ANNAP LIS SUMMIT 2018

PEOPLE 10 TO WATCH

PREVIEW OF THE SESSION

COMPLETE LIST OF LOBBYISTS

A PUBLICATION OF

JANUARY 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 3

Choice.

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COME VISIT US: 4815 Seton Drive, Baltimore, MD 21215 410.358.6400 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 3 TABLE OF ANNAP LIS CONTENTS SUMMIT• 2018 SERIES ROUNDUP 5 COMMENTARIES 8 his is a milestone year TEN TO WATCH 18 T for the Annapolis Summit. HOGAN’S CABINET 20 It is the 15th year that this event has been held – all MARYLAND’S 2018 under the leadership of re- GENERAL ASSEMBLY 22 spected broadcast newsman Marc Steiner. For the fifth TOP PAID LOBBYISTS 24 year in the row, The Daily COMPLETE LISTING OF Record will join Marc as the hosts for the behind-the- MARYLAND LOBBYISTS 25 scenes preview of this year’s Maryland General Assembly session. We are pleased to wel- come back Gov. Larry Ho- gan, Sen. President Thomas Cover photo by Maximilian Franz V. Mike Miller and House Speaker Michael Busch to offer their thoughts and per- spective on the 2018 session. This is an election year in 200 St. Paul Place Maryland, adding a level of Suite 2480 urgency and excitement to Baltimore Maryland 21202. Main Number: 443.524.8100 the work that will take place in Annapolis. The insights from the governor and legislative leaders are why the Summit has become Suzanne E. Fischer-Huettner ���������������Publisher a must-attend event for Maryland’s most connected businesspeople and in-the-know Thomas Baden Jr. ����������������������������������� Editor politicos. Inside this magazine, readers also will find news analyses on this year’s major Maria Kelly ...... Comptroller issues; commentary pieces from stakeholders and policy experts; snapshots of leaders to Tracy Bumba . . . . Audience Development watch; as well as useful guides to identifying and contacting lawmakers and lobbyists. Director The Summit marks not only the start of the legislative session but of The Daily Re- Darice Dixon ...... Senior Account cord’s expanded coverage, which will include an inside look at how government policies Manager and legislative proposals affect business, the legal profession and local governments. Terri Thompson Account Manager Throughout the session, we’ll have space dedicated to legislative coverage in both the Ohene Wiafe-Ababio . . . Account Manager print edition of The Daily Record and on our website. We will again offer our popular Jason Whong Digital Editor Eye on Annapolis blog as well as an email news alert each morning so you can keep Sean Wallace ...... Assistant Editor abreast of all our coverage. (Visit TheDailyRecord.com to sign up.) Maximilian Franz ��������������� Senior Photographer We know what happens during these 90 days has a critical impact on our readers, Erin McLaughlin ����������������� Events & Marketing regardless of their profession. That’s why we, along with The Marc Steiner Show, are Coordinator committed to providing such comprehensive and relevant coverage. We hope you enjoy Jessica Lewis Digital Marketing Specialist Kady Weddle . . .Special Projects Supervisor it, as well as this year’s Annapolis Summit. Heather Heater ...... Special Projects Designer Sincerely, Suzanne Fischer-Huettner, Publisher, The Daily Record To order additional copies of this publication, please contact Shelby Carter at 443.424.8184 and Marc Steiner, Host, The Marc Steiner Show or [email protected].

4 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 5

RE A L ESTATE May17, 2018 | Hilton Baltimore BWI Airport Hotel MATTERS Leadership in Law recognizes Maryland’s legal professionals – lawyers and judges – whose dedication to their occupation and to their communities is outstanding. This March 9, 2018 | Hilton Baltimore BWI Airport Hotel event also honors up-and-coming lawyers through the Generation JD award and Real Estate Matters brings real estate-focused individuals together for a day of identifies exemplary careers through the Lifetime Achievement Award. learning, networking and industry honors. Features include keynote speakers, sessions on real estate business and trends, and awards presentations for accomplished real estate professionals.

WOMEN’S September 13, 2018 | Gertrude’s at The Baltimore leadership summit Museum of Art March 2018 | TBD The VIP List recognizes Maryland’s leaders who are age 40 or younger based on their The Daily Record’s Women’s Leadership Summit will convene Top 100 Women, professional accomplishments, community service and a commitment to inspiring change. Leading Women and Maryland’s network of female professionals to learn about important topics facing women in business today, give back to the community MARYLAND’S MOST ADMIRED and create mentoring relationships.

November 15, 2018 | BWI Hilton Most Admired CEO honors talented business CEOs and nonprofit leaders whose leadership and vision are admired by those around them. Three-time winners March 22, 2018 | Grand Lodge of Maryland are inducted into the Circle of Influence. Influential Marylanders honors individuals who have made a significant impact in their field and are influential leaders for their organization. Honorees are selected by The Daily Record's editors for significant contributions in their field. Three-time winners are inducted into the Circle of Influence. December 3, 2018 | The Annapolis Westin Leading Women celebrates women who are age 40 or younger for the tremendous accomplishments they have made so far in their careers. They are selected based on professional community involvement and a commitment to inspiring change.

April 23, 2018 | Meyerhoff Symphony Hall Maryland’s Top 100 Women recognizes high-achieving Maryland women who are making an impact through their leadership, community service and December 18, 2018 | The Center Club in Baltimore mentoring. Three-time winners are inducted into the Circle of Excellence. The Icon Honors awards recognizes Maryland business leaders over the age of 60 for their notable success and demonstration of strong leadership both within and outside of their chosen field.

NomiNaTE. SpoNSoR. CElEbRaTE. TheDailyRecord.com/Events

For more information, call 443.524.8100 or email [email protected]

4 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 5 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT SERIES ROUNDUP A question of priorities Gov. Larry Hogan and the Democratic legislative leadership have been at odds for the last three years over how to fix the state’s structural budget deficit. Hogan, as did his predecessor, has used program cuts and spending actions through the Board of Public Works to cut tens of millions in state spending. But that is only a short-term fix. In years past, Hogan has asked the General Assembly to pass legislation to ease mandated programmatic spending, which includes education and health care. Automatic program funding increases, he argues, can’t be justified during times of economic travail. Democrats have been reluctant Illustration by Maximilian Franz to roll back any mandates, saying that those programs are of the highest priority to state residents. Baltimore violence to be focus of attention To an already volatile mix you With the number of homicides exceeding 300 Lawmakers say 2018 will be the year oft- can add the uncertainty of what annually in Baltimore, the Maryland General introduced legislation is enacted to terminate the Trump tax cuts might mean Assembly will consider increasing funding for parental rights for those who conceive a child for the budget of an affluent state programs to reduce violent crime in the state’s through non-consensual intercourse. whose residents have enjoyed most populous city as well as strengthening But job one for the General Assembly’s deducting state and local taxes penalties for illegal gun possession and witness judiciary committees will be increasing public from their federal returns – a intimidation. safety in Baltimore, where the number of move that will be limited under Legislation will also be introduced to homicides has exceeded 300 in each of the past the new tax law. broaden the law prohibiting cyberbullying. three years, including 2017, legislators say.

Today’s idea. Tomorrow’s reality.

mdpolicy.org xxx

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Photo illustration by Maximilian Franz that is less than a decade old. Gambling on legalized sports betting The additional money could help the state offset, to some small degree, the price Some Maryland lawmakers the state. weeks after the end of tag of recommendations for as well as officials in the With a Supreme Court Maryland’s 90-day session, additional mandated spending gaming industry are wagering decision in a case that some are seeing a window of for K-12 education coming by on the General Assembly could legalize sports betting opportunity to further expand 2019. legalizing sports betting in nationwide expected perhaps a Maryland gaming industry

A health insurance mandate for Md.? After months of turmoil on Maryland’s individual health insurance exchange, the General Assembly will get its first crack at tackling some of the forces that led to significant increases in premiums this year. The legislature’s work will take on a sense of urgency as insurance companies predict that without changes the state’s exchange could collapse by 2019. “If we don’t act next year, it’s very likely that we won’t have an individual market in 2019 in Maryland,” Deborah R. Rivkin, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield’s vice president for government affairs and a member of the Maryland Health Insurance Coverage Protection Illustration by Maximilian Franz Commission, said last month. 6 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 7

Reported by Bryan P. Sears, Steve Lash and Tim Curtis

Some Maryland craft brewers are concerned A battle over beer that a bill to loosen regulations on the industry An issue in will become stuck in a political quagmire of A proposal by Comptroller Peter Franchot special interests and the legislature’s disdain for every state promises the likelihood of a second consecutive the comptroller. year for beer and the state’s growing local Others fear that lawmakers see brewers as a legislature brewing industry to be in the center of a collection of guys making beer in a garage rather Maryland appears likely to contentious debate. than a burgeoning manufacturing industry. join the scores of other state legislatures that are facing questions about whether they are doing enough to deter sexual misconduct and to protect victims. The number of sexual harassment incidents reported against Maryland lawmakers or their staffers will be made public in an annual report to a legislative committee, under an update to the General Assembly’s policy approved in December. While the report to the Legislative Policy Committee will not name anyone, it will include how each matter was handled and any punishment received by a legislator. Some women lawmakers and lobbyists privately question whether that policy is tough enough, and many Annapolis observers wonder whether sexual assault and harassment allegations that have roiled other statehouses are likely to occur here.

GREATER BALTIMORE COMMITTEE

Don’t miss GBC’s 2018 Maryland General Assembly Legislative Forum January 29, 2018 • 7:30 a.m. Renaissance Baltimore Harborplace Hotel, 202 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202

Join the Greater Baltimore Committee for its annual Maryland General Assembly Legislative Forum, which will feature top legislative leaders from both parties who will discuss the legislative dynamics that are in store under the State House dome in 2018 as they preview the Maryland General Assembly’s legislative session.

Register to attend: gbc.org/register-for-events • Questions? Call 410-727-2820 or email [email protected] 8 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 9 ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Here’s how to improve Md.’s competitive environment As we enter the final legislative session of Business tax credits Gov. Larry Hogan and the Maryland General Several business tax credits have been Assembly’s four-year term, all will be seek- recommended for repeal or overhaul by ing to report to voters that positive actions the Department of Legislative Services. The have been taken on their behalf. The 90-day GBC agrees that these incentives would session may be complicated by the uncer- benefit from a thoughtful review and would tainty and political polarization that exists in support statutory improvements, but firmly Washington, D.C., and the potential impact disagrees that either should be eliminated. on Maryland’s revenues and budget. The General Assembly should address the It is never easy to anticipate the issues issues while keeping in mind that the ben- that will dominate the session, as undoubt- efits of these programs far outweigh the edly a “surprise” emerges. costs, as they leverage small amounts of The Greater Baltimore Committee will taxpayer dollars to increase opportunities focus its attention on improving our com- for economic growth and activity. petitive environment and preparing our workforce for the future. Public safety Public safety proposals from Baltimore’s Paid sick leave Mayor Catherine Pugh and Police Commis- The first major policy battle of the leg- sioner Kevin Davis, as well as those from islative session will be the paid sick leave Gov. Larry Hogan, are likely to dominate veto. Both sides are actively working the legislative action this year. The General As- issue; expect the key battleground to be in sembly should act quickly and decisively the Senate. Donald C. Fry to provide the resources and policy chang- Budget President & CEO es needed to ensure the safety of residents One of the most pressing issues will be Greater Baltimore Committee and visitors to the Baltimore region. dealing with Maryland’s budget and reve- The proposals being floated include: nue projections. making a second firearm conviction a fel- While the FY 2017 general fund revenues mitigate an impact on the Maryland health ony; requiring second-time violent offend- came in $90 million over expected, FY 2018 care system. Without a federal mandate to ers serve their full sentences and be denied revenue projections have been written obtain health insurance, the General As- parole; and strengthening Maryland’s an- down twice: $53 million in September and sembly must move quickly to understand ti-gang and Racketeer Influence and Cor- an additional $73 million in December. the consequences to Maryland’s health rupt Organizations Act (RICO) statutes by These write-downs are in large part due care system, ensuring stability for individ- expanding the list of gang-related crimes to weaker than anticipated sales tax reve- uals, employers and health insurers. that can be prosecuted across jurisdic- nues. These forecasts do not include po- Education tional lines. tential impacts of federal changes to the Education funding had been identi- It’s an election year tax code or health care. fied as a top issue for 2018, based on the The GBC hopes that the 2018 session will The GBC desires a responsible, thoughtful original reporting date for the Kirwan not bring any election year issue “surpris- budget and tax structure that recognizes our Commission report, which will outline es.” Maryland residents want their elected changing economy and ensures that Mary- recommendations on school funding and officials to do their jobs and not get dis- land has stable revenue sources to finance statewide recommendations for improve- tracted by issues unrelated to improving the state’s vital education, public safety and ment. While the commission has delayed Maryland through strong policy action. other functions now and in the future. its final report, the GBC is confident that During the 2018 General Assembly ses- Health care the legislature will take the time this ses- sion, the GBC will help its members sort The GBC urges the General Assembly to sion to address fiscal problems in jurisdic- through the noise and advocate for policies act quickly to address any federal changes tions that haven’t received adequate state that promote a strong business climate that to the tax code and health care in order to funding. spurs economic growth and job creation. 8 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 9 BUSINESS

An agenda that will promote jobs & growth We believe Maryland is better for every- like just the cost of doing business, but one when it’s better for business. That’s think about it this way: Ultimately, these why the Maryland Chamber of Commerce kinds of regulations stifle job growth, stag- has one big resolution for the 2018 legisla- nate business starts and expansions, and tive session: Support a dedicated biparti- force a number of businesses every year san approach to legislation that will create, to shut down and eliminate jobs. That is an maintain, and expand jobs and economic outcome we fervently hope the legislature growth in the state. and the governor work together to avoid. For us, that means working to avoid an- Our resolution means we support great other onslaught of well-meaning legislation strides in growth opportunities like the with unintentionally destructive conse- 2017 More Jobs for Marylanders Act. This quences -- especially for Maryland’s hun- bipartisan law has already attracted dozens dreds of thousands of small businesses. of manufacturing businesses seeking to Legislative efforts such as House Bill 1’s bring much-needed jobs to areas of Mary- mandatory paid leave, with its one-size- land with high unemployment. The gover- fits-all mandate, threaten the existence of nor has announced his intent to expand many small businesses and the jobs they this program to additional jurisdictions provide. Gov. Larry Hogan vetoed HB 1 in with high unemployment and to increase May because of all the damage it could do, the available tax credit funding from the and we resolved to support that veto. We current $9 million to $15 million, creating hope legislators understand that damage even more jobs for Maryland’s citizens. We and sustain the veto. will be happy to support this initiative in We will work to help lawmakers see the the 2018 session. danger in a $15 minimum wage. We want We’ve also resolved to help strengthen all Marylanders to live well. Unfortunately, and expand relationships between Mary- this rate would artificially alter the price land’s education system and the business of labor and raise costs to businesses – community. We believe in working collab- costs that in most cases can’t be offset by oratively to accelerate development of a price increases alone. What this ultimate- well-educated, well-trained workforce. ly means is a loss of jobs, available hours That’s why we will always support leg- Christine Ross and benefits, not to mention a higher cost islation that does this while addressing President & CEO to consumers. Ironically, a $15 minimum business and community needs in ways wage could actually hurt the Marylanders it that help all Marylanders find the work Maryland Chamber of Commerce means to help the most. Such a high wage they want. Our support will keep a partic- means demand for greater skill, creating ular eye toward apprenticeship training, even greater competition to get and keep vocational/non-degree grants, and adult tions to reduce energy costs, maintaining these jobs, leaving lower-skilled and young- learning. These initiatives make sense as a healthy balance between Maryland’s eco- er workers out. we work toward a more robust school-to- nomic and environmental needs. We will work to help employers deter- workforce pipeline that makes Maryland a This is the work that advances the state mine the fairest and most effective ways to stronger, more economically competitive and creates more meaningful opportunities schedule their staff hours. Potential restric- state. for all Marylanders. So as we all work to tions on employers’ scheduling practices Resolving to make Maryland better for make improvements in 2018, we will reded- can substantially impact their ability to op- business also includes working for tax icate ourselves to our resolution, working erate their business. Legislative proposals policy reforms that can stimulate busi- such as these cause layers of paperwork, ness growth and increase jobs. It means together with the executive and legislative record-keeping nightmares, burdensome supporting meaningful health care reform branches to bring about a better, healthier, and costly requirements, and more chal- that lowers the overall cost of health care. more prosperous future for the state we lenges to employers. That may all sound It means striving for market-driven solu- love. 10 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 11 EDUCATION

Our schools need higher standards – not more money ent who wants a good education for their it harder to use academic performance to child – and every taxpayer who would like gauge a school’s performance. The legis- to know their money is being spent wisely. lature overrode the governor’s veto along On average, U.S. states spend $11,000 per partisan lines, all but admitting that union student, according to the U.S. Census Bu- protection was a higher priority than a reau. Marylanders, however, pay more than child’s education. $15,000 per student. In Baltimore City, we Advocates for more school spending typ- pay $17,000 per student. ically don’t talk about the other side of the So, we are already spending 36 percent equation: how to pay for it. Maryland tried more on our kids than the rest of the coun- the tax-and-spend mentality under former try and 60 percent more in Baltimore. We Gov. Martin O’Malley, who enacted 83 new have doubled the amount of money we taxes and fees in eight years. spend on each student since 2003. During that time, 60,000 residents left Despite this massive investment, less Maryland, taking more than $5 billion in tax- than half of Maryland students passed their able income with them. Driving Marylanders English and Math assessments this year. out of the state with higher taxes is no way Not only have our massive education to improve the public education system. investments not yielded results, but often So, what can the Maryland General As- times our tax dollars aren’t even spent on sembly to do fix public education? students. First, expand Maryland’s charter school Christopher A Project Baltimore analysis found this options, where thousands of students are summer that Maryland school districts on wait lists. Maryland has one of the na- B. Summers are among the worst culprits in America tion’s weakest charter school laws. President & CEO for spending tax dollars on administrative Second, expand the BOOST Program for bloat. Of America’s 100 largest school dis- low-income students to attend a private Maryland Public Policy Institute. tricts, six of the top 10 for administrative school of their choice. The BOOST Pro- costs per student are in Maryland. Balti- gram has a long wait list of students whose As Maryland legislators convene in An- more City spends $1,600, by far the most on parents are eager to get them out of their napolis, citizens could be forgiven for administrators in the nation. current, failing public school. wondering if they are watching the movie Audits repeatedly show that school ad- Third, increase school and administra- “Groundhog Day,” in which Bill Murray’s ministrators waste large sums of tax dollars. tive efficiency. Lawmakers should require character wakes up to the same events day In Baltimore County, school system ad- that more dollars be directed into the class- after day. ministrators were on the payroll of the room and that corruption and mismanage- Just as they have every year for decades, same technology companies to whom they ment be ripped out from the roots before Maryland’s teachers’ union will convene were awarding millions of dollars in school taxpayers asked to spend a penny more. protests demanding more taxpayer money contracts. Lastly, insist on higher standards. Mary- for the public education system. In Baltimore City, the school system had land’s Constitution states that our school The question is not whether public ed- to repay a federal grant after using the mon- system exists to provide a “thorough and ucation is an important service – it abso- ey for lavish dinner cruises, makeovers and efficient” education for our children, not to lutely is. The question is whether unions meals for administrators. shield highly-compensated school adminis- and administrators have shown they are More troubling is the teachers’ union in- trators from accountability. capable of improving classroom outcomes tent to lower its own accountability while To avoid the “Groundhog Day” effect or spending our tax dollars effectively. The demanding money. of perpetual underachievement in our answer is “no.” Gov. Larry Hogan in April vetoed House schools, Maryland lawmakers must reject Maryland already spends more on public Bill 978, an outrageous bill to force Mary- calls for more money and instead insist on education than most states – and what we land to adopt the weakest school account- more accountability for Maryland school do spend often doesn’t even make it to the ability system in the nation. At the behest administrators. The civil rights of all Mary- classroom. That should concern every par- of teachers’ union leaders, the bill made land children depend on it. 10 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 11

Your lobbyists for life!

