ReportWire

Tag: umbc

  • Are national politics influencing voters in the Maryland senate race? A new poll suggests it’s possible – WTOP News

    Are national politics influencing voters in the Maryland senate race? A new poll suggests it’s possible – WTOP News

    [ad_1]

    Despite strong favorability ratings and stronger name recognition, a new poll out from the UMBC Institute of Politics finds Democrat Angela Alsobrooks leads Republican Larry Hogan.

    Sign up for WTOP’s Election Desk weekly newsletter to stay up-to-date through Election Day 2024 with the latest developments in this historic presidential election cycle.

    It’s the most expensive U.S. Senate campaign the state of Maryland has ever seen, but a new poll suggests efforts to flip a seat from Democratic control may come up short.

    Despite strong favorability ratings and stronger name recognition, Democratic candidate and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks leads Republican candidate and former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan by a 48-39 margin, according to a new poll released Wednesday by the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC) Institute of Politics.

    “Both candidates are viewed favorably — more favorably than unfavorably,” said Mileah Kromer, the director of the UMBC Institute of Politics. “Forty-nine percent of Maryland likely voters have a favorable view of Angela Alsobrooks, 53% have a favorable view of former Gov. Larry Hogan.”

    But Kromer said only 4% of voters don’t know how they feel about Hogan, while 19% are still unsure about Alsobrooks.

    “I think that, in combination with the 20% of folks who said they could change their mind and the very small number now who are fully undecided, there is some room for fluctuation,” said Kromer. “But our poll does show that Angela Alsobrooks is up, and up outside of the margin of error.”

    A Republican hasn’t represented Maryland in the U.S. Senate since the 1980s, and the voter registration in Maryland is roughly 2-1 in favor of Democrats. That appears to be playing a big role in the outcome. During the survey, after voters expressed a preference for one or the other, they were asked why they felt that way.

    For Alsobrooks, 46% of voters backing the county executive “said something about how they liked her, or they had a positive view toward the Democratic Party or some of the Democratic policies,” said Kromer.

    But 26% of her support comes by the nature of having the letter “D” next to her name on the ballot.

    “They’re voting for Angela Alsobrooks because they do not want Republicans to take control of the U.S. Senate,” said Kromer.

    On the flip side, most Hogan voters are backing him because they like him so much, or because they have positive views of the GOP.

    “It is not an unusual thing that people vote based on party identification, because party does tell you a lot of things about what an individual candidate would do in office, or what they would care about, or what the issues they would advance and support,” said Kromer.

    “The big takeaway message is how important the control the Senate has become as an issue in this campaign,” she added.

    The poll also finds Hogan is only running about 4 points better than former President Donald Trump, who trails Vice President Kamala Harris by a 57-35 point margin in Maryland. Another 5% said they’re voting for a third party, and 3% are undecided.

    Also in November, Maryland voters will vote on whether to enshrine abortion rights into the state constitution. The UMBC survey found voters support “Question 1” rather broadly, by a 69-21 percent margin in Maryland.

    More than half (57%) of Maryland likely voters said abortion was a “critical issue” for them, Kromer said.

    “While ‘Question 1,’ perhaps as a stand-alone, hasn’t gotten that much attention, the issue of reproductive rights and the issue of abortion certainly has,” Kromer said.

    Most voters said the issue that mattered the most to them was the cost of everyday goods and services. Crime and public safety, as well as taxes and government spending, also rated high as issues voters cared about.

    The institute polled 863 likely voters over the final full week of September. The margin of error is +/- 3.3%.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

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

    [ad_2]

    John Domen

    Source link

  • $4.1M proposed settlement for students abused by former UMBC coach to go before Md. board – WTOP News

    $4.1M proposed settlement for students abused by former UMBC coach to go before Md. board – WTOP News

    [ad_1]

    A proposed $4.1 million settlement with students abused by a former University of Maryland Baltimore County coach goes before a state board in April.

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

    Maryland state officials are set to vote early next month on a proposed $4.1 million settlement with two groups of individuals who were abused by a former University of Maryland Baltimore County swimming and diving coach. The proposed payment is part of the Board of Public Works agenda for April 3, which was posted Friday afternoon.

    The settlement request comes from UMBC and the Office of the Attorney General after a U.S. Department of Justice Title IX investigation revealed this week that head coach Chad Cradock, who died in 2021, sexually and verbally abused members of the team for about five years.

    Beyond the agenda item, few details of the settlement were immediately available Friday afternoon.

    “If this settlement is approved, the Department of Justice will inform the individuals of the availability of the specific settlement payments to settle all claims against the University arising out of or related to sex discrimination at the University,” according to the April 3 board agenda.

    In a statement provided to Maryland Matters on Friday evening, Kacey Hammel, chief of staff to UMBC President Valerie Sheares Ashby, said, “UMBC has cooperated with the DOJ every step of the way and is committed to meeting the terms of the agreement, including the financial relief for individuals.

    Subject to BPW approval, the payment of funds under the agreement will have no impact on student services, activities, or programs, nor on any aspect of the academic enterprise.”

    The DOJ investigation alleges Cradock began to sexually abuse students on the men’s team starting in 2015.

    The following year, members of the women’s team were harassed, stalked and subjected to “dating violence” by their male teammates.

    In the DOJ letter addressed to Sheares Ashby, who began her tenure in August 2022, department officials said they conducted 70 interviews with former and current students, school administrators, staff with the athletic department and others.

    The investigation that began in November 2020 focused on the school not complying with Title IX obligations “in its response to known allegations of sex discrimination in its athletics department.”

    Title IX is a federal law passed in 1972 that combats discrimination based on sex among students and employees in education programs and activities.

    Cradock was a UMBC alumnus from Canada who came to the school on a competitive swimming scholarship. He became head coach of the swimming and diving team in 2001, and served in that position until departing without public explanation in late 2020.

    Cradock died on March 7, 2021, three days before his 47th birthday. No cause of death was publicly disclosed.

    Unrelated to the DOJ investigation, UMBC’s Graduate Student Association will host a Title IX forum April 3, on the same day and more than six hours later than the Board of Public Works meeting.

    “This event serves as an introduction of the Office of Equity and Civil Rights (ECR) to the student body. They oversee the office of Title IX,” according to a forum description. “This is a space where individuals are able to advocate for themselves or others for reform to our school’s Title IX policies and services individuals need related to issues like this.”

    Seven UMBC alumni, including trailblazing House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County) currently serve in the Maryland General Assembly. One of those alumni, Sen. Charles E. Sydnor III (D-Baltimore County), expressed his distress with the Cradock scandal on Friday.

    “While this is a painful moment for the greater UMBC family, I cannot imagine how greater the pain must be for the students who were victimized,” said Sydnor, whose district incudes the UMBC campus and whose daughter attends the school. Sydnor received a Masters of Public Studies degree at the university in 2000.

    “The United States Department of Justice’s Title IX findings were difficult to read and the University’s failure to properly respond to the harms suffered by our students are inexcusable,” he said in a statement Friday evening.

    “The students that were harmed deserved better than what they got. President Sheares Ashby committed to ensuring that failures like this ‘never happen again’ and that those who failed would be held to account. I take President Sheares Ashby at her word. I stand ready to support the students, President Sheares Ashby, and UMBC family.”

    This breaking news story has been updated.

    [ad_2]

    Matt Small

    Source link