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  • Maryland candidates join Congressional Black Caucus conference, work to double number of Black women in US Senate – WTOP News

    Maryland candidates join Congressional Black Caucus conference, work to double number of Black women in US Senate – WTOP News

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    Sen. Laphonza Butler (D-Calif.) said she understood the significance of math when she walked into the U.S. Senate chamber last year as just the third Black woman and 12th Black person ever to serve in the chamber.

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

    Angela Rye moderates a Sept. 13 panel, “Black Women Belong…In the Senate,” at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s conference. Others, from left, are Angela Alsobrooks and Lisa Blunt Rochester, Senate candidates from Maryland and Delaware, respectively, and Sen. Laphonza Butler (D-Calif.). Photo by William J. Ford

    Sen. Laphonza Butler (D-Calif.) said she understood the significance of math when she walked into the U.S. Senate chamber last year as just the third Black woman and 12th Black person ever to serve in the chamber.

    Butler, who will step down when her term expires in January, said the number of elected Black women senators could double this fall if voters elect U.S. Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.) and Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks (D).

    “I’m so excited that we are about to move beyond the acceptance of having just one. We’re going to be bold enough to send two to the United States Senate,” Butler said Friday, the third day of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s legislative conference at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C.

    “I’m excited for the doors that they are going to keep kicking open when we are no longer counting how many, but that we are welcoming women, Black women, women of color, women of all experiences and walks of life to the highest chamber in our United States government,” Butler said.

    Butler was appointed to the Senate after the death of longtime California Sen. Dianne Feinstein. Only two Black women have been elected to the chamber: Carol Moseley Braun of Illinois was the first, in 1992, and Vice President Kamala Harris was elected in 2016 from California.

    If Rochester and Alsobrooks are elected this fall, then, the total number of Black women elected to serve in the Senate in its history will double from two to four. All the women are Democrats.

    In Delaware, home to President Joe Biden, Rochester is the heavy favorite to win against Republican Eric Hansen and independent Michael Katz. She has served as Delaware secretary of labor, personnel director with the state’s Office of Management and Budget, and CEO of the Metropolitan Wilmington Urban League.

    “We are qualified,” Rochester said. “We don’t just step up into this and it wasn’t, ‘Poof. Now I’m here.’”

    Rochester said sometimes when she walks into a room with a male Senate colleague, people will “call him senator and me Lisa. It’s important how we present ourselves.” 

    In neighboring Maryland, Alsobrooks has a more competitive race against two-term former Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican. She said her race “is center stage” in the fight to determine control of the Senate, repeating a central theme of her campaign.

    “When we elect Kamala Harris to be our president, she’s going to need to have the majority in the Senate so that she can get her agenda across,” Alsobrooks said.

    She also took aim at Hogan’s position on abortion, another campaign theme, saying the former governor “is, bless his heart, he’s shifting and changing and all kind of things.”

    Alsobrooks noted that vetoed legislation two years ago to expand abortion access in the state, and when that veto was overridden by the Democratic-controlled legislature, he withheld state funding that would have been used to train non-physicians to perform abortions. That money was released by Democratic Gov. Wes Moore on his first day in office last year.

    Hogan has pushed back on the abortion argument, saying repeatedly that while he personally opposes abortion, he would vote to codify the protections of Roe v. Wade, which was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2022.

    And the Hogan campaign this week turned the control of the Senate argument on its head with a new ad that says Hogan would be a “critical swing vote” in a closely divided Senate. To drive the point home, the campaign pointed to an endorsement of Hogan by retiring Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who often broke with his party in recent years, giving him outsized influence in the Senate.

    Despite their qualifications, Rochester said women are still viewed differently than men who are elected to office.

    Alsobrooks’ career spans 27 years, including serving as the county’s first full-time prosecutor to handle domestic violence cases, the youngest and first woman elected as the county state’s attorney in 2010 and the first woman elected to be county executive eight years later.

    Butler was president of California’s biggest union of long-term care workers, Service Employees International Union 2015. She also served as an adviser when Harris launched a 2019 campaign for president.

    If elected, Rochester said she and Alsobrooks, who affectionately call each other future “sister senator,” plan to push to codify Roe v. Wade. The conservative majority of the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 two years ago in favor of a Mississippi ban on abortion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, allowing states to set their own rules for abortion.

    “I have my daughter sitting right here on the front row, and she now has less rights than we did and that ain’t right,” Rochester said. “So, we want to make sure that those who come before us and those who are here now have the right to do with their body what they want.”

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    Ivy Lyons

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  • Crowded field files to replace former Prince George’s County Council Member Mel Franklin – WTOP News

    Crowded field files to replace former Prince George’s County Council Member Mel Franklin – WTOP News

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    At least 13 people – nine Democrats and four Republicans – had filed a certificate of candidacy by Friday’s deadline.