Left: Robert Garagiola, President, Government Relations; Right: James Cleaver, Firm President 54 State Circle, Annapolis Fort Washington • La Plata • Cumberland • Rockville • Alexandria 410-974-9000 http://www.alexander-cleaver.com Legal • Lobbying • Business Solutions 12 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 13 MEDICAL MARIJUANA

advocate is Michael Bronfein of Promote diversity, competition in NeighborCare Pharmacy fame who, with his daughter, Wendy, is the principal owner cannabis program, not an oligarchy of Curio Wellness, purportedly a $20 million fully automated facility housed in In 2018, Maryland legislators will conduct comprehensive outreach to small, an industrial building in Baltimore County. attempt to complete unfinished business minority, and women business owners and Bronfein recently told a group of hopeful from 2017 to promote “a successful but entrepreneurs with an interest in growing, minority applicants of his continuing consumer-friendly medical cannabis processing and dispensing medical “learning curve” struggles and his support industry in the State to provide patients cannabis and to establish medical cannabis for a 10-year moratorium in order to with affordable access to medical employment training programs. Second, recoup his investment in an industry that cannabis” and promote participation by the legislation requires the commission he believes could generate $600 million “small, minority, and women business adopt lawful race- and, presumably, over the next six years. owners and entrepreneurs.” However, gender-neutral practices to actively seek This proposed moratorium is anti- buried in Senate Bill 1/House Bill 2 is a diversity by encouraging applicants who competitive and a protectionist measure six-year moratorium on the expansion of qualify as a Minority Business Enterprise that should be eliminated from the bill. grower and processor licenses that totally under state procurement law or “who are The currently constituted Medical undermines the promise of affordable small, minority, or women-owned business Cannabis Commission chose well- access to medical cannabis. The public entities” to apply for licenses. Presumably capitalized companies owned primarily should be concerned. the new commission would not ignore by white men who promised large grow Filed jointly as emergency legislation, this the way the old commission did. The facilities with high price tags: many 45,000 SB 1 is co-sponsored by Senate President legislation would also expand from 15 to to 65,000 square feet costing $10 million Thomas V. “Mike” Miller, D-Calvert, Senate 20 grower and processor licenses but is or more without any guarantee that they Education, Health & Environmental silent on new dispensary licenses. Affairs Committee Chair Joan Carter would successfully meet patient demand Conway, D-Baltimore City, and Sen. Yet SB 1/HB 2 has a serious flaw. Buried or achieve affordable medical cannabis. Nathaniel McFadden, D-Baltimore City. in the legislation is a moratorium on Only a few months underway, the H.B. 2 is sponsored by Del. Cheryl Glenn, expansion of new grower and processor Maryland program already has over 20,000 D-Baltimore City, chair of the 50-member licenses until 2024 -- a gift to existing qualifying patients. By comparison, strong Legislative Black Caucus. licensees and those who receive them Arizona closed its first year in 2012 with The legislation shrinks the current under the legislation. One moratorium 28,000 patients. Bronfein compares Natalie M. LaPrade Medical Cannabis Commission from 16 to nine members. The secretary of health’s designee would survive, but the balance of current EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS commissioners would be replaced James B. Astrachan, Chair David Jaros with five members appointed by the James K. Archibald Ericka King governor, with advice and consent of John Bainbridge Jr. Stephen Meehan the Senate, and three members chosen Wesley D. Blakeslee C. William Michaels by the governor, from lists provided by the Senate president and the speaker of Martha Ertman Norman Smith the House, of candidates with business, Arthur F. Fergenson H. Mark Stichel private foundation, academic experience Susan Francis Ferrier R. Stillman or professionals from health, agriculture The Daily Record Editorial Advisory Board is composed of members of the legal or finance fields. New members profession who serve voluntarily and are independent of The Daily Record. Through their would receive compensation; current ongoing exchange of views, members of the Board attempt to develop consensus on issues commissioners volunteer. of importance to the Bench, Bar and public. When their minds meet, unsigned opinions SB 1/HB 2 proposes two positive steps to will result. When they differ, majority views and signed rebuttals will appear. Members of promote the inclusion of small, minority, the community are invited to contribute letters to the editor and/or columns about opinions and women-owned businesses. First, expressed by the Editorial Advisory Board. the bills mandate the new commission 12 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 13

Maryland to the Arizona market. As 2017 1937 prohibition status by 29 states and closes, Arizona has over 150,000 patients the District of Columbia, medical cannabis and is on track to sell over 70,000 pounds is at the cutting edge of anti-inflammatory of medical cannabis. In Arizona, growers and pain relief, tumor reduction, seizure process their harvest to support their own control, palliative care, and many other dispensaries, approximately 130 licensed conditions. statewide. Unlike opiates, medical cannabis has no There is little doubt Maryland will match associated deaths or physical addiction. or exceed Arizona’s growth during the By contrast, opiate addictions are moratorium. Unless the legislative goal is undermining employment participation to concentrate profits in an oligarchy and and overdoses are the leading cause of maintain high prices for patients, Maryland death for Americans under 50. needs more growers and processors to We encourage the legislature to strike meet demand. Already Maryland’s growers the anti-competitive moratorium in the are commanding prices over $3,300/lb., name of Maryland patients and encourage far above this week’s medical cannabis diversity of industry participants national average of $1,500/lb. Patients are to promote new ideas for medical reportedly paying over $600/ounce. This applications and technical processes. is unsustainable and prohibitive to lower- Advisory Board member Stephen income Marylanders. Even though SB 1/ diversity in the state-created medical Z. Meehan is a minority owner of HB 2 creates a Compassionate Use Fund cannabis industry. The original enabling Hippocratic Growth, LLC, a majority for Medical Assistance and the Veterans legislation allowed an indeterminate woman-owned medical cannabis Administration patients, the industry- number of new grower licenses to meet dispensary pre-approval awardee funded program will be exhausted quickly patient demand and allowed for unlimited awaiting inspection for final licensure. at these prices. processors, the real engine of medical Editorial Advisory Board members SB 1/HB 2’s oligarchical approach is cannabis creativity. Medical cannabis was James B. Astrachan, John Bainbridge unsustainable. first recognized as an effective drug in the Jr. and Arthur F. Fergenson did not Marylanders will benefit by expanding United States in 1851. Restored to its pre- participate in this opinion.

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Katie Allston, LCSW-C *Maria Johnson Darby 2017 Amy E. Askew *Sen. Cheryl C. Kagan Real Estate Insider Debra Reznick Attman Dr. Rita Rastogi Kalyani Report says high-end apartments doing well, Mythili “Lee” Bachu Dr. Shohreh A. Kaynama Child abuse lawsuit plus other deals, leases and relocations. Victim sues Prince George’s County school system, Zoa D. Barnes Marguerite O. Kelley 9A alleging hire made despite criminal record. Angie Barnett Sharon Krevor-Weisbaum Walakewon Blegay Bonnie Krosin 10A Dr. Mary Way Bolt Sharon Kroupa Tammy Brumwell Bresnahan Bonnie N. Luna *Alison Gates Brown 2017 Ganesha Martin Rev. Lettie Moses Carr, Esq. Robin McKinney Nona Carroll Karen S. Cherry Jennifer Meyer Karen C. Miller Robin Motter-Mast, D.O. Leadership Thursday, April 7, 2016 Kathleen M. Murphy Hon. Karen Murphy Jensen Volume 127 | Number 128 Maryland’s trusted source of business, legal and government news in Martha Nathanson Law Candace Breland Osunsade TheDailyRecord.com Cecilia B. Paizs *Hon. Nicole Pastore-Klein Del. Edith J. Patterson Katherine Pinkard ‘Black Panther’ a hot item June A. Poole Bill jailing Cynthia Blake Sanders Md. comic book stores report strong interest in Ta-Nehisi Coates series Ronnie Lapinsky Sax Dr. Kim Schatzel hosts of Tina M. Corner Marianne Schmitt Hellauer *Carol Coughlin Nichelle D. Schoultz Corryne Deliberto *Joan Webb Scornaienchi Cari DeSantis Stephanie L. Shack teen parties Kimberly Conway Indira K. Sharma Dumpson, Esq., CFRE Michele A Shermak, MD, FACS Margaret Dunkle *Terry D. Sherman Ralston weakened Lynette Maria Entzian Jane Frankel Sims Kirsten M. Eriksson Michelle Daugherty Siri Key senator concerned Christine Espenshade Angela H. Spencer Hon. Deborah Sweet Eyler *Bonnie B. Stein college students could Susan Finlayson Denise A Sullivan Christina Fitts *Karen T. Syrylo end up behind bars Barbara Gassaway Courtney A. Thomas By S Julie Gaver Faith Thomas teve LaSh Elizabeth A Green, Esq. [email protected] Sherita Thomas Dominica Groom Dr. Joan Tilghman Susan M. Hahn ANNAPOLIS – The Senate Ju- Subscribe Today! Jackie Harris *Michele Bresnick Walsh dicial Proceedings Committee on Zaneilia Harris Salli J. Ward Wednesday approved watered-down Nicole L. Harrison, M. Ed., M.S. M. Courtney Watson legislation that would permit par- *Mary Hastler Dana Weckesser ents and Del. Laura E Weeldreyer other adults Hon. Wanda Keyes Heard Elizabeth Weglein to be jailed for up to ANNAPOLIS Beth Hehir Dr. Leana Wen one year for Lt. Col. Laura L. Herman Alicia Lynn Wilson p r o v i d i n g 2016 Rev. Debra Hickman Sky Woodward n Lawmakers approve alcohol to proposal to rein in mis- Tina Hike-Hubbard Michelle Wright or hosting Kristine K. Howanski Dr. Marylou Yam leading behavior by for- d r i n k i n g profit higher education MaryBeth Hyland Julianne S. Zimmer parties at- Bryan Levy, manager of Collectors Corner comic book store on Charles Street in Baltimore, displays the first issue of ‘Black Panther,’ institutions.See 7A Tracy Imm tended by written by Baltimore native Ta-Nehisi Coates. n Board of Public Ngozi Irondi-Azubike * Denotes Circle minors who Works approves $5.6 D’Ana E. Johnson of Excellence honorees By anamika MAXIMILIAN FRANZ become im- Get Maryland’s daily statewide source roy billion Purple Line con- [email protected] first issue in the series was released on paired and tract.See 8A s e r i o u s l y Wednesday and local comic store own- copies ahead of time. n Senate panel OKs “Black Panther,” a highly anticipated ers saw it fly off the shelves. injure them- $37.5M tax break for comic written by Ta-Nehisi Coates, has “Ta-Nehisi Coates is still seen as selves or “This sold faster and better and a son of Baltimore,” Ray said. “He’s a Northrop Grumman. been making waves among comic fans others in quicker than any comic we’ve ever very popular writer and a very relevant See 8A and mainstream audiences since Mar- driving from had,” said Benn Ray, co-owner of writer.” vel announced in September that the the event. Atomic Books in Baltimore’s Hampden “Black Panther,” illustrated by Brian Baltimore native was writing the series The committee’s action rep- neighborhood. Stelfreeze, takes place in a fictional about one of the first black superhe- resents a dramatic weakening of In the first hour, Atomic Books sold wealthy African nation called Wakanda. roes in a major American comic. The bills that the Senate and House ap- 50 copies and set aside an additional 50 The country is run by monarchs called for people who had called and reserved proved earlier this General Assem- bly session in memory of two recent SEE COMIC 3A for business, law, government and SEE UNDERAGE 11A Hogan, Franchot say they’ll ignore ‘I promise you this is going lawmakers’ edict on school hearings to bring more transparency, more account- By B ryan P. SearS ability, more [email protected] increase their efforts despite a legislative scrutiny,’ says edict meant to diminish their roles. Comptroller ANNAPOLIS — Maryland’s Republi- The tough talk from the state comp- Peter Franchot can governor and Democratic comptrollertroller and the governor comes just a day of a law de- vowed to continue to call school officials after Gov. Larry Hogan announced he signed to allow real estate news. to account for how construction and ren- would allow his capital budget to become schools offi- ovation funding is spent and promised to cials to avoid testifying on SEE OVERSIGHT 8A construction projects. Auction sales Calendar 14B INDEX News briefs Employment 6A Law briefs 4A Lawyer to lawyer FILE PHOTO 18A Litigation support 12A Online today 12, 19A 12, 19A $269 per year Public notice 2A For subscriptions 1B $2 per copy call 1-800-451-9998 or email TheDailyRecord.com/subscribe • 800-451-9998 [email protected] TheDailyRecord.com/subscribe • 800-451-9998 14 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 15 ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT

It’s time to invest in clean energy jobs

This year, Maryland legislators should eligible to receive dedicated funding work to expand and improve the state’s for market growth through the state’s renewable energy law by passing the Clean “Strategic Energy Investment Fund.” Energy Jobs Act of 2018. Low-income communities and This initiative, proposed by the communities of color have borne the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, the majority of the costs for dirty energy Maryland Climate Coalition and the Maryland production. In Maryland, low-income Clean Energy Jobs Initiative, would double communities and communities of color renewable energy power in Maryland by face higher cancer risks from hazardous air 2030 and invest in small businesses and pollutants. They are also more likely to live workforce development while phasing near facilities that emit toxic emissions. out the dirty energy sources that currently Additionally, The Maryland Clean Energy benefit from the renewable standard. Jobs Campaign is committed to phasing out In the face of catastrophic storms, super incineration as a Tier 1 source in the RPS. droughts and increased wildfires from Incineration threatens local communities global warming, it is time to take bold steps and the whole state, which is why many on climate and move to a renewable energy local and statewide groups oppose future. Maryland is a coastal state with miles construction of any new incinerators. New of tidal shoreline, thus making us one of the clean energy development from removing most vulnerable states in America to sea waste to energy incineration from the RPS level rise. Yet most of Maryland’s electricity would decrease carbon emissions, reduce still comes from carbon-spewing fossil Brooke Harper healthcare costs, and deliver economic fuels — coal and natural gas. Increasing Environmental Justice Chair benefits regionally. Maryland’s Renewable Portfolio Standard By providing more investments in clean (RPS) to 50 percent clean power by 2030 NAACP Maryland State Conference energy and moving away from fossil fuel would reduce 8.1 million metric tons of CO2, Maryland Policy Director and trash combustion that release toxic which is the carbon equivalent of taking 1.7 emissions, Maryland would significantly million cars off the road each year. Chesapeake Climate Action Network improve the lives for all communities, Clean, renewable energy has proven for growth. In 2016, Maryland generated especially low-income residents and itself to be a powerful driver of economic enough wind energy to power 49,000 communities of color. development in Maryland, including job homes. Currently, Maryland boasts three This policy is backed by a broad and creation. Maryland is poised to stimulate a manufacturing facilities and nearly 500 diverse coalition of environmentalists, statewide resurgence of manufacturing and employees in the wind sector. A typical 250 public health officials, business leaders, construction jobs. Renewable energy has MW wind farm creates about 1,079 jobs labor leaders, faith leaders, academics, already created jobs and helped diversify over the lifetime of the project. low-income advocates, and social justice Maryland’s economy. The Maryland Clean Energy Jobs advocates. More than 600 organizations Maryland’s solar industry, which already Campaign also strives to ensure that all across Maryland have endorsed the surpasses the crab industry in value, now communities benefit from the clean energy campaign. boasts over 165 companies and employs economy. The policy would establish A renewable energy future is an over 5,000 residents. Between 2015 and a working group among government achievable future. The campaign builds on 2016, the solar industry grew 20 times faster agencies and clean energy stakeholders to past successes in Maryland. In 2017, the than the state’s overall state economy and examine the best funding opportunities to Maryland General Assembly enacted the there is now enough solar in Maryland invest in job training in the clean energy original Clean Energy Jobs Act, achieving a to power over 68,000 homes. This policy industry in economically distressed regions 25 percent renewable electricity standard would support and retain nearly 20,000 of the state and to remove barriers for entry by 2020. This was a landmark victory for all new jobs in the solar industry. in the clean energy economy. In addition, Marylanders. Now it is time to double our The wind industry is also beginning to it makes small minority-, veteran-, and efforts and double Maryland’s Renewable thrive in Maryland, with great opportunity women-owned businesses in this industry Portfolio Standard to 50 percent by 2030. 14 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 15 EDUCATION

