Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

20071112 News Clips


News Clips

From Monday Nov. 12, 2007

STATE NEWS

From behind closed doors to backroom
http://www.examiner.com/a-1043559~From_behind_closed_doors_to_backroom.html
The action of the General Assembly's special session shifts this week from behind closed doors to the backroom behind the backrooms, where a handful of lawmakers from House and Senate hash out their differences. To be sure, everything is finalized in public as required by the state constitution and rules of the chambers. But the details of a final agreement that will reconcile different tax rates, budget cuts and slots policy will almost certainly be reached in private conferences that may or may not include Gov. Martin O'Malley's aides.
In the Budget and Tax Committee last week, the new draft of the tax bill was shared only with the committee members and st aff. Republicans weren't even handed some amendments till they demanded them.

House passes tax increases, now to look at budget cuts
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.me.session12nov12,0,7894514.story
bill containing the individual and corporate income tax provisions and an attempt to make sure corporations pay taxes on their profits in Maryland passed the House of Delegates early yesterday, 82-55.
A separate measure increasing the sales tax and the car-titling tax rates from 5 percent to 6 percent, doubling the tobacco tax to $2 a pack, and raising the hotel tax passed 80-56. Similar measures passed the state Senate last week.Today, the House Appropriations Committee will meet to propose budget cuts expected to total $500 million. Meanwhile, the House Ways and Means Committe e is scheduled to take up O'Malley's plan for a referendum on slot machine gambling. Both measures could go to the House floor and receive final votes as early as tonight.

Compromise near on taxes
After initial objection, modified plan is likely to pass House
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.session11nov11,0,4323436.story
The House of Delegates gave preliminary approval last night to a modified version of Gov. Martin O'Malley's tax plan after objections by Montgomery County Democrats nearly derailed his efforts to resolve Maryland's budget shortfall.
Under the new plan expected to pass the House early this morning, the sales tax would not be extended to any additional services. Proposals by O'Malley and the state Senate to tax computer services, real estate management and health clubs dr e w widespread protests, as did an earlier House proposal to tax repair services. House leaders also agreed to soften a proposed increase in the hotel tax, raising it from 5 percent to 7.5 percent. The original plan called for the tax to be 10 percent.
Despite the differences, the overall structures of the House and Senate plans are similar, and lawmakers said they were optimistic that the two chambers can come to agreement and send legislation to the governor to close a projected $1.7 billion budget shortfall.

Decisions taxing local delegation
http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/11_11-35/TOP
Cuts will hurt local programs; tax hikes will hurt constituents
Since the start of the special session on Oct. 29, telephone calls and e-mails from Maryland voters have poured into the offices of senators and delegates ali k e.
County Executive John R. Leopold said a drop in state funding will make constructing the county budget difficult "because the needs are many and the resources are few." The full effects of cuts to school funding in Anne Arundel will be unknown until the county does budget projections early next year, he said, adding that "We'll have see how it all shakes out."
Republicans on both side of the aisle have banded against any tax increases, and county lawmakers are no different.
Raising corporate taxes, placing higher income taxes on people who make more money and increasing the sales tax will all make Maryland less competitive and anti-business, said Del. Ron George, R-Arnold. "(Democrats) don't understand what they are doing," he said. "(The taxes) are hitting the people who invest and create the jobs."

Pro-slot forces spent millions
Nearly $4 million steered toward candidate s , lobbying
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.slots11nov11,0,6194073.story
Powerful interests that stand to benefit the most from Gov. Martin O'Malley's plan to legalize slot-machine gambling have contributed nearly $1.25 million to state candidates and political parties since 2003, and spent $2.6 million on State House lobbying fees during the past two years, according to a Sun analysis.
Gambling supporters have poured at least $135,000 into the campaign accounts of O'Malley and Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown, records show. Former Republican Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., an avid slots supporter, received about $131,000 during the same period.House Speaker Michael E. Busch, an Anne Arundel County Democrat and slots foe, said the money that pro-slots interests have spent to influence the political process is one o f the reasons he favors a voter referendum. "If the voters have an opportunity to look at it, and it looks like the process doesn't unjustly enrich anyone, then I think it has a decent chance," Busch said. "If it doesn't, it could look like a rigged game, if you will, [and] I think it has less chance in the voters' eyes."

House strikes repair tax plan
http://www.examiner.com/a-1041311~House_strikes_repair_tax_plan.html
The House Ways and Means Committee stripped a proposed sales tax on repair services for cars, home and hosts of other items out of tax proposal being brought to the House floor Saturday night. "We couldn't get the votes" to pass it in the full House, said Committee Chairman Sheila Hixson. The committee also cut a proposed doubling of the hotel tax in half. It will now go up from 5 p e rcent to 7.5 percent. Some counties and Baltimore City also add their own 7 percent local tax on hotel rooms. A meeting of the full House was delayed several times on Saturday as Democratic leaders tried to reach a compromise tax proposal that at least 71 delegates could support. Hixson, D-Montgomery, said they were coming up 30 votes short in winning the new tax on repairs and parking.
The full House began debate on the tax package Saturday night.

Senate Passes Health Legislation
Measure passes 30-17, would expand coverage to more of state's uninsured

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.health10nov10,0,1178799.story
The Maryland Senate approved legislation yesterday that would expand government-funded programs to provide medical coverage to more of the state's 800,000 uninsured, boosting the measure's chances just months after a similar proposal died in that chamber. When fully implemented, the health care expansion would cost more than $600 million, including federal matching funds and $250 million in added state revenue. Coverage could ramp up over time so that eventually more than 100,000 residents would get insurance. While the health care bill would be paid for through a variety of mechanisms, some of the expansion would ne ed to be curtailed if funding doesn't materialize. In particular, the extension of Medicaid benefits to tens of thousands of childless adults would not happen unless voters approve slot machines in November 2008, which could bring as much as $700 million a year to the state.

Competing tax plans
House, Senate divided on individual, corporate levies
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.taxes10nov10,0,3642752.story
The Maryland Senate and House of Delegates charted divergent courses yesterday for closing a $1.7 billion budget gap, with the Senate approving a plan that increases the sales, tobacco and corporate income tax rates while House leaders pushed an alternative that more heavily taxes the wealthy and corporations. The measures now go to the House, where a committee app r oved alternate versions of the legislation yesterday. Many of the elements of the plan being considered by the House are identical to what the Senate approved, but the two chambers remain divided over how progressive to make the individual income tax and how to ensure that corporations pay their fair share of taxes.
The Senate's close vote reflected the unease of many conservative Democrats, particularly those from the Baltimore suburbs, with the tax package championed by Democratic Gov. Martin O'Malley.
Nine Democrats joined all 14 Senate Republicans in voting against the plan. "It's clear that every Marylander is going to pay more, significantly more," said Sen. David R. Brinkley, the minority leader from Frederick County.
"We seem to be so concerned about, as the governor calls them, the working poor, and it seems to me they're going to be the people who are going to own cars that are 10 or 12 years old and break down more often," said Del. D. Page Elmore , an Eastern Shore Republican. "This will be a tax on the working poor."

