not brain science to see what happened and how the former governor was successful in the state of Maryland, and so that context is very real, and we have to be honest about it,” Maryland Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat, said Tuesday in an interview with The Associated Press.

    Hogan, who began building his popularity early in his first term by lowering tolls statewide in 2015, has been quick to condemn the revenue package that has led to a budget showdown between the chambers. On Wednesday, he noted the initial proposal in the Maryland House of Delegates was for $1.3 billion, which “would cost us jobs and hurt Maryland families already squeezed by historic inflation.”

    “Enough is enough,” Hogan posted on X. “Let’s reject these tax hikes and send a message that it’s time to end politics-as-usual.”

    Democrats hold a tenuous 51-49 majority in the U.S. Senate. And Hogan, who was originally elected governor by railing against tax increases endorsed by the General Assembly, has already made the Maryland race unusually competitive in the heavily Democratic state.

    A Washington Post-University of Maryland poll late last month showed Hogan remains an overwhelmingly popular political figure in Maryland, underscoring his potential to turn a usually solid blue state into a competitive one for Republicans. But while his potential opponents remain relatively unknown, the poll also shows that Maryland voters remain much more likely to prefer a Democratic U.S. Senate.

    Del. Ben Barnes, a Democrat who chairs the Maryland House Appropriations Committee, said the state’s transportation funding problems can’t wait a year, and he questions why the legislature with strong Democratic majorities in both chambers should wait.

    “I’m not afraid of Larry Hogan,” Barnes said. “I don’t think any of us should be afraid of Larry Hogan. I think voters are going to vote in this U.S. Senate race based on national issues. I do think Marylanders expect us to solve this problem, particularly this transportation issue, largely created by Larry Hogan, and his neglect of the Transportation Trust Fund for eight years caused the shortfall.”

    Nevertheless, some Democrats question whether now is the time for a package of tax and fee increases proposed by the state’s House of Delegates to pay for transportation and K-12 education, when lawmakers could wait a year and defer potential political blowback.

    “It is something that is a factor in the decision-making process for the next year,” Ferguson said. “The makeup of the U.S. Senate will matter for the long-term investment future for Maryland.”

    With strong majorities in both the the state House and Senate, and a 2-1 advantage in statewide voter registration, Maryland Democrats typically don’t have to worry much about the GOP in the state capital. But Hogan is a rare Maryland Republican who has won two statewide races. That’s something neither of his likely Democratic opponents, including U.S. Rep. David Trone and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks, has done.

    Gov. Wes Moore, a Democrat, submitted a balanced $63 billion budget for the next fiscal year in January without tax increases, and he has said raising taxes would face “a very, very high bar” this year.

    The Maryland Senate this month largely kept his budget plan intact, despite a drop in revenue estimates announced after the governor submitted his plan. But the House has changed budget legislation to include new revenues, relying on a variety of transportation-related user fees and corporate tax reform for much of it. The Senate has been mostly unreceptive to the House plan, with Ferguson ruling out the corporate tax component. He’s also ruled out legalizing internet gambling this year, another part of the House plan.

    Senators negotiating with House members have expressed willingness to raise about $250 million in revenues, but the House negotiators have said that’s not enough. With differences still unresolved and less than a week left in the session, Moore issued an executive order Monday night to extend the session by 10 days, if needed beyond Monday’s scheduled adjournment at midnight.

    In December, the state’s transportation secretary proposed roughly $3.3 billion in cuts for Maryland’s six-year transportation spending plan, as inflationary pressures add to the problem as well as the fact that traditional revenue sources haven’t kept up with costs.

    Ferguson said the budget plan approved in the Senate invests in the state’s priorities without tax increases, with ample reserves still in the rainy day fund to avoid a hurried approach to revenues. He also noted that the bridge collapse has only underscored the need to keep a Democratic majority in the Senate.

    “This is about the long-term future of the state, and that is the political reality that we have to operate within,” Ferguson said.

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    © 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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    WTOP Staff

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