More and better investments in Md. schools

What kind of state do we want to be? option either. With no chance at a formal Do we believe every single child should education in the years when 90 percent of have access to a public school that offers brain development occurs, these kids start a path to a sustainable career in her or his and stay behind their peers. Maryland should future? expand public access to full-day pre-K to all These are the questions that public 4-year-olds and low-income 3-year-olds. educators want legislators to focus on 2. Elevate the teaching profession: during this General Assembly session and We know from extensive research that the every session that follows in the next decade single biggest in-school factor for student ahead. We want Maryland legislators — in success is teacher quality. Yet Maryland has 2018 and beyond — to do everything we consistently undervalued and overworked can as a state to live up to this fundamental its teacher workforce. According to the aspiration for our next generation. Economic Policy Institute, Maryland That starts with acknowledging that — teachers make just 84 percent of what Betty Weller despite the progress we have made at times workers in comparable professions make in Teacher — we have a long way to go. Here are the the state. And since 2007, Maryland has hired Kent County Public Schools facts about where our public schools are as just one teacher for every 105 additional we start 2018: students enrolled in schools — driving up President According to independent analysis, class sizes and reducing individualized Maryland State Education Association Maryland public schools are underfunded attention for students. It’s no wonder by $2.9 billion every year. That means the demand for entering the profession is at a Finland — Maryland allows children to average school in our state has $2 million less crisis level and turnover from year-to-year grow up in poverty. Since 2004, the number than it needs to give every student an equal continues to rise. Maryland should correct of public school students considered low- chance to be successful. Marylanders are these troubling trends by closing the teacher income in our state has increased by 40 keenly aware of this huge funding gap, with pay penalty and hiring enough teachers to percent. When they go to school, they bring 83 percent of voters saying it is important to give each school the necessary time to work many health, safety, and nutrition-based increase funding for public education. closely with every single student. barriers to learning with them. Maryland That underfunding is especially crippling 3. Create career pathways for all should adopt the Community School Model in the communities where we can least students: The jobs available following the for schools serving communities with high afford it: areas of highly concentrated Great Recession have shifted and will only concentrations of poverty, a proven method poverty. Maryland’s poorest school districts continue to shift as greater automation for bringing in community-based resources receive 4.9 percent less local and state impacts the economy. The skills our students — such as afterschool programs and mental funding than the state’s most affluent need in the 21st century are not always well health professionals — to give students a districts. It’s no wonder that we have aligned with a traditional four-year college chance to focus on learning. achievement gaps in which the proficiency track. In fact, that singular college focus has These are not partisan ideas. Educators rate of all students more than doubles that pushed much of our young workforce deep hope to work with legislators on both of low-income students. into debt without the wages to pay off the sides of the aisle — like we have to reduce But this isn’t just about more money — it’s crushing financial burden. Unfortunately, unnecessary standardized testing in recent also about how we target more funding. Here only a select few students in our school years — to make a stronger, more strategic are four ways we can prioritize an increased systems have access to Career and investment in our public schools in the years investment to make a difference for our Technology Education completer courses ahead. We’ll also continue to work with students: that result in industry certification and a parents, civil rights groups, and community 1. Early childhood education: Right career after high school. We need to scale leaders across the state to build support now, Maryland only offers half-day pre-K up those offerings to improve access for all for this shared vision. With a new funding for 4-year-olds at or below 185 percent of students. formula awaiting in 2019, we will work poverty, which means a lot of working- 4. Coordinate non-academic services in tirelessly this session and the rest of the and middle-class kids aren’t eligible for a schools: Unlike places with high-performing calendar year to make as much progress as public program but can’t afford a private school systems — such as Singapore and possible for Maryland’s students. 16 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 VOTING ACCESS

Maryland needs to expand voters’ access to polls

The right to vote is the most fundamental these states, like Maine and Wisconsin, have mechanism of a democratic society. Citizens allowed Election Day registration since the should not face barriers to voicing their mid-70’s. There is no reason that Maryland desire for the future direction of their com- should be decades behind other states in munities. Yet across the country, forces are protecting access to the ballot and increas- aligning to make it more difficult for Mary- ing participation. landers to exercise that vital right. The Gen- The second policy being introduced to eral Assembly can and must adopt policies protect voting access in Maryland is the to ensure that Marylanders are protected Secure and Accessible Registration Act from those efforts. (SARA), a form of automatic voter registra- President Donald Trump quickly signaled tion. Sponsored by Del. and his intentions to attack voting rights when Sen. Will Smith, SARA would expand access he baselessly claimed that millions of people to voter registration by seamlessly register- voted illegally in the 2016 elections. He then ing eligible Marylanders to vote when they created a commission to study his own base- interact with agencies such as the MVA, the less claims, choosing as its leader Kansas health care exchange, and local social ser- Secretary of State Kris Kobach, a man who Damon Effingham vice agencies. pushed such onerous voting policies in his Acting Director Currently, Marylanders registering to vote state that federal judges have described his Common Cause Maryland at these agencies must take extra steps to fill tactics as a “mass denial of a fundamental out forms with information they’ve already constitutional right.” Trump further signaled legislative session that have had overwhelm- provided. This unnecessary and duplicative his administration’s contempt for voting ing bipartisan support in other states and process leads to thousands of Maryland- rights access by ordering the Department would help to ensure that no matter the cur- ers skipping registration each year. SARA of Justice to reverse course at the Supreme rent attacks on voting rights, Marylanders makes this process faster and more efficient Court – the DOJ now supports Ohio’s efforts will be able to have their voices heard on by using information that agencies already to prematurely throw voters from the voting Election Day. have to register eligible Marylanders to vote rolls where they had once opposed them. The first measure, sponsored by Del. Kirill without requiring additional paperwork. Maryland has not been immune to these at- Reznik and Sen. Paul Pinksy, is Election Day Policies like SARA have had broad bi- tacks. Judicial Watch, a national conservative Registration. We have been able to imple- partisan support in 9 states. In 2016, over organization, has threatened suits against the ment same-day registration during the early 65 percent of Alaskan voters approved a state and the Montgomery County Boards of voting period, but due to Maryland’s state similar policy, and just this year, the Illinois Elections in an attempt to throw Marylanders constitution, we have not been able to allow legislature unanimously adopted their own off the voting rolls more quickly. Marylanders to register or update their reg- version. While SARA is newer than Election The General Assembly has taken positive istration on Election Day itself, when voting Day registration, the evidence of its impact steps recently to expand voting rights ac- is at its highest single-day concentration. on participation is heartening: Oregon, one cess. Same-day voter registration during the That we have different policies on voter of the first states to implement automatic early voting period allowed 20,000 eligible registration between early voting and Elec- voter registration, saw the highest increase Marylanders to update their registration or tion Day is confusing and unnecessary. Elec- in voter participation in the nation after en- register to vote for the very first time during tion Day registration would fix this disparity acting its law, with 2-3 percent attributable the 2016 elections. The General Assembly by allowing same-day voter registration at to the law itself. That kind of increase here also restored the right to vote to 40,000 your precinct on Election Day, just as you could mean 50,000-75,000 more Marylanders formerly-incarcerated Marylanders after would register any other day of the year. Six- participating in our elections. overturning Gov. Larry Hogan’s veto on the teen jurisdictions currently allow for Elec- The General Assembly must not ignore issue. But these steps, while laudable, are tion Day registration, including Colorado, the clear intentions of those across the not enough to protect Marylanders’ ability Wisconsin, Idaho, and Montana. country looking to reduce access to the bal- to practice their right to vote. States that have Election Day registration lot box. Election Day Registration and SARA Thankfully, there are two straightforward on average see 11 percent higher voter par- provide clear, bipartisan defenses to this at- measures being introduced during the 2018 ticipation than those that do not. Some of tack on the right to vote. 16 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 If it happens in Government, it’s...

Bryan P. Sears General Assembly Beat Reporter Bryan P. Sears covers state government, from the governor’s office to the legislature to the Departments of Business and Economic Development and Labor, Licensing and Regulation. Wherever business and government intersect, Bryan is there to provide exclusive coverage. Daily. InPrint. Online.

When business happens in Maryland, It’s...

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HOUSE SPEAKER MICHAEL E. BUSCH COMPTROLLER Busch turned 71 a week PETER FRANCHOT before the start of his 32nd The state’s chief tax collec- year in the legislature. This is tor and liquor law enforcer his first session back after a isn’t satisfied with taking on living donor liver transplant. members of his own party this Will Busch rebound to his old year. For the 2018 session, form? His future could affect he’ll also take on the tradition- the political plans of others, ally powerful alcohol industry such as Dels. Dereck E. Davis in his quest to ease rules on and Maggie McIntosh. the craft brewing industry. TO WATCH 10Look to these 10 men and women to make a big impact on the 2018 legislative session

UNKNOWN The #metoo movement that has taken hold in Hollywood, D.C. and other state capitals has lawmakers and lobbyists DEL. MARY BETH here holding their breath. A CORROZZA story in VOX.com in which The first-term Eastern a former Washington Post Shore Republican has brand- reporter alleges sexual ha- ed herself as a strong Republi- rassment on the part of three can voice in the House Appro- unnamed lawmakers — two priations Committee and is Democrats and a Republican setting herself up to challenge — has only heightened the fo- incumbent Sen. Jim Mathias cus on this issue. in the 2018 election. 18 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 19

BILLY MURPHY SEN. JOHN C. ASTLE The Baltimore lawyer and The six-term Anne Arundel former judge has emerged as County Democrat unsuccess- a key player in the state’s na- fully ran for mayor of Annap- scent medical marijuana in- olis and all but announced his dustry. There’s an opportuni- retirement at the end of the ty for him to be a strong voice 2017 session. Does he reverse as the Legislative Black Cau- course and seek re-election, cus seeks to tweak the pro- and, if so, does Sarah Elfreth gram to make more licenses withdraw or set up a genera- available for minority-owned tional battle? businesses.

LARRY RICHARDSON VICTORIA GRUBER The veteran lobbyist now Senate President Thomas represents the Maryland V. Mike Miller Jr.’s longtime Chamber of Commerce and chief of staff is now the head will be the tip of the spear in of the Department of Legis- an effort to sustain Gov. Lar- lative Services. Gruber is a ry Hogan’s veto of paid sick known entity around the State leave. The retooled cham- House and considered to be ber, under the leadership of one of the few who can push Christine Ross, looks to have back against lawmakers as a stronger voice in Annapolis. her predecessor did.

WILLIAM “BRIT” KIRWAN ROBERT NEALL There won’t be any recom- The former state senator mendations just yet from the had spent the first three years commission led by the former of Gov. Larry Hogan’s term as University System of Mary- one of the governor’s most land chancellor that is exam- trusted advisers. Now, he’s ining how to adequately fund been asked to replace Dennis public education in Maryland. Schrader as health secretary But the Kirwan panel’s work after Schrader’s nomination looms like a shadow over this ran afoul of Senate Demo- session. crats. Not an easy job. 20 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 21 GOVERNOR LARRY

Sam Abed Joseph Bartenfelder Carol Beatty Mark Belton SECRETARY OF JUVENILE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE SECRETARY OF DISABILITIES SECRETARY OF NATURAL SERVICES RESOURCES

David Brinkley Ellington Churchill Jr. James Fielder Jr. Michael Leahy SECRETARY OF BUDGET & SECRETARY OF GENERAL SECRETARY OF HIGHER ACTING SECRETARY MANAGEMENT SERVICES EDUCATION OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

R. Michael Gill Ben Grumbles Kenneth Holt Rona Kramer SECRETARY OF COMMERCE SECRETARY OF THE SECRETARY OF HOUSING & SECRETARY OF AGING ENVIRONMENT COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT 20 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 21 HOGAN’S CABINET

Stephen Moyer George Owings III Robert McCord William Pallozzi SECRETARY OF PUBLIC SAFETY SECRETARY OF VETERAN SECRETARY OF PLANNING SECRETARY OF STATE POLICE & CORRECTIONAL SERVICES AFFAIRS

Pete Rahn Karen Salmon Robert Neall Kelly Schulz SECRETARY OF STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF INTERIM SECRETARY OF HEALTH SECRETARY OF LABOR, TRANSPORTATION SCHOOLS &MENTAL HYGIENE LICENSING & REGULATION

Major Gen. Linda Singh John Wobensmith Lourdes Padilla ADJUTANT GENERAL SECRETARY OF STATE SECRETARY OF HUMAN MARYLAND ARMY NATIONAL GUARD RESOURCES 22 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 23 MARYLAND 2018 GENERAL ASSEMBLY

1st Legislative District – Del. Eric Bromwell (D) 17th Legislative District – Montgomery Allegany, Garrett & Washington Counties Del. John Cluster (R) County Sen. George C. Edwards (R) Del. (R) Sen. Cheryl C. Kagan (D) Subdistrict 1A – Allegany & Garrett counties Del. Kumar P. Barve (D) Del. Wendell R. Beitzel (R) 9th Legislative District Del. Jim Gilchrist (D) Subdistrict 1B – Allegany County Sen. Gail H. Bates (R) Del. Andrew Platt (D) Del. Jason C. Buckel (R) Subdistrict 9A – Howard & Carroll counties Subdistrict 1 C – Allegany & Washington Del. (R) 18th Legislative District – Montgomery counties Del. Warren E. Miller (R) County Del. Mike McKay (R) Subdistrict 9B – Howard County Sen. Richard Madaleno (D) Del. Bob Flanagan (R) Del. Al Carr (D) 2nd Legislative District – Washington 10th Legislative District – Baltimore County Del. (D) County Del. (D) Sen. Andrew A. Serafini (R) Sen. Delores G. Kelley (D) Subdistrict 2A – Washington County Del. Benjamin Brooks (D) 19th Legislative District – Montgomery Del. Neil C. Parrott (R) Del. (D) County Del. Adrienne A. Jones (D) Del. William J. Wivell (R) Sen. Roger Manno (D) Subdistrict 2B – Washington County Del. (D) Del. Paul Corderman(R) 11th Legislative District – Baltimore County Sen. Bobby A. Zirkin (D) Del. Ben Kramer (D) Del. Marice I. Morales (D) 3rd Legislative District – Frederick County Del. Shelly Hettleman (D) Del. Dan Morhaim (D) Sen. Ronald N. Young (D) 20th Legislative District – Montgomery Del. Dana M. Stein (D) Subdistrict 3A – Frederick County County Del. Carol L. Krimm (D) 12th Legislative District – Baltimore & Sen. William C. Smith (D) Del. Sheila E. Hixon (D) Del. (D) Howard counties Sen. Edward J. Kasemeyer (D) Del. (D) Subdistrict 3B – Frederick County Del. Jheanelle K. Wilkins (D) Del. William “Bill” Folden (R) Del. Del. Terri L. Hill (D) 21st Legislative District – Anne Arundel & 4th Legislative District – Frederick County Prince George’s counties Sen. Michael Hough (R) 13th Legislative District Sen. Jim Rosapepe (D) Del. (R) Sen. Guy J. Guzzone (D) Del. Ben Barnes (D) Del. Barrie S. Ciliberti (R) Del. (D) Del. Barbara Frush (D) David E. Vogt III (R) Del. (D) Del. Frank S. Turner (D) Del. Joseline Pena-Melnyk (D) 5th Legislative District – Carroll County 22nd Legislative District – Prince George’s Sen. Justin D. Ready (R) 14th Legislative District – Montgomery County Del. Susan Krebs (R) County Sen. Paul G. Pinsky (D) Del. April R. Rose (R) Sen. Craig J. Zucker (D) Del. Tawanna P. Gaines (D) Del. (R) Del. Anne R. Kaiser (D) Del. Eric Luedtke (D) Del. Anne Healey (D) 6th Legislative District – Baltimore County Del. Pamela E. Queen (D) Del. Alonzo T. Washington (D) Sen. Johnny Ray Salling (R) Del. Robin L. Grammer Jr. (R) 15th Legislative District – Montgomery 23rd Legislative District – Prince George’s Del. Bob Long (R) County County Del. Ric Metzgar (R) Sen. Brian J. Feldman (D) Sen. Douglas J.J. Peters (D) Del. (D) Subdistrict 23A – Prince George’s County 7th Legislative District – Baltimore Del. David Fraser-Hidalgo (D) Del. Geraldine Valentino-Smith (D) & Harford counties Del. Aruna Miller (D) Subdistrict 23B – Prince George’s County Sen. J.B. Jennings (R) Del. Marvin E. Holmes Jr. (D) Del. Rick Impallaria (R) 16th Legislative District – Montgomery Del. Joseph F. Vallario Jr. (D) Del. Pat McDonough (R) County Del. (R) Sen. Susan C. Lee (D) 24th Legislative District – Prince George’s Del. Bill Frick (D) County 8th Legislative District – Baltimore County Del. (D) Sen. Joanne C. Benson (D) Sen. Katherine Klausmeier (D) Del. (D) Del. (D) 22 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 23

