For The Baltimore Sun – Baltimore Sun https://www.baltimoresun.com Baltimore Sun: Your source for Baltimore breaking news, sports, business, entertainment, weather and traffic Fri, 01 Dec 2023 18:01:01 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://www.baltimoresun.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/baltimore-sun-favicon.png?w=32 For The Baltimore Sun – Baltimore Sun https://www.baltimoresun.com 32 32 208788401 Federal appeals court stands with gun makers — or so it appears | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/federal-appeals-court-stands-with-gun-makers-or-so-it-appears-reader-commentary/ https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/federal-appeals-court-stands-with-gun-makers-or-so-it-appears-reader-commentary/#respond Fri, 01 Dec 2023 00:16:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/federal-appeals-court-stands-with-gun-makers-or-so-it-appears-reader-commentary/ The federal appeals court ruling that overturned Maryland law requiring gun licensure deserved a better headline in the print version of The Baltimore Sun than “Ruling widens firearm access” (Nov. 22). As if this is a good thing? How about, “Court sides with gun manufacturers over public safety.” Or, “Court makes Marylanders more likely to die by gun.”

I always thought the judiciary was our last protection against public policy extremism and a guardian of our rights. As far as our right to be safe from gun violence is concerned, that, sadly, is no longer true.

— Herb Cromwell, Catonsville

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Make Harborplace like the holiday market: warm, cozy and inviting | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/make-harborplace-like-the-holiday-market-warm-cozy-and-inviting-reader-commentary/ https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/make-harborplace-like-the-holiday-market-warm-cozy-and-inviting-reader-commentary/#comments Thu, 30 Nov 2023 23:15:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/make-harborplace-like-the-holiday-market-warm-cozy-and-inviting-reader-commentary/ Maybe the holiday market downtown could serve as a model for a Harborplace replacement (“Overhauling Baltimore’s Harborplace: Developer to seek approvals for $500M investment in office and apartment towers,” Oct. 30). Organic, local, homey, down-to-earth, inviting, warm and cozy — just some of the feelings that come to mind when describing what’s there. All of their supporting programming too from the “Winter Wunder Bar” to wine tastings and European treats and specialties, special events, discounted parking program and their email newsletter — it’s something different that may not be available elsewhere in our region that will draw people with money to spend back to the Inner Harbor.

Seasonal themes could include a Harbor Point like Sandlot with a Key West vibe in summer with maybe a fishing pier with fishing supply shack and rentals and even an enclosed netted swimming area now that the water is cleaner with all the trash wheels operating and lots of steamed crabs and corn on the cob on offer. Fall could have lots of fallen leaves with Halloween pumpkin patches and makeshift haunted houses with ghosts and goblins and goats and other animals for petting. Springtime is Flower Mart time in Baltimore so bring down the lemon sticks and potted plants and pansies.

Animate the walkways with a miniature train trolley connecting the Federal Hill area with Pier 5 and maybe even a smaller version of New York’s Little Island with its 650-seat amphitheater and lush plantings and water features on different levels out on the Hudson River near the Chelsea Market and the Whitney. We can bring down some of the stuff that’s in storage from the Baltimore Museum of Art and the Walters Art Museum and maybe even piano players from the Peabody Institute.

— Harvey Schwartz, Baltimore

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Shift from gas-powered lawn care must be gradual and reasonable | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/shift-from-gas-powered-lawn-care-must-be-gradual-and-reasonable-reader-commentary/ https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/shift-from-gas-powered-lawn-care-must-be-gradual-and-reasonable-reader-commentary/#respond Thu, 30 Nov 2023 22:14:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/shift-from-gas-powered-lawn-care-must-be-gradual-and-reasonable-reader-commentary/ I am a homeowner who spends every Saturday doing some type of yard work. I cut my grass in the spring and summer using my John Deere riding mower and trim my grass using my gas-powered trimmer. In the fall, I use my commercial backpack gas blower blowing the leaves that fall from the numerous trees I have on my property. I have an office job during the week and I enjoy spending my time doing yard work on Saturdays. I take pride in the work I do and the gas-powered lawn equipment I have invested in and care for is essential for the work I need to do.

Although I have always just ignored The Baltimore Sun’s misguided editorials and gone on with my day, the recent editorial, “Time to prune gas-powered leaf blowers in Maryland” (Nov. 27), bothered me to the point where I must respond.

You have not fully considered how an immediate ban would affect a homeowner like me. First, with an immediate all-out ban there would suddenly be thousands of lawn mowers, blowers, trimmers, chain saws and snowblowers that are still useful and operable but can no longer be used or if used would subject the user to fines. The banned equipment would either sit in the homeowner’s garage or shed or be taken to a local trash collection facility. Does each county have the capacity to suddenly accept thousands of pieces of banned lawn equipment?

