Close Menu
BmoreNews.com
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Editorial/Op-Ed
  • The Glover Report
  • Black Wall Street
  • Video
  • More
    • BEOs
    • HBCU
    • Africa/Caribbean
Trending
CHAOS OR COMMUNITY? Our Political Conversation at the Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center

CHAOS OR COMMUNITY? Our Political Conversation at the Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center

The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session

The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session

WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? The Silence of Maryland’s Legislature on the Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys

WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? The Silence of Maryland’s Legislature on the Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
BmoreNews.com
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Editorial/Op-Ed
  • The Glover Report
  • Black Wall Street
  • Video
  • More
    • BEOs
    • HBCU
    • Africa/Caribbean
Newsletter
BmoreNews.com
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Editorial/Op-Ed
  • The Glover Report
  • Black Wall Street
  • Video
Home » The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session
Politics

The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session

Doni GloverBy Doni GloverApril 18, 20262 ViewsNo Comments4 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session
Doni Glover interviews Black Caucus Chair N Scott Phillips in Annapolis.

(ANNAPOLIS – April 18, 2026) — The 2026 Maryland General Assembly session wrapped April 13 with a mix of landmark victories, historic overrides, and at least one painful stall — each with direct consequences for Black communities across the state. From the ballot box to the courtroom to the housing market, here’s what mattered most.


Maryland Voting Rights Act (SB 255)

Passed in the final minutes of the session, the Maryland Voting Rights Act is the year’s most significant civil rights legislation. The law prohibits racially discriminatory voting systems and district maps, targets at-large election structures that have historically diluted Black voting strength, and gives communities new legal tools to challenge local election changes in court. For a state with one of the highest concentrations of Black eligible voters in the nation, this is a fundamental protection of Black political power — and it almost didn’t make it across the finish line.


Reparations Commission (SB 587) — Veto Overridden

This one had drama. Gov. Wes Moore vetoed the bill to establish a Maryland Reparations Commission — a move that stunned advocates and the Legislative Black Caucus alike. Lawmakers overrode that veto. The commission will study harms tied to slavery and discriminatory policies, recommend specific remedies including potential financial redress, and begin delivering reports in 2027. Advocates are clear-eyed: the study is not the end goal. Implementation is. But getting the commission established at all — over a sitting governor’s objection — is a historic step.


Juvenile Justice Reform

Maryland passed meaningful reform limiting when youth can be automatically charged as adults. Black youth are disproportionately funneled into the adult criminal system, and this legislation keeps more young people in the rehabilitative juvenile system where they belong. It is one of the session’s most immediate policy changes for Black families — and one of the quietest wins.


Ending 287(g) Agreements

Lawmakers moved to end 287(g) agreements that deputized local law enforcement as federal immigration agents. For Black immigrant communities — often overlooked in the broader immigration debate — this matters enormously. Advocates have documented how racial profiling under these agreements falls heavily on Black and Brown immigrants regardless of status. Ending them is both a policing reform and an immigrant rights victory.


The PACE Act (SB 475)

The Protecting Artists’ Creative Expression Act limits the use of rap lyrics and other creative work as criminal evidence unless directly tied to a specific crime. It passed the Senate 32-10. For years, prosecutors have weaponized Black artistic expression in courtrooms — this bill pushes back. It won’t make national headlines, but ask any Black family in Baltimore what it means when their kid’s music becomes evidence. They’ll tell you.


Housing Equity

The Legislative Black Caucus drove forward measures targeting appraisal bias — the systemic undervaluation of Black-owned homes and Black neighborhoods that has robbed generations of wealth. Proposed reconsideration processes modeled after the federal VA Tidewater Initiative give homeowners a path to challenge discriminatory appraisals. The racial wealth gap runs directly through homeownership. This legislation chips at one of its foundations.


The Setback: Clean Slate Act — Failed

The Clean Slate Act, which would have automatically expunged eligible criminal records, stalled in the House. This is a significant loss. Criminal records are one of the most persistent barriers Black Marylanders face in finding jobs, securing housing, and building wealth. The bill will have to start over next session. It’s not dead — but the delay has real costs for real people right now.


The Big Picture

Three pillars defined what the 2026 session meant for Black Maryland: protecting the vote, reforming systems that criminalize Black life, and beginning to repair historic economic harm. Beyond the headline bills, dozens more were flagged for racial equity impact — touching expungement, no-knock warrants, drug policy, long sentences, and protections for unhoused residents. Individually incremental, but collectively pointing in a direction.

The work, as always, is far from finished. Passing a bill in Annapolis is one thing. Making it real on North Avenue, in Cherry Hill, in PG County, in Prince George’s — that’s the measure that matters.

The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleWHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? The Silence of Maryland’s Legislature on the Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys
Next Article CHAOS OR COMMUNITY? Our Political Conversation at the Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center

Keep Reading

CHAOS OR COMMUNITY? Our Political Conversation at the Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center
April 18, 2026

CHAOS OR COMMUNITY? Our Political Conversation at the Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center

By Doni Glover
WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? The Silence of Maryland’s Legislature on the Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys
April 18, 2026

WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? The Silence of Maryland’s Legislature on the Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys

By Doni Glover
A Marine, A Councilman, A Contender: Pete Smith Sets His Sights on Anne Arundel’s Top Job
April 12, 2026

A Marine, A Councilman, A Contender: Pete Smith Sets His Sights on Anne Arundel’s Top Job

By Doni Glover
Pete Smith Walks 40 Miles for Anne Arundel County Exec Race
April 11, 2026

Pete Smith Walks 40 Miles for Anne Arundel County Exec Race

By Doni Glover
Baltimore County Executive Race: Julian Jones Secures Major Endorsements from State’s Attorneys Ivan Bates and Scott Shellenberger
April 8, 2026

Baltimore County Executive Race: Julian Jones Secures Major Endorsements from State’s Attorneys Ivan Bates and Scott Shellenberger

By Doni Glover
Truth Be Told: Today’s Democratic Party & The GOP
April 6, 2026

Truth Be Told: Today’s Democratic Party & The GOP

By Santura Pegram
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest News
The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session

The Most Impactful Bills for Black Marylanders in the 2026 General Assembly Session

WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? The Silence of Maryland’s Legislature on the Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys

WHERE IS THE OUTRAGE? The Silence of Maryland’s Legislature on the Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys

Meet Mr. Victor Pate, Advocate for the Formerly Incarcerated

Meet Mr. Victor Pate, Advocate for the Formerly Incarcerated

Black Wall Street CHELSEA is where we shot our first TV show in New York City.

Black Wall Street CHELSEA is where we shot our first TV show in New York City.

Trending News
Chrisean Rock Gives Youth Advise at Mack Lewis Gym

Chrisean Rock Gives Youth Advise at Mack Lewis Gym

April 17, 2026
Sandtown-Winchester Is Not for Sale: A Community Demands Accountability for the Legacy of New Song

Sandtown-Winchester Is Not for Sale: A Community Demands Accountability for the Legacy of New Song

April 17, 2026
Indigenous Series: Truth, Identity & the Untold Story

Indigenous Series: Truth, Identity & the Untold Story

April 17, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Baltimore news and updates directly to your inbox.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
2026 © BmoreNews.com. All Rights Reserved.
  • Doni Glover
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.