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

    A crowded field of candidates is lining up to fill the vacant at-large seat on the Prince George’s County Council, with just one month until the primary in the special election.

    At least 13 people – nine Democrats and four Republicans – had filed a certificate of candidacy by Friday’s deadline.

    According to the Maryland State Board of Elections website, the Democratic candidates include County Council Chair Jolene Ivey, state Del. Marvin E. Holmes Jr., former Del. Angela M. Angel, Bowie Mayor Tim Adams, Tamara Davis Brown, Gabriel Njinimbot, Keisha D. Lewis, Judy Mickens-Murray and Leo Bachi Eyombo.

    The state board also reported that Republicans Kamita Gray, Michael Riker, Isaac Toyos and Jonathan White had filed for the seat.

    All the candidates will run in a special primary election scheduled for Aug. 6, with early voting to run from July 31 to Aug. 5. The winner would run in the Nov. 5 general election, the same day as the presidential election.

    They are running to replace former at-large County Council Member Mel Franklin (D), who abruptly resigned on June 14 after serving 14 years on the council. Less than a week later, charging documents were filed against Franklin for multiple counts in what authorities said was a campaign theft scheme that involved more than $133,000 from his campaign account.

    The winner of this fall’s special election would serve the remaining two years of Franklin’s term.

    Belinda Queen, a community activist and former Prince George’s school board member, said the county might have to pay for another special election, depending on who wins.

    An Ivey victory would require an election to fill her current seat representing the county’s District 5, an area that includes Bladensburg, Cheverly and Glenarden. Ivey has another two years on her four-year term. Other county elected officials have been mentioned as possible candidates, but none were on state or county lists as of Friday evening.

    “The taxpayers will have to pay for that,” Queen said. “I get why all of them are running … to see about wanting to serve in a larger position.”

    She believes most voters will support Ivey, who’s already known in the county with her position on the council.

    Ivey’s campaign has already mailed fliers to Democratic voters that include a family portrait with her husband, Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-4th) and their children, a summary of her legislative work and an endorsement from former County Executive Rushern L. Baker III.

    Meanwhile, Queen, who isn’t supporting any candidate, offered advice for all the candidates.

    “The most objective way to get your voice out there is to go in the grocery store and meet the people. That’s the best thing to do,” Queen said.

    The other known candidates include:

    Holmes, who has served as a state delegate for more than 20 years. He’s one of the leading voices on housing topics as chair of the Housing and Real Property Subcommittee on the House Environment and Transportation Committee.

    Adams, who became Bowie’s first Black mayor in 2019. He’s also the owner of a multimillion-dollar company in the county called Systems Applications & Technologies Inc. (SA-TECH).

    Davis Brown, an attorney and community activist, ran in the May 2022 Democratic primary for the District 26 legislative seat against state Sen. C. Anthony Muse (D). She lost by 345 votes.

    Angel, a former state delegate, sought a vacant House seat in December to represent legislative District 25.

    Mickens-Murray is a former school board member who was appointed in 2021. State law passed a year later removed all four appointed members starting this month and will make the body a fully elected board to represent nine districts.

    Njinimbot, an entrepreneur, ran an unsuccessful congressional campaign in this year’s May primary against Ivey.  He came in second place, but only garnered 4,366, or 5.5%, of the vote.

    Bachi Eyombo sought the at-large seat two years ago in the Democratic primary election. So did White, an Air Force veteran who’s now running as a registered Republican.

    Riker is a retired Prince George’s County Police officer.

    Toyos did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.

    The state Board of Elections updated the list of candidates at 9:22 p.m. Friday with Lewis and Gray, but no information was immediately available on them.

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    Kate Corliss

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  • ‘Kumbaya’ is the word, as Maryland Democrats make peace after primary – WTOP News

    ‘Kumbaya’ is the word, as Maryland Democrats make peace after primary – WTOP News

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    Shake hands, hug, kiss and be friends again.

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

    Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller, Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks and other Democrats hoist their hands in the air at a May 23, 2024, unity breakfast at Martin’s Crosswinds in Greenbelt. (Photo by William J. Ford.)

    Shake hands, hug, kiss and be friends again.

    That’s what members of the Maryland Democratic Party did Thursday morning at a unity breakfast nine days after the primary election that ended a heated contest between Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks and U.S. Rep. David Trone (D-6th) for the party’s nomination for U.S. Senate.

    Trone, who lost that race to Alsobrooks, walked to the stage as “kumbaya” blared through the speakers Thursday.

