Putting the studying behind us

 

Summer study.

The three months since the General Assembly adjourned on April 9 have given that term new meaning.

Our deliberations on gambling seem endless.

In fact, one of the arguments for holding a special session in August is to put the matter behind us, freeing up the 2013 legislature’s time, focus, and horsetrading.

Summer study often means that a bill’s demise has been postponed until a between-session work group has made meaningless recommendations that won’t see the light of implementation.

But not always.

When I introduced House Bill 991 this past session, it created a work group to study how to assist seniors aging in place, in the homes that they own. The bill passed without amendments. Its report is due by the end of this year.

At yesterday’s first meeting, I made the point that the group could recommend to the Governor that he put money in the budget to implement our recommendations.

“Funding next year won’t solve the problem for the long term,” responded one of the citizen members of the group.

I decided to save my “the budget bill is the policy document of the State” response for this fall.

Here to help you

     I’m from the government, and I’m here to help you.

     Ronald Reagan said those were the “nine most terrifying words in the English language.”

     Elderly homeowners who need minor maintenance on their home would disagree – if such help were available and they knew of its existence.

     An elderly homeowner may face more pressing problems than a leaky roof and is justifiably reluctant to take on debt.

     However, a deteriorating property poses a problem for its owners, their heirs, and their neighbors.

     We need to intervene before these people get “caught in the crosshairs of code enforcement,” said a participant at my pre-bill drafting meeting.

     CHAI is already providing such assistance in Northwest Baltimore, but the need far exceeds its resources.

      My conversations with some of the first families to buy on their block in Forest Park and other communities are confirmed by the census data.  There are hundreds of homeowners 75 and older in the Park Heights and Liberty Heights corridors.

       We decided to draft a bill creating a task force on aging in place.

      Help from the government may be on its way.

  • My Key Issues:

  • Pimlico and The Preakness
  • Our Neighborhoods
  • Pre-Kindergarten
  • Lead Paint Poisoning