Del. Carolyn J.B. Howard (D) 32nd Legislative District – Anne Arundel 39th Legislative District – Mongomery Del. (D) County County Sen. James Ed DeGrange (D) Sen. Nancy J. King (D) 25th Legislative District – Prince George’s Del. Pamela Beidle (D) Del. Charles Barkley (D) County Del. Mark S. Chang (D) Del. (D) Sen. Ulysses Currie (D) Del. Theodore J. Sophocleus (D) Del. Shane Robinson (D) Del. Angela Angel (D) Del. (D) 33rd Legislative District – Anne Arundel 40th Legislative District – Baltimore City Del. Dereck E. Davis (D) County Sen. Barbara A. Robinson (D) Sen. Edward R. Reilly (R) Del. Frank M. Conaway Jr. (D) 26th Legislative District – Prince George’s Del. Michael E. Malone (R) Del. Antonio Hayes (D) County Del. Tony McConkey (R) Del. Nick Mosby (D) Sen. C. Anthony Muse (D) Del. (R) Del. Tony Knotts (D) 41st Legislative District – Baltimore City Del. (D) 34th Legislative District – Harford County Sen. Nathaniel T. Oaks Del. (D) Sen. Bob Cassilly (R) Del. Bilal Ali (D) Subdistrict 34A – Harford County Del. Angela C. Gibson (D) 27th Legislative District – Calvert, Charles Del. (R) Del. Samuel “Sandy” Rosenberg (D) & Prince George’s counties Del. (D) nd Sen. Thomas V. “Mike” Miller Jr. (D) Subdistrict 34B 42 Legislative District – Baltimore County Subdistrict 27A – Charles & Prince George’s Del. Susan K. McComas (R) Sen. Jim Brochin (D) counties Subdistrict 42A – Baltimore City Del. Elizabeth G. “Susie” Proctor (D) 35th Legislative District – Cecil & Harford Del. Stephen Lafferty (D) Subdistrict 27B – Calvert County counties Subdistrict 42B – Baltimore County Del. Michael A. Jackson (D) Sen. Wayne Norman (R) Del. Susan L. Aumann (R) Subdistrict 27C – Calvert County Subdistrict 35A – Cecil County Del. Chris West (R) Del. Mark N. Fisher (R) Del. Kevin Bailey Hornberger (R) 43rd Legislative District – Baltimore City Subdistrict 35B – Cecil & Harford County Sen. Joan Carter Conway (D) 28th Legislative District – Charles County Del. Andrew Cassilly (R) Del. (D) Sen. Thomas “Mac” Middleton (D) Del. Teresa Reilly (R) Del. Sally Y. Jameson (D) Del. Maggie McIntosh (D) Del. Edith J. Patterson (D) 36th Legislative District – Queen Anne’s, Del. Mary Washington (D) Kent, Caroline & Cecil counties Del. C.T. Wilson (D) 44th Legislative District – Baltimore City & Sen. Stephen S. Hershey Jr. (R) Baltimore County 29th Legislative District – St. Mary’s & Del. Steve Arentz (R) Sen. Shirley Nathan-Pulliam (D) Calvert counties Del. Jeff Ghrist (R) Subdistrict 44A – Baltimore City Sen. Steve Waugh (R) Del. Jay A. Jacobs (R) Del. Keith Haynes (D) Subdistrict 29A – St. Mary’s County th Subdistrict 44B – Baltimore County Del. Matt Morgan (R) 37 Legislative District – Talbot, Del. Charles E. Sydnor III (D) Subdistrict 29B – St. Mary’s County Dorchester & Wicomico counties Del. (D) Del. Deb Rey (R) Sen. Adelaide “Addie” Eckardt (R) Subdistrict 29C – Calvert County Subdistrict 37A – Dorchester & Wicomico 45th Legislative District – Baltimore City Del. Gerald W. “Jerry” Clark (R) counties Sen. Nathaniel J. McFadden (D) Del. Sheree Sample-Hughes (D) Del. (D) 30th Legislative District – Anne Arundel Subdistrict 37B – Talbot, Dorchester & Del. Cheryl D. Glenn (D) County Wicomico counties Del. Cory V. McCray (D) Sen. John C. Astle (D) Del. Christopher T. Adams (R) Subdistrict 30A – Anne Arundel County Del. (R) 46th Legislative District – Baltimore City Del. Michael E. Busch (D) Sen. Bill Ferguson (D) th Del. Herb McMillan (R) 38 Legislative District – Somerset, Del. (D) Subdistrict 30B – Anne Arundel County Wicomico & Worcester counties Del. Brooke E. Lierman (D) Del. Seth Howard (R) Sen. Jim Mathias (D) Subdistrict 38A – Somerset & Wicomico 47th Legislative District – Prince George’s 31st Legislative District counties County Sen. Bryan W. Simonaire (R) Del. Charles James Otto (R) Sen. Victor Ramirez (D) Subdistrict 31A – Anne Arundel County Subdistrict 38B – Wicomico County Subdistrict 47A – Prince George’s County Del. (D) Del. Carl Anderton Jr. (R) Del. Diama M. Fennell (D) Subdistrict 31B – Anne Arundel County Subdistrict 38C – Wicomico & Worcester Del. (D) Del. Nicholaus R. Kipke (R) counties Subdistrict 47B – Prince George’s County Del. Meagan C. Simonaire (R) Del. Mary Beth Carozza (R) Del. (D) 24 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 25 MARYLAND’S TOP 10 LOBBYISTS RAKED IN $14.9 MILLION

By Bryan P. Sears [email protected]

Last year, 155 registered lob- Top 10 lobbyists by reported earnings byists in Maryland, five fewer, than the year before, reported 1. Timothy Perry $2,526,551.00 earnings of at least $50,000 and the total payments to this 2. Gerard Evans $1,946,010.32 group of high earners equaled 3. Rob Garagiola $1,793,895.11 more than $45.2 million. Lobbyists in the top 10 alone 4. Bruce Bereano $1,675,303.75 reported earnings totaling more than $14.9 million. 5. Michael Johansen $1,275,516.50 Timothy Perry, of Perry, White, Ross & Jacobson, re- 6. Joel Rozner $1,170,083.80 tains the top spot on the list for the reporting period that 7. Gregory Proctor $1,158,552.00 runs between Nov. 1, 2016, and Oct. 31, 2017, according to the 8. Nicholas Manis $1,144,850.00 State Ethics Commission. Perry, a former chief of staff 9. Lisa Harris Jones $1,136,320.00 to Senate President Thomas V. 10. John Stierhoff $1,109,750.98 Mike Miller Jr. reported earn- ings in excess of $2.5 million. Gerard E. Evans, another The top employers by reported expenses perennial top earner and lob- byist for the Law Offices of Pe- ter Angelos, checks in at No. American Petroleum Institute $1,467,342 2 with more than $1.9 million. Evans is former chairman of Maryland Hospital Association $756,780.21 the Maryland Democratic Par- Maryland State Education Association $527,623.92 ty who also was top legislative aide Miller. Johns Hopkins Institutions $401,588 Robert Garagiola, Alexan- der & Cleaver, P.A., comes in Baltimore Gas and Electric $377,669.30 third on the list with nearly $1.8 million. Garagiola served MedStar Health $364,013.42 a decade in the Maryland Sen- ate including three years as Senate majority leader. Source: Reports on lobbying activity between Nov. 1, 2016 and Oct. 31, 2017, Lisa Harris Jones, Harris filed with the Maryland State Ethics Commission. Jones & Malone LLC, was the only woman to make the top 10 list. Reported earnings represent client fees paid but do not in- clude factors such as overhead or other lobbyists at the same firm that may have done work for the same clients. 24 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 25 MARYLAND LOBBYISTS

KATIE SETON ALEXANDER WANDRA ASHLEY-WILLIAMS PETER P. BARON A Maryland Catholic Conference WLA Associates, LLC Maryland Hospital Association 10 Francis Street PO Box 1737 6820 Deerpath Road RICK ABBRUZZESE Annapolis, MD 21401 Ellicott City , MD 21041 Elkridge, MD 21075 KOFA Public Affairs LLC (410)379-6200 111 South Calvert Street Suite ALEXANDER & CLEAVER, P.A. JOSEPH L. ASKEW 2820 54 State Circle Verizon ROBERT P. BEHLKE 12 West St. Baltimore, MD 21202 Annapolis, MD 21401 Choptank Electric Cooperative, Inc. 410-685-7080 Annapolis, MD 21401 P.O. Box 430 202-515-2447 SHANNON ALFORD Denton, MD 21629 BENJAMIN STONER ABRAMS National Rifle Association 410-479-8553 Northrop Gruman Corporation CARYN C.M. ASLAN of America Job Opportunities Task Force 2980 Fairview Park Drive DAVID BELISLE 11250 Waples Mill Road c/o 217 E. Redwood St., Suite 1500 Falls Church, VA 22042 NRA General Counsel Baltimore, MD 21202 Teamsters Joint Council No. 62 1030 S. Dukeland St. KATHARINA ACOSTA Fairfax, VA 22030 KEVIN ATTICKS Baltimore, MD 21223 Maryland Catholic Conference JOHN ALLEN Grow & Fortify, LLC 410-566-5700 10 Francis Street Pepco Holdings, Inc. 6247 Falls Road, Suite G Annapolis, MD 21401 EP1202 701 Ninth St., N.W Baltimore, MD 21209 CHARLES BELL Consumer Reports, Inc. KELLY ADAMS Washington, DC 20068 RAGINA COOPER AVERELLA 1535 Mission Street Everytown for Gun Safety Action MISTY ALLEN AAA Mid-Atlantic San Francisco, CA 94103 Fund Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) 8600 LaSalle Road, P.O. Box 4184 Oxford Building Suite 639 47 State Cir., Suite 403 KATE M. BELL New York, NY 10163 Towson, MD 21286 Marijuana Policy Project Annapolis, MD 21401 2370 Champlain St. NW, Suite 12 EARL ADAMS, JR. BRYAN ALSTON Washington, D.C. 20013 DLA Piper LLP (US) State Circle Strategies, LLC B 6225 Smith Ave. LORENZO M. BELLAMY 15 School Street Suite 104 ASHLIE BAGWELL Baltimore, MD 21209-3600 Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. Annapolis, MD 21401 Harris Jones & Malone, LLC 410-580-4188 54 State Cir. 410-834-3708 2423 Maryland Ave., Suite 100 Annapolis, MD 21401 PUNEET AHLUWALIA Baltimore, MD 21218 410-974-9000 New World Strategies, Inc. AMERICAN COUNCIL OF 410-366-1500 ENGINEERING COMPANIES/ 1055 Rector Lane TYLER W. BENNETT MARYLAND THOMAS M. BALLENTINE, JR. McLean, VA 22102 National Association of Industrial Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. 312 N. Charles St., Suite 200 703-283-6644 and Office Properties, Maryland 54 State Cir. Baltimore, MD 21201 P.O. Box 16280 Annapolis, MD 21401 RAIS AKBAR 410-539-1592 Baltimore, MD 21210 410-974-9000 Advocates for Children 410-977-2053 and Youth Inc. BENJAMIN F. GUY ANDES BRUCE C. BEREANO 1 North Charles St., Suite 2500 G.S. Proctor & Associates, Inc. SEANNIECE A BAMIRO 191 Duke of Gloucester St. Baltimore, MD 21201 29 Francis St. Job Opportunities Task Force Annapolis, MD 21401 410-547-9200 Annapolis, MD 21401 217 E. Redwood St 410-267-0410 410-280-5088 Baltimore, MD 21202 DAVID G. ALBERT SUSAN BERNARD The Waverly Group Inc. ERIN ANDREWS ELIZABETH MCDANIEL BANACH Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. 9520 Berger Road, Suite 212 FAIR Fund, Inc. Marylanders to Prevent Gun 54 State Cir. Violence Columbia, MD 21046 2100 M Street NW Suite #170-254 Annapolis, MD 21401 2600 St Paul St WASHINGTON, DC 20037 410-974-9000 SALLIANN ALBORN Baltimore, MD 21218 Maryland Community JOHN A. ANDRYSZAK DAVID W. BEUGELMANS BRIAN D. BANKS Law Office of John A Andryszak Health System MGM National Harbor Gordon Feinblatt LLC 27 Maryland Avenue 5850 Waterloo Road, Suite 140 120 Waterfront St., Suite 500 233 E. Redwood St. Columbia, MD 21045 Annapolis, MD 21401 National Harbor, MD 20745 Baltimore, MD 21202-3332 301-749-7500 410-576-4104 GARY R. ALEXANDER ERIN APPEL Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. Capitol Strategies, LLC RON BARNES JENNIFER BEVAN-DANGEL 54 State Cir. 1 State Cir. Google Inc. Common Cause Maryland Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 c/o 2350 Kerner Blvd., Suite 250 121 Cathedral St., Suite 2A-4 410-974-9000 410-268-3099 San Rafael, CA 94901 Annapolis, MD 21401 26 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 27

JULIANA BILOWICH TINA M. BJAREKULL MATT BOHLE AISHA N. BRAVEBOY Maryland PIRG Maryland Independent College & Rifkin, Weiner, Livingston, Levitan Childrens National Medical Center 3121 St Paul Street University Association & Silver LLC 111 Michigan Ave. NW 60 West St., Suite 201 225 Duke of Gloucester St. Baltimore, MD 21218 Washington, DC 20010 Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 RICK BINETTI 202-471-4892 Laborers’ International ALLYSON BLACK FRANK D. BOSTON, III Union of North America Baltimore Gas and Electric Co. Law Office of Frank D. Boston, III TAMELA ELIZABETH BRESNAHAN 2002 Clipper Park Road Suite 108 Baltimore/Washington 47 State Cir., Suite 403 AARP Maryland Baltimore, MD 21211 Construction Workers & Public Annapolis, MD 21401 200 St. Paul St. 25th Floor 410-323-7090 Employees Baltimore, MD 21202 FRAZIER BLAYLOCK Laborers District Council 4812 Drummond Ave. JASON BOTEL JENNIFER BRIEMANN 11951 Freedom Dr., Suite 310 Chevy Chase, MD 20815 MarylandCan Reston, VA 20190 1112 16th St. NW, Suite 240 Maryland Catholic Conference NICOLA BOCOUR Washington, DC 20036 10 Francis Street DANTE BISHOP Americans for Responsible RAY BOURLAND Annapolis, MD 21401 Maryland Working Families Solutions Pepco Holdings, Inc. 2524 N. Charles St. 700 13th Street, NW Suite 600 JULIANNA NICOLE BRIGHTMAN Baltimore, MD 21202 701 Ninth St., NW Washington, DC 20005 Washington, DC 20068 The Law Offices of Frank D. TABB J. BISHOP Boston, III HENRY W. BOGDAN ALAN BOWSER Verizon Maryland Association of Nonprofit Bridgewater Associates LP 2002 Clipper Park Road Suite 108 1 E. Pratt St., 8N Organizations 1 Glendinning Place Baltimore, MD 21211 Baltimore, MD 21202 1500 Union Ave. Suite 2500 Westport, CT 06880 410-393-4178 Baltimore, MD 21211 BARBARA M BROCATO TIM E. BRAUE Barbara Marx Brocato & TABB J BISHOP J.C. BOGGS Old Line Government Affairs, LLC Associates Gerard E. Evans, Ltd. King & Spalding 100 West Pennsylvania Avenue 191 Main Street Suite 210 1700 Pennsylvania Ave., Suite 101G 18 Pinkney St. Annapolis, MD 21401 NW Suite 200 Baltimore, MD 21204 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-990-1521 Washington, D.C. 20006 (410)321-8200 410-269-1503

We must invest in the students and schools that are the key to Maryland’s economy and future. msea

Building a Bridge to the Rejecting Vouchers and Public Defending and Strengthening Recommendations of the Funding of Private Schools Maryland’s Charter School Law Kirwan Commission MSEA opposes the continuation of Efforts from Governor Hogan and Maryland has set ambitious goals the BOOST voucher program. As our U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy to guarantee that students are public schools face billions of dollars DeVos to create and advance college and career ready when in unmet needs, it is unconscionable unaccountable charter schools they graduate. Unfortunately, those that public dollars are diverted to is the wrong policy for Maryland. standards have not been supported private schools. These vouchers are Our state has the best charter with adequate funding, staffing, or mostly supporting students already school law in the nation because it programs to realize this promise attending private school and have strikes the right balance between for all students. An independent been used to subsidize private local control, accountability, and study acknowledges that Maryland’s schools that discriminate against innovative instruction. It should current funding formulas are broken students and their families. be defended and strengthened and underfund our schools by $2.9 to avoid the corruption and billion annually. During the 2018 privatization giveaways that have legislative session, MSEA will fight plagued other states. for the policy and budget solutions to support world-class public schools that meet the growing and diverse needs of all students.

