verna l jones rodwell
- A state Senate committee decided Tuesday to urge the state Board of Public Works to withhold approval of the first phase of the $1.5 billion State Center renovation if the project could push the state over its self-imposed debt limit.
-
- Democrats offer best choice for diverse district
- District 44 state Senate candidates also offer options
- Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler will announce his selection of a running mate Monday as he attempts to move beyond the controversies that have plagued his campaign for governor, including allegations that he routinely pressed his security detail to drive unsafely.
- Since the 1980s, Baltimore has greatly expanded its Enterprise Zone tax credit program, offering multimillion-dollar tax breaks to developers in many of the city's most popular neighborhoods.
- Marking a generational shift in Baltimore County politics, Del. John A. Olszewski Jr. will announce Tuesday that he's running for the Dundalk-area Maryland Senate seat held by Sen. Norman R. Stone Jr. for almost 50 years.
-
- Indictment alleges criminal conspiracy inside Baltimore City Detention Center
- With the season for legislating over in Maryland as of last Monday, the season for raising cash for campaigns has begun.
- Applications not checked thoroughly and complaints not dealt with properly
- Gov. Martin O'Malley predicted that Maryland will ban assault weapons during the General Assembly session that began Wednesday.
- The ongoing debate over youth crime in downtown Baltimore has sparked a war of words over race — overshadowing a debate over the police response to disturbances and objections from city politicians who say the issue is vastly overblown.
- Baltimore County senators sue over redistricting
- A Baltimore delegate wants to create an authority to oversee a new stream of school construction money that the city would get under a plan envisioned by schools CEO Andres Alonso.
- NAACP, black caucus say legislative map will leave General Assembly overly white
- Drafters of Maryland's proposed legislative districts appear to have taken to heart the terms of a 2002 Court of Appeals decision — but will it be enough to stand up to the inevitable legal scrutiny?
- Baltimore would lose two of its 18 delegates and share one of its six senators with Baltimore County under new state legislative map proposed Friday by a panel appointed by Gov. Martin O'Malley.