Major Wins & Real Challenges: 2025 Housing Legislation Wrap-Up
As the 2025 Maryland General Assembly session came to a close, Renters United Maryland is reflecting on the progress made—and the work still ahead—in the fight for housing justice.
This year brought some hard-earned victories for renters across the state, as well as sobering reminders of the continued challenges in securing safe, stable, and affordable housing for all Marylanders.
Here’s a look at the key legislative outcomes impacting tenants this session:
Read moreA Win for Baltimore, A Win for Justice
My name is Mary Randall, and I’ve lived in Baltimore City my entire life. I love my city. It’s a place of resilience, community, and beauty. But, if you live here, you also know how often we’re asked to carry burdens that others don’t. For years, trash incineration has been one of those burdens.
For years, those of us living near the incinerators were told that this was a necessary part of managing waste and creating energy. But that’s not the full story. Trash incineration creates more pollution than coal plants. It’s not clean, and it’s certainly not renewable. Yet it received subsidies meant for actual renewable energy sources like wind and solar. Worse, this pollution disproportionately impacted neighborhoods like mine, where working-class Black and brown families are more likely to live. It felt like we were being sacrificed for the sake of profits.
Read moreProgressive Maryland Celebrates Victory in Years-Long Fight to End Subsidies for Trash Incineration
State Legislation Marks Major Step Toward Environmental Justice in Baltimore and Beyond
Annapolis, MD—After years of grassroots organizing and community-led advocacy, Progressive Maryland members are celebrating a significant milestone for environmental justice and clean energy advocacy with the Maryland General Assembly's decision to end subsidies for trash incineration. Trash incineration will be officially removed from Maryland’s Renewable Portfolio Standard, marking a pivotal moment in the fight for cleaner air and healthier communities across the state. This means that ratepayer money will no longer be used to subsidize trash burning, which has long polluted the air in majority-Black neighborhoods.
“South Baltimore has been in this fight for a long time, and we are just relieved to see the removal of subsidies for trash incineration,” said Jennifer Mendes Dwyer, Deputy Executive Director of Progressive Maryland. “This is undeniably a victory for public health and ending environmental racism in our state.”
This achievement is a result of our persistent advocacy in which we began ramping up our environmental justice campaign in 2022 with the formation of a community-based task force in Southwest Baltimore focused on ending government support for incineration. Our Environmental Justice Task Force leaders have spent years knocking doors, educating neighbors, organizing town halls, building coalitions and submitting legislative testimony. We’ve been organizing with and for the communities who’ve suffered the worst impacts of toxic air pollution and decades of environmental racism and neglect.Â
Read moreProgressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, April 14, 2025
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News You Can Use: Winners and losers in MD Assembly Session; nothing but losers in chaotic trade wars
This week, Marylanders' eyes shuttle back and forth between weighing the work (and failures) of the just-completed General Assembly session and the outrages of the latest Trump follies and lawlessness. The Orange Menace has bypassed Congress's role in setting tariffs, recklessly setting and unsetting tariff rates to the great disadvantage of US economic standing as well as perceptions here and overseas about the sanity and stability of national leadership. Trump and others' behavior during the wild gyrations of tariff-setting has raised questions about market manipulation and insider trading. Even more lawlessly, having kidnapped a legal Maryland resident and dumped him in a notoriously brutal prison in El Salvador, Trump and his minions claim they have no duty to seek his return.
The General Assembly appears to have preserved the Blueprint plan for the state's education system more or less intact and delivered a balanced budget despite a revenue deficit, but there were many failures of nerve and succumbing to the blandishments of lobbyists as well. Next year the Assembly members face election or re-election (many were appointed to vacancies but have not yet faced the voters) and they are dodging any appearance of the burning of bridges with potential donors.
It's News You Can Use.
Read moreMaryland General Assembly Falls Short in Advancing Measures to Keep Families Housed and Hold Landlords Accountable
Maryland General Assembly Falls Short in Advancing Measures to Keep Families Housed and Hold Landlords Accountable
Despite Overwhelming Support from Local Officials and Advocates, Senate Leadership Caves to Landlord Lobbyists and Blocks Protections for Renters
Annapolis, MD- Amid a growing housing crisis and a looming recession, the Maryland Senate refused to pass Good Cause Eviction – the one housing bill pending that has been proven in other jurisdictions to reduce evictions and displacement while holding corporate landlords accountable. Good Cause Eviction (SB 651/HB 709), which was passed by the House of Delegates last year and has passed in 8 other states and 23 localities, would have allowed counties to require that corporate landlords provide renting families a legitimate reason for any eviction. The General Assembly also cut the budget for eviction prevention funds by 50% at a time when renting families need this support the most. Despite this resistance, Renters United Maryland (RUM) and legislative allies passed key policies that advance housing justice, including a measure that will provide tenants with advance notice of any scheduled eviction date so that tenants can plan and prepare to lessen the catastrophic effects of eviction.
Read moreMaryland General Assembly Eliminates Trash Incineration from the State Renewable Portfolio Standard
Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, April 7, 2025
Today is Sine Die, the final day of Maryland’s 2025 legislative session. By midnight, lawmakers will wrap up their work for the year, and every hour until then is a race to finalize votes and move remaining bills across the finish line.  For Progressive Maryland, this is a critical day. Our staff, members, and allies have spent months fighting for transformative legislation that impacts working families, tenants, healthcare workers, incarcerated people, and our environment. In our legislative updates section below, you’ll find the latest on what’s already happened and the key bills still on the table as we wait to see how they play out today.  It’s been a tough few months. While we’ve fought for progressive policy here at home, we’ve also had to navigate the devastating impacts of what’s happening nationally. From attacks on democracy and bodily autonomy to policies meant to divide and undermine communities across the country—including right here in Maryland—we’re up against a lot. That’s why base-building and people power are more important now than ever. We’re fighting injustice in real time, preparing for threats that haven’t yet surfaced, and still cultivating a community rooted in hope and the belief that we can win a better Maryland together.  And especially in a time when national politicians attempt to dictate what information and opinions are acceptable, National Library Week (April 6-12) is a celebration reminding us of the valuable role libraries, librarians, and library workers play in transforming lives and strengthening our communities. Librarians fight for our right to unconstrained information every day. It’s their job and this week, we honor and uplift that work.  Read on for today’s updates and news you can use.  In solidarity, The Progressive Maryland Team |
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Read moreAppeals Court upholds Maryland man's return from Salvadoran prison; plus Assembly's rush to adjourn and other News You Can Use
As the General Assembly tries to wrap up its work today, known as Sine Die, news comes that a federal appeals court has upheld a ruling that the Salvadoran Maryland resident was wrongly deported to a notorious mass-incarceration facility in El Salvador and must be returned tonight. Definitely a stay-tuned day as worldwide stock markets crash for a third day, more DOGE firings loom and the prez plays golf (while charging the Secret Service for their lodging at... Mar-a-Lago) and many thousands rallied Saturday all over the US in what was called a "THE RESISTANCE ARRIVES" moment.
Read moreProgressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, March 31, 2025
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