EDUCATORS’ AGENDA EDUCATORS’ Learn more about the full range of our legislative priorities at mseanewsfeed.com. facebook.com/marylandeducators @MSEAeducators 26 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 27

JEN BROCK-CANCELLIERI DEBORAH BURRELL MARIA TERESA CARRINGTON TODD R CHASON 1199SEIU United Healthcare Burrell International Group Carrington and Associates Gordon Feinblatt LLC Workers East – Maryland/DC 1945 Crossing Stone Court 6007 Hillmeade Road 233 East Redwood Street Division Frederick, MD 21702 Bowie, MD 20720 Baltimore, MD 21202-3332 611 N. Eutaw St. 732-763-7398 410-576-4069 Baltimore, MD 21201 JAN BURRUS 443-449-2087 Greenwich Biosciences, Inc. DAVID H. CARROLL, JR. CHESAPEAKE BAY FOUNDATION, c/o 28 Liberty Ship Way, Suite Capitol Strategies, LLC INC MARIE E BROWN 2815 1 State Circle Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Inc Thread Sausalito, CA 94965 Annapolis, MD 21401 6 Herndon Avenue PO Box 1584 Annapolis, MD 21403 LINDA C CARTER Baltimore, MD 21203 BLAKE BUTLER 410-268-8816 Harris Jones & Malone, LLC Meyers, Rodbell, and Rosenbaum, TAMERA ANITA BROWN 2423 Maryland Avenue P.A. ANN T. CIEKOT Merck, Sharp & Dohme Corp. 6801 Kenilworth Ave Suite 400 Baltimore, MD 21218 Public Policy Partners PO Box 6255 Riverdale Park, MD 20737 410-366-1500 48 Maryland Avenue, Ste 304 Washington, DC 20015 301-699-5800 Annapolis, MD 21401 RUSSELL P. BUTLER 410-268-0990 ROBERT T. BROWN SR. ROBERT EDGE CARTER Maryland Crime Victims’ Resource Maryland Waterman’s Association Edge Business Development, Inc. Center, Inc. MICHAEL CINQUANTI 1805A Virginia St. 7018 Beechwood Drive Northeast Regional Council of Annapolis, MD 21401 1001 Prince Georges Blvd. Suite Chevy Chase, MD 20815-5176 Carpenters 410-216-6610 750 202-550-4400 Upper Marlboro, MD 20774 111 State Street First Floor ERIC L. BRYANT 301-952-0063 W. MINOR CARTER Albany, NY 12207 Rifkin, Weiner, Livingston, Levitan VanScoyoc Associates, Inc. PATRICIA LYNN CIOTTA & Silver, LLC DAVID BYRAM 39 Southgate Avenue CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield 225 Duke of Gloucester St. Braeburn Pharmaceuticals Annapolis, MD 21401 10455 Mill Run Circle Annapolis, MD 21401 42 Hulfish Street Suite 441 410-269-7954 Owings Mills, MD 21117 410-269-5066 Princeton, NJ 08542 VLAD CARTWRIGHT 864-979-3417 MARY CLAPSADDLE JOSEPH C. BRYCE SevenTwenty Strategies Johns Hopkins Manis Canning & Associates MARGARET BYRON 1220 19th Street, NW Suite 300 901 S. Bond Street Suite 540 12 Francis St. The Nature Conservancy Washington, DC 2003 Baltimore, MD 21231 Annapolis, MD 21401 8926 Mt Tabor Road NICHOLAS CASALE 410-263-7882 Middletown, MD 21769 KATLYN M. CLARK Indivior Inc. Waterkeepers Chesapeake ELIZABETH BUNNEN 610 Island Way Unit 502 P.O. Box 11075 AnnDyl Policy Group, LLC Clearwater Beach, FL 33767 717 Kennebec Ave C Takoma Park, MD 20913 Takoma Park, MD 20912 ARDATH M. CADE WILLIAM A. CASTELLI 240-320-7711 202-276-1773 Maryland Association The Cade Mason Group EMMA CLEVELAND 78 Riverside Drive of Realtors, Inc. RACHEL PASSIE BURCH SEIU Local 32BJ Severna Park, MD 21146 200 Harry S Truman Gerard E. Evans, Ltd. 25 West 18th Street 5th Floor 410-647-7882 Parkway Suite 200 191 Main Street Suite 210 Annapolis, MD 21401 New York, NY 10011 Annapolis, MD 21401 LOUIS CAMPION 800-638-6425 DREW P. COBBS 410-990-1521 Maryland Motor Truck Association TERRENCE JAMES CAVANAGH Maryland Petroleum Council 9256 Bendix Road Suite 203 ROBERT W. BURDON SEIU Maryland / DC State Council 60 West Street, #403 Columbia, MD 21045 Annapolis & Anne Arundel County 15 School Street, 2nd Floor Annapolis, MD 21401 Chamber of Commerce MICHAEL F CANNING Annapolis, MD 21401 49 Old Solomons Island Rd, JULIE D COHEN Manis Canning & Associates 410-280-0830 Suite 204 Johnson & Johnson 12 Francis Street Annapolis, MD 21401 MATTHEW CELENTANO P.O. Box 34043 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-266-3960 Maryland Citizen’s Health Initiative Bethesda, MD 20817 410-263-7882 2600 St. Paul Street JOSEPH COHN GENE L. BURNER Baltimore, MD 21218 JON STEVEN CARDIN Foundation for Individual Rights in MPPA, Inc. 410-235-9000 19 Fairway Island CWO Strategies, LLC Education (FIRE) Grasonville, MD 21638 211 St. Paul Place JOHN CERRONE 510 Walnut Street Suite 1250 410-279-1264 Baltimore, MD 21202 N/A 200 Stevens Drive Philadelphia, PA 19106 Philadelphia, PA 19113-1570 CHET BURRELL J. DARRELL CARRINGTON ERIC COLCHAMIRO CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield Carrington & Associates GABRIELLE CHARNOWITZ Health Care for the Homeless 1501 S. Clinton St. Mail Stop: 6007 Hillmeade Road CommuniCare 421 Fallsway CT17-01 Bowie, MD 20720 1304 Concourse Drive Suite 110 Baltimore, MD 21202 Baltimore, MD 21224 732-763-7398 Linthicum Heights, MD 21090 (443)703-1165 28 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 29

CARVILLE B COLLINS JEREMY CRANDALL DANA DAVENPORT JOANNA LEIGH DIAMOND DLA Piper LLP (US) The Pew Charitable Trusts Maryland Catholic Conference Planned Parenthood of Maryland 6225 Smith Avenue 901 E Street NW 10 Francis Street 330 N. Howard St. Baltimore, MD 21209 Washington, DC 20004 Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21201 410-580-4125 AMANDA CREW MAX DAVIDSON DAVID MELVIN DINGES ERIN COLLINS Bruce Bereano N/A 1005 N. Charles Street Apt 2A Brotherhood of Locomotive National Association of Mutual 191 Duke of Gloucester Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Engineers and Trainmen Insurance Companies Annapolis, MD 21401 732-585-3141 245 Summer Grove Drive 3601 Vincennes Road 410-267-0410 Kearneysville, WV 25430 ANNA DAVIS Indianapolis, IN 46268 215-459-4008 STEVE CRIM Advocates for Children and Youth VALERIE T. CONNELLY Main Street Strategic Advisory 1 N. Charles Street, Suite 2400 CHRISTOPHER V. DIPIETRO Maryland Farm Bureau, Inc. Group Baltimore, MD 21201 Cdi Consulting Services, LLC 3358 Davidsonville Road 91 Main Street 410-547-9200 4411 Sedgwick Road Davidsonville, MD 21035 Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21210 410-922-3426 ANGELO DE JOSEPH PHILIP CRONIN Trinity Highway Products, LLC 410-243-5782 CHARLES COOK 2525 Stemmons Freeway Harris Jones & Malone, LLC FRANCES P. DOHERTY Maryland State and DC AFL-CIO 2423 Maryland Avenue, Suite 100 Dallas, TX 75207 The Doherty Group, LLC 7 School St. Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21218 330-978-1012 P.O. Box 668 410-269-1940 410-366-1500 STEVEN DELBIANCO New Market, MD 21774 BETHANNE COOLEY OTIS W CUTLER NetChoice 1401 K Street 301-865-2214 CTIA - The Wireless Association Public Sector Consulting Group NW Suite 502 MICHAEL J DOHERTY 1400 16th St. NW Suite 600 | 6400 Baltimore National Pike Washington, DC 20005-3417 Maryland State Rifle & Pistol Washington, DC 20036 Baltimore , MD 21228 202-420-7482 Association 443-865-5518 DAVID COOPER VINCENT DEMARCO 10221 Dolliter Ct The GEO Group, Inc. TRAVIS KNIGHT CUTLER Vincent DeMarco Ellicott City, MD 21042 One Park Place, 621 NW 53rd St Dominion Resources 3072 Maryland Citizens Health Initative 443-288-6045 Suite 700 Centreville Road Herndon, VA Education Fund, Inc. Boca Raton, FL 33487 20171 2600 St. Paul Street DANIEL T DOHERTY, JR. The Doherty Group, LLC DONNA COOPER Baltimore, MD 21218 P.O. Box 668 Potomac Electric Power Company 410-235-9000 New Market, MD 21774 701 Ninth Street, NW, EP9628 D CYNTHIA M. DEMAREST 301-865-2214 Washington, DC 20068 CARMINE G D’ALESSANDRO Maryland Care dba Maryland Chesapeake Employers Insurance ALFONSO CORNISH Physicians Care ELIZABETH DOORY N/A 1000 Nicollet Mall TPN-1101 Company 509 Progress Drive Advocates for Children and Youth Minneapolis, MN 55403 8722 Loch Raven Blvd. Linthicum, MD 21090 1 N. Charles Street, Suite 2400 TOWSON, MD 21286 410-401-9570 Baltimore, MD 21201 ALLISON CORR 410-547-9200 The Pew Charitable Trusts NICHOLAS J D’ANDREA JOSEPH DEMATTOS, JR. 901 E Street NW Washington, DC UPS Health Facilities Association of ROBYN ANNE DORSEY 20004 1400 N. Hurstbourne Pkwy Maryland Maryland Consumer Rights Louisville, KY 40223 601 Global Way Suite 100 - 103 Coalition, Inc. MARJORIE A. CORWIN 502-329-6760 Linthicum, MD 21090 2209 Maryland Ave Gordon Feinblatt LLC Baltimore, MD 21218 THOMAS C DAME ISABELLA DEMOUGEOT 233 E. Redwood Street 410-624-8980 Baltimore, MD 21202 Gallagher Evelius & Jones LLP Rifkin Weiner Livingston LLC 410-576-4041 218 N. Charles St. Ste. 400 225 Duke of Gloucester Street MICHELE DOUGLAS Baltimore, MD 21201 Annapolis, MD 21401 Public Policy Partners CHRISTOPHER COSTELLO 48 Maryland Avenue, Suite 304 Public Sector Consulting Group MICHAEL DAMERON AMY DEMPSTER Annapolis, MD 21401 6400 Baltimore National Pike N/A 607 14th Street NW Suite 650 N/A 1919 6th Street NW 410-268-0990 Baltimore, MD 21228 Washington, DE 20005 Washington, DC 20001 410-746-3452 SUSAN GAZAWAY DANTONI THOMAS M DENNISON ROBERT C DOUGLAS CARMELA COYLE Montgomery County Medical Southern Maryland Electric DLA Piper LLP (US) Maryland Hospital Association Society Cooperative, Inc. 6225 Smith Avenue 6820 Deerpath Road 15855 Crabbs Branch Way 15035 Burnt Store Road Baltimore, MD 21209 Elkridge, MD 21075 Rockville, MD 20855 Hughesville, MD 20637 410-580-4141 410-379-6200 MIRANDA DARDEN JENNIFER DIAMOND TINA DOVE WILLIAM R CRAIGLE Maryland Affordable Housing Maryland Consumer Rights Maryland State Education Sprint Corporation Coalition Coalition Association 65 Stone Crest Drive 273 Capote Ct W 2209 Maryland Avenue 140 Main Street Mechanicville, NY 12118 Severna Park, MD 21146 Baltimore, MD 21218 Annapolis, MD 21401 28 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 29

LOREEN K DOYLE ROBYN S ELLIOTT RACHAEL GUNDE FAULKNER MICHAEL FORLINI CBH Community Behavioral Health Public Policy Partners Public Policy Partners Forlini Law Group, LLC Assn. 48 Maryland Avenue, Suite 304 48 Maryland Avenue Suite 304 5 East Franklin Street 18 Egges Lane Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21202 Catonsville, MD 21228 410-268-0990 410-528-7777 JOHN F FAVAZZA JAMES J DOYLE, III JESSICA ENNIS Manis Canning & Associates FRANN G FRANCIS Law offices of James J. Doyle, Earthjustice 12 Francis Street Apartment & Office Bldg. LLC. 1625 Massachusetts Ave. NW Annapolis, MD 21401 Association of Metropolitan 100 International Drive 23rd Floor Suite 702 410-263-7882 Baltimore, MD 21202 Washington, DC 20036 Washington 443-676-2940 MICHAELINE R FEDDER 1050 17th Street, NW, #300 D. ROBERT ENTEN American Heart Association Washington, DC 20036 KRISTIN E DRAPER Gordon Feinblatt LLC 217 East Redwood Street Suite Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & 233 E. Redwood Street 1100 JENNIFER V FRANK Ecker, P.A. Baltimore, MD 21202 Baltimore, MD 21202 Maryland Independent College and 12505 Park Potomac Avenue Sixth 410-576-4114 410-246-6716 University Association Floor 140 South Street CHRIS ERCOLI Potomac, MD 20854 MARK FEINROTH Annapolis, MD 21401 N/A Maryland Association of Realtors WILLIAM DREW 601 Thirteenth Street NW 9th Floor 200 Harry S Truman Parkway BRIAN FRAZEE Capitol Strategies, LLC North Washington, DC 20005 Suite 200 Maryland Hospital Association One State Circle KURT G ERICKSON Annapolis, MD 21401-7348 6820 Deerpath Road Annapolis, MD 21401 (800)638-6425 410-268-3099 Washington Regional Alcohol Elkridge, MD 21075 Program JON COLBY FERGUSON 410-379-6200 JENNIFER R DRIBAN 7700 Leesburg Pike Suite 249 Maryland Farm Bureau, Inc. National Aquarium Falls Church, VA 22043 RYAN FREDRIKSSON 3358 Davidsonville Road in Baltimore, Inc. 703-893-0461 National Aquarium Davidsonville, MD 21035 Pier 3, 501 East Pratt Street 410-922-3426 Pier 3, 501 East Pratt Street Baltimore, MD 21202 SUSAN ESTY Baltimore, MD 21202 AFSCME Maryland 410-986-2387 CAMILLE G. FESCHE 410-385-8276 190 W. Ostend Street Rifkin Weiner Livingston LLC 225 DENIS P DUNN Baltimore, MD 21230 Duke of Gloucester Street HERBERT D. FRERICHS, JR. AT&T Annapolis, Maryland 21401 Perdue Farms, Inc. 1120 20th Street, N.W Suite 800 GERARD EVANS 31149 Old Ocean City Road Washington, DC 20036 Gerard E. Evans, Ltd. 410-269-5066 202-463-4119 191 Main Street Suite 210 Salisbury, MD 21804 Annapolis, MD 21401 BRENT FEWELL 410-341-2109 KATHLEEN MCNALLY DURKIN 410-990-1521 Earth & Water Law LLC The Arc Baltimore 1455 Pennsylvania Ave, NW DONALD C FRY 7215 York Rd HAYLEY EVANS Potomac, MD 20854 Greater Baltimore Committee Baltimore, MD 21212 Gerard E. Evans, Ltd. 111 South Calvert Street, 191 Main Street Suite 210 STANLEY S. FINE Rosenberg Martin Greenberg, LLP Suite 1700 JENNIFER DWYER Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21202 Progressive Maryland 410-990-1521 25 S. Charles Street Baltimore, MD 21201 35 University Blvd., E NEELY T. FRYE Silver Spring, MD 20901 REGINALD EVANS Maryland Independent Automobile DORIAN FLYNN Novartis Pharmaceuticals Dealers Association Maryland Association of Nonpublic 1140 Cord Drive 1501 North Front Street Special Education Facilities Hummelstown, PA 17036 E Harrisburg , PA 17112 P.O. Box 6815 6501 North Charles KURT H. FUCHS DOUGLAS EARL EDWARDS 717-238-9002 Street Mission of Love Charities, Inc. Baltimore, MD 21285 MidAtlantic Farm Credit 6180 Old Central Avenue 410-938-4413 379 Deep Shore Rd Capitol Heights, MD 20743 F Denton, MD 21629 301-333-4440 MICHAEL FORD 800-573-3028 DAVID FARBER N/A 12523 Hidden Oaks Court DAMON ANDREW EFFINGHAM King & Spalding LLP Richmond, VA 23222 JANICE FUESER Common Cause Maryland 1700 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, UNITE HERE STEVE FORDE 121 Cathedral Street Suite 2A-4 Suite 200 275 7th Avenue, 13th Floor Annapolis, MD 21401 Washington, DC 20006 Exxon Mobil Corporation c/o New York, NY 10001 202-737-0500 2350 Kerner Blvd., Ste. 250 NANCY EGAN San Rafael, CA 94901 416-384-0983 Property Casualty Insurers ANITA CATHLYN FARROW Association of America Goodwill Industries of the DYANA FORESTER DANIEL FURMANSKY 8700 W Bryn Mawr Avenue Chesapeake, Inc. United Food & Commercial n/a Suite 1200S 222 East Redwood Street Workers Union Local 400 1524 Hanby Street Chicago, IL 60634 Baltimore, MD 21202 8400 Corporate Drive Suite 200 Silver Spring, MD 20902 443-708-4668 410-837-1800 Landover, MD 20785 301-461-4900 30 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 31

