Maryland
State-funded pretrial home monitoring program to restart in Maryland
The program to fund home monitoring devices for low-income Marylanders pretrial that abruptly ended in mid-February is set to restart Monday, officials confirmed Thursday.
According to Brad Tanner, a spokesman for the judiciary, all defendants who participated in the program prior to its cancellation on Feb. 16 will be covered.
Tanner said the program is anticipated to run through June 30, 2025.
“They’re going to reenroll everyone that was enrolled, and then be able to take new folks, as well, so it’s good news,” said Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee Chair Will Smith.
The program, introduced under a 2021 bill and funded by federal dollars Maryland received under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, ended with little warning in February. Judge John P. Morrissey, chief judge of Maryland’s District Court, told a Senate subcommittee last week that the judiciary was aware that funding was near to running dry as far back as December 2023.
Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat, publicly criticized the judiciary for its lack of communication with the legislature, which is responsible for negotiating and passing the state budget during Maryland’s 90-day legislative session. The Senate president also said he’d be checking in with the judiciary’s spending habits.
Sen. Sarah Elfreth, an Anne Arundel County Democrat, said last week that the judiciary habitually returns around $5 million in unspent budgeted funds to the state every year. Ferguson asserted that a portion of that excess could be utilized to keep the program running.
In a text to The Baltimore Sun Thursday afternoon, Elfreth said she’s hoping to have a better sense of future funding for the program next week, when the Senate moves the state budget.
Ferguson said Tuesday that he had spoken with officials from the judiciary about the program, and that they were working in partnership to resolve discrepancies about language in the law stating that only federal funds would continue the services.
“I feel confident that we’re all closer to the same page,” he said.
According to Smith, the judiciary will fund the program when it is up and running again, and that the legislature will “find a permanent stopgap” to continue it down the line. His committee will hear a bill this session that would establish a task force to recommend options for oversight for the program.
“I’m confident that we’ll find a permanent fix,” Smith said.
Maryland
Attempted traffic stop leads to arrest of Maryland man wanted for kidnapping
Frederick County Sheriff’s Office (FCSO) announced the arrest of a man wanted for kidnapping on Thursday afternoon.
Suba Washington Jr., 27, of Williamsport, Maryland, was apprehended in Frederick after an attempted traffic stop early Thursday morning, according to deputies.
The pursuit
When officers tried to pull over a Hyundai Elantra in the 7300 block of Crestwood Blvd., the driver, later identified as Washington, refused to stop.
Deputies were later notified that Washington was wanted on charges of kidnapping, first-degree assault, second-degree assault, and reckless endangerment in Washington County, Maryland.
As Washington fled northbound on Route 85, he struck a car near Crestwood Blvd. and Buckeystown Pike; however, the driver of the vehicle was unharmed as the suspect continued onto northbound I-270 and then westbound I-70.
Washington’s tires were eventually flattened after deputies deployed stop sticks near the Middletown exit.
Though the pursuit still wasn’t over, as the vehicle managed to cross over into Washington County, where the Washington County Sheriff’s Office (WCSO) and Maryland State Police (MSP) aided in apprehension.
Washington was taken into custody after his vehicle approached the Route 40 exit, coming to a full stop on the highway.
The charges
A 17-year-old in the passenger seat was found with Washington during the pursuit. The teenager was released to WSCO.
According to FCSO, Washington Jr. was taken to the Frederick County Adult Detention Center and charged with numerous traffic citations, including reckless driving, negligent driving, and two counts of attempting to elude law enforcement.
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
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