Maryland delegates fine-tune tax plan
http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20071111/METRO/111110041/1004
The House of Delegates early this morning passed a $1.4 billion tax plan after a day of closed meetings and hurried vote-counting to aimed at gathering support for the package.The House version of Gov. Martin O'Malley's tax plan includes an increase in the sales tax, corporate income tax and restructuring of the personal income tax, but it did not include a gas-tax hike or an expansion. But Republicans continued their criticism of the hurried process in Annapolis, which enters its third week today. "I think we need to consider the ramifications a little bit more before we push those buttons," said House Minori t y Whip Christopher B. Shank, after asking lawmakers to wait until tomorrow to vote on the tax plan.
But Democrats, after an afternoon caucus, returned the latest tax plan with the support of Montgomery County Democrats.
The move drew the ire of Republican leaders, who said Democrats excluded Republicans, reporters and the public from a Ways and Means Committee meeting where the plan was drafted, a potential violation of Maryland's open-meetings law.
"This is a bad way to do public policy," said House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell, Southern Maryland Republican. "There's no rush to get this done on a false deadline."
House and Senate leaders would then have to meet in a conference committee to iron out the differences in their slots and tax plans.

House OKs $1.4 billion tax-reform plan
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071112/METRO/111120053/1004
House lawmakers passed a $1.4 billion tax plan early yesterday morning after long weekend debates in which leaders of the Democrat-controlled General Assembly scrambled to find support for the plan.
The House version of Gov. Martin O'Malley's tax plan includes an increase in the sales tax, corporate income tax and restructuring of the personal income tax and a plan to spend more than $450 million on transportation projects.
The House plan does not include a gas-tax increase or an expansion of the sales tax to include services.
Republicans tried unsuccessfully to stall the plan through a series of amendments that would have stripped away specific tax increases and t hrough motions to delay the votes.
"This is a bad way to do public policy," said House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell, Southern Maryland Republican. "There's no rush to get this done on a false deadline."
House Republicans said considering increased spending is a mistake because Mr. O'Malley told lawmakers they were returning to Annapolis to close a budget shortfall, estimated at $1.5 billion to $1.7 billion. "We are setting ourselves on the same course that brought us here," said Delegate Richard K. Impallaria, Baltimore County Republican.

House Passes Income, Sales Tax Bills After Struggle
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/10/AR2007111001527.html
The Maryland House of Delegates passed two major tax bills early this morning that would togethe r raise $1.4 billion a year to close a yawning budget shortfall and pay for transportation and health-care priorities.
Together, the two bills would raise roughly the same revenue as a bill passed Friday by the Senate. But several differences between the two chambers' plans would need to be resolved for the special session initiated by Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) two weeks ago to come to a successful close. Republicans blasted their Democratic colleagues for pushing "massive tax increases" through the chamber in a rushed process. "This bill will do untold damage to the economy of the state of Maryland," said House Minority Whip Christopher B. Shank (R-Washington) as debate entered its fifth hour at 11 p.m.
The start of a rancorous late-night debate was delayed for several hours as Democratic House leaders struggled to round up votes needed to pass the bills. Like the Senate, the House declined to include in its package an O'Malley proposal to roll th e state sales tax back by 3 cents per $100 in assessed value. House leaders said they did not think it was a responsible thing to do, with the state facing a large budget shortfall.
O'Malley told reporters that he might resurrect his plan in future years when the state has its "fiscal house in order."

Tax Bills Passed, Bargaining Begins
Md. House, Senate Faced With Reconciling Their Differences on Sales, Income Levies
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/11/AR2007111101516.html
Leaders of the Maryland House of Delegates offered one another congratulatory embraces early yesterday morning after passing two tax bills that would raise $1.4 billion a year to help close a budget shortfall and pay for transportation and health-care priorities. But lawmakers pr e dicted several more long days ahead as they try to bring a special session called by Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) to a close this week. The House, which wrapped up a six-hour debate on its tax bills shortly after 1 a.m. yesterday, must reconcile its legislation with that of the Senate, which passed a comprehensive tax bill Friday. The Senate and House. Besides the slots legislation, the House plans to take up bills this week to expand access to health care and to direct O'Malley to cut at least $500 million from the budget next year.
Republican leaders blasted Democrats for both the magnitude of the tax increases and for a rushed process.
"We don't know what this bill is," said House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell (R-Calvert). "We've got taxes in, taxes out. We don't know what the bill does."

'Every veteran is a patriot'
Worcester County honors those who served
http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071112/NEWS01/711120304/1002
Remembering is a very important thing on Veterans Day, Congressman Wayne Gilchrest, R-1st-Md., said Sunday during the ceremony at the Worcester County Veterans Memorial in Ocean Pines.
"It is so important to remember those young Americans who came to find a place in history," he said. "They came form a democratic process where your dreams and ideals can become a reality."

Montgomery officials look to Congress for tax help

http://www.examiner.com/a-1043184~Montgomery_officials_look_to_Congress_for_tax_help.html
Montgomery elected leaders are asking members of Maryland's congressional delegation to fix a ta x glitch that could have some county residents facing increased federal taxes, in addition to potential state tax increases. Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett, Council President Marilyn Praisner and Council Vice President Mike Knapp sent Sens. Benjamin Cardin and Barbara Mikulski, and Reps. Roscoe Bartlett, Chris Van Hollen and Albert Wynn a letter requesting they work to modify the federal alternative minimum tax.
Knapp said the tax could be especially devastating this year because Gov. Martin O'Malley is proposing a 20 percent increase in the sales tax and increases in the income tax rate for residents earning more than $150,000.
"Everything would be piling up on the county at the same time," Knapp said. "It would be hitting our residents very hard all at once at a time when the economy itself is not very strong."

Shelter for homeless veterans breaks ground on expansion
Addition could be com p leted within a year and will add 42 beds
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-shelter1112,0,3238070.story
The South Baltimore Station, a shelter used by many homeless veterans battling substance abuse, broke ground on an expansion this morning. U.S. Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin told onlookers that there are 25 million veterans living in America, in addition to the 1.2 million activity duty members of the military, about 200,000 of whom are serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. Veterans Day is being observed today with a federal holiday. "I can't think of a more appropriate place to be on this Veterans Day than here at Baltimore Station," Cardin said, and noted that he feels veterans have been shortchanged over the years. "We haven't even done what we said we could do, and now we're trying to the right thing." Shelter officials said that private foundations, government agencies and private citizens have contributed nearly $4 million for the expansion.