    “Soak it in. Kumbaya,” he said to his fellow Democrats at Martin’s Crosswinds in Greenbelt, the same venue where Alsobrooks held her election night watch party.

    Although part of Thursday’s mood was festive as some sipped coffee, water or juice and nibbled pastries, messages from Trone and other speakers centered on the Republican nominee, former Gov. Larry Hogan, and the need for Democrats to retain control of the Senate.

    U.S. Rep. David Trone gives remarks May 23, 2024, during a Maryland Democratic Party unity breakfast at Martin’s Crosswinds in Greenbelt. Photo by William J. Ford.

    “We must unite behind County Executive Angela Alsobrooks. Angela has my full endorsement,” Trone said to cheers from the crowd. “It’s easy to cheer, but it’s hard to work. The difference of Angela Alsobrooks and Larry Hogan is night and day.”

    During the nearly 90-minute event, speakers noted that in her nearly eight years as Prince George’s County state’s attorney, Alsobrooks oversaw a 50% decline in violent crime, matching a national trend. Hogan released a 10-point paper on public safety Wednesday, but Gov. Wes Moore (D) noted that during Hogan’s eight years as governor, homicides in Baltimore rose to more than 300 every year.

    Trone and other Democrats said Thursday that Alsobrooks will fight for women and abortion rights, while repeatedly pointing to Hogan’s 2022 veto of a measure that would have expanded abortion access in the state. When the legislature overrode his veto, Hogan withheld state funding that would have been used to train nonphysicians to perform abortions — funding that Moore released on his first day in office in 2023.

    Hogan said on WBAL Radio Wednesday that he would work to codify protections in Roe v. Wade (which the U.S. Supreme Court overturned in June 2022) that had guaranteed the right to an abortion up to 26 weeks.

    But Democrats don’t believe him.

    Moore used a line from author James Baldwin to accentuate the point.

    “Now the old governor’s saying he’s pro choice,” Moore said. “James, please tell us one more time: ‘I cannot believe what you say because I see what you do.’”

    Moore continued: “Angela isn’t flip-flopping on issues to win a vote. She’s been consistent throughout her entire career. Angela isn’t studying polls to see how she should talk about reproductive rights because she says what she believes in her heart. Let’s not forget the people of Maryland recruited Angela Alsobrooks to run for Senate. (U.S. Senate Minority Leader) Mitch McConnell recruited Larry Hogan.”

    Alsobrooks, who seeks to become the first Black woman elected to represent Maryland in the Senate, also had a few words for Hogan and Republicans in Congress, especially about protecting women’s health care.

    “We’ve already heard from Larry Hogan, who said he understands how emotional this issue is for the ladies. We tried to tell Larry Hogan we don’t need any help with our emotions, none whatsoever,” she said. “Furthermore, we need him and all of these politicians to get out of the examination room.”

    A Hogan campaign spokesperson did not respond to messages seeking comment on the Demorcrats’ rally Thursday.

    Minutes before the breakfast ended, a video on the social platform X appeared from an account called “Hogan Rapid Response,” paid for by Hogan for Maryland, which is new to the platform this month. It asked if the Democratic Party played a video of several Democratic leaders praising Hogan.

    Part of the Democratic Party’s work is to convince some undecided Democrats and unaffiliated voters, particularly those who voted for Trone, not to choose Hogan.

    That’s not a problem for Cheryl Bost, president for the Maryland State Education Association, who had endorsed Trone in the primary. When Hogan was in office, he called the teacher’s union “thugs.”

    “Our members don’t forget,” said Bost, who added that Hogan vetoed the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future education reform plan four years ago.

    U.S. Rep. David Trone, left, and Cheryl Bost greet each other May 23, 2024, at Maryland Democratic Party unity breakfast at Martin’s Crosswinds in Greenbelt. Photo by William J. Ford.

    Meanwhile, Democratic leaders plan to travel across the state to encourage voters not only to support Alsobrooks in the general election, but also to support Democrats running for seats in the U.S. House of Representatives:

    Blaine H. Miller III will face Rep. Andy Harris (R-1st), the lone Republican in the state’s federal delegation. Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr. will face Republican Kimberly Klacik, a local conservative radio host and MAGA personality for the open 2nd district seat. Sen. Sarah K. Elfreth (D-Anne Arundel) will face Republican businessman and attorney Rob Steinberger to represent the 3rd district. April McClain Delaney will go against former state Del. Neil Parrot (R). The winner would replace Trone to represent the 6th district.

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    Ivy Lyons

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  • Md. public school superintendent announces accountability task force to assess academic achievement – WTOP News

    Md. public school superintendent announces accountability task force to assess academic achievement – WTOP News

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    The group will include local superintendents, principals and higher education representatives to provide recommendations on how to better assess how students are doing in the classroom.