DAVON GARDNER GIL GENN ANDRE J. GINGLES G Law Office of Frank D. Boston, III Capitol Hill Strategic Advocates, Gingles, LLC 2002 Clipper Park Road Suite 108 LLC SHANNON GRACE GAHS 14401 Sweitzer Lane, Suite 570 Baltimore, MD 21211 3 Church Circle Suite 301 BAYADA Home Health Care Laurel, MD 20707 410-323-7090 Annapolis, MD 21401 4022 Smiths Landing Court 301-367-3191 Abingdon, MD 21009 EMILY GARDNER ADAM GITLIN 443-797-4192 Public Citizen JOHN GIBSON Brennan Center for Justice 215 Pennsylvania Ave SE, N/A 120 Broadway Suite 1750 STEPHANIE GALICA 3rd Floor 601 Pennsylvania Ave NW Suite New York, NY 10271 Adapt Pharma, Inc. Washington, DC 20003 720 28 Liberty Ship Way, Suite 2815 Washington, DC 20004 JULIE GARNER FRANCES HUGHES GLENDENING Sausalito, CA 94965 AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, LP WILLIAM F GIBSON II Maryland Association of Boards of 1023 Covington St. ERIC GALLY Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & Education Baltimore, MD 21230 Gally Public Affairs, Inc. Ecker, P.A. 621 Ridgely Avenue Suite 300 68 State Circle Suite 6 RYAN GAROFALO 12505 Park Potomac Avenue Sixth Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 N/A Floor 410-990-0069 950 F Street, NW Suite 300 Potomac, MD 20854 ROBERT MERRITT GLIDEWELL Washington, DC 20004 Washington Gas CRAIG A. GILL BRIAN GAMBERINI Pfizer Inc. 101 Constitution Ave., N/A MICHAEL KEVIN GATHAGAN c/o 28 Liberty Ship Way Suite 2815 NW 3rd Floor 1155 F Street NW Suite 400 MD Catholic Conference 10 Francis Street Sausalito, CA 94965 Washington , DC 20080 Washington, DC 20004 Annapolis, MD 21401 TARA GILL GEOFFREY J GONELLA ROBERT J. GARAGIOLA Advocates For Highway & Auto ANN GEDDES Cornerstone Government Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. Non-profit Safety Affairs LLC 54 State Circle 10632 Little Patuxent Parkway, 750 First Street, NE Suite 1130 Annapolis, MD 21401 Suite 234 Washington, DC 20002 300 Independence Avenue, SE 410-974-9000 Columbia, MD 21044 202-408-1711 Washington, DC 20003

TRUSTED ADVISORS • HARD WORK • PROVEN RESULTS 30 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 31

LARRY A. GORDON SHANNON HALL CHRIS HATCHER NORA HOBAN Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & Community Behavioral Health Rifkin Weiner Livingston LLC Maryland Hospital Association Ecker, P.A. Association of Maryland 225 Duke of Gloucester Street 6820 Deerpath Path Road 12505 Park Potomac Avenue 18 Egges Lane Annapolis, MD 21401 Elkridge, MD 21075 Sixth Floor Catonsville, MD 21228 410-269-5066 410-379-6200 Potomac, MD 20854 SYEETAH A HAMPTON-EL HEIDI MICHELLE HAWKINS JENNIFER HOEHN LORI GRAF Syeetah A. Hampton-EL N/A N/A 708 SW 8th Street Bentonville, AR 72716 Maryland Builiding Industry 5722 Willowton Ave 101 Constitution Ave. NW Association Washington, DC 20008 Baltimore, MD 21239 KELLY M. HOFFMAN 11825 W Market Place 443-762-5227 Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. Fulton, MD 20759 TERESA HEALEY-CONWAY Teresa Healey-Conway 54 State Circle KRISTEN HARBESON ASHLEY GRAY 714 Baltimore & Annapolis Blvd Annapolis, MD 21401 Maryland League of Conservation Center for Reproductive Rights Severna Park, MD 21146 410-974-9000 199 Water Street 22nd Floor Voters 410-544-0312 ROBERT LOUIS HOFMANN New York, NY 10038 30C West Street Annapolis, MD 21401 TERESA MARIE HEALEY-CONWAY Maryland Works, Inc. MICHAEL A GRAZIANO 410-280-9855 AFSCME Maryland, Council 3 10270 Old Columbia Road Prince George’s County Assn. of 15 School Street 2nd Floor Suite 100 Realtors, Inc. MARINA TAFT HARDY Annapolis, MD 21401 Columbia, MD 21046 Taft Hardy & Associates 9200 Basil Court, #400 410-547-1515 PATRICK JOHN HOGAN Largo, MD 20774 1208 Bay View Court CAROLINE L. HECKER Cornerstone Government Edgewater, MD 21037 Affairs, Inc. JOSEPH C. GREEN, JR. 443-822-2405 Rosenberg Martin Greenberg, LLP G.S. Proctor & Associates, Inc. 25 S. Charles Street 9 State Circle Suite 302 Annapolis, DC 21401 29 Francis Street KEN HARRIS Baltimore, MD 21201 Annapolis, MD 21401 Harris Jones & Malone, LLC ASHLEY LAURA HEFFERNAN MARK HOLMAN 410-280-5088 2423 Maryland Avenue Suite 100 Ridge Policy Group LLC G.S. Proctor & Associates, Inc. Baltimore, MD 21218 1140 Connecticut Avenue NW JOSHUA GREENFELD 29 Francis Street 410-366-1500 Suite 510 Maryland Building Industry Annapolis, MD 21401 Washington, DC 20036 Association LATARA HARRIS 410-280-5088 11825 West Market Place TONI E. HOLNESS AT&T PETER HENRY Fulton, MD 20759 ACLU of Maryland 1120 20th Street, NW, Suite 800 Cerner Corporation 3600 Clipper Mill Road Suite 350 AARON J. GREENFIELD Washington, DC 20036 2900 Rock Creek Parkway Baltimore, MD 21211 Greenfield & Kress, P.A. Kansas City, MO 64117 WILLIE R. HARRIS 150 South Street Suite 103 JESSICA HONKE Harris Public interest Consulting THERESE MARIE HESSLER Annapolis, MD 21401 NAMI Maryland LLC 443-321-9988 Maryland Right To Life 10630 Little Patuxent Parkway 5804 Berkeley Avenue 420 Chinquapin Round Road Suite 475 MELONY GHEE GRIFFITH Baltimore, MD 21215 Suite 2-I Columbia, MD 21044 Essential Strategies, LLC 410-367-0220 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-884-8691 13605 Hotomtot Drive 410-269-6397 Upper Marlboro, MD 20774 LISA HARRIS JONES ILAYA ROME HOPKINS 301-390-2665 Harris Jones & Malone, LLC ADAM HIGGINS Montgomery County Chamber of 2423 Maryland Avenue, Suite 100 Baker Hostetler Commerce CHRISTOPHER GRIMM Baltimore, MD 21218 1050 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. 51 Monroe Street Suite 1800 Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP 410-366-1500 Suite 1100 Rockville, MD 20850 1152 15th Street NW Washington, DC 20036 301-738-0015 Washington, DC 20005 MARTA HARTING Venable, LLP SEAN T. HIGGINS BRYAN B. HORSEY JEFFRY F GUIDO Golden Entertainment, Inc. 750 E. Pratt Street Suite 900 Bloom Energy Building & Construction Trades 6595 S. Jones Blvd. Baltimore, MD 21202 200 Christina Parkway Dept. AFL-CIO Las Vegas, NV 89118 Newark, DE 19713 815 16th St. NW Suite 600 410-244-7542 DENISE O. HILL DILLON HOSIER Washington, DC 20006 ETHAN HASBROUCK Denise Hill Israeli-American Coalition 202-756-4660 Bristol-Myers Squibb Company 3914 Jenifer St., NW for Action 57 Picadilly Circle Washington, DC 20015 5900 Canoga Avenue, #390 H Marlton, NJ 08053 202-362-2231 Woodland Hills, CA 91367 202-888-4240 RONALD JOSEPH HALBER JOSHUA ANDREW HASTINGS LARRY E. HINTON JCRC of Greater Washington Eastern Shore Land Conservancy GEICO MICHAEL HOUSER 6101 Executive Blvd,. Suite 300 114 S. Washington Street One Geico Plaza Fidelity Brokerage Services, LLC North Bethesda, MD 20852 Ste. 101 Washington, DC 20076 245 Summer Street V6A (301)770-0881 Easton, MD 21601 301-986-2081 Boston, MA 02210 32 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 33

EMILY HOVERMALE JONAS A JACOBSON ROBERT JOHNSTON LAUREN KALLINS Humane Society of the United Perry, White, Ross & Jacobson Anne Arundel County Association MD Association States 125 Cathedral Street of Realtors of Community Services 1255 23rd Street, NW Suite 450 Annapolis, MD 21401 1521 Ritchie Highway Ste 300 8835 Columbia 100 Parkway Washington, DC 20037 410-977-3419 Arnold, MD 21012 Suite P 410-544-4554 Columbia, MD 21045 KATHERINE K. HOWARD MICHELLE JACQUIS 410-740-5125 Regional Management, Inc. Vertex Pharmaceuticals, ERIC L JOHNSTON, III. 11 East Fayette Street Incorporated Coca-Cola Bottling Co. JODY L KALLIS Baltimore, MD 21202 2750 Old St. Augustine Road #D36 Consolidated Maryland Association of 410-539-2370 Tallahassee, FL 32301 7210 Preston Gateway Drive Community Colleges Hanover, MD 21076 60 West Street, Ste 200 FRANK HOWARD, JR. SUJATHA JAHAGIRDAR 202-406-0049 Annapolis, MD 21401 Howard Consulting Group Natural Resources Defense Council 1875 K Street NW Fourth Floor 1152 15th St., NW, Suite 300 ANN HOLMES JONES ARDY KAMALI Washington, DC 20036 Washington, DC 20005 Partners for Open Space Schwartz, Metz and Wise, P.A. 1209 North Calvert Street 20 West Street JOSH HOWE 202-717-8294 Baltimore, MD 21202 Annapolis, MD 21401 Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. JUDY JENKINS 54 State Circle Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, GARY R JONES LAWRENCE E KASECAMP Annapolis, MD 21401 Inc. Baxter, Baker, Sidle, Conn SMART 410-974-9000 12305 Harbour Circle & Jones, P.A Transportation Division 120 E. Baltimore Street, Suite 2100 11505 Caboose Road, SW, Suite LAURA HOWELL Fort Washington, MD 20744 Baltimore, MD 21202 1A MD Association of Community Frostburg, MD 21532 Services MICHAEL JEWELL 410-385-8004 White Star International Inc. 8835 Columbia 100 Parkway PAMELA M KASEMEYER 2651 Pot Spring Road KATHERINE JONES Suite P Blue Water Baltimore Schwartz, Metz & Wise, P.A. Lutherville, MD 21093 Columbia, MD 21045 3545 Belair Rd| 20 West Street 202-445-1093 Annapolis, MD 21401 KIMBERLY R. HUMPHREY Baltimore, MD 21213 MICHAEL V JOHANSEN 410-244-7000 ACLU of Maryland MITCH JONES Rifkin Weiner Livingston, LLC 3600 Clipper Mill Road, Suite 350 Food & Water Watch CHARLES KASKY 225 Duke of Gloucester Street Baltimore , MD 21211 3121 SAINT PAUL ST STE 28 Maryland Association of Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21218 REALTORS JOHN ADAMS HURSON 410-269-5066 Personal Care Products Council 410-394-7651 200 Harry S Truman Parkway #200 1620 L Street NW DERON A JOHNSON Annapolis, MD 21401 KRISTIN JONES BRYCE Washington, DC 20036 N/A 305 Stable View Court University of Maryland Medical TAYLOR KASKY Parkton, MD 21120 DIANE HUTCHINS System Corporate Office KOFA Public Affairs 111 South Calvert Street 2820 Maryland Zoo in Baltimore KATHRYN JOHNSON 250 W. Pratt Street, 24th fl Baltimore, MD 21202 1876 Mansion House Drive Christian Science Committee on Baltimore, MD 21201 410-685-7080 Baltimore , MD 21217 Publication for Maryland 410-328-0389 443-552-5265 P.O. Box 1585 LISAE C JORDAN DANNA L KAUFFMAN Annapolis, MD 21404 Law Office of Lisae C.Jordan Schwartz, Metz & Wise, P.A. 638 - 5th Street, NE 20 West Street KEVIN JOHNSON I Washington, DC 20002 Annapolis, MD 21401 NA TRACY IMMEL 443-995-5544 410-244-7000 244 Prince George Street Health Facilities Association of Maryland Annapolis, MD 21401 WILHELM H JOSEPH, JR. KEVIN P. KENNEDY Legal Aid Bureau, Inc. Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & 601 Global Way, Suite 100-103 MICHELE WAXMAN JOHNSON 500 E. Lexington Street Ecker, P.A. Linthicum, MD 21090 Central Scholarship Bureau, Inc. Baltimore, MD 21202 12505 Park Potomac Avenue 6 Park Center Court, Suite 211 410-951-7680 Sixth Floor Owings Mills, MD 21117 Potomac, MD 20854 J 410-415-5558 JOHN H JOSSELYN MARCUS JACKSON none CHRISTINE KEPPEL Maryland Building Industry ROBERT G. JOHNSON 8108 KIRKWALL COURT March of Dimes Association Capitol Strategies, LLC TOWSON, MD 21286 175 West Ostend Street 11825 West Market Place 1 State Circle Baltimore, MD 21230 Fulton, MD 20759 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-752-8163 301-776-6242 410-268-3099 K JOHN P. KITZMILLER DONNA L. JACOBS SEAN JOHNSON ROBERT F. KAHOE Maryland Automobile Dealers University of Maryland Medical Maryland State Education Robert F. Kahoe, Jr., P.A. Association System Association 9 South Hickory Avenue 7 State Circle, Suite 301 250 W. Pratt Street, 24th Floor 140 Main Street Bel Air, MD 21014 Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21201 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-838-5210 410-269-1710 32 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 33

PILLAR G KLEMANS RUSSEL KUJAN VINCENT O LEGGETT CYNTHIA M LIFSON Chesapeake Employers’ Baltimore County Medical Leggett Group Law Offices of Cynthia M. Lifson Insurance Fund Association 3436 Cohasset Ave 10440 Little Patuxent Parkway, 8722 Loch Raven Blvd. 1211 Cathedral Street Annapolis, MD 21403 Suite 300 Room 429A Baltimore, MD 21201 410-269-7815 Columbia , MD 21044 Towson, MD 21286 410-296-1232 MIRIAM LEHMAN ANNE M LINDNER LISA MARIE KLINGENMAIER JOSHUA KURTZ N/A Catholic Charities The Nature Conservancy Maryland Bankers Association 228 W. Lexington Street, Suite 220 425 Barlow Place Suite 100 186 Duke of Gloucester Street 10 South Dearborn Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Bethesda , MD 20814 Annapolis, MD 21041 Chicago, IL 60603 410-269-5977 VIRGINIA KNOWLTON BRETT STEWART LININGER Disability Rights Maryland VALERIE LEHMAN Semmes, Bowen & Semmes 1500 Union Avenue Suite 2000 L Anne Arundel Medical Center 25 S. Charles Street, Ste. 1400 Baltimore, MD 21211-1982 TRACI LA VALLE 2001 Medical Parkway Baltimore, MD 21201 410-727-6352 Maryland Hospital Association Annapolis, MD 21401 6820 Deerpath Road PATRICIA JANE LIPPOLD DAVID KOWALSKY Elkridge, MD 21075 KATELYN DIANA LEISNER 1199SEIU United Health Care 7Leaf Consulting 410-379-6200 KOFA Public Affairs Workers 734 S Charles St 111 South Calvert Street East 611 North Eutaw Street Baltimore, MD 21230 TODD LAMB Baltimore , MD 21224 410-709-8734 Capitol Strategies, LLC Baltimore, MD 21202 1 State Circle 410-685-7080 ROY E LITTLEFIELD IV JANIS ANNE KRAMER Annapolis, MD 21401 WMDA Service Station and Janis A. Kramer 410-268-3099 CHARLES LEITGEB 684 Santa Maria Lane Bayer U.S. LLC Automotive Repair Association Davidsonville, MD 21035 KIMBERLY ANN LAMPHIER 100 Bayer Boulevard, P.O. Box 915 1532 E Pointer Ridge Place KHL Strategies Whippany, NJ 07981 Bowie, MD 20716 DWAYNE A. KRATT 3 Enjay Avenue Diageo 801 Main Avenue Catonsville, MD 21228 DOROTHY J LENNIG SCOTT LIVINGSTON Norwalk, CT 06851 House of Ruth Maryland Rifkin, Weiner, Livingston, JOHN LANG III 203-229-4504 2201 Argonne Drive Levitan & Silver, LLC Association of School Busness 7979 Old Georgetown Road WILLIAM ALLEN KRESS Officials, Maryland & District of Baltimore, MD 21218 Suite 400 Greenfield & Kress PA Columbia (ASBO MD & DC) 410-554-8460 Bethesda, MD 20814 150 South Street Suite 103 626C Admiral Drive Suite 723 LEIGHANN LENTI Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-269-5066 The College Board 443-321-9988 410-608-0911 1919 M St NW Suite 300 ROBIN LLOYD LARS BO KRISTIANSEN IVAN K LANIER Washington, DC 20036 Americans for Responsible Nationwide Mutual Insurance Pepco Holdings Solutions Company 701 9th St NW BRIAN LEVINE 700 13th Street, NW Suite 600 1401 Poplar Avenue Washington, DC 20068 Greater Baltimore Committee Washington, DC 20005 Annapolis, MD 21401 111 S Calvert St # 170 443-994-4319 IVAN V LANIER Baltimore, MD 21202 CAILEY LOCKLAIR TOLLE Greenwill Consulting Group Maryland Retailers Association CHRISTINE K KRONE 92 Franklin St, Suite 202 RICHARD EDWIN LEVINE 171 Conduit Street Schwartz, Metz & Wise, P.A. Annapolis, MD 21401 DLA Piper LLP (US) Annapolis, MD 21401 20 West Street 410-490-1309 Annapolis, MD 21401 6225 Smith Avenue 410-269-1440 410-244-7000 KATHRYN MARY LAVRIHA Baltimore, MD 21208 RAMON LOOBY N/A 111 Storm Haven Court LAURENCE LEVITAN CHARLES JOSEPH KRUFT Stevensville, MD 21666 Bank of America Corporation FirstEnergy Rifkin Weiner Livingston, LLC 1455 Pennsylvania Ave NW, 111 South Calvert Street JULIE LAWSON 225 Duke of Gloucester Street Suite 950 DC8-455-09-01 Suite 2700 Trash Free Maryland Annapolis, MD 21401 Washington, DC 20004 Baltimore, MD 21202 3002 Laurel Ave 410-269-5066 Cheverly, MD 20785 SEAN M LOONEY JEREMY KUDON JENNIFER LEVY Comcast NBC Universal Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP BRAD LEE Maryland Optometric Association 27 Francis Street 1152 15th Street NW Trinity Highway Products, LLC PO Box 350 Annapolis, MD 21401 Washington, DC 20005 2525 Stemmons Freeway Stevenson, MD 21153 443-949-8134 Dallas, TX 75207 LAURIE KUIPER 804-241-2258 Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of HOWARD LIBIT JOHANN D. LOPEZ the Mid-Atlantic States, Inc. JOSEPH LEE Baltimore Jewish Council Citigroup Washington, Inc. 2101 East Jefferson Street RELX Inc. 5750 Park Heights 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Rockville, MD 20852 1150 18th Street, NW Suite 600 baltimore, MD 21215 Suite 1000 301-816-6480 Washington, DC 20036 410-542-4850 Washington, DC 20004 34 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 35