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

More time is needed to face budget woes
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/letters/bal-ed.le.11nnov11,0,2126136.story
I have many concerns about the process of the General Assembly special session. Foremost among them is the lack of time and information available for voters to review and reflect on the legislation being considered ("Panel reworks revenue package," Nov. 7). Increasing Maryland's state taxes must be given serious and thoughtful consideration so that we understand all the related concerns. Once the decision to increase taxes is made, i t will be difficult to go back and revisit these increases.
But just look at how many new taxes are being considered, even though their full impact is not clearly understood.
I love my state. I love my nation. I realize that government needs funding to function.
However, I expect no less from our government than I do from my family - and that is to spend within our budget and be accountable for how we spend our hard-earned dollars.
Please take this budget process more seriously.
Patt A. Parker
Dunkirk
The writer is president of the Maryland Federation of Republican Women.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Dispatches from the front lines in the deficit war
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.fraser11nov11,0,3152895.column
The De m ocratic Party's Senate caucus was full of grumbling last week about Comptroller Peter Franchot, who called Gov. Martin O'Malley's tax reform package a "pounding" for the poor.
At the same time, Mr. Franchot was stepping away from the governor's proposal to require taxes of some mega-corporations that currently pay no taxes in Maryland. Mr. Franchot had absented himself from the Budget and Tax Committee's effort to craft an acceptable loophole-closing bill.
The no-higher-tax heat arises in many forms as the General Assembly wrestles with Mr. O'Malley's plan. Democratic Sen. James Brochin, for example, announced last week that he would join the Republicans in their opposition to the governor's revenue-raising and tax-reform plan.Mr. Brochin, who is consistently voting for Republican efforts to defeat the governor's plan, says he's willing to pay the bill if government economizes and stops supporting things such as state a id to independent colleges. He's from a legislative district in Baltimore County that marginally favored former Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. over Mr. O'Malley.
Last week, I quoted an acquaintance who asked why no one stops to think of paying taxes as a privilege. What he meant is that taxes are, as a wise man once said, the price of living in a democracy.
You will no doubt be surprised to learn that not everyone agrees. I offer this proof in the form of an e-mail last week: "Fraser Smith, you are a pathetic fool, and a doddering socialist. 'Paying taxes is a privilege'? Moronic!"


Balto. Co. delegates consider slots
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_county/bal-slots1110,0,331518.story
Baltimore County delegates are considering a plan for a slot machine gambling parlor in the M i ddle River area, an idea that could gain political traction amid opposition to proposed sites in Cecil and Worcester counties.
The county has long been a hotbed of slots supporters, but the long-standing opposition of County Executive James T. Smith Jr. to a site at the Timonium fairgrounds has kept them out of the slots proposals that have been floated in Annapolis in recent years, including the one Gov. Martin O'Malley offered as part of his budget-balancing package.
"For the last six years being down here, I've supported slots," said Del. J. B. Jennings, a Republican whose district includes the potential site. "What kind of person am I to say I'm for slots but don't put them in my backyard?"
The two other delegates from that district, Republicans Patrick L. McDonough and Richard K. Impallaria, opposed the plan.
"I can tell you, with me, it won't happen," McDonough said. "It's a non-starter. The communities will not accept it. You'll have a fight you do n 't want."

Budget cuts may affect farmland
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/harford/bal-ha.farm11nov11,0,7371273.story
Farmers have a big stake in the current special session of the General Assembly called by Gov. Martin O'Malley to close a $1.7 billion state budget deficit. Money for agricultural land preservation would be cut drastically, and funding for cover crops would be slashed if lawmakers are unable to reach an agreement on new revenue sources to close the gap, said state Agriculture Secretary Roger Richardson. His warnings were included in a letter to farmers alerting them to some of the proposed reductions and how agriculture would be affected.

2 senators support tax-plan changes
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/howard/bal-ho.politics11nov11,0,265919.story
Two of Howard County's three state senators sit on the Budget and Tax Committee and participated in key votes for the first set of changes that are reshaping Gov. Martin O'Malley's tax plan. Democratic Sens. Edward J. Kasemeyer and James N. Robey supported the committee majority in lowering O'Malley's suggested top income tax rate for Maryland's highest-income residents, while rejecting his idea for relief for people earning less than $15,000. Kasemeyer and Robey said the changes make sense to them, despite angry calls and e-mails from anti-tax critics and pressure from liberals to make Maryland's rates higher for wealthy people.
Howard's third senator, Republican Allan H. Kittleman, the Senate's minority whip, serves on the Finance Committee. He, like other GOP members, had strong opini o ns on the sales-tax portion of what his county colleagues did. "It was the classic bait and switch," he said. "A shell game." Instead of sales taxes on health clubs, real estate services and tanning salons - all of which vigorously lobbied against the move - the committee substituted computer services, landscaping firms and arcades, without any notice or plans for a public hearing. "They put in three new [businesses] who had no idea they were even being considered," Kittleman said.

20071113 WBAL: Goodwin Gone As Baltimore Fire Chief

WBAL: Goodwin Gone As Baltimore Fire Chief

Goodwin Gone As Baltimore Fire Chief

BALTIMORE FIRE CHIEF WILLIAM GOODWIN RESIGNS. LISTEN TO WBAL RADIO FOR CONTINUING DEVELOPMENTS. UPDATES AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AT http://wbal.com

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

WBAL Radio

Baltimore's Fire Chief William Goodwin Jr. will step down December 31, bookending a tough year that included the death of a fire department recruit during a training exercise.

Goodwin, a 32-year veteran of the department who has been fire chief since February 2002, submitted his resignation to Mayor Dixon during a meeting Tuesday, said the mayor's spokesman, Anthony McCarthy.

Dixon did not ask Goodwin to step down, but "the mayor was not surprised that the chief decided to retire," McCarthy said.

[…]

The mayor will conduct a national search for his successor, McCarthy said.

[…]

Dixon had expressed lukewarm support for Goodwin since the February training exercise that killed recruit Racheal Wilson, 29, whose foot became trapped during a live burn in a vacant rowhouse.

Dixon fired the head of the department's training academy and suspended two lieutenants after Wilson's death. A state agency cited the department for "intentionally" and "knowingly" violating safety rules, and an independent investigation concluded that 50 safety standards were violated, including setting several fires when only one was allowed.

The two unions that represent city firefighters had called for Goodwin to resign, accusing him of failing to accept responsibility for Wilson's death and hurting department morale.

