State Roundup, June 30, 2016

HOGAN, DEL. GOV UNITE AGAINST POWER COST HIKES: Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan is joining forces with Delaware Gov. Jack Markell (D) to fight an increase in electricity rates to cover the cost of a power line that will connect Delaware to a nuclear power complex that sits off its shores, Ovetta Wiggins reports for the Post. The director of the Maryland Energy Administration said that at least 385,000 Maryland residents would be affected by the rate increases. She estimated that the average customer would pay $2 to $3 more a month.

  • Hogan met with Markell at Harpoon Hanna’s, a restaurant at the line between Ocean City and Fenwick Island, Del., for lunch and a news conference. He called the ruling on how to split up the costs of the project “a terrible decision,” writes Michael Dresser in the Sun. Hogan said ratepayers in Maryland and Delaware will bear about 90% of the costs of the $272 million power line, while 90% of the benefits will go to New Jersey.
  • “We have expressed our disappointment, frustration and opposition in a letter to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission this week and we have let the agency know that we are going to use every tool at our disposal to reverse this regrettable and improper decision,” Hogan said. Both Hogan and Markell stopped short of vowing to pursue the matter in court, saying they hoped federal regulators would change their ruling without the need for a lawsuit, reports Bryan Sears in the Daily Record.

UM CHIEFS GET RAISES: It may be lonely at the top, but there are some perks, writes Daniel Leaderman for the Daily Record. Leadership at 11 of the 12 University System of Maryland institutions will be getting raises in the coming fiscal year, most of no more than 3.5%. University of Maryland, College Park President Wallace Loh is getting the largest increase of $73,723, or 14%, bringing his total fiscal 2017 salary up to $600,314, according to data provided by the university system.

OD DEATHS IN MARYLAND UP: Data released Wednesday by the state Department of Health and Mental Hygiene show the number of drug and alcohol overdose deaths within the first quarter of the year rose more in Anne Arundel County than in any other jurisdiction in the state. There were 383 overdose fatalities in Maryland within the first three months of the year — with 45 reported in Anne Arundel, the statistics show, Lauren Loricchio reports in the Annapolis Capital.

  • As overdose deaths in Maryland continue to increase, Washington County saw a decrease in the first quarter of 2016 compared with the same time last year, Don Aines and CJ Lovelace report for the Hagerstown Herald Mail. The state Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reports a statewide total of 383 drug- and alcohol-related deaths from January to March, reflecting a steady year-over-year increase of about 65 deaths each year since 2013’s first-quarter total of 189. However, in Washington County, the total first-quarter overdose deaths dropped from 19 in 2015 to 12 in 2016, the report shows.

NEW LAWS TAKE EFFECT: From the AP at WTOP-AM, here are the laws that are set to go into effect tomorrow, July 1, in Maryland, including a minimum wage hike.

DEM LAWMAKERS SEEK TOUGHER GUN LAWS: Democratic members of Maryland’s congressional delegation gather in an attempt to maintain pressure on the issue of gun safety legislation. Maryland gun-safety advocates met in Baltimore to support tougher laws connected to gun violence, setting up what could be an interesting debate next week on Capitol Hill. After last week’s sit-in on the House floor, many of Maryland’s Democratic members of Congress, along with gun violence prevention advocates and victims of gun violence, made an attempt to keep up the pressure on the issue, addressing a crowd in north Baltimore, reports Lowell Melser for WBAL-TV.

Van Hollen gun violence

At Cathedral of the Incarnation in Baltimore, Rep. Chris Van Hollen at the podium and other Maryland congressmen and officials gather to support push for congressional action on gun laws. From Chris Van Hollen’s Facebook page.

UK SHOULD INVEST IN MARYLAND: Britons voted to leave the European Union last week. The United Kingdom’s departure from the EU could spell opportunity for Maryland. Nervous UK investors seeking new homes for their capital should find one in Maryland, Richard Douglas writes in an opinion piece in MarylandReporter.com.

NEW MO CO SCHOOL CHIEF: Jack Smith is not flashy. He describes himself as calm and persistent, a 58-year-old onetime English teacher who steps into the top schools job in Montgomery County on Friday with plans to parse data and listen as he sorts out how learning can be improved in the high-achieving district, Donna St. George writes in this profile for the Post. “I’m much more of a rock than a rock star,” said Smith, whose career in education spans more than three decades and includes recent high-level state posts.

CARROLL SCHOOL CLOSINGS OK’D: The Maryland State Board of Education on Tuesday upheld the Carroll County school board’s decision to close three schools, reports Jeremy Bauer-Wolf for the Frederick News Post. Appeals came before the state board to save Charles Carroll Elementary School, New Windsor Middle School and North Carroll High School. The Carroll County Board of Education voted in December to close them.

PUGH HOLDS DEBT-PAYING FUND-RAISER: The Democratic nominee for Baltimore City mayor, Catherine E. Pugh, was set to hold a fundraiser last night at the Baltimore Convention Center to try to pay off the substantial debts she incurred during the primary race, including a last-minute loan from Jim Smith, the two-term Baltimore County executive and former Maryland Secretary of Transportation, Mark Reutter reports for Baltimore Brew.

A CONSERVATIVE’S DILEMMA: A question has confronted him daily for months, writes Towson professor Richard Vatz in the Sun.  Am I going to vote for Donald Trump? Vatz looks a the dilemma facing conservatives as November approaches.

BEZOS AND THE POST: There is a very long and fairly interesting story in New York magazine about The Washington Post under the ownership of Jeff Bezos. Yet entirely missing from the story, much of which can be skipped by readers familiar with the background, is any mention of local news and its place in the new scheme of things. First mention comes in a comment on the story.

About The Author

Cynthia Prairie

cynthiaprairie@gmail.com
https://www.chestertelegraph.org/

Contributing Editor Cynthia Prairie has been a newspaper editor since 1979, when she began working at The Raleigh Times. Since then, she has worked for The Baltimore News American, The Chicago Sun-Times, The Prince George’s Journal and Baltimore County newspapers in the Patuxent Publishing chain, including overseeing The Jeffersonian when it was a two-day a week business publication. Cynthia has won numerous state awards, including the Maryland State Bar Association’s Gavel Award. Besides compiling and editing the daily State Roundup, she runs her own online newspaper, The Chester Telegraph. If you have additional questions or comments contact Cynthia at: cynthiaprairie@gmail.com

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