pm_folks_with_banner.jpgIn the Memo this week: a roundup of the broad scope of legislation requiring attention from Maryland's progressives in week NINE of the Session; news from our chapters, events from our progressive allies, and of course our recent blog posts.

 

Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, March 2, 2020 Note some items in GREEN type because of changes after the email was sent

 In the Memo this week: a roundup of the broad scope of legislation requiring attention from Maryland's progressives in week NINE of the Session; news from our chapters, events from our progressive allies, and of course our recent blog posts.

Don't miss the Annex -- a separate post with all you will ever need to keep track of this week's bills and hearings.

 Progressive Maryland is working to improve the flawed election process in Maryland and in its jurisdictions, where big money seems to talk all too loudly, drowning out the voices of working families and those of less means.

Two important bills in pursuit of Fair Elections had hearings last week – one, SB 613/HB1125, strengthening the existing public-financing provisions for the race for Governor and adding the state Attorney General and Controller to the program, and the second, HB1351/SB0947, sets up a Fair Elections public financing electoral process for members of the Assembly, in which small-donor contributions are matched with public funds. Progressive Maryland and Maryland Working Families testified in favor of both bills last week; read our testimony here or in the blog roundup below. The Fair Election method is catching on in major counties and jurisdictions throughout the state either in place or pending an effective date after having been adopted in Baltimore City and Montgomery, Howard and Prince George’s counties.

But lots more is happening in Annapolis this week and down the road – so much so that we have put the full info in a separate post, linked here. There the progressive activist will find something to do every day in the state capital – bills on preserving and expanding our access to health care coverage; on ending the criminalization of poverty by a skewed system of criminal justice, and on transformational, not just tweaked, education reform as embodied by the Kirwan school improvement plan. This material has been gathered by our allies at the Job Opportunities Task Force and the Maryland Legislative Coalition. It is a lot of work and they have earned your support.

Here are many of the Lobby Days/Nights coming up. See an issue you are especially impacted by? You can join activists to lobby for a better Maryland. Follow links for details and contact information.

Every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday - 9:00 am - Strong Schools Maryland
Tuesday, March 3rd - 9:00 am - Compassion and Choices Lobby Day for End of Life Option Act
Wednesday, March 4th - 8:00 am - League of Women Voters Lobby Day 
Thursday, March 5th - 9:00 am - Compassion and Choices Lobby Day for End of Life Option Act
Monday, March 9th - 1:00 pm - Fair Elections Check-In

All these proposed bills have to jostle for room inside some form of state budget. Kevin Kinnally of Conduit Street, the newsletter of the Maryland Association of Counties, has a roundup on the Budget Briefing presented to legislators early in the session by the Department of Legislative Services. It is more than you ever wanted to know, but features outstanding explanatory graphics. https://conduitstreet.mdcounties.org/2020/01/20/fiscal-briefing-highlights-budget-big-picture/

 

Progressive Maryland’s BlogSpace and Weekly Memos will follow the Assembly session – but when that ends in April, we’ll keep going with our advocacy for progressive efforts in Maryland and, sometimes, how they are echoed in the wider region and nation.

And speaking of helpful emails – you can sign up to get this Weekly Memo by email.

OUR CHAPTERS AROUND THE STATE

Progressive Prince George’s 

Prince George’s Chapter Update February 24, 2020

Progressive Maryland joined AROS (the Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools) and the Prince Georges County Education Association for a meeting and training session in support of Community Schools on February 22nd at the PGCEA offices.  Saturday’s session featured presentations and discussions on our combined ongoing efforts to create more parent engagement and ownership for community schools which are beginning to take hold in the County. Community Schools are designed to provide more resources and services to students, parents and the neighborhoods they serve.  

Following the session, a number of participants and leaders did some canvassing in local districts to

update voters on the status of the Blueprint for Maryland Schools https://www.marylandblueprint.org/  in the General Assembly. The Blueprint, also known as the Kirwan Commission recommendations, is critical to achieving educational and racial equity and to  increasing and strengthening the number of community schools in PG and around the state. Folks met many enthusiastic voters while door knocking and distributed yard signs from Bowie to Temple Hills. 

If you would like a Blueprint yard sign or want to learn more about upcoming events in support of the Blueprint , Community schools, and PGCPS related issues contact Patty Snee  at [email protected]. Stay tuned for continuing updates on our local organizing.

 

PMD Montgomery 

MOCO Update March 2, 2020: Important education issues, state and local, continue to be a key focus of our Montgomery County organizing.

 MARCH EVENTS:

On the local level we’re supporting the Education Association’s call to the School District and the County Council and Executive to fully fund our public schools. MCEA is in the midst of contract negotiations with MCPS.  At two recent bargaining sessions, the Education Association’s president, Chris Lloyd, stressed the need to increase funding by $100 million over maintenance of effort to meet critical staffing and program needs in our schools.

Please join us at a Parent Community Meeting on Monday March 10 at 6:45 at the MCEA office at 12 Taft Court in Rockville to learn more about the negotiations and the proposals from MCEA to create a better school system.action_for_ed.jpg

   Actions Needed: Local

             Turn out to support our teachers at the next bargaining session on Monday March 16 at 15 W. Gude St. Rockville, 3rd floor.