"We're elated," said Richard G. Schluderberg, president of the union…

[…]

Said Stephen Fugate, president of the fire officers' union…

[…]

Mayor Dixon Accepts Resignation of Fire Chief William Goodwin

Baltimore, MD (November 13, 2007) – Mayor Sheila Dixon has accepted the resignation of Baltimore City Fire Chief William Goodwin. Chief Goodwin informed the Mayor in a meeting this afternoon of his decision to retire in late-December after 32 years with the department. Goodwin became Chief of the Baltimore City Fire Department in 2002 after having served in every rank in the department.

"Chief Goodwin has served the City of Baltimore and the Fire Department with distinction. On behalf of the citizens I want to thank him for his years of sacrifice and commitment over an extraordinarily long and successful career," said Mayor Dixon. "The last year has been difficult for the department and Chief Goodwin has provided the steady and consistent hand that was needed."

Mayor Dixon will immediately begin a national search for a new chief.

To read the entire WBAL article click here: Goodwin Gone As Baltimore Fire Chief

LISTEN TO WBAL RADIO FOR CONTINUING DEVELOPMENTS. UPDATES AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AT http://wbal.com

20071113 AP: MONTPELIER, Vt. -- Disable woman with celiac disease wants to keep tiny horse by DAVE GRAM

Tiny horse center of rights dispute

Published by AP: Tuesday, Nov 13, 2007

Disabled woman wants to keep pony in apartment to pull wheelchair

Photo by TOBY TALBOT / Associated Press

Patty Cooper sits in her wheelchair with her miniature horse, Earl, last month in Warren, Vt.


By DAVE GRAM ASSOCIATED PRESS

MONTPELIER, Vt. -- Patty Cooper's landlord normally welcomes tenants who use animals to help them get around, such as guide dogs for the blind.

So after the disabled woman bought a 32-inch-tall miniature horse to pull her wheelchair, she asked to keep the animal in her home. When her landlord rejected the request, she filed a human rights complaint.

Cooper, 50, paid $1,000 for the 1-year-old gelding named Earl, expecting to use it for trips to the bus stop and into town. The agency that owns the apartment complex in Waitsfield denied her proposal, citing concern about horse droppings, hay storage and lack of grazing space.

Cooper insists the 100-pound tobiano pinto can be house-trained and said it "just makes me so happy whenever I'm around him. I'm not lonely anymore."

[…]

The case has drawn national attention since it was reported last month as an example of disabled people using animals other than guide dogs for the blind.

Cooper, 50, has celiac disease, a disorder in which exposure to a protein called gluten destroys the ability of the small intestine to absorb nutrients and can cause brittle bones. Cooper, who broke her back for a second time four years ago, uses a wheelchair most of the time.

Preston Jump, executive director of the Central Vermont Community Land Trust…

[…]

Read the entire article here: Tiny horse center of rights dispute

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

20071112 Poughkeepsie Journal: Panels explore presidents' relationship with Supreme Court By Michael Woyton


Poughkeepsie Journal: Panels explore presidents' relationship with Supreme Court By Michael Woyton

http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071112/NEWS01/711120329/1006/NEWS01

Former justice gives keynote speech at 2-day conference

Monday, November 12, 2007

By Michael Woyton Poughkeepsie Journal

Photo by Denise DeVore/For the Poughkeepsie Journal

Former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor gave the keynote address during “The Presidency and the Supreme Court” conference on Sunday, at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park.

Related: 20071111 The Presidency and the Supreme Court conference Agenda Or click on:

History American Presidents – and the Supreme Court Conference at FDR Presidential Library Nov. 11 and 12 2007

HYDE PARK - Former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, speaking on "The Presidency and the Supreme Court," focused on four historic moments "in which the two large offices (the executive and the judiciary) have intersected, overlapped and even clashed," she said.

The first two involved Thomas Jefferson and the establishment of judicial review by the court and Abraham Lincoln's suspending habeas corpus, or the right to petition for relief from unlawful detention, during the Civil War.

The third centered on FDR and his desire to pack the court with his justice picks.

"He was more than a little annoyed that the justices were giving thumbs down to his legislation," O'Connor said.

The final example took place during the Korean War, when Harry Truman was prevented by the Supreme Court from taking over the steel mills to prevent a strike.

O'Connor was the keynote speaker at the conference organized by the presidential libraries and held at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park.

Read the entire article here: Poughkeepsie Journal: Panels explore presidents' relationship with Supreme Court By Michael Woyton

Sunday, November 11, 2007

20071110 AP: Newsday - Writer Norman Mailer has died at age 84


AP: Newsday - Writer Norman Mailer has died at age 84



Nov 10, 2007



http://www.newsday.com/



Notable deaths


http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/sns-2007-deaths-pix,0,5859368.photogallery?coll=ny_wire_promo


(AP/Kathy Willens)



Norman Mailer, the pugnacious prince of American letters who for decades reigned as the country's literary conscience and provocateur with such books as "The Naked and the Dead" and "The Executioner's Song," died of acute renal failure on Nov. 10. He was 84.



Mailer built and nurtured an image over the years as bellicose, street-wise and high-living. He drank, fought, smoked pot, married six times and stabbed his second wife, almost fatally, during a drunken party.



He had nine children, made a quixotic bid to become mayor of New York City on a "left conservative" platform, produced five forgettable films, dabbled in journalism, flew gliders, challenged professional boxers, was banned from a Manhattan YWHA for reciting obscene poetry, feuded publicly with writer Gore Vidal and crusaded against women's liberation. (AP/Kathy Willens)


_____

Also see: CNN: Literary lion Norman Mailer dies By Todd Leopold CNN updated 9:24 p.m. EST, Sat November 10, 2007

Story Highlights:

Renowned author died of renal failure early Saturday

Influential novelist, essayist Mailer died at Mount Sinai Hospital at 84

Burst on scene with "The Naked and the Dead"

Wrote "The Armies of the Night," two-time Pulitzer Prize winner

more photos »

_____

19480000 to November 10 2007 Works by Norman Mailer

"The Naked and the Dead" 1948
"The Barbary Shore" 1951
"The Deer Park" 1955
"Advertisements for Myself" 1959
"The Presidential Papers" 1963
"An American Dream" 1965
"Why Are We in Vietnam?" 1967
"The Armies of the Night" (National Book Award, Pulitzer Prize) 1968
"Miami and the Siege of Chicago" 1968
"Of A Fire On the Moon" 1971
"The Prisoner of Sex," essay, 1971
"Existential Errands" 1972
"St. George and the Godfather," 1972
"Marilyn" 1973
"The Fight" 1975
"Some Honorable Men" 1975
"Genius and Lust" 1976
"A Transit to Narcissus" 1978
"The Executioner's Song" (Pulitzer Prize for Fiction) 1979
"Of Women and Their Elegance, Pieces and Pontifications,"
essay, 1982
"Ancient Evenings" 1983
"Tough Guys Don't Dance" 1984
"Harlot's Ghost" 1991
"The Gospel According to the Son" 1997

20071111 This week in The Tentacle


This week in The Tentacle

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Veterans Day: “The Wall” at 25

Kevin E. Dayhoff

This year Veterans Day is also the 25th anniversary of the dedication of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, in Constitution Gardens adjacent to the National Mall in Washington. The Memorial, well known as “The Wall,” was dedicated November 13, 1982.

