Gov. Larry Hogan canceled his final bill-signing ceremony that was scheduled for Thursday, a sign that he will likely allow hundreds of bills to become law without his signature.
“Based on the remaining bills, the May 23 bill signing was no longer necessary,” Hogan spokeswoman Shareese Churchill said in a statement.
Among the bills awaiting action from the Republican governor are measures that would create a board to monitor prices for prescription drugs that insurance plans for state and local governments pay, ban most foam food and drink containers and dissolve the state’s Handgun Permit Review Board.
Hogan also must make a decision on a bill that would send $3.2 million in state money to the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. The BSO is counting on that money to resolve a labor dispute with musicians.