Maryland
Marine’s wife Bailey Anne Kennedy crowned first transgender Miss Maryland USA
The wife of a Marine has been crowned the first-ever transgender Miss Maryland USA — and said she was inspired by the “sisterhood” of other competitors she saw on the pageant circuit.
Bailey Anne Kennedy, 31, won the coveted title on Saturday, according to the official Miss Maryland USA Instagram account.
She is now prepared to compete at Miss USA, which will be held in Los Angeles on Aug. 4.
The victory, Kennedy told WDCW, was a “whirlwind because I knew it was bigger than me.”
“I knew that it was going to mean a lot for all the LGBTQ kids out there who might feel like they don’t belong in a box — like me growing up,” she explained.
Kennedy said she did not have any anxiety about being the only trans competitor, and said she felt bolstered by the “sisterhood” of women on stage.
“I felt confident in my own skin at 31, which is past the old age limit, which is 28 — as you know Miss Universe Organization lift the restriction now — so every woman of all ages can compete,” she pointed out.
Kennedy added that she “hopes her milestone will open up some doors, open up some hearts for people to see that there are many aspects of LGBT community out there and I hope I can be a positive contribution to society in making a difference like the USO program I’m working with.”
Kennedy was inspired to compete in pageants following her marriage in 2019, according to her website.
“When I turned 30, The Miss Universe Organization lifted the traditional marital status and age restrictions. I knew it was a sign from the Universe that they are ready to crown an older, military spouse like myself,” the write-up explained.
“Although this is such a small effort, I could only imagine the magnitude of my action on a state level, national level or even on the international level if I win the title to represent USA, the beautiful country to which I owe so much,” she added.
In addition to being the first transgender Miss Maryland USA, Kennedy is also the first Asian American winner and the first military spouse to hold the title, according to The Advocate.
The first trans contestant to appear at Miss USA was Kataluna Enriquez, who competed as Miss Nevada USA in 2018, the outlet noted.
“It hasn’t hit me yet. We just made history, and I don’t know how that feels. It was part of my goal, part of my dream,” Enriquez told the Las Vegas Sun in the wake of her history-making win in the state.
Maryland
Run Up to Juneteenth 5K raises funds for SEED School of Maryland program
BALTIMORE (WBFF) — With Juneteenth celebrations approaching in Baltimore, the fifth annual Run Up to Juneteenth brought the community together Sunday at Druid Hill Park.
The event featured a 5K run and a 1-mile walk, drawing participants and volunteers from across the region. Proceeds from the race will benefit The SEED School of Maryland’s College Transition & Success Program.
Held the weekend before the AFRAM Festival, the Run Up to Juneteenth serves as the official kickoff to AFRAM’s 50th anniversary celebration.
This year, the race returned to Druid Hill Park, following AFRAM’s original routes and honoring the community runs that were once a staple of the festival.
Organizers also embraced AFRAM’s history with a 1976-themed race, encouraging participants to wear retro outfits, tube socks, headbands and other throwback attire. A prize was awarded for the best 1976-inspired look.
Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, when enslaved people in Texas learned of their freedom more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.
Baltimore’s annual Juneteenth observance includes a weeklong series of events beginning with the Run Up to Juneteenth and culminating with AFRAM, one of the East Coast’s largest African American festivals.
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Additional information is available at seedschoolmd.org and aframbaltimore.com.
Maryland
AFRO News endorses Brooke Lierman for Maryland Comptroller
By Megan Sayles
AFRO Staff Writer
When Brooke Lierman became the first woman to take the Office of the Comptroller of Maryland in 2022, she promised to modernize and streamline the state’s financial systems—reducing red tape that makes it harder for Marylanders to access services, file taxes and navigate state agencies.
Her work to return more than $121 million in unclaimed property to residents, provide free tax filing to hundreds of thousands of Marylanders, ensure eligible residents take advantage of the Earned Income Tax Credit and increase minority business enterprise (MBE) participation in state procurement reflects a focus on efficiency and equity in state finance. For these reasons, the AFRO endorses Lierman for re-election as Maryland Comptroller.
Take a look below at some of Lierman’s 2026 AFRO Midterm Questionnaire responses:
TOPIC: Tax Policy and Administration
- How will you modernize tax collection and compliance to be efficient without burdening small businesses or middle class families?
- What role should the Comptroller play in civic education around taxes and state Budgeting?
Lierman: Modernization has been the throughline of my first term and the standard I apply is simple: Does this make the government work better for the people it serves?
The new business tax system we launched – Maryland Tax Connect – gives Marylanders a full tax portal: one place to see everything they’ve paid, everything they owe, and everything being processed (launched for businesses in 2024, individuals in late 2025). Our new CRM, MyCOMConnect, lets individual taxpayers submit requests and get help entirely online, without needing to navigate a phone tree or wait on hold. These aren’t cosmetic upgrades. They are fundamental changes to how this agency relates to the people it serves – treating Marylanders like the customers they are, not obstacles to be managed. We’ve even launched a brand new unclaimed property system to help reunite Marylanders with their money – and we sent out $120 million to Marylanders last year.
Lierman: The Comptroller should be Maryland’s chief financial educator. Full stop.