“Remembering Vietnam – The Wall at 25,” is the subject of a stunning original Smithsonian Channel Documentary. The program will be simultaneously web-streamed on the Smithsonian Channel Website (www.smithsonianchannel.com) with its on-air broadcast to DirecTV subscribers on Channel 267 this evening at 8 p.m. and 11 p.m.

Heidi Schroeder, my colleague at The Westminster Eagle, and I were provided an advance copy of the documentary. We had been contacted for research information by Lynn Kessler-Hiltajczuk last summer.

Ms. Kessler-Hiltajczuk is a writer-producer for Alexandria-based LK Productions and served as an independent producer for the program. She was looking for additional information on Lance Cpl. Muriel Stanley Groomes, a Carroll Countian who was killed in Vietnam November 2, 1968.

[…]

Veterans such as Carroll County State’s Attorney Jerry F. Barnes, a former Frederick County assistant State’s Attorney who choose to forego what would have been an easily available draft deferment in May 1968 and joined the Army.

It was in that month that the 1966 Westminster High School graduate received his draft notice. According to a biographical sketch written by former Maryland State Delegate Carmen Amedori, Mr. Barnes joined a number of draftees from Carroll County “on a school bus at the (Westminster) Post Office downtown,” and headed to Fort Holabird in Baltimore – and then promptly to Fort Bragg, NC.

There Mr. Barnes opted to eschew being drafted for two years and enlisted for three years. At first he wanted to be a helicopter pilot, but after a series of events, he signed up for Special Forces – the Green Berets.

Mr. Barnes’ Vietnam experience was one of a number of sketches by Ms. Amedori which appears in a new publication from the Historical Society of Carroll County: “Tours of Duty – Carroll County and the Vietnam War,” by Gary D. Jestes and Jay A. Graybeal.


[…]

Read the entire column here: Veterans Day: “The Wall” at 25


Friday, November 9, 2007

"Fair Lady" and "The Scourge of God"

Roy Meachum


Lisa O’Hare stars as Eliza Doolittle with Christopher Cazenove as Professor Henry Higgins in the Baltimore’s Hippodrome Theater presentation of “My Fair Lady.” (Photo by Joan Marcus)


Thursday, November 8, 2007

An Open Letter…

Chris Cavey

Dear Governor O’Malley, The Guinness Book of World Records lists Teflon as the slipperiest substance on Earth. In a few short months Maryland’s citizens will witness that you are the slipperiest governor in the United States; because nothing will stick.


Russian Glimpses – Part 3 – St. Petersburg

Patricia A. Kelly

(Editor's Note: Columnist Kelly recently toured Russia. This is her third of three parts recounting her adventure.) Our senior guide in St. Petersburg, Masha, was the daughter of intellectuals. During Soviet times, her parents traded their historic, central apartment for a Khrushchev apartment farther out, so that they could send Masha to kindergarten without a 6-year wait. Apartment developments are named after the leader of the time they were built. Stalin’s were the best.


Wednesday, November 7, 2007

The Ever Green Fund

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Last Friday, the House Environmental Matters Committee in the Maryland General Assembly held a hearing on House Bill 23, the “Maryland Green Fund.”


Tuesday, November 6, 2007

“I’m mad as Hell….”

Farrell Keough

Of late, I have gotten responses to my columns that fall into two camps; some have told me they were a nice, condensed view of facts surrounding issues and others have said I need to lighten up and write to a lower level of education. While I appreciate receiving input, (good or bad) it is this latter perspective I would like to tackle.


War without heroes and villains

Roy Meachum

Most Americans prefer personalized war. They need heroes to admire; but most of all they want villains to hate. Hitler was a perfect example. He was a demon long before the United States entered World War II.


Monday, November 5, 2007

General Assembly Journal – Special Session

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

Part 1

Last Monday was a day of rallies, political meetings, and an evening Joint Session of the Maryland General Assembly


Friday, November 2, 2007

Noisy Neighbors

Roy Meachum

With their eyes firmly fixed on the next (2009) elections, four Frederick aldermen stepped backwards on the noise issue. They let be known their views that neighbors could judge when someone gets too loud.


Christmas is Coming

Edward Lulie III

Christmas season, my favorite time of the year, is about to begin. This also means the start of another fast and furious season of shopping madness. I guess that it takes all of that pain and suffering to achieve a memorable holiday, but rarely is "getting there half the fun" when it comes to preparing for Christmas or finding those presents to buy.

20071111 The Presidency and the Supreme Court conference Agenda


This weekend I am attending a conference on the Presidency and the Supreme Court – November 11th and 12th, 2007 at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum

The Presidency and the Supreme Court conference brings together a wide range of speakers, including scholars, policymakers, and journalists to deliberate on the complex relationship between the Court and the Presidency and the impact of that interaction on American society. Panels focus not only on the political process of Supreme Court nominations and confirmations, but examines the Court's influence on social issues, civil rights and governmental power in times of crisis. The conference also includes a keynote address by former Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.

This conference is sponsored by the nation's twelve Presidential Libraries, their foundations, the National Archives, the Foundation for the National Archives, and the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute with generous support from:

Thomson West, Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge LLP, Frederick P. Furth, Wiley Rein LLP

The Presidency and the Supreme Court conference Agenda

AGENDA

Sunday, November 11, 2007

1:00 p.m.

Welcoming Remarks

Professor Allen Weinstein, Archivist of the United States;

Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, Co-Chair,

Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute;

Former President George H. W. Bush (via video).

1:15 - 3:00 p.m.

Presidents Hoover and Roosevelt and the 1930s Supreme Court

The consequential Supreme Court decisions, appointments, and presidential politics of the 1930s.

Chair: Alan Brinkley, Provost, Columbia University; Professors William E. Leuchtenburg and G. Edward White; Author and Newsweek Senior Editor Jonathan Alter.

3:00 - 4:45 p.m.

Shaping the Modern Court: Presidents Truman through Clinton

Insider accounts of Supreme Court appointments and how the appointment process has changed over the past sixty years.

Chair: Allen Weinstein; Ambassador C. Boyden Gray; Professors Douglas Brinkley and Laura Kalman.

5:00 p.m.

Keynote Address: The Honorable Sandra Day O'Connor

Monday, November 12, 2007

9:15 a.m.

Welcoming Remarks

Sharon Fawcett, Assistant Archivist for Presidential Libraries;

The Hon. Judith S. Kaye, Chief Judge of the State of New York.