Second, my yard work still needs to be done but I would be forced to pay the cost of replacing all my gas-powered lawn equipment with battery operated equipment. I estimate it would cost me $8,000 to $10,000 to replace all my gas-powered lawn equipment with battery-operated equipment. Most of the battery powered equipment available on the market is not comparable to my gas-powered equipment. For example, there is not a battery powered leaf blower I could find on the market that has the power and capacity of my gas-powered blower so I can quickly clear the many leaves that fall or blow onto my property. The time for me to clear my leaves would increase substantially.

Carefully consider a more gradual, reasonable and practical approach.

— F. Lee Elrick, Phoenix

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Union leader: Online casino gambling would cost Maryland hundreds of jobs | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/union-leader-online-casino-gambling-would-cost-maryland-hundreds-of-jobs-reader-commentary/ https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/union-leader-online-casino-gambling-would-cost-maryland-hundreds-of-jobs-reader-commentary/#comments Thu, 30 Nov 2023 21:13:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/union-leader-online-casino-gambling-would-cost-maryland-hundreds-of-jobs-reader-commentary/ In addition to contributing to gaming addiction as pointed out in The Baltimore Sun’s recent editorial, “Can elected officials resist the lure of more online betting to balance Md.’s budget?” (Nov. 28), the expansion of online gambling would eliminate casino jobs and reduce the incentive to invest in or expand Maryland’s casinos. It will harm thousands of Maryland workers who rely on in-person gaming and tips. It will undermine the promise of good jobs and economic development that the industry made to Maryland’s voters in 2008.

Legalizing iGaming will reduce Maryland’s brick and mortar casino revenue by 10.2%, according to a report produced by The Innovation Group for the Maryland Lottery. It found that from 2019 to 2022, states with iGaming saw in-person revenues decline 8.2% while states without iGaming saw in-person revenues grow 2%, implying a “cannibalization rate” of 10.2%. There would be less money to local jurisdictions that get a percentage of the revenue from their casinos and benefit from the local business and taxes that are generated.

Maryland’s six brick and mortar casinos directly employ 6,715 people and generate an annual economic impact of $2.96 billion that supports 15,364 jobs in the state. A 10.2% reduction in gaming revenue would mean a loss of 685 direct jobs and 1,567 total jobs in Maryland.

Since Maryland legalized online sports betting, in-person sports betting wagers have fallen 42% in the state. This is already harming Marylanders who work at in-person sportsbooks as attendants, bartenders, servers and cleaners. Many rely on tips from customers.

In 2008, Maryland voters approved legalizing casino gaming for the promise of good jobs and economic development. Online gaming will endanger these economic development opportunities at casinos throughout the state, slashing future job creation.

Maryland, say no to iGaming.

— Tracy Lingo, Baltimore

— Paul Schwab, Washington, D.C.

The writers are, respectively, president of UNITE HERE Local 7 and executive secretary-treasurer of UNITE HERE Local 25. UNITE HERE is the largest union of gaming workers in the country, representing 100,000 casino workers nationwide.

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In the face of hate on college campuses, good people must speak out | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/in-the-face-of-hate-on-college-campuses-good-people-must-speak-out-reader-commentary/ https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/in-the-face-of-hate-on-college-campuses-good-people-must-speak-out-reader-commentary/#respond Thu, 30 Nov 2023 20:13:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/in-the-face-of-hate-on-college-campuses-good-people-must-speak-out-reader-commentary/ Your recent article about the University of Maryland’s launch of an antisemitism and Islamophobia task force is both welcome news and a sharp reminder (“University of Maryland to launch antisemitism and Islamophobia task force amid increased on-campus tensions,” Nov. 29). It’s welcome because our college students increasingly need the support to face the obscene rise in hate-based incidents and crimes infecting college campuses around the state and our nation.

The shooting of three Palestinian college students last week near the University of Vermont campus was just the latest in a series of terrible tragedies impacting our college students. Hillel International, the Jewish campus organization, just reported that over half of Jewish students (54%) are scared, more than one in three say they have needed to hide their Jewish identity and around the same percentage say there have been acts of hate or violence on campus against Jews.

Your article is also a sharp reminder that we can and must act because hate is a problem whose solution does not rely solely on institutions such as universities, political leaders or even newspapers, as important as their efforts are. It’s a problem that can be addressed by us — by good people refusing to be silent. We can speak up among friends and neighbors, co-workers and co-religionists when we read about these troubling incidents. We can offer our personal support to victims and their communities.

