Tag: Guy Guzzone
8 state senators get free rides to reelection, wit...
By Len Lazarick | May 8, 2022 | Election | 0 |
Senate Democrats unveil $520 million COVID-19 fisc...
By Bryan Renbaum | January 27, 2021 | General Assembly | 0 |
Hot contests for judge shut out independent voters
By Len Lazarick | May 22, 2020 | Election | 0 |
State faces crisis in getting direct service worke...
By Maryland Reporter | February 17, 2020 | General Assembly, News | 0 |
Audit: Public assistance programs lack documents t...
By Maryland Reporter | April 22, 2015 | News | 3 |
Analysis: Are we being set up for a tax hike to bolster transportation revenue?
by Len Lazarick | January 4, 2024 | General Assembly | 1 |
Are we being set up for state tax increases to fund transportation? That’s the question that came to mind after Maryland Transportation Secretary Paul Wiedefeld announced that the state would need to cut highway and transit projects by 8%, as well as state aid for county roads to compensate for a projected $3.3 billion deficit in the state Transportation Trust Fund in coming years. As expected, local officials and residents impacted by the cuts squealed.
Read More8 state senators get free rides to reelection, with no opponents in primary or fall
by Len Lazarick | May 8, 2022 | Election | 0 |
For the second four-year election cycle in a row, Howard County Sen. Guy Guzzone, one of the most powerful legislators in Annapolis as chair of the Budget and Taxation Committee, has no opponent in the Democratic primary and no Republican challenger in the fall.
Read MoreSenate Democrats unveil $520 million COVID-19 fiscal relief package
by Bryan Renbaum | January 27, 2021 | General Assembly | 0 |
Senate Democratic leaders Wednesday unveiled a $520 million coronavirus fiscal relief package aimed at helping both the state’s small businesses and its most vulnerable communities survive the pandemic.
Read MoreHot contests for judge shut out independent voters
by Len Lazarick | May 22, 2020 | Election | 0 |
Howard County this primary election has one of the most competitive races for circuit court judge in recent decades. Three lawyers are trying to defeat a sitting judge. Yet, more than 42,000 unaffiliated and third-party voters – 20% of registered voters – get no say on who sits on the bench.
Read MoreState faces crisis in getting direct service workers for health care
by Maryland Reporter | February 17, 2020 | General Assembly, News | 0 |
Demographic changes and a rapidly rising senior population in Maryland are driving the demand for direct service workers, who make up a third of the health care work force. But they are in such short supply that the Maryland Regional Direct Services Collaborative (MRDSC) has declared the situation a crisis.
Read MoreAudit: Public assistance programs lack documents to detect fraud
by Maryland Reporter | April 22, 2015 | News | 3 |
Social service agencies are missing critical documentation to check whether people currently enrolled in food stamps and energy assistance programs are actually eligible for those benefits, a state audit has found.
Read MorePhoto album: Tawes Crab feast, coolest in memory, had plenty of crabs, shortage of candidates
by Len Lazarick | July 17, 2014 | News | 1 |
It was the coolest Tawes Crab Feast in memory. The political-social event of the summer in Crisfield on the Lower Eastern Shore is usually a scorcher in the 90s, but Wednesday was in the low 80s with cool breezes off the bay and low humidity at least at the outset. There was a peculiar lack of candidates this year, perhaps due to the June 24 primary that eliminated many of them. Here’s a photo gallery of some of the folks who did show up.
Read MoreSenate incumbents pick up challengers on filing deadline
by Len Lazarick | February 26, 2014 | Annapolitics Blog, General Assembly, News | 3 |
Maryland Senate incumbents who were running unopposed picked up challengers at Tuesday’s filing deadline, but other senators without any opponents must wait until Monday to find out if the opposition parties will name a candidate to run against them.
In Baltimore County’s District 8, former Republican Del. John Bishop will run as a Democrat challenging Democratic Sen. Kathy Klausmeier.
Read MoreRobey named Md. Senate majority leader
by Len Lazarick | October 23, 2013 | Annapolitics Blog, General Assembly, News | 0 |
Democratic Senate President Mike Miller announced Wednesday night that Howard County Sen. Jim Robey will become majority leader of the Senate for Robey’s final year. He replaces Sen. Rob Garagiola who resigned in August.
In the surprise announcement at a fundraiser for the man running to succeed Robey in District 13 — Del. Guy Guzzone — Miller also said that Guzzone would fill Robey’s seat on the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee in 2015.
Read MoreDel. Guzzone goes for Robey’s Senate seat
by Len Lazarick | June 14, 2013 | Annapolitics Blog, News | 0 |
A large and diverse crowd usually flocks to Del. Guy Guzzone’s annual pizza party, filling the streets of his quiet Columbia neighborhood. But Senate President-for-life Mike Miller hasn’t showed up before at the event that asks only for a voluntary contribution.
So when the Senate chief popped out of his trooper-driven Crown Vic Thursday evening it was a sure sign that Democrat Guzzone was going to take the plunge and run for the state Senate seat being vacated by Jim Robey, the former Howard County executive.
Read MoreGuzzone won’t run for county executive; Schuh definitely will
by Len Lazarick | May 2, 2013 | News | 0 |
Democratic Del. Guy Guzzone has decided not to run for Howard County executive as many expected, but instead to campaign again for the legislature, possibly for the state Senate. Republican Del. Steve Schuh fulfilled everyone’s expectations Thursday night by announcing a race for Anne Arundel County executive, even though he will likely face new county executive Laura Neuman in a Republican primary as well as County Councilman John Grasso.
Read MoreRetiring Howard delegates endorse successor as part of big turnover
by Len Lazarick | April 30, 2013 | News | 0 |
Democratic Dels. Liz Bobo, Steve DeBoy and Jimmy Malone have disagreed on many of the big issues in their decades at the State House: taxes, gambling, gun control, same-sex marriage, the death penalty.
The three veteran delegates are giving up their seats representing the oddly shaped District 12 that stretches from West Columbia to Arbutus, but Monday they came together to endorse a candidate to replace them: Terri Hill, a Columbia plastic surgeon who grew up in its most liberal precincts.
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