Moderator for the day: National Public Radio Legal Affairs Correspondent Nina Totenberg.

9:30 - 11:30 a.m.

The Presidency, the Supreme Court and Civil Rights

The interactions of Presidents and the Supreme Court on topics relating to race, discrimination, equality and civil rights.

Civil rights leader and former Assistant Attorney General Roger Wilkins; Professor David A. Nichols; former Secretary of Education the Hon. Shirley Hufstedler; Professor and former President of the American Civil Liberties Union Norman Dorsen; National Public Radio Senior Correspondent Juan Williams.

Lunch Break

12:45 - 2:45 p.m.

The Presidency, the Supreme Court and the "Culture Wars"

Presidential and Supreme Court concerns and decisions relating to abortion, the death penalty, gay rights, religion and other topics of societal division.

The Hon. Michael W. McConnell; Professors Heather Gerken and Michael C. Dorf.

3:00 - 5:00 p.m.

The Supreme Court and Presidential Power

Supreme Court adjudication of the limits of executive power under the Constitution, especially in times of war and crisis.

Professor John Q. Barrett; former White House Counsel John W. Dean; Author and New York Times Columnist Anthony Lewis; former White House Counsel Beth Nolan.

5:00 p.m.

Concluding Remarks

Ambassador William J. vanden Heuvel, Founder and Chairman Emeritus, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute.

20071107 I appeared on The Marc Steiner Show

I appeared on The Marc Steiner Show on Wednesday, November 7, 2007, 12:40-1:20 with Faser Smith…

Marc talks with WYPR’s Fraser Smith and conservative columnist Kevin Dayhoff about the special session in Annapolis.

LISTEN

####

Saturday, November 10, 2007

20071109 Westminster Road Runners Schedule for January - May 2008

Westminster (Md) Road Runner Schedule

January-May, 2008

November 9th, 2007

Tuesday, January 1, 12:00 noon, Winfield Mile, South Carroll

High School, Winfield, Md. Alan Pobletts, 410-549-1873

or franpob@carr.org RACE DAY ENTRY ONLY.

Sunday, January 13, 12:00 noon, Mighty Medford Freeway 5K,

Avondale and Stone Chapel Roads, Westminster, Md. Tom

Yinger, 410-857-2930 or yinger32@yahoo.com RACE DAY

ENTRY ONLY.

Sunday, February 3, 12:00 noon, Bear Run Four Miler,

Pleasant Valley Fire Hall, Pleasant Valley, Md. Sam

Alspach, 410-875-2621 or galspach@mcdaniel.edu RACE

DAY ENTRY ONLY.

Saturday, March 1, 9:00 am, Flying Feet 5K, Bear Branch

Nature Center, Westminster, Md. David Griffin, 410-857-

4974 or Dpgflyingfeet@aol.com RACE DAY ENTRY ONLY.

Sunday, March 16, 9:00 am, Four Mile Predicted Time Run,

F&M Manufacturing Company, Tech Court, Westminster, Md.

David Herlocker, 410-848-8332 or dherlock@mcdaniel.edu

RACE DAY ENTRY ONLY.

Saturday, March 29, 9:00 am, McDaniel College 5K Track Run,

Bair Stadium, McDaniel College, Westminster, Md. Skip

Fennell, 410-848-8991 or ffennell@mcdaniel.edu

RACE DAY ENTRY ONLY.

Saturday, April 5, 9:00 am, Race for the Stars 5K Run/Walk,

Century High School, Eldersburg, Md. Mark Sobota,

410-833-0346 or msobota@verizon.net

Wednesday, April 16, 7:00 pm, Main Street Mile, Westminster, Md.

Beth Weisenborn, wrrc.web@gmail.com or 717-677-6883

Entries are available on-line at http://www.carr.org/~wrrc

MAILIN ENTRIES CLOSE APRIL 1.

ONLINE ENTRIES CLOSE WHEN THE 700-RUNNER LIMIT IS REACHED.

Friday, November 09, 2007

20071109 News Clips


News Clips

Nov 9, 2007

STATE NEWS

Senate OKs slots plan
Referendum proposal on gambling devices goes to House
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.slots09nov09,0,1274286.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout
The Maryland Senate approved last night a referendum on slot machine gambling, moving the legislature one step closer to asking voters in November 2008 whether to allow up to 15,000 of the devices across the state. Senators worked late into the night on a $1.4 billion package of tax increases, and a final vote on the tax plan was expected today.The Senate's 31-15 vote to approve a referendum on Gov. Martin O'Malley's slots proposal came hours after backers fended off efforts to change the planned locations of slot p arlors and to have an up-or-down vote on allowing them.
In the House, delegates planned to begin taking formal committee votes on the tax legislation today, but preliminary meetings held yesterday suggested that they might try to restore some of the measures that senators stripped out of O'Malley's income tax proposal and establish a mechanism that proponents say would prevent large corporations from hiding their profits out of state.
Several Republicans objected to using the state constitution as a vehicle for the slots debate, arguing that the General Assembly has the authority to legalize slots gambling and that the referendum is a political tool. "It's a sacred document, not a weather vane," said Sen. David R. Brinkley, the minority leader from Frederick County. "You don't need to go in and tinker with the constitution." Earlier yesterday, Republicans failed to amend the bill to take out the Worcester C ounty location at Ocean Downs and instead include Rosecroft Raceway in Prince George's County. Sen. J. Lowell Stoltzfus, an Eastern Shore Republican, said that many officials in Worcester County oppose slots, and that the gambling facility would draw tourists away from Ocean City. "That glitz is going to pull a lot of people," he said, "and existing businesses [will] die."

Slots bill goes to House

http://www.examiner.com/a-1038430~Slots_bill_goes_to_House.html
With votes to spare for a three-fifths supermajority, the Maryland Senate on Thursday night approved Gov. Martin O'Malley's plan to allow voters to decide next year whether to put up to 15,000 slot machines at five locations. The measure could raise about $500 million for education by 2012. It's now up to the House of Delegates to approve a key component of the governor's revenue-raising package with a similar supermajority, despite the House's long reluctance to embrace the gambling scheme.
Sen. Lowell Stoltzfus, whose Lower Shore district includes the ocean resort, said businesses and elected officials in Worcester County all opposed slot machines at Ocean Downs racetrack.
"Rosecroft would generate another $200 million" over Ocean City, Stoltzfus said. Putting the slots operation in Prince George's "does not cannibalize existing businesses," as putting slots near a resort does. But he said, "I can understand why Prince George's does not want the site in their county."

Voters likely to have final say on slots
http://www.examiner.com/a-1038133~Voters_likely_to_have_final_say_on_slots.html
The Senate moved a step closer Thursday by su p porting Gov. Martin O'Malley's plan to install 15,000 slot machines at five locations but also allow voters to give the final say to the gambling measure on the 2008 ballot. It could raise about $500 million for education by 2012.