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

    Maryland Interim State Superintendent Carey Wright speaks at a press conference Oct. 12, 2023. (Courtesy Maryland Matters/Danielle J. Brown)

    Five days after the Maryland State Board of Education unanimously voted to appoint Carey Wright as the state’s permanent superintendent of schools, she held a news conference on Monday to announce the creation of a task force to assess academic achievement.

    Wright said members of this group will include local superintendents, principals and higher education representatives to provide recommendations on how to better assess how students are doing in the classroom. The group will be led by the Center for Assessment, a national education nonprofit that designs, implements and evaluates accountability systems to see how students are learning.

    Part of this initiative stems from the Maryland Comprehensive Assessment Program (MCAP), which measures a student’s proficiency in math, English and science.

    The Maryland Report Card uses a rating system from one to five stars to measure overall school performance such as graduation rates, attendance and academic performance.

    MCAP results are among the factors that determine the state’s report card and school star rating system.

    Although 76% of Maryland schools received at least three out of five stars on the state’s report card released in December, only 47% of all students in third to eighth grades scored on a proficient level in English language arts. The percentage was even lower in math, at nearly 25% proficiency.

    “That’s doesn’t ring true,” Wright said. “You can’t have three quarters of your schools being rated as excellent, if you will, and then not seeing student achievement, almost commensurate with that.”

    The task force, which will meet about twice a month, will begin its work Thursday and provide recommendations by December to the state Board of Education. Because this accountability system to assess student achievement is in state statute, any proposed changes would need to be done before the Maryland General Assembly convenes for its 90-day legislative session in January.

    There’s also a plan to update the online report card to make it easier for parents, guardians and students to comprehend.

    “The report card website needs to be a lot more accessible for folks to understand and be able to access data for their schools in their districts,” said Joshua Michael, vice president of the school board. “So delighted that Dr. Wright will be leading that portion of the accountability [measure].”

    Wright, who will begin her tenure without the interim title July 1, said conversations “have to start now” on trying to diversify the state’s teacher workforce.

    That’s part of the priorities in the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future education reform plan, but some local school leaders have documented challenges in hiring and retaining qualified teachers, and even recruiting teachers of color.

    Although Maryland is one of the most diverse states in the nation, a September 2023 report from The Century Foundation noted that 70% of the teachers in the state were white in 2022. In comparison, about 19% were Black and 4% were Latino.

    The percentages of the student population at the time: About 40% white, 33% Black and 21% Latino.

    Wright recalled a program in place while she was schools superintendent in Mississippi that she would like to replicate in Maryland.

    During her nine-year tenure in Mississippi, which ended with her retirement in 2022, the state became the first in the nation to launch a state-run residency teacher program to fill teaching positions and lack of diverse teachers.

    “I think we need to do a better job of campaigning and outreach,” Wright said Monday about boosting Maryland’s teacher workforce. “It’s looking to see how we are helping districts recruit at specific areas. Children need to see somebody that looks like them standing in front of the classroom.”

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    Jose Umana

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  • $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

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    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.

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    Matt Small

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  • Md. house speaker packages ‘decency agenda,’ releases video ahead of legislative push – WTOP News

    Md. house speaker packages ‘decency agenda,’ releases video ahead of legislative push – WTOP News

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    The “decency agenda” championed by House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County), one of her main priorities for this year’s 90-day legislative session, was formally released Thursday.

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

    House Speaker Adrienne Jones (D-Baltimore County) highlighted her “decency agenda” as part of her speech to state Democrats gathered at a pre-session luncheon in Annapolis on Jan. 9, 2024. Photo by Bryan P. Sears.

    The “decency agenda” championed by House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County), one of her main priorities for this year’s 90-day legislative session, was formally released Thursday.

    While the bills that are part of the agenda have all been introduced in recent days, their common thread is being amplified with a video message that Jones released Thursday.

    “To me, decency is about respect,” Jones said. “Respect for our communities, coworkers, friends and families. Unfortunately, over the past few years, that respect has been jeopardized by political disagreements that has literally pulled us apart.”

    Five bills are part of the speaker’s decency agenda in the House of Delegates.

    At the top of the agenda is House Bill 785 sponsored by Del. Dana Jones (D-Anne Arundel), which focuses on protecting controversial books and other diverse materials in libraries.

    The package also includes anti-discrimination and anti-disinformation bills and a measure to provide training to school officials on anti-semitism and Islamophobia.

    The library bill is part of a national conversation on what literary material is being made available in public libraries and school libraries.

    The legislation, labeled the “Freedom to Read Act,” seeks to protect school and public library employees by stating they “may not be dismissed, suspended, disciplined, demoted, reassigned, transferred or otherwise retaliated against” for following state library standards that are laid out in the bill.

