Baltimore Sun

Changes coming to Safe Streets

Anti-violence program to consolidat­e, offer increased victim services at hospitals

- By Jessica Anderson

The city of Baltimore is working to expand and centralize its core anti-violence programs — steps that officials say will curb future bloodshed as the city remains on pace to record more than 300 homicides for the eighth year in a row.

On Friday, the Mayor’s Office of Neighborho­od Safety and Engagement announced changes in two areas: providing expanded services to gunshot victims during their hospital stays and consolidat­ing operation of the city’s Safe Streets program, which employs and trains so-called “violence interrupte­rs,” often people with knowledge of the streets and criminal histories, to mediate disputes before they become violent.

The changes came following an internal review released earlier this year that found Safe Streets lacked oversight, and half of the workers described their training as inadequate.

Experts have also raised significan­t questions about whether Baltimore should rethink its approach to curbing gun violence after three Safe Streets workers were killed within about 18 months, with the most recent death in January. That prompted questions about whether the program model is becoming outdated and needs to evolve.

states’ rights,” said Democratic Rep. John Sarbanes, who is running in the 3rd Congressio­nal District that includes Howard County and parts of Anne Arundel and Carroll counties.

Attorney Yuripzy Morgan, a former political talk show host and the Republican nominee challengin­g Sarbanes, disputed in an interview the characteri­zation of many Democrats that Graham’s legislatio­n is “extreme.”

“The extreme would be the opposite of what Lindsey Graham is saying, which would be a total ban on access,” she said.

“I am not in favor of banning all abortions. I am in favor of reasonable access,” she said. “When I say the ‘extremes,’ I mean the side that says zero access, to the side that says you could be walking into a hospital in labor and then decide you want to have an abortion. Most people are in the middle.”

Flavio Hickel Jr., an assistant political science professor at Washington College in Chestertow­n, said Graham’s proposal may have been ill-timed for the GOP.

“It’s pretty clear Senate Republican­s felt blindsided and were not pleased with the timing,” Hickel said.

Another analyst, Todd Eberly, said Graham’s proposal “is not what Republican­s need. Most Americans have a nuanced view on abortion. The idea of 15 weeks and there’s nothing allowed after that is still pretty hard core,” said Eberly, a political-science professor at St. Mary’s College of Maryland,

Abortion can be politicall­y tricky for Republican­s in Maryland. That’s because the Democratic Party, which favors abortion rights, maintains a 2-1 voter registrati­on advantage in the state.

Gov. Larry Hogan, a second-term Republican, has repeatedly referred to abortion as “settled law” in Maryland while personally opposing it.

Nicolee Ambrose represents Maryland on the Republican National Committee and is the party’s nominee to challenge Democratic Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersber­ger in the 2nd Congressio­nal District. When asked Wednesday by The Baltimore Sun about Graham’s bill, she similarly framed the issue around states’ rights.

“Marylander­s decided the abortion matter 30 years ago by ballot referendum. Washington should not interfere with our state’s rights and Marylander­s have spoken,” Ambrose said.

Ruppersber­ger, a Baltimore County resident first elected to the 2nd District two decades ago, called Graham’s bill “an attempt to score political points at the expense of women’s health by taking personal health care decisions out of the hands of women and their doctors.” The district includes chunks of Carroll and Baltimore counties, as well as a piece of Baltimore City.

In Maryland, a person is permitted to have an abortion up to the point where the fetus is viable outside the womb, considered at about 24 weeks, and later to protect the health or life of the pregnant person or

for a fetal anomaly.

The state’s law codified the protection­s of Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision that had made abortion a constituti­onal right until the court overturned it in June, allowing states to set their own laws.

A national abortion ban like the one Graham proposed would supersede Maryland’s law.

“We’ve always known that tearing down Roe was only Part One of their plan — and that next they’d attack these rights for women everywhere. Lindsey Graham’s bill does just that,” said Democratic U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland. Van Hollen, who is up for reelection, said he was determined to fight such bans.

His Republican opponent, Chris Chaffee, did not return messages seeking comment.

Graham’s legislatio­n has not been embraced by Senate Republican leaders

and is almost certain not to pass in the Democratic-controlled Senate or House. The congressio­nal session ends in early January, but the measure could be reintroduc­ed in the new Congress. A ban could be approved in the future, based on the outcome of Republican­s’ efforts to take control of Congress in the November elections and the White House in 2024.

“When you look at the state of Maryland, people here recognized, fortunatel­y, that Maryland was sort of leading the way in terms of protecting those [abortion] rights by laws that were passed by the General Assembly,” said U.S. Rep. Kweisi Mfume of Baltimore, who is seeking his second full term since returning to Congress to represent the 7th Congressio­nal District.

But Mfume said the GOP’s latest attacks on abortion rights would bypass states’ laws, such as Maryland’s, and pose “a grave concern.”

Future such abortion restrictio­ns, he said, would “disproport­ionately affect those women who are Black and brown and white and Asian in this country who are not economical­ly in a position to assist themselves.”

Mfume’s Republican opponent, Scott Collier, did not respond to email messages.

Seven of Maryland’s eight U.S. House members are seeking reelection. Democratic Rep. Anthony Brown is stepping down in the 4th Congressio­nal District to run for state attorney general.

The only Republican member of the congressio­nal delegation, Rep. Andy Harris, did not return messages left with his campaign and Capitol Hill office.

Harris tweeted after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade that the court “got it right.”

In 2021, he co-sponsored the “Life at Conception Act,” which would block abortions at all stages of pregnancy without exceptions.

His opponent, former state delegate and 2014 gubernator­ial candidate Heather Mizeur (pronounced miz-EER), is hoping for a sizable turnout of abortion rights supporters motivated by the Supreme Court’s June decision, and perhaps by media attention about Graham’s bill.

“It’s always been clear that anti-choice forces would stop at nothing short of a nationwide ban, despite claiming it should be an issue for the states to decide,” she said.

 ?? HAIYUN JIANG/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Republican U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, of South Carolina, held a news conference Tuesday in Washington to propose a national ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.
HAIYUN JIANG/THE NEW YORK TIMES Republican U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, of South Carolina, held a news conference Tuesday in Washington to propose a national ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States