Senate Removes Landscaping From Sales Tax; Tax Vote Today
http://wbal.com/news/story.asp?articleid=65445
Members of the Maryland Senate chose not to stay in session all night last night, and are returning this morning to take a final vote on a revised tax bill which Governor Martin O'Malley and other supporters say is needed to eliminate an up to $1.7-billion structural deficit. Senate President Mike Miller told senators before adjourning last night's session that he hoped today's session would be brief, so that the measure can get to the House of Representatives which has scheduled sessions for 2 pm and 5 pm today.
Senate Minority Leader David Brinkley says Republicans are still planning to filibuster the tax bill to prevent a vote from taking place. Republicans need five Democrats to prevent the vote. Brinkley says his party is close to getting that support. Both Brinkley and Senate Minority Whip Allan Kittleman tell WBAL News they have been approached by several Democrats, who have expressed an interest in joining the filibuster effort.
Brinkley says the vote to cut off debate will be "indicative" of the support the tax plan has in the Senate.

Governor looks to House after Senate alters plan
Anne Arundel would lose $20 million under proposal

http://www.capitalonline.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/11_08-42/TOP
A litany of Senate amendments pushed Gov. Martin O'Malley's deficit proposal into a more cons e rvative posture, and now Maryland's chief executive is looking to the House of Delegates to bring it closer to his original vision. The Senate plans to take full votes today on legislation to cut spending and raise taxes, and on bills to legalize slot machines if approved during a 2008 referendum.
Democratic and Republican lawmakers grilled the budget committee for hours when the amended bills were introduced yesterday.
Their comments included how the public didn't get a chance to testify against the new services placed under the sales tax, and how language about locations in the slots proposal appears to telegraph where the machines will be placed even though there's supposed to be an open bidding process.
"You got Democrats questioning (the plan) just like the Republicans," said Sen. John Astle, D-Annapolis, following the full Senate hearing. "There is a lot of dissension (among Democrats) about aspects of it."

O' M alley tax package faces Republican filibuster
http://www.examiner.com/a-1038134~O_Malley_tax_package_faces_Republican_filibuster.html
The Senate was close to giving tentative approval Thursday night to its reworked version of Gov. Martin O'Malley's proposal to increase sales, income and corporate taxes that would raise $1.5 billion.
But the plan faces a filibuster to talk it to death Thursday night or Friday morning by 14 Republicans and at least one Democrat.The Senate resisted many attempts to make changes to bill by both Republicans and Democrats.
In a letter to House Speaker Michael Busch, Comptroller Peter Franchot objected to the new computer taxes. "I am frustrated by the seemingly random and arbitrary manner in which these industries have been targeted for taxation," Franchot said.

Senate Votes to Put Slots On Ballot
Md. Tax Package Clears Hurdles

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/08/AR2007110801171.html
A bill to ask voters whether to place slots at five sites in Maryland passed 31 to 15, two votes more the supermajority required for approval. Putting the issue to a public vote was cast as a compromise to an issue that has paralyzed Annapolis for years. Other procedural votes forced by Republicans suggested that Democratic Senate leaders were likely to win the votes needed today to pass other parts of a revenue package that includes raising the sales, tobacco, corporate income and vehicle titling taxes, as well as overhauling the state's income tax brackets.
The Senate agreed late last night to invest up to $50 million over five years in the financially troubled Prince George's County h o spital system if a still-elusive agreement on a long-term solution for the system is reached by state and county leaders or by the General Assembly.
The breakneck pace drew protests from Republicans and even some Democrats, who said legislation was being muscled through the Senate without vetting by lawmakers and the public.
"What is so special that we have to stay here all night to pass this?" Sen. E.J. Pipkin (R-Queen Anne's) asked his colleagues. "We've done a year's worth of work in a day." Although several more long days await them, some lawmakers said they can envision the session coming to a successful close.

All eyes are on the Senate Solutions begin to take shape
http://www.gazette.net/stories/110907/polinew14300_32371.shtml
A marathon Senate session on Thursday addressed slots and health care expansion a n d sought to answer the question of what's in a sales tax. The solution to the state's projected $1.5 billion budget deficit began to take on a clearer outline during the second week of the General Assembly's special session as the Senate moved forward with its ideas. Republicans spent Wednesday and Thursday making their point that new taxes are unwanted. Their discontent did not change as the debate over taxes dragged into Thursday evening. ''It went from a poison pill to a poison bowling ball, and they're asking the voters to swallow it," said Senate Minority Leader David R. Brinkley (R-Dist. 4) of New Market.On Wednesday, Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. predicted the session could last another week.
''I think we'll be out of here by next Wednesday, I hope," said Miller (D-Dist. 27) of Chesapeake Beach ''If we aren't able to get out of here by Wednesday, I'm ready to wave the white flag."

Heat from lawmakers' tax jockeying is burning leadership on all sides
http://www.gazette.net/stories/110907/polinew14246_32368.shtml
After a week of testimony and then the first week of bill mark-up, the General Assembly's leadership was taking hits from all sides over the process of the special session. Republicans on Thursday called for an end to the special session. Renegade Democrat Del. Luiz R.S. Simmons complained that the legislature's reputation had been ''stained."
On Tuesday the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee removed health clubs, tanning salons, property managers and massage therapists from Gov. Martin O'Malley's sales tax plan. The four services, like virtually all other services in Maryland, are untaxed. The panel substituted three others - landscaping, computer services and arcades.
Lawmakers had not signaled the services woul d be considered for taxation during the week of legislative hearings on O'Malley's tax plan. That's when the volume on the complaints went to 11.
''It was their unlucky day. They lost Tax Lotto," said Sen. E.J. Pipkin (R-Dist. 36) of Stevensville. ''It's not enough [Democrats have] got control of the House, the Senate and the governor's mansion. Now they're going against the democratic - lowercase d - process."''We call for an end to the special session because we believe it is out of control," House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell (R-Dist. 29C) of Lusby said. ''The governor talks about cost of delay. Here's the cost of haste."
''The reputation of the Maryland General Assembly will be stained by the arbitrary and capricious way this process is being conducted," said Simmons (D-Dist. 17) of Rockville. ''There are people here for whom the ends justify any means."