    Some of the standards, according to the bill, would include not removing library materials, books and other resources based on an author or creator’s background, origin, or opinions. In addition, a library should not prohibit or remove materials from its catalogue “because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval.”

    If any county library, resource center, or “cooperative service program” developed by the Maryland State Library Agency have policies that aren’t consistent with these state standards, then the state librarian would authorize the state comptroller to withhold state funding.

    A person cannot “knowingly and” unlawfully take, disfigure, or ruin any book or other library property.

    A person found accused of these offenses would be charged with a misdemeanor and, if found guilty, could spend up to 10 months in jail, pay a fine not exceeding $1,000, or both. The current fine is $250.

    The bill is scheduled for a hearing before the House Ways and Means Committee on Feb. 21.

    “If you don’t like a book, you don’t have to read it. And if it’s not right for your family, you don’t have to check it out for your child or your family,” Dana Jones, who’s worked on this legislation for nine months, said in an interview this week. “But you shouldn’t have the ability to take that book off the shelf for somebody who does want to read it [and] could learn from the lived experiences of those people in the book.”

    House Minority Leader Jason C. Buckel (R-Allegany) signaled his discomfort with the legislation and said the key issue in the discussion is what’s “age-appropriate.”

    “Public libraries are wonderful places. We need to have a wide variety of educational literature and materials in them,” said Buckel, who serves on the Ways and Means Committee. “But if 6-year-olds and 8-year-olds and 9-year-olds can easily access material that’s not written for them…I think that’s a problem.”

    He continued: “I think it’s a problem to use taxpayer dollars to provide materials that most of us wouldn’t read [and] almost all of us wouldn’t read to our kids. That’s not a knock on the LGBTQ community. It has a place in public discourse for more mature children and adults, just as literature that probably is a little too mature in a heterosexual context. I wouldn’t support any of that being in schools.”

    National movements

    If the Democratic-controlled General Assembly approves the library legislation, Maryland would be one of the few states in the nation to approve a policy with strong protections for what can be found in libraries and penalties for those who attempt to thwart it.

    Illinois became the first state in the nation last year to sign a similar policy into law, which went into effect Jan. 1.

    Several other state legislatures, including Colorado, Kansas, New Jersey and New Mexico have seen anti-book banning legislation introduced this year.

    To combat book banning efforts nationwide and celebrate Banned Books Week in October, PEN America, the literature and human rights organization, launched online training for students that included sessions with best-selling authors, activists and others.

    The organization, which also advocates for the First Amendment, published a report which showed more than 3,300 books were banned in the U.S. during the 2022-23 school year, a 33% increase from the previous school year.

    The report found the top five books banned in schools last school year were “Tricks,” “The Bluest Eye,” “Looking for Alaska,” “A Court of Mist and Fury” and “Gender Queer: A Memoir.”

    Although the PEN America report notes Maryland was one of 16 states without book bans, there’s been some local resistance.

    The Carroll County School Board unanimously approved a policy last month, which says in part that “all other instructional materials…shall not contain sexually explicit content. Sexually explicit content is defined as unambiguously describing, depicting, showing, or writing about sex or sex acts in a detailed or graphic manner.”

    An email sent to Maryland Matters on Wednesday from a school board spokesperson showed a list of books that were removed from school library shelves and media resource centers along with others that were retained. One book in a second round of review titled “Sex is Funny Word” was recommended by a reconsideration committee to “retain” in the schools, but the superintendent chose to remove it.

    Moms for Liberty, a conservative parental-rights group with about 300 chapters nationwide, has been one of the leaders pushing for stricter rules for school systems to select books in libraries.

    According to the group’s website, 10 chapters have been established in Maryland, in Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Cecil, Frederick, Harford, Howard, Montgomery, Talbot and Worcester counties.

    Suzie Scott, chair of the Moms for Liberty’s Maryland Legislative Committee, called the Freedom to Read Act bill “very radical” and part of an agenda with the Maryland Library Association.

    “The [Freedom to Read] Act is really a right to read inappropriate material,” said Scott, chair of the organization’s Harford County chapter. “It will allow the state to train librarians to keep inappropriate materials by reframing words like ‘diversity’ and ‘inclusion’…and have to have this material in our schools. Some of it is truly pornographic.”

    Scott highlighted BookLooks.org as a resource that has reviewed thousands of books.

    The site rated “Gender Queer: A Memoir,” one of the books PEN America noted as one of the nation’s most banned books in schools, with “4.” The number, according to Book Looks, equates to a book with adult content with “explicit, sexual nudity.”

    Scott said if people want to purchase the books, or read them at a public library or online, that’s fine. However, she said books such as “Gender Queer” aren’t suitable for young people.

