Baltimore Sun

Hogan signs into law dozens of bills

One sets standards for paying people wrongly convicted

- By Pamela Wood Baltimore Sun reporter Bryn Stole contribute­d to this article.

Hours after Maryland lawmakers adjourned their annual session, Gov. Larry Hogan signed off on dozens of new laws Tuesday, including measures that set standards for compensati­ng the wrongly incarcerat­ed and restructur­ing the leadership of the Maryland Environmen­tal Service.

The Republican governor was joined by the Democratic leaders of the General Assembly, House of Delegates Speaker Adrienne A. Jones and Senate President Bill Ferguson. Because of the coronaviru­s that is still spreading through Maryland, the trio had a limited audience of a few staffers and journalist­s.

“This session was unlike any other, and I believe that together we achieved more than any of us expected,” Jones said.

The bills that Hogan signed into law include the Walter Lomax Act, which sets guidelines for how much money the state must pay individual­s who have been wrongly convicted and sent to prison.

It’s named for a man who spent nearly four decades in prison before having his sentence commuted and later having his conviction wiped from his record. It took five years after Lomax was formally exonerated before he was awarded about $3 million.

Maryland lacked a system for calculatin­g payments to exonerees, and each person’s award was handled on a case-by-case basis. Hogan previously blamed the legislatur­e for not passing a law setting up a system for payments.

Lawmakers came close to passing the bill last year, but the legislatio­n fell victim to an early end to the 2020 session as the coronaviru­s started spreading in Maryland.

“It was a year late, pandemic delayed, but this will be a very big victory,” Ferguson said.

Another bill signed into law restructur­es the board of directors of the Maryland Environmen­tal Service, an agency thrown into the spotlight last year after The Baltimore Sun reported it paid outgoing executive director Roy McGrath about $238,000 when he left to become Hogan’s chief of staff. McGrath resigned less than a week after The Sun’s first report, and lawmakers continue to investigat­e his tenure at the environmen­tal service.

The bill bans the type of severance McGrath received and removes the MES executive director from the board of directors, a move intended to increase the board’s oversight of that person.

Hogan said the bill will “bring accountabi­lity and oversight” to the environmen­tal service.

Other bills he signed include a measure creating an Office of Statewide Broadband and one that requires the 211 phone system to study how to offer referrals for mental health treatment, named for U.S. Rep. Jamie Raskin’s late son, Tommy Raskin. Tommy Raskin died Dec. 31 by suicide, and his family’s public discussion of his death and their grief raised awareness of mental health needs.

All told, state lawmakers passed 817 pieces of legislatio­n this year. Hogan has until the end of May to decide whether to veto, sign or allow bills to become law without his signature.

Hogan thanked Democratic leaders for working with him, particular­ly on the state budget and aid to people and businesses harmed financiall­y by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Hogan has vowed to veto at least one bill, a measure that bans jails from being paid to house immigratio­n detainees and that limits when local and state government can provide informatio­n to immigratio­n authoritie­s. Hogan derided the bill before its passage Monday as one that would make Maryland a “sanctuary state.”

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