We’ve built the infrastructure to back that up. We created an Advisory Council on Financial Education to bring together experts, community leaders, and advocates to help shape how this office teaches Marylanders about their finances and their government. Our public engagement team holds community presentations across the state explaining how tax credits work, how the state budget is built, and how every Marylander can participate in the process. Our State of the Economy and State Spending reports are written for Marylanders — not just economists.
Access matters too. Our newly redesigned website is available in English, Spanish, and Chinese, with Korean and additional languages on the way, and it meets full 508 accessibility standards – because civic education only works if everyone can actually reach it. I will continue to champion and expand this work during a second term. I know that civic trust doesn’t happen by accident; it’s built through understanding. We always have more work to do!
TOPIC: Fiscal Responsibility and Transparency
- What actions would you take if projected revenues fall short and create bigger budget deficits?
Lierman: Maryland’s revenue environment is being buffeted by forces larger than any state can fully control: federal workforce reductions, broader economic shifts, and an avalanche of policy changes coming out of Washington. My job is to make sure Maryland policymakers, businesses, and all residents see those challenges clearly. As Chair of the Board of Revenue Estimates, I’ve worked with our economists at the Bureau of Revenue Estimates to modernize our forecasting methodology, build in new risk scenarios, and issue interim updates when conditions shift significantly, rather than waiting for the calendar to catch up with reality.
When Congress moved the One Big Beautiful Bill, we produced a 60-day analysis showing how that federal action would reshape Maryland’s fiscal outlook and taxes. That kind of responsive, plain-language analysis is what voters deserve from this office and I’m proud we are able to deliver it. Going forward, I will keep doing that work and keep finding new ways to make sure both Marylanders and their elected leaders understand what the numbers actually mean for their lives.
TOPIC: Ethics, Campaign Finance, and Influence
- Do you support public financing reforms for state offices to limit big money influence?
Lierman: Yes – without hesitation. Big-money politics distorts who runs for office, who wins, and who gets listened to once someone is elected. Public financing fixes that. It lets candidates spend their time talking to voters instead of courting large donors, and it opens the door to candidates who actually reflect the full diversity of Maryland communities. I supported public financing as a Delegate, and I’ll continue pushing for its expansion to statewide and local offices. I also support ranked choice voting as a tool to strengthen democratic participation and reduce the outsized influence of extreme or well-funded factions. A healthier representative democracy isn’t just good for voters – it produces better governance.
AFRO Intern Morgan Carpenter contributed this report.
Related
Maryland
Governor Wes Moore Celebrates the 50th Anniversary of the Maryland Science Center, Groundbreaking For Renovation of The Center’s Harbor Plaza, and Completion of Record-Breaking $15 Million Fundraising Campaign
Updated:
ANNAPOLIS, MD– Governor Wes Moore today delivered remarks in honor of the 50th anniversary of the Maryland Science Center and broke ground for the renovation of the Maryland Science Center Harbor Plaza. The event also highlighted the completion of the center’s record breaking $15 million fundraising campaign, which will be used to renovate older facilities, improve sustainability, and provide free and reduced cost admission to students and Marylanders on SNAP or WIC.
“Since its opening 50 years ago, Maryland Science Center has been a central hub of hands-on learning and experience,” said Gov. Moore. “We are proud to invest in that history and look forward to the Maryland Science Center’s impactful future, as it continues to expand accessibility to STEM education outside of the traditional school setting.”
The Maryland Science Center opened on June 13th, 1976 and was the one of the first attractions built as part of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor renaissance. Since opening, the Center has seen over 15 million guests. The Maryland Science Center has received investments each year of the Moore-Miller administration including: $200,000 in Fiscal Year 2027, $3,000,000 in Fiscal Year 2026, $200,000 in Fiscal Year 2025, and $1,000,000 in Fiscal Year 2024 and the administration awarded the center $3.2M in capital grants during Fiscal Years 2024 and 2025 specifically to assist with the renovation of Harbor Plaza.
The renovation of the center’s Harbor Plaza will feature new science exploration exhibits focused on fossils and gravity, as well as more green space, shaded areas, and improved water management.
The governor was joined by Mark Potter, President and CEO of the Maryland Science Center, and Mark Zimmerly, Chairman of the Maryland Science Center Board of Trustees, along with other local leaders including Comptroller Brooke Lierman and Senate President and District 46 Senator Bill Ferguson.
“The mission and importance of the Maryland Science Center is as relevant today as it was 50 years ago,” said President and CEO of the Maryland Science Center, Mark Potter. “In 1976, we were innovators and trailblazers, starting the momentum that led to one of the country’s most celebrated urban redevelopments. Five decades later, and with the renovation of our harborside entrance, we’re still a model for informal science education, the joy of scientific discovery, and creating a welcome invitation to Baltimore and Maryland.”
“Every year, more than 400,000 Marylanders walk through the Maryland Science Center’s doors – but the impact goes far beyond a visitor count,” said Comptroller Brooke E. Lierman. “When a visit to the Science Center lights the spark that launches a STEM career, when a free field trip makes science feel possible for a kid who might never have had that chance – that’s what this institution is really for. The Harbor plaza renovation doubles down on that promise, and I couldn’t be prouder to support it.”
During the 50th anniversary celebration on June 13th, the Center will have throwback 1976 admission pricing all day: $1 for children and $2.50 for adults.
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