Please contact County Executive Marc Elrich and our County Council Members to urge them to vote for full funding for our schools

 [email protected]

https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/COUNCIL/members/index.html

We’ll share dates and activities regarding public budget hearings at the Council this month as they get scheduled.

Districtwide Boundary Analysis: Support a process that will help positively shape MCPS now and in the future.  Progressive Maryland supports this Analysis and is getting signatures to a letter that One Montgomery has written to the School Superintendent and School Board Chair. 

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HCGNjDMnfLJsKWGZHDHQ4bLkeC8vrgO6K4NEomZungc/viewform?edit_requested=true

Please sign and share with at least three other folks! We need to show there’s public support for gathering up-to-date data and facts about the operations and workings of our growing district.

Actions Needed: State

We support full funding of the Kirwan Commission game-changing recommendations for the Maryland public school system. We oppose Governor Hogan’s attempts to defeat the measure through a million dollar ad campaign.  Many elected officials from the MOCO delegation (and numerous of their colleagues from around the state) see the short and long term value of this Blueprint for our school system, our economy and our state. They have promised strong support and are committed to finding the revenue we need for Kirwan.

The measure is however facing some serious opposition so we need to keep organizing.

Please email, write, or call your Delegates and State Senators asking them to fully fund all of the Kirwan recommendations. Here are some suggested points you can use, courtesy of our allies at Strong Schools Maryland:

  • Our students and schools are the winners when these recommendations get funded. Maryland schools have been underfunded for too long, our kids can’t wait.
  • Support the full range of proposed systems changes. Taken together, they will make a difference for all Maryland students--the changes needed in education practice and funding require a comprehensive approach, not a selective one.
  • We need full funding. Taking action this year will help us avoid much bigger costs in state and local dollars for social services in the future.
  • The new funding formula ensures that all districts receive enough funding AND it will help fix many inequity issues in the current school funding formula.

 Thank you for taking action on these issues at this very critical time. Contact Patty Snee at [email protected]  or Josh Raznick at [email protected] if you want to learn more and get involved in the MOCO Chapter’s work on education and other issues.

Frederick County Progressives

Take Action Anne Arundel County

Talbot Rising

Lower Shore Progressive Caucus 

Join us! Our next Lower Shore Progressive Caucus meeting is at the Wicomico Public Library in Downtown Salisbury on March 5! Click here for info. And check out the chapter’s legislative committee report posted the past week.

PMD Baltimore


EVENTS FROM OUR PROGRESSIVE ALLIES

 Sunday, March 8 — Prince George’s County Our Revolution 12 noon - 2 PM note time change, monthly meeting to discuss current actions and events. New Deal Cafe, 113 Centerway, Roosevelt Center, Greenbelt

Thursday MAR 19 March on Annapolis for Jobs and Justice 8 AM House office building, 6 Bladen St. Info and RSVP https://www.eventbrite.com/e/march-on-annapolis-for-jobs-justice-tickets-95513917699

And see our list of progressive organizations’ Lobby Days in Annapolis, above


Baltimore progressives, Check in on the wide-ranging Baltimore Activist Alert calendar and tip sheet at http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/


Reading the Progressive Maryland BlogSpace: our recent blogs are shown below, but if you want a handy way to keep track – and never miss a blog post – you can sign up to get this Weekly Memo by email. Remember this is your blogspace and your participation is heartily invited. See something going on that you don’t like – or that you do like and hope to see more of? Send us your thoughts; submit to the moderator at [email protected]

We recently published these blog posts:

February 25, 2020 Public funding for state candidates will democratize a flawed electoral system

Two important bills in pursuit of Fair Elections had hearings on Friday Feb. 20 – one, SB 613/HB1125, strengthening the existing public-financing provisions for the race for Governor and adding the state Attorney General and Controller to the program, and the second, HB1351/SB0947, sets up a Fair Elections public financing electoral process for members of the Assembly, in which small-donor contributions are matched with public funds. Progressive Maryland testified in favor of both bills last week.

Here is testimony in support of both bills before the Senate Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee as delivered Friday, Feb. 20 by Progressive Maryland Executive Director Larry Stafford.

February 24, 2020 Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, February 24, 2020

In the Memo this week: a roundup of the broad scope of legislation requiring attention from Maryland's progressives in week SEVEN of the Session; news from our chapters, events from our progressive allies, and of course our recent blog posts.

Don't miss the Annex -- a separate post with all you will ever need to keep track of this week's bills and hearings.

February 24, 2020 ANNAPOLIS SESSION ANNEX to the Progressive Maryland Weekly Memo for Monday, February 24, 2020

Here is the Maryland Legislative Coalition's roundup of upcoming hearings for the cascade of bills at the Maryland General Assembly


>REMEMBER – these blog posts are frequently expressions of political opinion from our wide-ranging membership and circle of allies. They are not expressions of opinion by Progressive Maryland. Don’t be surprised if they sometimes vary in their political content. You might even disagree with them – a good reason to contribute a blog of your own. Send it to the moderator, Woody Woodruff, at [email protected].

>>Keeping up with the blogs is easier with the index. The blogs published in the PM BlogSpace from June 2015 through December 2016 are all available with descriptions and links here. You can follow blogs for 2017-18 starting from here

 

woody woodruff

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M.A. and Ph.d. from University of Maryland Merrill College of Journalism, would-be radical, sci-fi fan... retired to a life of keyboard radicalism...