Baltimore Sun

Moore meets Assembly on ENOUGH Act

Governor faces questions about budget shortfall

- By Sam Janesch

An hour into hearing mostly glowing comments about his plan to invest in Maryland’s most impoverish­ed neighborho­ods, Gov. Wes Moore was posed a question Wednesday that brought to the forefront a topic he and other Democrats have largely avoided in this year’s session of the Maryland General Assembly.

How does he justify the new spending — even at only $15 million per year — when the state is facing billions of dollars in shortfalls in the coming years and is not actively considerin­g ways to raise new money?

“It keeps me up at night thinking next year we come, having passed this bill and been very pleased with ourselves, like the Blueprint [for Maryland’s Future], only to have to cut it, only to have to cut the program, cut the

Blueprint,” Del. Ben Barnes, a Democrat who chairs the powerful House Appropriat­ions Committee, told the governor, referring to Maryland’s expensive long-term education reform plan that the state doesn’t have a way to fully fund.

“It would be a shame, a damn shame, if we had to cut any of these programs,” Barnes said.

The Democratic governor was testifying before Barnes’ committee on the ENOUGH Act, his top policy priority of the year. The bill would provide up to $500,000 grants to communitie­s with at least 20% of children living in poverty — a step Moore has said will continue the state’s path toward his goal of eliminatin­g child poverty.

“Let’s be clear,” Moore responded to Barnes, holding up a map depicting concentrat­ions of child poverty across Maryland. “This is an economic drain on the entire state — that we have so many communitie­s that are so deeply neglected.”

Even in times of economic uncertaint­y, the Democratic governor said, “we cannot continue looking at children who are continuing to be condemned in pockets of poverty and say, ‘Well, they’re just going to have to wait.’ ”

The program has wide support and is expected to pass easily before the session ends in April.

It has a relatively small fiscal impact in the $63.1 billion state budget Moore proposed earlier this year. That plan resolves an immediate $1.1 billion cash shortfall by reducing some programs, pulling from the state’s reserves and borrowing more, though it leaves the state on the hook for a structural deficit expected to hit $3 billion in four years.

“We’re not just going to spend smarter our way out of $3 billion,” Barnes told the governor, who responded that he is “active and eager” to continue conversati­ons.

The exchange came at the end of a hearing that featured mostly praise for Moore’s bill — one of 16 pieces of legislatio­n he’s proposing this year.

Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers celebrated its goals to advance “place-based” strategies to target poverty. Under the ENOUGH Grant Program, community organizati­ons could apply for and use the money for targeted investment­s that improve areas like child care, housing, business and health.

“I haven’t been this excited about a piece of legislatio­n in a long time,” said Del. Carl Anderton, a Wicomico County Republican who’s developed a friendship with Moore.

Del. Ric Metzgar, a Baltimore County Republican, said, “We need to once and for all attack [child poverty] and put the action to what we’re doing.”

Questions about the program mainly focused on technical details, though some asked about overlappin­g existing efforts like the Blueprint or a fund that collects some of the recreation­al cannabis tax revenue aimed at some of the same high-poverty communitie­s. Moore said the program will complement those efforts.

Del. Stephanie Smith, a Baltimore Democrat, said she had some concerns about areas with especially high concentrat­ions of poverty or that may not have local leaders or organizati­ons ready to work within the program.

“Some of these organizati­ons that would be eligible to help may not have leadership or staff that reflect the demographi­cs of the community,” Smith said, questionin­g whether that would incentiviz­e outside groups “parachutin­g into communitie­s” they don’t reflect.

Carmel Martin, the governor’s special secretary for the Office for Children, said the administra­tion will work directly with people in the neighborho­ods to build that kind of infrastruc­ture if it doesn’t exist.

Moore, who ran one of the country’s largest poverty-fighting nonprofit organizati­ons before running for governor, has taken several steps to lift low-income workers and their children since taking office.

A bill he sponsored last year expanded the state’s child tax credit and earned income tax credit for low-income families in what he’s described as Maryland’s most aggressive “assault” on child poverty ever.

The ENOUGH — or Engaging Neighborho­ods, Organizati­ons, Unions, Government­s, and Households — Act, he said, is designed to further those efforts.

“There are going to be certain communitie­s that it might take a little bit more time and take a little bit more nurturing for them to be prepared,” Moore said when asked about the longterm approach after the hearing. “But the thing that we want for all of the eligible communitie­s to know is that we’re here and ready to support and ready to help build out a better future for those communitie­s.”

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