Regardless of what divisive political or tech leaders may say, we can enforce an expectation that this behavior is not tolerated, not any longer, not in our communities.

— David Conn, Baltimore

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Pay more attention to growing U.S. debt burden | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/pay-more-attention-to-growing-u-s-debt-burden-reader-commentary/ Thu, 30 Nov 2023 19:36:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/pay-more-attention-to-growing-u-s-debt-burden-reader-commentary/ First, props to The Baltimore Sun for printing the commentary, “U.S. credit gets downgraded as signs of default become clearer” (Nov. 17). This issue, which might be understood by 1% of Americans, will hurt us way more than climate change within the next 25 years.

When tax rates have to go north of 75%, everyone will ask, “What the hell is this? Why didn’t George W. Bush have a war tax for his Iraq and Afghanistan invasions? Why was Barack Obama spending wildly and paying zero attention to the Simpson-Bowles fiscal responsibility and reform plan? Why did Donald Trump have a tax cut to help the well off that added $2.5 trillion to the debt? And why didn’t Trump and Joe Biden have a COVID-19 tax?”

Make no mistake, members of Congress are at fault for all this, too — both Democrats and Republicans!

I will be long gone when this day of reckoning happens, but I feel sorry for my kids and everyone’s kids.

— Lyle Rescott, Marriottsville

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9099048 2023-11-30T14:36:00+00:00 2023-12-01T05:41:05+00:00
Former MSA chair Kelso: Don’t just save jobs, save Oriole Park oversight | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/former-msa-chair-kelso-dont-just-save-jobs-save-oriole-park-oversight-reader-commentary/ Thu, 30 Nov 2023 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/former-msa-chair-kelso-dont-just-save-jobs-save-oriole-park-oversight-reader-commentary/ I read with great interest Jeff Barker’s article, “As lease nears end, Orioles and Maryland may consider development rights separately” (Nov. 27), and I agree that the portion of the memorandum of understanding relating to development rights needs to be totally reconsidered. When and if such reconsideration takes place, the Maryland Stadium Authority must be a partner in any redevelopment, and the state must have an opportunity to benefit from any upside success.

While I also appreciate negotiators’ attempts to protect employees they had originally planned to dismiss, turning the MSA, or any state agency, into a staffing firm makes little sense. The only solution is to remove the provision of the MOU which creates the employee problem in the first place — the dismantling of the MSA’s role at Camden Yards.

Under current terms of the MOU, the MSA’s statutory role managing the Camden Yards complex is eliminated. By doing so, the Orioles will control how billions of taxpayer dollars are spent with no oversight by the MSA staff, the board of the MSA and, most importantly, the Board of Public Works. This is unheard of. Meanwhile, the Orioles would, solely, decide how maintenance on the stadium will be done and how much they will spend on it annually with no MSA oversight.

Eliminating the MSA’s and BPW’s historic functions means no state-run procurements, no goals for Minority Business Enterprise (MBE) participation and no requirements for prevailing wage.

If the Orioles do not maintain the stadiums properly, the taxpayers of Maryland will once again be on the hook for the additional money to correct these problems. Because of the parity clause in both team leases, the Ravens will derive this exact same benefit — from state coffers. Essentially, both teams will have the benefits of ownership of the stadiums without any controls by the taxpayers who actually do own them.

Rather than accepting adhesive bandages for employees, negotiators must address the most egregious issue — the elimination of the MSA and BPW oversight of Oriole Park. This should be a non-starter. MSA stands, and has stood, in the shoes of the taxpayers and protected their interests since it was formed in 1986. The results speak for themselves.

— Thomas Kelso, Phoenix

The writer served as chairman of the Maryland Stadium Authority from 2015 to 2023.

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9099196 2023-11-30T14:00:00+00:00 2023-12-01T05:41:10+00:00
H. Mebane Turner gave much to UB and Baltimore | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/h-mebane-turner-gave-much-to-ub-and-baltimore-reader-commentary/ Thu, 30 Nov 2023 17:58:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/h-mebane-turner-gave-much-to-ub-and-baltimore-reader-commentary/ I was privileged be a part-time faculty member of the University of Baltimore and attorney for The Lyric Foundation during the tenure of H. Mebane “Meb” Turner. I commend Jacques Kelly on his obituary of Dr. Turner and would add two comments (“H. Mebane ‘Meb’ Turner, longtime president of the University of Baltimore, dies,” Nov. 21).

