Corporate Ownership Bills Stall in Annapolis
Efforts to regulate corporate ownership of single-family homes in Maryland have stalled, effectively halting two key pieces of legislation during a critical election year.
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Efforts to regulate corporate ownership of single-family homes in Maryland have stalled, effectively halting two key pieces of legislation during a critical election year.
Dropping a 50-unit senior housing complex into these heavy-traffic sectors guarantees an eventual clash over noise ordinances and commercial truck routes. The county government will inevitably side with the new residential voting bloc when noise complaints flood the Department of Permits, Approvals and Inspections.
David Marks introduced Bill 20-26 on February 17 to change how Baltimore County calculates development impact fees. The legislation modifies Title 6 of the Adequate Public Facilities code.
A fire in 1995 destroyed the building’s roof and interior. Only the stone foundation and front arches remain today. The Baltimore County Landmarks Preservation Commission pushed for the designation under Section 32-7-303 of the county code. The Department of Recreation and Parks intends to include the stabilized ruins in a new playground project.
Picture this scenario. You meticulously maintain your property. You secure your trash bins. You do everything right. But right across the alley sits a massive apartment complex with overflowing, unmonitored dumpsters. That is the actual breeding ground. The rats feast on the commercial waste, scurry across the pavement and dig a single hole near your fence line.
Yesterday, The Baltimore Informer issued a hard 5:00 PM deadline to the Maryland Democratic Party. We demanded they remove a blatantly misleading graphic from their official Facebook page and issue an apology to Maryland ratepayers.
Artwork generated for The Baltimore Informer Let’s get one thing straight right out of the gate. I possess zero sympathy for terrorists. The Islamic Republic […]
Kimberley Stansbury, a veteran of public health and community advocacy, officially outlined her vision for Baltimore County during an interview on the Baltimore Informer Podcast. Stansbury’s platform centers on government transparency, educational reform and community-focused public safety.
You can mail-in your ballot from your couch with zero witnesses, zero hassle, and zero questions asked. Fill out the ballot, drop it in the mail and presto, your voice in “democracy” has been heard. But try to repeal the trashy unconstitutional bills those same politicians just rammed through Annapolis?
Good luck.
By: Adam Reuter It has been exactly six years since former Governor Larry Hogan declared a State of Emergency, effectively suspending the Maryland Constitution with […]