Our schools have been severely underfunded for decades. Maryland’s public school children have the Constitutional right to an equitable opportunity to attend healthy and safe schools that provide high quality education. One step toward delivering on that right is to increase funding for education.
By Frank Patinella
William E. (Brit) Kirwan, Ph.D.Appointed by: Senate President Thomas Miller, Jr.Commission Chair (chosen by Governor, Senate President & House Speaker); Dr. Kirwan is the Chancellor Emeritus of the University System of Maryland. David M. Steiner, Ph.D.Appointed by: GovernorDr. Steiner is Director of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Education Policy and Professor of Education at Johns Hopkins University. Scott DorseyAppointed by: GovernorMr. Dorsey is Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer at Merritt Properties, LLC. Senator Nancy J. KingAppointed by: Senate President Thomas Miller, Jr.Nancy King is a Democratic State Senator representing District 39 in Montgomery County. She serves at the Senate Chair of the Joint Committee on Children, Youth and Families. Richard S. Madaleno, Jr.Appointed by: Senate President Thomas Miller, Jr.Rich Madaleno is a Democratic State Senator representing District 18 in Montgomery County. He serves on
By Nicole McCann
Dr. Ivory Toldson addresses the “Kirwan” Commission on what Black students need to succeed.
By Nicole McCann
Just one 24 hour period in my work this week showed how dangerously misguided Baltimore leaders continue to be in their efforts to reduce violence. They are looking once again to "tough on crime" policies that lock up more Black residents, for longer periods of time.
By Meredith Curtis Goode
This Women's History Month, we remember that it was a woman who founded the ACLU of Maryland: Elisabeth Gilman, daughter of the first president of Johns Hopkins University. In 1921 she formed The Maryland Civil Liberties Committee.
By Meredith Curtis Goode
When Baltimore City’s chief lawyer Andre Davis reaffirmed several weeks ago that the City would not always agree to pay punitive damages judgments awarded against Baltimore Police Officers who intentionally and flagrantly abuse their authority, many people in Baltimore, including us at the ACLU of Maryland, cheered. The hope was that holding officers personally accountable for paying those (very rare) punitive damages would help deter that kind of egregious misconduct. So when the City announced after the verdict in the Gun Trace Task Force (GTTF) trial that it would not pay any damages awarded against the officers who plead or were found guilty, it is not surprising that some people also saw that as a step forward for individual police accountability. But it isn’t. Instead, it is a transparent attempt to again shift the cost of the BPD’s own repeated and systemic failures onto the people who have been victimized.
By David Rocah
After the 2016 election, the ACLU of Maryland realized that we were in for the fight of our lives to protect the civil liberties we hold dear. However, we also received an enormous wave of support. Thousands of Marylanders understood that our rights and liberties were at risk and felt the need to be educated, get involved, and take action.
By Meredith Curtis Goode, Sergio España
UPDATE: As this blog post was being sent to press, the court denied the Justice Department's request to delay Thursday's hearing. The court said, "The Government's motion is untimely. To postpone the public hearing at the eleventh hour would be to unduly burden and inconvenience the Court, the other
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