Maryland
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore’s administration, public employee union agree to new contract
Union leaders representing most of Maryland’s public employees have reached an agreement on a new three-year contract with Gov. Wes Moore’s administration, which also announced the hiring of a new top official to lead future bargaining negotiations.
Details of the contract, which must be ratified through a vote of union members, have not been released. The sides said they met a Dec. 31 deadline and described the deal as “tentative” and “preliminary.”
After working on annual employee raises and staffing issues with former Republican Gov. Larry Hogan’s administration for eight years, union leader Patrick Moran said “the tone of this year’s negotiations was markedly different,” though he did not explain whether leaders were pleased with the deal.
Moran, Council 3 president of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), and other union members had often been critical of Hogan, who they said failed to fill necessary vacancies in state government positions and did not provide adequate cost-of-living adjustments for employees during his two terms. After negotiations for the current contract ended a year ago and promised an average wage increase of 2.4%, Moran called the raises “insufficient” and stressed that understaffing remained a critical issue.
Moore, a Democrat, entered office last January with a vow to rebuild the state’s workforce but his administration has fallen short on hiring goals so far.
While the governor previously stated his desire to reduce the number of vacancies by half in his first year, the vacancy rate fell by just 2 percentage points — from 13.1% in January to 11.1% in October — according to a recent report by the legislature’s Spending Affordability Committee. As of October, there were about 1,800 more filled positions than the previous year, with about 5,400 remaining vacancies in the executive branch, not including positions in higher education, the report stated.
The governor, however, has stood by his pledge to support the workforce — adding about $35 million in salary increases while crafting the state budget early last year and standing alongside AFSCME during its nationwide tour in the summer to encourage hiring.
“Rebuilding state government and supporting our state employees is a top priority for the Moore-Miller Administration, and while the final contracts must be ratified by a full member vote by all four unions, these preliminary agreements are another critical step forward in that work,” Moore said in a statement Wednesday.
Moran said in his statement that Moore’s budget secretary, Helene Grady, worked closely with AFSCME “to address a number of key issues affecting our state workforce and state services.”
“We will continue to work with this administration, our elected officials, and our allies to find solutions, including raising additional state revenues, to tackle this staffing crisis and ensure our public services can continue to function,” Moran said.
Moore also said Wednesday he had hired Dyana Forester to represent him in future labor relations activities as a senior director of labor relations.
Forester was most recently president of the Metropolitan Washington Labor Council, AFL-CIO, and has about two decades of experience organizing workers. In her new role, she will direct collective bargaining activities and advise the governor on labor relations issues affecting the state workforce. AFSCME is the largest union, representing about 30,000 public employees — including correctional officers, state hospital workers and higher education workers.
In a letter explaining its priorities for the 90-day session beginning Wednesday, the union said it will be lobbying for new laws to change the bargaining process, including moving the deadline from New Year’s Eve to September 30 and requiring a neutral arbitrator to be agreed to by both parties for the negotiations. Another bill would expand collective bargaining rights to more than 4,000 supervisors who work in the executive branch. The letter also stressed the union’s priority to continue filling vacant positions and raising wages.
“We have a huge hole to fill now, with state employee salaries lagging inflation by 14% in this same time period, and thousands of remaining position shortages and vacancies. Despite renewed recruitment efforts under the Moore Administration, sadly, state agencies are still not on track to hit their vacancy reduction targets this year,” the letter signed by Moran read.
Maryland
Maryland to launch study on economic impacts of climate change
Maryland will launch a study to analyze the economic impacts of climate change to determine the costs associated with storm damage and health outcomes.
The move is part of the Moore-Miller administration’s strategic approach to investing in a clean energy economy and modernizing the state’s energy infrastructure.
“While the federal government has spent the past year rolling back climate protections and driving up energy costs, Maryland is taking a responsible step toward understanding the true price tag of climate change,” Gov. Wes Moore said in a statement. “This study will give us a clear, data-driven look at the real burden taxpayers are shouldering as climate change drives more extreme and costly weather events.”
The RENEW Act Study will be funded by investments and state sources, including $30,000 from philanthropic funding and $470,000 from the Strategic Energy Investment Fund, to assess the burden that Marylanders are paying due to intense weather events and environmental shifts.
Marylanders on climate change
The announcement comes months after Maryland lawmakers opposed a proposal by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to recind its 2009 endangerment finding, which determined that greenhouse gases were a danger to public health.
Lawmakers raised concerns that the move would mean engine and vehicle manufacturers would not be required to measure, control or report greenhouse gas emissions. They also raised concerns that the decision could impact climate change and harm local communities.
The EPA said it intended to retain regulations for pollutant and toxic air measurement and standards. In September, the agency initiated the formal process to reconsider the finding.
In March, a Johns Hopkins University poll found that nearly 73% of surveyed Baltimore City and County residents were concerned that climate change would affect them.
According to the study, city residents were more concerned about personal harm from climate change than county residents. However, county residents expected to see higher costs in the next five years due to climate change.
About 70% of Baltimore area residents believe climate change will increase costs for homeowners and businesses in the next five years, the study found.
An April report ranked the Washington/Baltimore/Arlington region as the 36th worst in the country and second worst in the mid-Atlantic region for ozone smog. The report graded Baltimore County an “F” for ozone smog.
Maryland
Combination of cold and snow coming to Maryland
Maryland
Powerball jackpot grows to $1 billion as Maryland’s $1 million ticket winner awaits claim
WBFF — A Powerball ticket sold in Lanham has made one lucky player $1 million richer following Wednesday night’s drawing.
The ticket, which matched all five white balls but missed the red Powerball, is one of three significant wins in Maryland from the Dec. 10 drawing. The other two winning tickets include a $150,000 prize in Hughesville and a $50,000 prize in Bel Air.
The $1 million ticket was purchased at the 7-Eleven located at 7730 Finns Lane in Lanham, Prince George’s County.
Meanwhile, the $150,000 ticket, which included the Power Play option, was sold at the Jameson-Harrison American Legion Post 238 in Hughesville, Charles County.
The $50,000 ticket was bought at Klein’s Shoprite on North Main Street in Bel Air, Harford County.
None of these winning tickets have been claimed yet, and the Maryland Lottery is urging winners to sign their tickets and store them safely. Prizes over $25,000 must be claimed by appointment at Lottery headquarters within 182 days of the drawing date.
The Powerball jackpot, which has not been won since Sept. 6, has now rolled over to an estimated annuity value of $1 billion, with a cash option of $461.3 million for the next drawing on Saturday night. This marks the seventh-largest jackpot since Powerball began in 1992.
JOIN THE CONVERSATION (1)
For more details on the winning tickets and other information, visit the Maryland Lottery’s website.
-
Alaska6 days agoHowling Mat-Su winds leave thousands without power
-
Texas7 days agoTexas Tech football vs BYU live updates, start time, TV channel for Big 12 title
-
Ohio1 week ago
Who do the Ohio State Buckeyes hire as the next offensive coordinator?
-
Washington4 days agoLIVE UPDATES: Mudslide, road closures across Western Washington
-
Iowa5 days agoMatt Campbell reportedly bringing longtime Iowa State staffer to Penn State as 1st hire
-
Miami, FL6 days agoUrban Meyer, Brady Quinn get in heated exchange during Alabama, Notre Dame, Miami CFP discussion
-
Cleveland, OH5 days agoMan shot, killed at downtown Cleveland nightclub: EMS
-
World5 days ago
Chiefs’ offensive line woes deepen as Wanya Morris exits with knee injury against Texans