Bump for slots operators a bad bet, some po l s say
http://www.gazette.net/stories/110907/polinew14244_32367.shtml
Lawmakers on both sides of the gambling debate are bristling over a maneuver this week to sweeten the pot for slots operators who will be competing with existing parlors in Pennsylvania, Delaware and West Virginia.The Senate Budget & Taxation Committee boosted the share of gross revenues that will be directed to slots owners from 30 percent to 33 percent, a $72.6 million bump in the first three years of the slots program. One Republican suggested voters will see the additional money as an unfair payday for the wealthy slots operators, haunting Democrats in the next election.
''That's pouring out a gallon of poison instead of a half-gallon," said Del. Richard B. Weldon (R-Dist. 3B) of Brunswick. ''Every policy position that gets rushed through ... strengthens the message that we carry back right now and in two years."
The Senate measure makes a bad bill even worse because it doesn't bring any immediate revenue into the state, said House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell (R-Dist. 29C) of Lusby.
''To give these licenses away and to propose to give them more of the keep is not a good deal for the citizens of Maryland," he said.

Senate overrides police gun veto
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.guns09nov09,0,6111225.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout
The Maryland Senate voted unanimously yesterday to override Gov. Martin O'Malley's veto of a bill that would let police departments dispose of their guns by selling them to a manufacturer.
The bill was approved unanimously this year in both the Senate a nd the House of Delegates. No one testified against it during a Senate committee hearing. State law requires police departments to either destroy the guns or sell them only to another police agency or an active or retired officer.
O'Malley stated that "police weapons should not be potentially made available outside of the law enforcement community." The House of Delegates would need to get a three-fifths' vote for the General Assembly to override the veto.

Smoking-ban talk: waivers, buffers
15 percent loss could get business off hook temporarily
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.smoking09nov09,0,1046638.story
Less than three months before the state's sweeping smoking ban will go into effect, supporters and opponents of the ban tackled the details of the p roposed regulations at a public hearing yesterday, focusing on a provision allowing for temporary waivers. The waivers would give bars and restaurants that prove financial hardship a three-year extension to comply with the smoking ban. State officials are proposing that, to obtain a waiver, businesses would have to show that the first two months of the smoking ban caused gross sales of food and beverages to decline at least 15 percent compared with the same period over the two previous years.Some parts of the state -- such as Charles, Howard, Montgomery, Prince George's and Talbot counties -- have instituted their own bans. Baltimore passed a ban to make the city smoke-free early next year, helping prompt passage of the state leglslation.

Health plan costs questioned
2 council members raise concerns about the program's eventual bill
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/howard/bal-ho.chamber09nov09,0,463627.story
Howard County Executive Ken Ulman's much ballyhooed health access plan has been widely praised, but two County Council members raised questions yesterday about the plan's eventual costs.
The eventual goal is to enroll up to 12,000 uninsured adults in the program, and Councilman Greg Fox, a western county Republican, and Councilwoman Courtney Watson, an Ellicott City Democrat, said they don't know what the eventual costs will be. "If we need $700,000 for 2,000 people, will we [eventually] need $5 million a year?" Fox asked. He wondered if that much in donations could be raised annually in the future.Dr. Peter L. Beilenson, the county's health officer, said later that he is working to reduce the costs for prescription medicines and specialty care, but "the whole point of the 2,000 in the first year is so we can answer [cost questions] befo r e expanding. The first year is a pilot."

Online versions
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.vozzella09nov09,0,2075462.column
The state GOP issued a "Tax Hike Alert" that urged citizens to raise hell with their delegates and senators. It included a link to a state Web site where tax protesters could look up their elected officials.
Then the messages started coming in to the GOP, saying the site was down. "Apparently, we overwhelmed the server with angry citizens looking up their legislators online," said the state GOP's executive director, John Flynn.
State archivist Edward Papenfuse confirmed the site was down for several hours Wednesday, but he said the problem was routine maintenance, not high traffic. "We figured the day after an election would be a good day to refresh the data, " he said.
Flynn wasn't buying it. "What did they have to update? The incumbents won."


EDITORIALS/OPEDS

Contact senators, scream NO!
http://www.examiner.com/a-1038105~Contact_senators__scream_NO_.html
Come on, senators, stand up for Maryland. You can save us from Gov. Martin O'Malley's $1.5 billion sneak-a-tax plan today (unless he slipped it to us in the dark of night). Now is the time for citizens to SCREAM at their senators about this bogus tax plan, the largest single tax increase in Maryland history.Why? Because we just found out Thursday that, guess what? Contrary to O'Malley's smooth lie when he called the special session and said that 83 percent of us would pay less, almost all of us will end up paying more.
This is the standard fast-sh u ffle politicians of all parties at all levels of government play. We can't let them get away with it. Now is the time to tell those who represent us that we are angry at being tricked and taxed.Our senators must stop the tax hikes now. Surely at least four of them have the courage to do the right thing.

Keeping score on taxes no easy task
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.marbella09nov09,0,4546489.column?coll=bal_tab01_layout
For those of you keeping score at home, health clubs and real estate property managers -- they're good. No new sales tax on them. But landscapers, computer service providers and video arcades -- not so good. The grass-cutters, the geeks, the guy, as one legislator imagined, who offers the coin-operated bouncy horsey outside the store -- they should start boning up on the times-six multiplication table.
Surely no one expected, or even necessarily wanted, O'Malley's tax package to come out unscathed. But what's on the table, now that the Senate has had a crack at it, is quite another beast. Some bits have ended up on the cutting room floor, other parts have been amended beyond recognition.
Nothing is final, of course. The House of Delegates still has to speak, for one thing.
Somehow, though, it seems as if there has to be a better way to decide who gets taxed than who happens not to have gotten enough warning and couldn't get someone to Annapolis fast enough to talk their way out of it.

Survey didn't touch on biggest question about slots
http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/11_01-34/OPN
The governor must know that the majority support for slots shown in polls might evaporate once people visualize slots emporiums near at hand. So his current idea for a slots referendum is to tie three things voters presumably want - the property tax cuts, expansion of the Medicaid program for childless adults, and $300 million for school construction - to their approval of slots. A slots referendum shouldn't have that sort of blunt coercion. And it should be written so that slots cannot go into any jurisdiction where they are rejected by the voters. If there's really majority support for slots, what's so unfair about that?

A bum's rush for the taxpayer
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071109/EDITORIAL/111090005
Even as Gov. Martin O'Malley and other Democratic Party leaders do everything they can to attract illegal aliens to Maryland, they seem to be competing with one another to see who can do the most to ram through new taxes as rapidly as possible.
A broad-based package of tax increases is moving rapidly through the General Assembly during the current special session; in all likelihood, it is possible that a final tax-increase package could be on the governor's desk sometime this weekend or early next week, barring surprise developments like a successful Senate filibuster. The legislation is now before the Maryland Senate and House of Delegates, which appear to be racing to pass some version of the O'Malley tax-increase package before Marylanders realize the damage that tax increases will do to their livelihoods. Right now, the goal seems to be sending some bill - any bill - to the governor's desk so he can declare "victory." Once again, Marylanders are reaping the "benefit" of the one-party liberalism they voted for in November.