First and foremost, Meb’s transitioning the University of Baltimore from a private university to a public university was his greatest and everlasting achievement. Second, his extraordinary knowledge of real estate and recognition of the geographic limitations of the UB location in Midtown provided him the vision and ability to greatly expand the footprint of the campus and create development opportunities.

Meb will be remembered for his contributions to higher education and improving Baltimore.

— Stanley S. Fine, Baltimore

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9099315 2023-11-30T12:58:00+00:00 2023-12-01T05:41:16+00:00
Christmas 2023: It’s not about the tree, it’s about the memories | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/christmas-2023-its-not-about-the-tree-its-about-the-memories-reader-commentary/ https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/christmas-2023-its-not-about-the-tree-its-about-the-memories-reader-commentary/#respond Thu, 30 Nov 2023 10:57:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com?p=8553607&preview_id=8553607 There comes a point in your life when you must make an important decision every December: whether to put up a Christmas tree this year. By now, at 65 years old or thereabouts, you question the need for one. After all, your home is likely no longer the gathering place for the whole family. The next generation and their progeny have taken over the annual holiday get-together (“Taking the kids: And starting a new holiday tradition wherever you are,” Nov. 23).

You’ve already changed some elements of your decorating, replacing the live tree purchased at the high school lot and hauled home lashed to the top your car with an economical, hassle-free and eco-friendly artificial one (that comes pre-hung with hundreds of tiny LED lights). You’ve even neglected to hang all your ornaments, collected over a lifetime and stored 11 months a year in three crumbling boxes way back in the attic with the creaky pull-down stairs more wobbly and less stable each year.

You and your spouse go back and forth on whether “to tree or not to tree,” maybe changing your minds once or twice independent of the other. Concluding that you are still in good enough shape — this year — to carry the huge box containing the 6-foot tall everlasting Norway spruce from the shed to the living room, unpack it and assemble the parts, you put up the tree. You swear to yourself that you will not hang all the ornaments, but as you unload them it seems each piece triggers a special memory: The two boxes of red and green balls that you purchased for your first tree in your first apartment in 1974, the colorful wooden figures hand painted with your nephew and mother four decades ago, the flashing tree topper that is a remnant from spouse’s bachelor days and the tiny ballerina and stocky Santa that survive from your childhood tree decorations.

Later, sitting in the living room and gazing up at the tree with lights twinkling, we put off thinking that in less than three weeks we will have to take down the ornaments and store them in the attic and disassemble the tree and haul it back to the shed. The happy memories the tree inspires from Christmases past make us feel grateful and blessed in 2023. Whether you do or don’t choose to “deck the halls,” it’s the spirit of the holidays you’re never too old to celebrate which gives joy and hope to every season of life.

— Rosemary Faya Prola, Columbia

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Potential reinstatement of Syed conviction may prove inconsequential | READER COMMENTARY https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/potential-reinstatement-of-syed-conviction-may-prove-inconsequential-reader-commentary/ https://www.baltimoresun.com/2023/11/30/potential-reinstatement-of-syed-conviction-may-prove-inconsequential-reader-commentary/#respond Thu, 30 Nov 2023 08:56:00 +0000 https://www.baltimoresun.com?p=8553634&preview_id=8553634 I am a retired attorney who has long believed that Adnan Syed is not guilty of the murder of Hae Min Lee. But the hyperbole that permeates Miriam Aroni Krinsky and Leigh Goodmark’s recent commentary is wholly unwarranted (“Adnan Syed case: Maryland Supreme Court must allow unconstitutional convictions to be overturned,” Nov. 27).

Contrary to their argument, no one is claiming that Adnan Syed’s conviction should stand if it was obtained by unconstitutional means. All that Young Lee is asserting is that Maryland law allows victims a meaningful opportunity to be heard before a conviction is vacated. Had then-Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby supported a one-week postponement of the vacatur hearing so that Young Lee could attend it in person, there would now be no case. Perhaps she was too focused on her own upcoming criminal trial to extend that common courtesy to the Lee family.

I believe a large reason the Appellate Court of Maryland reinstated the conviction to allow for such a hearing was that the court was offended by this simple lack of courtesy on Mosby’s part. Syed need not have been incarcerated during that week. He could have been released on home detention. It is noteworthy that, although the Appellate Court reinstated the conviction so that there could be a new vacatur hearing, neither that court nor the Supreme Court has ordered that Syed be reincarcerated.

To me, that means that the most the Supreme Court will do is affirm the Appellate Court and require a largely symbolic opportunity for the Lee family to personally advise the trial court how it feels. I think the case ultimately will be much ado about very little.

— Sheldon H. Laskin, Pikesville

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