    “I’m 100% opposed to any censorship. I love the Harford County Public Library. It is a wonderful system, but I do believe I have the right to protect my children and grandchildren from materials that are clearly inappropriate for minors,” she said. “Parents aren’t just being heard and our challenges are being met with this book banning label and we are homophobic. Not at all.”

    Joshua Stone, executive director of the state Library Association, acknowledged there’s a “very small section of the community” trying to set an agenda for what materials should be on bookshelves.

    According to 172 responses in a survey between Sept. 19 to Sept. 25 from the Maryland Association of School Librarians, about 52% of respondents avoided purchasing a book because they were afraid it may be controversial.

    Last year in Carroll County, the state’s librarian association rallied before the school board in support of a librarian who reassigned as an English teacher, according to The Baltimore Banner.

    That’s why Stone said the Freedom to Read Act is important, because it would allow library employees to do their jobs without fear of retribution.

    “It will help libraries set their own standard and it gives the community actual avenues to be a part of that discussion without having one parent who decides that no children in that community should be able to read a book they disagree with,” he said. “It will let Maryland be a leader in the nation as far as protecting libraries, protecting library workers and protecting the freedom to read.”

    Another Freedom to Read Act supporter is Sonia Alcántara-Antoine, the CEO of the Baltimore County Public Library. Alcántara-Antoine, who also serves as president of the Public Library Association that represents libraries in the U.S. and Canada, traveled this week to Cleveland to talk about 21st Century libraries.

    “Libraries are welcoming, inclusive spaces that are there to serve their communities,” she said. “Our job is to provide access to materials, services and resources that reflect the diversity of our communities. It’s not appropriate for one person or one small minority within a community to basically determine what can be on the shelf at the library because they might disagree with it. Libraries do not prohibit or remove materials from our collections based on partisan or doctrinal disapproval.”

    Remaining decency agenda 

    The four remaining bills on the decency agenda includes House Bill 333 sponsored by Del. Samuel I. Rosenberg (D-Baltimore). A hearing already took place Feb. 6 before the Ways and Means Committee.

    The legislation would require each social media platform of more than one million monthly active users in the country “to make reasonable efforts to prevent, detect, and remove accounts and posts that communicate election disinformation in the state.”

    The final three bills scheduled for hearings this month are:

    • House Bill 602 – sponsored by Jones and co-sponsored by Del. Luke Clippinger (D-Baltimore), chair of the House Judiciary Committee. The bill, scheduled for a hearing Wednesday before the Economic Matters Committee, proposes to ensure employees do not discriminate against a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.
    • House Bill 1386 – sponsored by Del. Vanessa Atterbeary (D-Howard), chair of the Ways and Means Committee, would require each county and the city of Baltimore board of education for employees to receive annual training “on the prevention of antisemitism and islamophobia.” A hearing is scheduled before that committee Feb. 26.
    • House Bill 1287 – sponsored by the speaker and co-sponsored by Atterbeary and Del. Jheanelle K. Wilkins (D-Montgomery), vice chair of the Ways and Means Committee and chair of the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland. As part of rewarding a new contract, the legislation would require an incoming state superintendent and a local school superintendent must complete a school leadership course or program. A hearing on the bill is scheduled for Feb. 28 before the Ways and Means Committee.

    “I want to be clear: I’m not trying to push my ideology on anyone else. I am not asking for Marylanders to believe in what I believe in, or compromise their values,” Speaker Jones said. “We know that we’ll never agree on everything, and we shouldn’t. But we need to be able to have disagreements without being disagreeable. We need to stop allowing our worse instinct to drive the conversation. I’m just asking us all to show a little bit more decency, a little bit more respect, and a little bit more patience for the beliefs and the identity of our fellow citizens.”

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    Ivy Lyons

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  • Md. house speaker packages ‘decency agenda,’ releases video ahead of legislative push – WTOP News

    Md. house speaker packages ‘decency agenda,’ releases video ahead of legislative push – WTOP News

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    While the bills that are part of the “decency agenda” have all been introduced in recent days, their common thread is being amplified with a video message that Jones released Thursday.

    FILE – Maryland House Speaker Adrienne Jones speaks during a news conference at the Statehouse, Feb. 9, 2023, in Annapolis, Md. In 2024, Maryland voters will decide whether to enshrine the right to abortion in the state’s constitution, after the House of Delegates voted Thursday, March 30, to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)(AP/Julio Cortez)

    The “decency agenda” championed by House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones (D-Baltimore County), one of her main priorities for this year’s 90-day legislative session, was formally released Thursday.

    While the bills that are part of the agenda have all been introduced in recent days, their common thread is being amplified with a video message that Jones released Thursday.

