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Two bills passed by the General Assembly deal with contracts colleges and universities sign with apps and the expert content provided on them.
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With Anti-Semitism in particular on the rise, legislators approved letting victims sue their attackers.
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The bill sets limits on where permit holders can take their weapons, banning them from ‘special purpose areas’ like hospitals, government buildings, schools and bars.
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Drug test results that show fentanyl will be sent — with names and personal information redacted — to the Maryland Department of Health.
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Benjamin Orr — founding president and CEO of the Maryland Center on Economic Policy — joins us to survey some of the bills passed in the 2023 Maryland General Assembly, and assess their impact on Baltimore City.
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The bills position Maryland in direct opposition to Republican-led states on both issues, including one of its neighboring states.
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Insurers will be prohibited from imposing fees on breast and lung testing.
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Health insurance would help the undocumented get the care they need, before it’s an emergency. But legislative efforts are stalled.
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As mail-in voting gets increasingly popular, lawmakers OK’d making it easier to ‘cure’ such ballots, while also trying to speed up how they’re counted.
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The Maryland Attorney General’s office can now prosecute police-involved killings, as well as investigate alleged civil rights violations.