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“”²ŌĢżĀ in the House of Delegates and a photo finish in the Senate ended the 2023 session of the Maryland General Assembly on Monday night.
As both chambers adjourned sine die, the legislatureās teenage pages dumped boxes of confetti and trash bags full of balloons from the galleries above onto the rostrums and floors of the Senate and House, sending flashes of color raining down on the president and speaker below, in the traditional celebratory close.
When all was said and done, legislative leaders in the Democratically controlled houses, along with the stateās new governor, declared victory, taking bows for an exceptional session and ignoring their stumbles and defeats.
āItās not only the most successful first session for any new governor⦠[but] weād argue that itās the most successful ⦠session for a governor, period,ā enthused Gov. Wes Moore (D), at an afternoon press conference with fewer than eight hours left to go.
Moore did caution that, ānothingās done until itās done.ā
And there was indeed plenty more to do, this last day.
In the end, lawmakersĀ Ā for the sale of recreational cannabis when it becomes legal July 1, passed more restrictive handgun laws over multiple attempts by Republicans to water down the proposals,Ā Ā to oversee thoroughbred horse racing, and expanded the size of the Maryland Stadium Authority board to 11, to include a seat for Prince Georgeās County.
Before the final day, the legislature already had approvedĀ Ā to enshrine abortion rights and lifted legal limitations onĀ Ā against their alleged abusers.
āSome issues didnāt make it across ⦠but thatās expected, and itās a four-year term and so weāll be back nine months from now to take it up again.ā Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) said.
Among the bills that did make it across were measures to expand and modernize the offices of Comptroller Brooke Lierman (D) and Anthony Brown (D), who took office in January. Legislation passed to create a newĀ Ā for the comptroller, and for the attorney general, aĀ Ā and new powers toĀ .
Treasurer Dereck E. Davisās office willĀ .
The General Assembly passed a $63 billion budget for the upcoming Fiscal Year 2024, which begins July 1, nearly $1 billion less than Hoganās spending plan last year. That dollar figure included $5.1 billion for projects in the capital budget.
Unlike years past, when lawmakers could only decrease budget items, this was the first year in more than 100 that the legislature was empowered to increase, decrease and move money around the governorās proposed budget, as per a measure approved by voters in 2020.
The final budget included $900 million to the Blueprint for Marylandās Future fund, the stateās savings account for an ongoing ten-year education reform effort.
The budget maintained $2.85 billion in cash reserves, down from $5.2 billion before the legislative session began. The new reserves include $2.5 billion in the so-called Rainy Day Fund (Revenue Stabilization Account) and $351 million in the stateās general fund.
Throughout the day Monday, lobbyists set up grills around State Circle and side streets, offering food and drink to all comers on what was a beautiful spring day under a cloudless blue sky.
The book is now closed on the 445th meeting of the General Assembly, the first session of a four-year term that began Jan. 11 ā a week before Moore was inaugurated, and the State House was returned to the full control of Democrats after eight years under Gov. Larry Hogan (R). The Senate and House had remained solidly Democratic throughout.
Early Monday in the Senate, Republicans made an effort to resurrect their criminal justice bills ā drawing out a discussion on theĀ , which, among other changes, would update standards for state building construction to conserve energy and minimize impact on birds.
āItās frustrating to have sat here for 90 days ā and weāve really been having a frank discussion about the loss of life in this state to violent crime, weāve had a discussion about other sort of major environmental catastrophes ā and ⦠a bird-safe bill is coming out on the floor here when we still havenāt dealt with the issue of repeat violent offenders. Itās troubling to me the priorities that we see,ā said Sen. Justin D. Ready (R-Carroll and Frederick), the minority whip.
None of the measures moved forward in the legislatureās final hours.
Lawmakers introduced nearly 2,300 pieces of legislation ā 979 in the Senate, 1305 in the House ā in the first full session since the COVID-19 pandemic all but turned the State House into a virtual meeting place in March 2020.
The 2023 session was marked by dramatic change.
²Ń“Ǔǰł±šĢż, and his running mate, Aruna Miller (D), the first Indian-American lieutenant governor, as the stateās political hierarchy looked on that brisk afternoon three months ago on State Circle.