    “To me, decency is about respect,” Jones said. “Respect for our communities, coworkers, friends and families. Unfortunately, over the past few years, that respect has been jeopardized by political disagreements that has literally pulled us apart.”

    Five bills are part of the speaker’s decency agenda in the House of Delegates.

    At the top of the agenda is House Bill 785 sponsored by Del. Dana Jones (D-Anne Arundel), which focuses on protecting controversial books and other diverse materials in libraries.

    The package also includes anti-discrimination and anti-disinformation bills and a measure to provide training to school officials on anti-semitism and Islamophobia.

    The library bill is part of a national conversation on what literary material is being made available in public libraries and school libraries.

    The legislation, labeled the “Freedom to Read Act,” seeks to protect school and public library employees by stating they “may not be dismissed, suspended, disciplined, demoted, reassigned, transferred or otherwise retaliated against” for following state library standards that are laid out in the bill.

    Some of the standards, according to the bill, would include not removing library materials, books and other resources based on an author or creator’s background, origin, or opinions. In addition, a library should not prohibit or remove materials from its catalogue “because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval.”

    If any county library, resource center, or “cooperative service program” developed by the Maryland State Library Agency have policies that aren’t consistent with these state standards, then the state librarian would authorize the state comptroller to withhold state funding.

    A person cannot “knowingly and” unlawfully take, disfigure, or ruin any book or other library property.

    A person found accused of these offenses would be charged with a misdemeanor and, if found guilty, could spend up to 10 months in jail, pay a fine not exceeding $1,000, or both. The current fine is $250.

    The bill is scheduled for a hearing before the House Ways and Means Committee on Feb. 21.

    “If you don’t like a book, you don’t have to read it. And if it’s not right for your family, you don’t have to check it out for your child or your family,” Dana Jones, who’s worked on this legislation for nine months, said in an interview this week. “But you shouldn’t have the ability to take that book off the shelf for somebody who does want to read it [and] could learn from the lived experiences of those people in the book.”

    House Minority Leader Jason C. Buckel (R-Allegany) signaled his discomfort with the legislation and said the key issue in the discussion is what’s “age-appropriate.”

    “Public libraries are wonderful places. We need to have a wide variety of educational literature and materials in them,” said Buckel, who serves on the Ways and Means Committee. “But if 6-year-olds and 8-year-olds and 9-year-olds can easily access material that’s not written for them…I think that’s a problem.”

    He continued: “I think it’s a problem to use taxpayer dollars to provide materials that most of us wouldn’t read [and] almost all of us wouldn’t read to our kids. That’s not a knock on the LGBTQ community. It has a place in public discourse for more mature children and adults, just as literature that probably is a little too mature in a heterosexual context. I wouldn’t support any of that being in schools.”

    National movements

    If the Democratic-controlled General Assembly approves the library legislation, Maryland would be one of the few states in the nation to approve a policy with strong protections for what can be found in libraries and penalties for those who attempt to thwart it.

    Illinois became the first state in the nation last year to sign a similar policy into law, which went into effect Jan. 1.

    Several other state legislatures, including Colorado, Kansas, New Jersey and New Mexico have seen anti-book banning legislation introduced this year.

    To combat book banning efforts nationwide and celebrate Banned Books Week in October, PEN America, the literature and human rights organization, launched online training for students that included sessions with best-selling authors, activists and others.

    The organization, which also advocates for the First Amendment, published a report which showed more than 3,300 books were banned in the U.S. during the 2022-23 school year, a 33% increase from the previous school year.

    The report found the top five books banned in schools last school year were “Tricks,” “The Bluest Eye,” “Looking for Alaska,” “A Court of Mist and Fury” and “Gender Queer: A Memoir.”

    Although the PEN America report notes Maryland was one of 16 states without book bans, there’s been some local resistance.

    The Carroll County School Board unanimously approved a policy last month, which says in part that “all other instructional materials…shall not contain sexually explicit content. Sexually explicit content is defined as unambiguously describing, depicting, showing, or writing about sex or sex acts in a detailed or graphic manner.”

    An email sent to Maryland Matters on Wednesday from a school board spokesperson showed a list of books that were removed from school library shelves and media resource centers along with others that were retained. One book in a second round of review titled “Sex is Funny Word” was recommended by a reconsideration committee to “retain” in the schools, but the superintendent chose to remove it.

    Moms for Liberty, a conservative parental-rights group with about 300 chapters nationwide, has been one of the leaders pushing for stricter rules for school systems to select books in libraries.

    According to the group’s website, 10 chapters have been established in Maryland, in Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Cecil, Frederick, Harford, Howard, Montgomery, Talbot and Worcester counties.