KATHLEEN GARRETT LOUGHRAN THOMAS J MALONEY MARYLAND LEGISLATIVE BRETT MCCONE Anthem, Inc. and Its Affiliates Marriott International, Inc. AGENDA FOR WOMEN (MLAW) Maryland Hospital Association including Amerigroup Maryland 10400 Fernwood Road, c/o 6820 Deerpath Road 7550 Teague Road Dept. 52-904 305 W. Chesapeake Avenue Elkridge, MD 21075 Hanover, MD 21076 Bethesda, MD 20817 Suite 201 410-379-6200 410-981-4095 301-380-3158 Towson, MD 21204 CHAMPE C. MCCULLOCH 443-519-1005 DERON LOVAAS NICHOLAS G MANIS Maryland AGC 1301 York Road, Suite 202 Natural Resources Defense Manis Canning & Associates MARYLAND LIBRARY Lutherville, MD 21093-6005 Council (NRDC) 12 Francis Street ASSOCIATION 1152 15th St., NW, Suite 300 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-321-7870 1401 Hollins Street Washington, DC 20005 Baltimore, MD 21223 CAROL MCDERMOTT (202)289-6868 ANDREA MANSFIELD Manis Canning & Associates Public Policy Partners MARYLAND MATERNITY ACCESS JOHN LOYER 12 Francis Street 48 Maryland Avenue, Suite 304 National Ready Mixed Annapolis, MD 21401 COALITION, INC. Annapolis, MD 21401 Concrete Assoc 410-263-7882 111 S Calvert St Suite 2820 TOM MCDONALD 2003 Columbia Pike #622 Baltimore, MD 21202 Baker & Hostetler LLP Arlington, VA 22204 AARON ANTHONY MARCAVITCH Anacostia Trails Heritage Area Inc. GABE MASER 1050 Connecticut Ave., LEONARD L. LUCCHI P.O. Box 367 Renovate America, Inc. NW Suite 1100 O’Malley, Miles, Nylen & Hyattsville, MD 20781 4243 Colorado Ave NW Washington, DC 20036 Gilmore, P.A. Washington, DC 20011 CRISTINE BOSWELL MARCHAND CAITLIN E MCDONOUGH 11785 Beltsville Drive 10th Floor Harris Jones & Malone, LLC Calverton, MD 20770 The Arc Maryland GREG MASSONI 130 Lubrano Drive Suite 212 King & Spalding 2423 Maryland Avenue, Suite 100 Baltimore, MD 21218 ELAINE LUTZ Annapolis, MD 21401-7035 1700 Pennsylvania Ave, 410-366-1500 Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Inc NW Suite 200 LEE MARKS 6 Herndon Drive Washington, DC 20006 JAMES STEPHEN MCGARRY Orexo US, Inc. Annapolis, MD 21403 202-737-0500 Chesapeake Climate Action 106 Huntersfield Road 443-482-2165 Network Delmar, NY 12054 CHERYL F MATRICCIANI 6930 Carroll Ave. Suite 720 TIMOTHY P LYDEN Medical Mutual Liability Insurance Takoma Park, MD 20912 Lilly USA, LLC MITCH MARKS Society of Maryland 240-396-1983 19 Jennifer Lane Celgene Corporation 155 N. Wacker Suite 2700 225 International Circle Dillsburg, PA 17019 RENEE MCGUIRK-SPENCE Chicago, IL 60606 Hunt Valley, MD 21030 410-785-0050 Public School Superintendents G DAN MARTIN Association of Maryland M Mental Health Association of RIANNA MATTHEWS-BROWN 9 Trotters Ridge Court MARK A. MACDOUGALL Maryland Johns Hopkins Catonsville, MD 21228 901 S. Bond Street Suite 540 Southern Maryland Electric 1301 York Road, Suite 505 SHAWN M MCINTOSH Cooperative, Inc. Lutherville, MD 21093 Baltimore, MD 21231 MedChi, The Maryland State P.O. Box 1937 443-901-1550 SHERRY MCCAMMON Medical Society Hughesville, MD 20637 1211 Cathedral Street TRAVIS MARTZ American Cancer Society Cancer Baltimore, MD 21201 CHARLES D MACLEOD Maryland Automobile Dealers Action Network Funk & Bolton, P.A. Association 405 Williams Court Suite 120 ROBERT L. MCKINNEY 210 South Cross Street, Ste 101 7 State Circle Suite 301 Baltimore, MD 21220 McKinney Public Affairs Consulting Chestertown, MD 21620 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-933-5146 48 E. Montgomery Street 410-810-1381 410-269-1710 Baltimore, MD 21230 NICOLE MCCANN CLINTON MACSHERRY TRAVIS JOHN MARTZ Johns Hopkins Institutions ROBIN MCKINNEY Maryland Family Network Martz Legal 901 S. Bond Street Suite 540 Maryland CASH Campaign/Job 1001 Eastern Avenue 60 West Street #364 Baltimore, MD 21231 Opportunities Task Force Baltimore, MD 21202 Annapolis, MD 21401 217 E. Redwood Street, 443-440-5058 HAROLD N MCCAULEY Suite 1500 SEAN R MALONE WMDA Service Station & Baltimore, MD 21202 Harris Jones & Malone, LLC MARYLAND AGRICULTURE Automotive Repair Association 2423 Maryland Avenue Suite 100 COUNCIL, INC. BRIAN MCLAUGHLIN 1532 Pointer Ridge Place, Suite E Baltimore, MD 21218 12221 Fingerboard Road Imperium Global Advisors 410-366-1500 Monrovia, MD 21770 Bowie, MD 20716 12034 Devilwood Drive 301-390-0900 Potomac, MD 20854 KATHLEEN M. MALONEY MARYLAND FIRE CHIEFS Maloney and Associates ASSOCIATION VALENCIA A. MCCLURE JENNIFER MCLAUGHLIN 121 Cathedral Street Suite 2A, p o box 4610 Baltimore Gas and Electric Perry, White, Ross & Jacobson Office 2 Hagerstown, MD Company (BGE) 125 Cathedral Street Annapolis, MD 21401 21742 112 West Street Annapolis, MD Annapolis, MD 21401 301-776-6205 301-717-1161 21401 410-271-6939 34 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 35

JAMIE MEIER YAHEIRY MORA RYAN C O’DOHERTY Medical Mutual Liability Insurance CASA de Maryland N Mercy Health Services, Inc Society of Maryland 8151 15th Avenue 301 Saint Paul Place McAuley KATHERINE JOHANNA NASH 225 International Circle Hyattsville, MD 20783 Tower Rm 1523 1982 207 Meadowdale Lane Hunt Valley, MD 21030 (240)491-5781 Baltimore, MD 21204 410-785-0050 Frederick, MD 21702 STEPHEN H. MORGAN 301-524-9142 MICHAEL O’HALLORAN MICHELE MERKEL The Arc Baltimore Food & Water Watch MARTHA D. NATHANSON National Federation of 7215 York Road 1616 P Street, N.W, Suite 300 Lifebridge Health Independent Business Washington, DC 20036 Baltimore, MD 21212 2401 W. Belvedere Avenue 1201 F Street NW Suite 200 Baltimore, MD 21215 Washington, DC 20004 BRYAN MERRELL MARY S MORIN 202-406-4460 Bayer U.S. LLC Mary S. Morin JOHN B. NEIL 2232 Fallen Oaks Drive 714 B&A Blvd. Jack Neil & Associates, LLC KEVIN O’KEEFFE Knoxville, TN 37932 Severna Park, MD 21146 60 West Street, 864 Meringer, Zois & Quigg, LLC 320 North Charles Street SARAH MERSKY MATHEW J MOSSBURG Annapolis, MD 21404-0864 Baltimore Jewish Council 410-349-4646 Baltimore, MD 21201 Community Title Services, Inc. 443-524-7978 5750 Park Heights Avenue 9030 Red Branch Road Suite 110 Baltimore , MD 21215 BLAIR H NELSEN Columbia, MD 21045 MARK O’ROURKE 410-524-4850 SCI Management 410-884-1689 416 W Franklin St Astellas Pharma US, Inc. JOHN M MICELI Richmond, VA 23220 55 Railroad Place Unit 401 Volvo Group North America LORELEI MOTTESE Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 2900 K Street N.W. South Building N/A PHOEBE NESETH Suite 401 33 Northfield Avenue Edison, NJ Funk & Bolton, P.A. LISA M OCHSENHIRT Washington, DC 20009 08818 200 Duke of Gloucester Street AquaLaw PLC 6 S. 5th Street 732-906-5153 Richmond, VA 23219 AMERICAN JOE MIEDUSIEWSKI Annapolis, MD 21401 410-269-1554 Semmes, Bowen & Semmes MOIRA MOYNIHAN JOHN A OLSZEWSKI, SR. 25 S. Charles Street, Ste. 1400 Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. JOHN NETHERCUT CWO Strategies, LLC Baltimore, MD 21201 54 State Circle Annapolis, MD 211 St. Paul Place 410-576-4768 Public Justice Center 21041 1 N CHARLES ST STE 200 Baltimore, MD 21202 WILLIAM R MILES 410-974-9000 BALTIMORE, MD 21201 CLAY C OPARA William Miles P.O. Box 251 ANNA MUDD ANDREW NICKLAS Opara Law Huntingtown, MD 20639 Chesapeake Bay Foundation Law Office of Frank D. Boston, III 8600 Lasalle Rd. Suite 323 410-414-2515 6 Herndon Avenue 2002 Clipper Park Road Suite 108 Baltimore, MD 21286 Annapolis, MD 21403 Baltimore, MD 21211 410-685-0900 TIMOTHY MILEY 410-268-8816 301-639-7726 Gilead Sciences, Inc. BENJAMIN ORR P.O. Box 697 REBECCA H MULES ERIC A. NIELSEN Maryland Center on Economic Bedford, MA 01730 United HealthCare Services, Inc. Association of Maryland Pilots Policy DWAYNE B MINGO 9900 Bren Road East 3720 Dillon Street 1800 N. Charles Street Suite 406 Prince George’s County Assn. of Minnetonka, MN 55343 Baltimore , MD 21224 Baltimore, MD 21201 Realtors, Inc. MATTHEW MULLIN JIM OTRADOVEC 9200 Basil Court, #400 RICHARD DON NORLING Largo, MD 20774 High Street Strategies LLC Gally Public Affairs American Council of Engineering 301-306-7900 60 West Street Suite 201 PO Box 5850 Companies/Maryland Annapolis, MD 21401 3121 East Nobles Mill Rd 312 N. Charles Street, Ste 200 HOLLY E MIRABELLA Darlington, MD 21034 Baltimore, MD 21201 KATHLEEN M. MURPHY Maryland CASH Campaign 443-417-6385 410-539-3566 217 E Redwood St #1500 Maryland Bankers Association Baltimore, MD 21201 186 Duke of Gloucester Street ALEXANDER G. NUNEZ Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore Gas and Electric SUSAN MITCHELL P 410-269-5977 Company (BGE) Maryland Association of Realtors DENNIS H. PARKINSON 110 West Fayette Street 14th Flr. 200 Harry S Truman GWENN MURRAY The Rasmussen Group LLC Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21201 Maryland Right to Life 306 West Chesapeake Avenue 800-638-6425 420 Chinquapin Round Road Towson, MD 21204-4405 RICHARD A. MONTGOMERY III Annapolis, MD 21401 410-821-4445 Maryland State Bar Association, O Inc. RORY DOUGLAS MURRAY GARRETT J O’DAY JERRY PASTERNAK 196 Duke of Gloucester St. Capitol Strategies, LLC Maryland Catholic Conference LLC Pepco Holdings Annapolis, MD 21401 3401 Cayman Way Apt 411 10 Francis Street 701 Ninth Street, NW Suite 9209 410-269-6464 Abingdon, MD 21009 Annapolis, MD 21401 Washington, DC 20068 36 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 37

LAWRENCE NOEL PATTERSON, JR. DIANA PHILIP POTOMAC ELECTRIC POWER BRIAN M QUINN Allstate Insurance Company NARAL Pro Choice Maryland COMPANY Venable, LLP 15000 Conference Center Drive 8905 Fairview Road, Suite 401 Potomac Electric Power Company 750 E. Pratt Street, Suite 900 Suite 400 Silver Spring, MD 20910 c/o Donna Cooper Baltimore, MD 21202 701 Ninth Street, NW, EP1202 Chantilly, VA 20151 301-565-4154 410-244-7466 703-653-3551 Washington, DC 20068 JOHN A PICA, JR. JOHN QUINN TYLER C PATTON HANNAH POWERS GARAGIOLA Baltimore Gas and Electric Pica and Associates, LLC Maryland Broadband Cooperative Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. Company 14 State Circle 2129A Northwood Drive 54 State Circle 112 West Street Salisbury, MD 21801 Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-990-1250 410-974-9000 410-470-1215 JENIFER PAULIUKONIS Marylanders to Prevent Gun J. WILLIAM PITCHER MARY PRESLEY DANIEL QUINONEZ Violence Law Office of J. William Pitcher Maryland Motorcoach Association Howard Consulting Group 2600 St. Paul St 27 Maryland Avenue PO Box 320266 1875 K Street NW Fourth Floor Alexandria, VA 22320 Baltimore, MD 21218 Annapolis, MD 21401 Washington, DC 20036 571-312-7117 410-268-0842 BONITA MARIA PENNINO ELEANOR PRESTON American Cancer Society Cancer SUSAN J. PITCHER Consumer Health First R Action Network Law Office of J. William Pitcher P.O. Box 59202 KARLA RAETTIG 7500 Greenway Center Dr Suite 27 Maryland Avenue Potomac, MD 20854 Maryland League of Conservation 300 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-591-3611 Greenbelt, MD 20770 Voters 410-268-0842 301-758-1255 KATHY PRIZMICH 30C West Street Annapolis, MD 21401 ARI PLAUT The GEO Group, Inc. PEPCO HOLDINGS One Park Place, 621 NW 53rd St Law Office of Frank D. Boston, III PHILLIP A RAINES Pepco Holdings Suite 700 2002 Clipper Park Road Suite 108 Polaris Solutions c/o Kenneth Parker Boca Raton, FL 33487 701 Ninth Street, NW Baltimore, MD 21211 9900E Greenbelt Rd. Ste. 238 Washington, DC 20068 410-323-7090 GREGORY STEPHEN PROCTOR III Lanham, MD 20706 G.S. Proctor & Associates 301-254-8974 LAWRENCE ANTHONY PEREZ CHRISTOPHER D POMEROY 14408 Old Mill Rd Suite 201 L.A. Perez Consulting, LLC AquaLaw PLC Upper Marlboro, MD 20772 JOHN S RAINEY, JR. PO Box 331 6 S. 5th Street Altria Client Services LLC and Hyattsville, MD 20781-0331 Richmond, VA 23219 GREGORY S. PROCTOR, JR. its Affiliates -- Philip Morris USA 240-281-1718 G.S. Proctor & Associates, Inc. Inc., John Middleton Co., U.S. BRYSON F POPHAM 29 Francis Street Smokeless Tobacco Co., and Nu TIMOTHY A PERRY Bryson F. Popham, P.A. Annapolis, MD 21401 Mark LLC Perry, White, Ross & Jacobson 191 Main Street Suite 200 410-280-5088 6601 W. Broad Street 125 Cathedral Street Annapolis, MD 21401 Richmond, VA 23230 Annapolis, MD 21401 ALISON HOOPER PROST 410-268-6871 443-739-9346 Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Inc MEGAN ASHLEY RAKER 6 Herndon Avenue n/a Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & EDDIE L. POUNDS PERRY, WHITE, ROSS & Annapolis, MD 21403 Ecker, P.A. JACOBSON O’Malley, Miles, Nylen & Gilmore, 12505 Park Potomac Avenue Sixth PROTECT EMPLOYER HEALTH Perry, White, Ross & Jacobson P.A. Floor PLAN COALITION 126 Locust Lane 11785 BELTSVILLE DR FL 10 Potomac, MD 20854 Protect Employer Calverton, MD 20705 Annapolis, MD 21403 Health Plan Coalition 410-271-6939 ODETTE T RAMOS ELIZABETH POWELL c/o Maryland Public Affairs Community Development Network SARAH M. PETERS, J.D. G2G Consulting, LLC Suite 200 of Maryland, Inc. Annapolis, MD 21401 Bellamy Genn Group 1000 East Capitol St., NE Suite #4 PO Box 22426 220 Prince George St. Washington, DC 20003 I. VANESSA PURNELL Baltimore, MD 21203 Annapolis, MD 21401 202-445-4242 MedStar Health 443-801-8137 410-322-2320 9 State Circle Suite 303 ROBERT RANKIN, SR. MICHAEL C POWELL Annapolis, MD 21401 CHRISTINA PEUSCH Maryland State Education Gordon Feinblatt LLC 410-216-6205 Maryland State Child Care Association 233 E. Redwood Street Association 140 Main Street Baltimore, MD 21202 2810 Carrollton Rd. Annapolis, MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21403 410-576-4175 Q TINNA DAMASO QUIGLEY GENE M. RANSOM, III 410-820-9196 MATTHEW J POWER Funk & Bolton, P.A. Medical & Chirurgical Faculty of PEW CHARITABLE TRUST Maryland Independent College and Twelfth Floor 36 South Charles Maryland (MedChi) Pew Charitable Trust University Association Street 1211 Cathedral Street 901 E Street, NW #10 140 South Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Baltimore, MD 21201 Washington, DC 20004 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-216-1292 800-492-1056 36 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 37

