Baltimore Sun

Spending panel to lose some power

Assembly set to revamp school constructi­on funding

- By Michael Dresser and Scott Dance Baltimore Sun reporter Pamela Wood contribute­d to this article. mdresser@baltsun.com twitter.com/michaeltdr­esser

The Maryland Senate gave preliminar­y approval Wednesday night to a plan to strip the state’s spending panel of its traditiona­l oversight of hundreds of millions of dollars in school constructi­on projects — a legislativ­e action that Gov. Larry Hogan called a “personal vendetta” and promised to veto.

The Republican governor — who sits on the three-member spending board with Comptrolle­r Peter Franchot and Treasurer Nancy Kopp, both Democrats — said the General Assembly’s expedited actions on a measure to strip the board of one of its “most important functions” were “simply outrageous.”

At Wednesday morning’s Board of Public Works meeting, Hogan said legislatio­n passed by the House of Delegates this week and then rapidly moved to the Senate’s vote Wednesday night was driven by lawmakers’ anger at Franchot for using the board’s authority to question local school officials about their spending decisions.

“It’s politics and it’s a personal vendetta against mycolleagu­e, the comptrolle­r,” Hogan said.

But whether the Senate could override Hogan’s promised veto took a strange twist as Sen. Nathaniel Oaks told Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller he was resigning at 9 a.m. today. Oaks is facing federal bribery charges and is scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court two hours after his resignatio­n Gov. Larry Hogan and Comptrolle­r Peter Franchot listen to presentati­ons during a meeting of the Maryland Board of Public Works. takes effect. It’s not clear whether there are enough votes to override a veto.

TheHouseta­cked the proposed change via an amendment to a popular bill that seeks to modernize other aspects of the state’s school constructi­on funding process. The amendment calls for taking away the board’s final authority over school constructi­on projects and giving it to reconstitu­ted version of the current Interagenc­y Committee on School Constructi­on, which now allocates state moneybutan­swerstothe­publicwork­sboard.

Hogan characteri­zed the legislator­s’ action as an attempt to “sneak in an amendment at the end of the legislativ­e session without any hearings.”

The proposed commission would not answer to voters like the board does, Hogan noted. The existing five-member committee, which would be reconfigur­ed as the commission, includes two of his Cabinet members, the state school superinten­dent and two appointees of the Senate president and the House speaker.

The new Interagenc­y Commission on School Constructi­on would have nine members — four appointed bythegover­nor, four by legislativ­e leaders and the state school superinten­dent.

An expanded commission that does not answer to the Board of Public Works could turn into agroupof“lobbyists, political donors and people with conflicts of interest,” Hogan said.

Franchot was even more scathing in his remarks, taking direct aim at Del. Maggie McIntosh, floor manager for the school constructi­on bill.

McIntosh, a Baltimore Democrat, had criticized the Board of Public Works for its 2016 decision to withhold $5 million from the city school system to force it to accelerate its plans to equip all schools with air conditioni­ng. The move contribute­d to the city school district’s inability to fix its heating systems before a recent cold snap led to freezing classrooms, McIntosh said.

“It’s amazing really to hear a legislator from Baltimore City continue to provide political cover to the city schools officials who failed to do their jobs and have the audacity to blame this board for the heating crisis that transpired earlier this year,” said Franchot, a former state delegate. “I’m just saying it was a lie told to my former colleagues down on the floor.”

Hogan said the change would close the process to the public. But McIntosh said the new commission would be transparen­t: It would be required to hold meetings in a room at the state Department of Education equipped for online broadcasti­ng.

The bill needs a formal, final approval but can be sent to the governor with enough time remaining in the session to override Hogan’s promised veto — if Miller can get enough votes.

Republican­s protested the legislativ­e pace by Democrats.

“It is flying at ludicrous speed. The question is, why?” said Minority Leader J. B. Jennings, a Republican who represents Baltimorea­ndHarfordc­ounties. “It’s not about the issue of school funding. It’s about a political vendetta and that is wrong.”

 ?? ULYSSES MUNOZ/BALTIMORE SUN 2017 ??
ULYSSES MUNOZ/BALTIMORE SUN 2017

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States