    Suzie Scott, chair of the Moms for Liberty’s Maryland Legislative Committee, called the Freedom to Read Act bill “very radical” and part of an agenda with the Maryland Library Association.

    “The [Freedom to Read] Act is really a right to read inappropriate material,” said Scott, chair of the organization’s Harford County chapter. “It will allow the state to train librarians to keep inappropriate materials by reframing words like ‘diversity’ and ‘inclusion’…and have to have this material in our schools. Some of it is truly pornographic.”

    Scott highlighted BookLooks.org as a resource that has reviewed thousands of books.

    The site rated “Gender Queer: A Memoir,” one of the books PEN America noted as one of the nation’s most banned books in schools, with “4.” The number, according to Book Looks, equates to a book with adult content with “explicit, sexual nudity.”

    Scott said if people want to purchase the books, or read them at a public library or online, that’s fine. However, she said books such as “Gender Queer” aren’t suitable for young people.

    “I’m 100% opposed to any censorship. I love the Harford County Public Library. It is a wonderful system, but I do believe I have the right to protect my children and grandchildren from materials that are clearly inappropriate for minors,” she said. “Parents aren’t just being heard and our challenges are being met with this book banning label and we are homophobic. Not at all.”

    Joshua Stone, executive director of the state Library Association, acknowledged there’s a “very small section of the community” trying to set an agenda for what materials should be on bookshelves.

    According to 172 responses in a survey between Sept. 19 to Sept. 25 from the Maryland Association of School Librarians, about 52% of respondents avoided purchasing a book because they were afraid it may be controversial.

    Last year in Carroll County, the state’s librarian association rallied before the school board in support of a librarian who reassigned as an English teacher, according to The Baltimore Banner.

    That’s why Stone said the Freedom to Read Act is important, because it would allow library employees to do their jobs without fear of retribution.

    “It will help libraries set their own standard and it gives the community actual avenues to be a part of that discussion without having one parent who decides that no children in that community should be able to read a book they disagree with,” he said. “It will let Maryland be a leader in the nation as far as protecting libraries, protecting library workers and protecting the freedom to read.”

    Another Freedom to Read Act supporter is Sonia Alcántara-Antoine, the CEO of the Baltimore County Public Library. Alcántara-Antoine, who also serves as president of the Public Library Association that represents libraries in the U.S. and Canada, traveled this week to Cleveland to talk about 21st Century libraries.

    “Libraries are welcoming, inclusive spaces that are there to serve their communities,” she said. “Our job is to provide access to materials, services and resources that reflect the diversity of our communities. It’s not appropriate for one person or one small minority within a community to basically determine what can be on the shelf at the library because they might disagree with it. Libraries do not prohibit or remove materials from our collections based on partisan or doctrinal disapproval.”

    Remaining decency agenda 

    The four remaining bills on the decency agenda includes House Bill 333 sponsored by Del. Samuel I. Rosenberg (D-Baltimore). A hearing already took place Feb. 6 before the Ways and Means Committee.

    The legislation would require each social media platform of more than one million monthly active users in the country “to make reasonable efforts to prevent, detect, and remove accounts and posts that communicate election disinformation in the state.”

    The final three bills scheduled for hearings this month are:

    • House Bill 602 – sponsored by Jones and co-sponsored by Del. Luke Clippinger (D-Baltimore), chair of the House Judiciary Committee. The bill, scheduled for a hearing Wednesday before the Economic Matters Committee, proposes to ensure employees do not discriminate against a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.
    • House Bill 1386 – sponsored by Del. Vanessa Atterbeary (D-Howard), chair of the Ways and Means Committee, would require each county and the city of Baltimore board of education for employees to receive annual training “on the prevention of antisemitism and islamophobia.” A hearing is scheduled before that committee Feb. 26.
    • House Bill 1287 – sponsored by the speaker and co-sponsored by Atterbeary and Del. Jheanelle K. Wilkins (D-Montgomery), vice chair of the Ways and Means Committee and chair of the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland. As part of rewarding a new contract, the legislation would require an incoming state superintendent and a local school superintendent must complete a school leadership course or program. A hearing on the bill is scheduled for Feb. 28 before the Ways and Means Committee.

    “I want to be clear: I’m not trying to push my ideology on anyone else. I am not asking for Marylanders to believe in what I believe in, or compromise their values,” Speaker Jones said. “We know that we’ll never agree on everything, and we shouldn’t. But we need to be able to have disagreements without being disagreeable. We need to stop allowing our worse instinct to drive the conversation. I’m just asking us all to show a little bit more decency, a little bit more respect, and a little bit more patience for the beliefs and the identity of our fellow citizens.”

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    Emily Venezky

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