By Nneka Nnamdi and Sean Yoes The tragic death of three Baltimore City Firefighters: firefighter/paramedic Kelsey Sadler, EMT/firefighter Kenny Lacayo and Lt. Paul Butrim (firefighter John McMaster was also critically injured, but survived), the morning of Jan. 25, while battling a blaze at a vacant house in the 200 block of S. Stricker Street, refocused […]
Category: OPINION
Commentary: It’s time we invest in Black women entrepreneurship
By Larelle Clarke Innovation drives me as an individual. I love being able to solve complex issues and bring new solutions to old problems. When I saw the opportunity to start my own business, FareXchange, a business-to-business delivery platform, I left my job of over ten years to embark on a new, exciting journey. For […]
Commentary: Women’s History: Progress Isn’t Guaranteed
By Delegate Brooke Lierman The final major event of the 2020 General Assembly session was a 100th anniversary event of suffrage during Women’s History Month – and then the world stopped and session ended early for the first time in 150 years. In a way, women’s forward progress in the workforce stopped as well – […]
TBE#11 – Women’s History Month Sees Historic Progress For Black Women In America, But Work Remains To Achieve Full Equality
By Marc H. Morial, President and CEO, National Urban League “From the first settlers who came to our shores, from the first American Indian families who befriended them, men and women have worked together to build this nation. Too often the women were unsung and sometimes their contributions went unnoticed. But the achievements, leadership, courage, […]
Commentary: The struggle continues: The unfinished work of police accountability in Maryland
By Delegate Gabriel Acevero “I have witnessed and endured the brutality of the police many more times than once but, of course, I cannot prove it. I cannot prove it because the Police Department investigates itself, quite as though it were answerable only to itself. But it cannot be allowed to be answerable only to […]
Implementing Anton’s Law in Maryland
By Miranda S. Spivack A community group in Montgomery County was asked to pay $95,000 for copies of police discipline and complaint records, which, under a 2021 change in Maryland law, are no longer automatically private. Local public defenders in Baltimore seeking those records have been told to pay as little as $10 to the […]
What is Anton’s Law?
By Rebecca Snyder, executive director, Maryland-Delaware-D.C. Press Association Last year, Maryland’s General Assembly passed the groundbreaking Anton’s Law (the Maryland Police Accountability Act of 2021) to bring more transparency to police discipline records by making them available under Maryland’s Public Information Act. The movement for reform began with the 2018 death of Anton Black, a […]
The Moore Report: Rube Foster and Pete Hill: The hidden father figures of Black baseball
By Ralph E. Moore, Jr. The Negro Baseball Leagues produced two of the greatest athletes and business leaders this country has ever known. Consider the stories of Andrew Bishop “Rube” Foster and John Preston “Pete” Hill. Few Little Leaguers or their grandparents know of these men- but they paved the way for Jackie Robinson’s break […]
Life and remembrance: A legacy worth leaving
By Avery Ross We are hardwired to deal with grief, but everyone grieves differently. Acknowledging the complexities and simplicity of grief allow me to live a full life. Sometimes my grief manifests itself as gratitude for another day, sometimes it moves me to help others. As a grief counselor, I encourage others to acknowledge and […]
Op-ed: State of the Union: Democracy needs defenders
By Ben Jealous President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address reminded Americans that democracy needs defenders—here at home as well as in Ukraine. Russian dictator Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine was understandably a major focus of Biden’s speech. Putin’s eagerness to expand his power by unleashing brute force against his neighbors is a threat […]
Commentary: If You Have Been Harmed by Police, Maryland’s New Accountability Boards Can’t Help You
By Roberto E. Alejandro A lot of political energy in Maryland has been spent in recent years to establish or strengthen civilian review boards for local police departments. It is important to know, however, if your civil rights have been violated by the police in a way that actually caused you harm, a civilian review […]
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson: First Black female nominee to SCOTUS set to inspire generations to come
By Congressman Kweisi Mfume The Supreme Court of the United States, the third pillar of our nation’s branchesof government, serves as a check on Democracy to ensure the Constitution, thelaw of the land, reigns free. With lifetime tenure on a court of just nine members,both the executive and legislative branches bear significant responsibility inselecting and […]