Having never held public office before, Moore faced a sharp learning curve on the ways of governing Maryland.
His staff-generated schedule, supplied daily to the press, noted this for Monday:
ā11:59 PM:Ā Governor Moore will ring the ceremonial bell to celebrate Sine Die 2023.ā
There is no ceremonialĀ sine dieĀ bell that the governor, or anyone else, rings.
Early in the evening Monday, the governor did visit both the Senate and House of Delegates to thank members for their efforts.
Throughout his term, Moore has been focused on a better working relationship with the legislature, to include regular meetings in the State House and over breakfast at Government House, the governorās mansion.
āEven I have been surprised by the number of people that have come into Government House or come into the governorās office and said, āIāve never been here or I havenāt been here in eight years,āā said Eric G. Luedtke, the former House majority leader who left the legislature to become the governorās chief legislative officer. āAnd not just Democrats, Republicans too.ā
Since November, when the current members of the General Assembly were elected, two senators and six delegates have either left or will be shortly leaving their respective chambers.
The Moore administration resurrected other norms in their first year in office.
In February, ²Ń“Ǔǰł±šĢżĀ for his bill to give military retirees a larger tax break ā the first time a governor had done so since the administration of Gov. Martin J. OāMalley. (The General Assembly ultimately passed the legislation with amendments to increase the stateās current tax credit but limit the maximum subtraction modification to $20,000, half of what was sought by the governor.)
Lt. Gov. Miller, along with Mooreās cabinet secretaries, also appeared to advocate for or respond to legislation in committees.
āThe feedback Iām getting from legislators is more about their day-to-day work, like having agencies actually respond to questions, and secretaries give them calls about issues,ā Luedtke said. āAnd I think that relationship has been completely reset by this session. Part of it is we wanted to reset it, and part of it is the legislature wanted to reset it, too.ā
Moore did deliver on a campaign promise to make his administration the most diverse in state history, appointing a number of women, Black and Latino officials to the state governmentās top spots.
His first 83 days in office met with occasionally mixed, but generally favorable, results.
Ferguson said the Senate approved ā99.9 percentā of Mooreās appointments, under its charge for advice and consent.
Mooreās appointment of Yolanda Maria Martinez to the Stadium Authority board was held by the Senate Executive Nominations Committee after Maryland Matters reported she hadĀ Ā that included a recent $7.2 million bankruptcy and dozens of lawsuits and judgments for bad debts filed against her.
The governor, his staff and Martinez supportersĀ Ā ā both publicly and behind the scenes ā to approve the Ellicott City businesswomanās nomination, but the committee did not budge. The nomination quietly died in the chairwomanās bottom desk drawer.
One of Mooreās picks for the Public Service Commission, Juan Alvarado, a gas industry official,Ā , after a public backlash largely because of his employment in the gas industry at a time when state leaders are trying to move policy away from fossil fuels.
Mooreās nominee for superintendent of the Maryland State Police, former Lt. Col. Roland L. Butler Jr., faced stiff opposition from some in the Senate, but was able toĀ .
Legislative leaders and the Moore administration also made it a point this session to ārebuild state government,ā which had a 13% vacancy rate at the end of the Hogan era.
āItās gonna take us some time to build out a state government that is more attractive to employees, but itās something weāre already making a lot of progress on, I think,ā Luedtke said.
There were non-legislative diversions and distractions throughout the session, including the attorney generalāsĀ Ā by Roman Catholic clergy over the last 80 years and Linda H. LamoneāsĀ Ā as the State Board of Elections administrator after more than 25 years.
Moore, along with Ferguson and Jones, will take part in a bill-signing ceremony at 12 noon Tuesday. Among the bills to be signed are:
- , which accelerates an increase in the stateās minimum wage from the current $13.25 an hour to $15 an hour beginning Jan. 1, 2024, a year before what had been approved in 2019.
- , which lifts time limitations on alleged victims of child sexual abuse to sue for damages.
- , which permanently extends the 2021 expansions of the Maryland earned income credit, beginning June 1. The earned income credit offers both refundable and nonrefundable credits against the state income tax and a nonrefundable credit against the local income tax for low-to-moderate-income resident taxpayers.