EMILY M RANSON WILLIAM F RENDEROS KIMBERLY Y ROBINSON JUSTIN ROSS Clean Water Action Casa de Maryland Funk & Bolton, P.A Perry, White, Ross & Jacobson 1120 N Charles Street Suite 415 8151 15th Avenue 36 South Charles Street, 12th Floor 125 Cathedral Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Hyattsville, MD 20783 Baltimore, MD 21201 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-659-7700 240-687-3754 RASKY BAERLEIN STRATEGIC RETIREMENT PLANNING COMMUNICATIONS COALITION WINIFRED JEAN ROCHE JOEL D ROZNER Rasky Baerlein Strategic 191 Main Street, Suite 200 Roche & Associates/MTC Rifkin Weiner Livingston, LLC Communications Annapolis, MD 21401 552 Fountain Street 225 Duke of Gloucester Street 70 Franklin St Havre de Grace, MD 21078 Annapolis, MD 21401 Boston, MA 02110 PATRICK THOMAS REYNOLDS 410-269-5066 AFT-Maryland MELISSA S ROCK DENNIS F RASMUSSEN 5800 Metro Drive, Suite 100 KEVIN A RUDOLPH The Rasmussen Group, L.L.C. Advocates for Children and Youth Baltimore, MD 21215 1 North Charles Street, Suite 2400 Maryland Chamber of Commerce 306 W. Chesapeake Avenue 60 West St. Suite 100 Towson, MD 21204 Baltimore, MD 21201 LAWRENCE ANTHONY Annapolis, MD 21401 410-821-4445 410-547-9200 RICHARDSON, JR. 410-269-0642 Maryland Chamber of Commerce ERIC RASMUSSEN PATRICK H. RODDY 60 West Street Suite 100 MARY ELLEN RUSSELL N/A Rifkin, Weiner, Livingston, Levitan Annapolis, MD 21401 Maryland Catholic Conference, LLC 1455 Pennsylvania Avenue, & Silver, LLC 410-269-0642 10 Francis St. NW Suite 540 225 Duke of Gloucester Street Annapolis, MD 21401 Washington, DC 20004 MAJOR F. RIDDICK Annapolis, MD 21401 443-261-2283 MAANSI K RASWANT Strategic Solutions Center LAURENCE ANN RUTH Maryland Hospital Association 8181 Professional Place Suite 202 Women’s Law Center Landover, MD 20785 BEATRICE RODGERS of Maryland Inc. 6820 Deerpath Road Resource Connections, Inc. Elkridge, MD 21705 305 W. Chesapeake Avenue GARY RIDDLE 10001 Derekwood Lane Suite 110 410-379-6200 Suite 201 Indivior Inc. Largo, MD 20706 Towson, MD 21204 DARREN REAMAN 10710 Midlothian Turnpike Ste 430 410-321-8761 Custom Electronic Design & Richmond, VA 23235 AUSTIN RODRIQUEZ Installation Association Foundation for Advancing Alcohol 7150 Winton Drive Suite 300 BRAD RIFKIN Responsibility Indianapolis, IN 46268 Rifkin Weiner Livingston, LLC 2345 Crystal Dr, #710 S 225 Duke of Gloucester Street Arlington, VA 22202 ELISABETH SACHS NICHOLAS ALEXANDER REDDING Annapolis, MD 21401 571-228-2092 Job Opportunities Task Force Preservation Maryland 410-269-5066 217 E. Redwood Street Suite 1500 3600 Clipper Mill Road Suite 248 MARTIN GUY ROHLING Baltimore, MD 21202 Baltimore, MD 21211 NORMAN DAVID RIVERA Albers & Company 410-234-8040 The Law Offices of Norman D. 1655 North Fort Myer Drive BRENDAN REED Rivera, LLC Suite 700 BERNARD J SADUSKY N/A 17251 Melford Blvd. Ste. 200 Arlington, VA 22209 Maryland Association of 601 Thirteenth Street NW 9th Floor Bowie, MD 20715 202-895-0226 Community Colleges North (301)352-4973 60 West Street, Suite 200 Washington, DC 20005 AMY ROHRER Annapolis, MD 21401 DEBORAH R RIVKIN Maryland Hotel Lodging NANCY P REGELIN CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield ARIEL DAVID SADWIN Association Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy & 1501 S. Clinton Street Suite 700 Agudath Israel of Maryland 839 Bestgate Rd, Suite 400 Ecker, PA Baltimore, MD 21224-5744 23 Walker Ave Suite 102 12505 Park Potomac Avenue Sixth Annapolis, MD 21401 410-528-7054 Baltimore, MD 21208 Floor ADAM CRAIG ROSENBERG 410-484-3632 Potomac, MD 20854 MIKE ROBBINS Maryland Hospital Association Baltimore Child Abuse Center BRIAN A SAILER REBECCA C. REHR 6820 Deerpath Road 2300 North Charles Street Flywheel Government Solutions Association of Baltimore Area Elkridge, MD 21075 Suite 401 419 Second Street GrantMakers Baltimore, MD 21218 2 E. Read Street 410-379-6200 Annapolis, MD 21403 Baltimore, MD 21202 CARL D ROBERTS EMBER ROSENBERG ALEXANDER SANCHEZ LIUNA - N/A RICHARD JOSEPH REINHARDT Roberts Consulting MAROC 1001 G Street, NW Suite 950 Maryland Chamber of Commerce 1641 Ingleside Avenue 11951 Freedom Drive #310 60 West Street Perryville, MD 21903 Washington, DC 20001 Reston, VA 20190 410-642-6505 703-476-7398 Annapolis MD 21401 MARTIN ROSENDALE JOHN C. REITH PAUL L. ROBERTS Maryland Tech Council DELORA SANCHEZ Rifkin Weiner Livingston, LLC N/A 9210 Corporate Boulevard Suite Cornerstone Government Affairs 225 Duke of Gloucester Street 177 Frazee Ridge Road 470 LLC Annapolis, MD 21401 Friendsville, MD 21531 Rockville, MD 20850 9 State Circle Suite 302 443-261-2639 301-746-4287 240-243-4026 Annapolis, MD 21401 38 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 39

CHRIS SANTO STEPHANIE SCHARPF JAI MITRA SEUNARINE DAVID SIKORSKI Maryland Catholic Conference Jai Medical Systems Jai Medical Systems Coastal Conservation Association 10 Francis Street 5010 York Road 301 International Circle Maryland Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21212 Hunt Valley, MD 21030 P.O. Box 309 410-433-2200 410-433-2200 Annapolis, MD 21401 DIANA K. SAQUELLA 800-201-3474 Greenwood Consulting DAVID SCHATZ SFAAMD ASSOCIATION, INC 15 Greenwood Shoals ChargePoint 844 Sunny Chapel Road STEVEN SILVERMAN SSGovRelations, LLC Grasonville, MD 21638 355 I Street SW 502S Odenton, MD 21113 3012 Marlow Rd 410-443-8430 Washington, DC 20024 443-306-1179 Silver Spring, MD 20904 DRUSILLA SCHMIDT-PERKINS THOMAS S. SAQUELLA KATHY SHAHINIAN 1000 Friends of Maryland JEWEL JAMES SIMMONS Thomas S. Saquella Episcopal Diocese of Maryland 1209 North Calvert Street Renovate America, Inc. c/o 15 Greenwood Shoals 4 E. University Parkway Baltimore, MD 21202 2350 Kerner Blvd., Ste. 250 Baltimore, MD 21114 Grasonville, MD 21638 410-385-2910 San Rafael, CA 94901 410-991-7949 KELLEY SHANNON FRANZ SCHNEIDERMAN DIANA SIMPSON Jai Medical Systems CHRISTINE A. SATTERFIELD Consumer Auto Institute for Justice 5010 York Road Office of Bruce Bereano 13900 Laurel Lakes Ave Suite 101 901 North Glebe Road Suite 900 191 Duke of Gloucester Street Laurel, MD 20707 Baltimore , MD 21212 Arlington, VA 22203 Annapolis, MD 21401 443-977-9541 410-433-2200 SHERRIE S SIMS 410-267-0410 JOHN A SCHRATWIESER DANIEL SHATTUCK G.S. Proctor & Associates, Inc. JOHN WILLIAM SATTERFIELD Maryland Citizens for the Arts Barbara Marx Brocato & 29 Francis Street Delmarva Poultry Industry, Inc. 120 W. North Avenue Associates Annapolis, MD 21401 16686 County Seat Highway Baltimore, MD 21201 18 Pinkney Street 410-280-5088 Georgetown, DE 19947-4881 Annapolis, MD 21401 JUSTIN SCHWAB SINGLE SALES FACTOR 302-856-9037 Baker Hostetler BERNARD H. SHAW COALITION Maryland Public Affairs KIMBERLY ELIZABETH SAUER 1050 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Bernard H. Shaw 191 Main Street, Suite 200 Baltimore Child Abuse Center Suite 1100 1600 Shield Road Annapolis, MD 21401 2300 North Charles Street Washington, DC 20036 Fallston, MD 21047 4th Floor SCHWARTZ, METZ & WISE, P.A. SARAH D SHEPPARD KAREN SISSON Baltimore, MD 21218 20 West Street Funk & Bolton, P.A. Walgreen Co. 104 Wilmot Rd. MS #1428 410-396-6147 Annapolis, MD 21401 200 Duke of Gloucester Street 410-244-7000 Deerfield, IL 60015 224-723-2633 KARA SAUL RINALDI Annapolis, MD 21401 410-269-1554 AnnDyl Policy Group, LLC JEANANNE SCIABARRA NICOLE SITARAMAN 717 Kennebec Ave Consumer Health First Sunrun Inc. KELSEY SHIELDS 595 Market Street, 29th Floor Takoma Park, MD 20912 P.O. Box 59202 Barbara Marx Brocato & San Francisco, CA 94105 202-276-1773 Potomac, MD 20854 Associates 410-591-3611 18 Pinkney St. CINDY RENEE SMALLS MICHAEL SAXL Annapolis, MD 21401 AFSCME International Maine Street Solutions CHARLES E SCOTT 1410 Bush Street Washington Metropolitan Area 45 Memorial Circle PATRICK SHORTELL Baltimore, MD 21230 Augusta, ME 04332 Transit Authority Renovate America, Inc. c/o 600 Fifth Street, NW 207-623-3889 2350 Kerner Blvd., Ste. 250 DAVID SMEDICK Washington, DC 20001 San Rafael, CA 94901 Sierra Club Maryland Chapter EMILY SCARR 7338 Baltimore Ave Suite 102 LAWRENCE SCOTT Maryland PIRG LAWRENCE A. SHULMAN College Park, MD 20740 Scott Strategies, Inc. 3121 St. Paul St. Ste. 26 Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy PO Box 6052 DONNA SMITH Baltimore, MD 21218 & Ecker Annapolis, MD 21401 Compassion and Choices 12505 Park Potomac Avenue VIRGINIA KOENIG SCATTERGOOD 240-338-3187 3567 Laurel View CT, 6th Floor Northrop Grumman Corporation Laurel, MD 20724 CORNEILIUS W. SCOTT III Potomac, MD 20854 2980 Fairview Park Drive Farmers Group Inc. SARAH JOAN SMITH Fairfax, VA 22032 600 Red Brook Blvd #200 SUSHANT SIDH Bryson F. Popham, P.A. Capitol Strategies, LLC JULIE ANNE SCHAFER Owings Mills, MD 21117 191 Main Street Suite 200 443-622-2356 1 State Circle Unitarian Universalist Legislative Annapolis , MD 21401 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-268-6871 Ministry of Maryland ERIKA MARLO SEALING c/o Unitarian Universalist Church Elm Law Group, LLC GEORGE SIGALOS REBECCA SNYDER of Annapolis 3 Church Circle #106 George P Sigalos LLC MDDC Press Association 33 Dubois Road Annapolis, MD 21401 PO Box 6042 60 West Street Suite 107 Annapolis, MD 21401 (908) 507-2659 McLean, VA 22106 Annapolis, MD 21401 38 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 39

SUSAN CRAWFORD MURRAY VERA D TORRENCE REGAN K. VAUGHAN SOMERVILLE-HAWES T Maryland Retired School Catholic Charities The Arc Maryland 228 W. Lexington Street Suite 220 RICHARD A TABUTEAU Personnel Association 1911 Ruxton Rd Baltimore, MD 21201-3432 Schwartz, Metz and Wise, P.A. 8379 Piney Orchard Parkway Towson, MD 21204 410-261-5874 20 West Street Suite A 410-296-2925 Annapolis, MD 21401 Odenton, MD 21113-1508 MIKAILA VENTRUDO 410-244-7000 Mikaila Ventrudo COURTNEY MCGRATH SPANGLER PEGEEN A. TOWNSEND Spangler Strategic Advisors 191 Duke of Gloucester Street CASPER R. TAYLOR, JR. MedStar Health 726 Second Street Suite 3B Annapolis, MD 21401 Alexander & Cleaver, P.A. 5565 Sterrett Place 5th Floor Annapolis, MD 21403 410-267-0410 54 State Circle Columbia, MD 21044 MADELEINE ELIZABETH SPJUT Annapolis, MD 21401 410-772-6687 BEBE VERDERY Foundation for Advancing Alcohol 410-974-9000 ACLU of Maryland DALE TROLL 3600 Clipper Mill Road, Ste. 350 Responsibility JENNIFER THAYER Maryland State Pipe Trades Baltimore, MD 21211 2345 Crystal Drive Suite 710 Bryson F. Popham, P.A. Association 410-889-8555 Arlington, VA 22202 191 Main Street Suite 200 7050 Oakland Mills Road Suite 180 NICOLETTE HIGHSMITH VERNICK DELESE SPRIGGS Annapolis, MD 21401 Columbia, MD 21046 The Horizon Foundation Maryland State Education 410-290-3890 MARTIN THOMAS of Howard County Association Service Employees International 10221 Wincopin Circle Suite 200 140 Main Street STANLEY W. TUCKER Union, Local 32BJ Meridian Management Group, Inc. Columbia, MD 21044 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-715-0311 25 West 18th Street 5th Floor 826 E. Baltimore Street NICOLE STALLINGS New York, NY 10011 Baltimore, MD 21202 JOSEPH VIDULICH Maryland Hospital Association 410-333-2548 LINDSAY THOMPSON N/A 6820 Deerpath Road Thompson Ag Consulting LLC 8000 Towers Crescent Drive 16th Elkridge, MD 21075 JOSH TULKIN Floor 209 Jarman Branch Drive 410-379-6200 Sierra Club, Maryland Chapter Vienna, VA 22182 Centreville, MD 21617 7338 Baltimore Avenue #102 RENEE STEPHENS 443-262-8491 College Park, MD 20740 MARIO VILLAFRANCA Pepco Holdings The College Board MELVIN R. THOMPSON 301-277-7111 701 9th St NW, EP9628 1919 M Street NW Suite 300 Restaurant Association of Washington, DC 20068 BENJAMIN F TWILLEY Washington, DC 20036 Maryland Express Scripts Holding Co. JOHN R. STIERHOFF 6301 Hillside Court MADELINE VOYTEK 2412 Lincoln St. Venable, LLP Columbia, MD 21046 Maryland Retailers Association Columbia, SC 29201 750 E. Pratt Street, Suite 900 171 Conduit Street 803-394-7001 Baltimore, MD 21202 PAUL A TIBURZI Annapolis, MD 21401 410-244-7833 DLA Piper LLP (US) 410-269-1440 6225 Smith Avenue JOAN MARIE STRANG Baltimore, MD 21209 U NIKOLA VUJCIC Joan Strang 410-580-4273 Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, U.S. PHOTOVOLTAICS INC Pordy & Ecker, P.A. 303 Piedmont Court North Market St Suite 200 Berlin, MD 21811 MIKE TIDWELL 12505 Park Potomac Avenue Chesapeake Climate Action Frederick, MD 21704 Sixth Floor Network Potomac, MD 20854 FREDERICK STRATMANN BARRY DAVID UDOFF CommuniCare 6930 Carroll Ave Suite 720 Maryland Bail Bond Association 4700 Ashwood Drive Suite 200 Takoma Park, MD 20912 214 East Lexington Street Cincinnati, OH 45241 W SHIVANI TOMAR Baltimore, MD 21202 513-335-0004 FORD CLAYTON WAGGONER University of Maryland Medical 410-332-1450 Easter Seals Delaware & JAMES STRONG System Maryland’s Eastern Shore Inc. USW District 8 250 W. Pratt Street 24th Floor UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND UPPER CHESAPEAKE HEALTH 22317 Dupont Boulevard 7939 Honeygo Blvd. Baltimore, MD 21201 Georgetown, DE 19947 Baltimore, MD 21236 SYSTEM, INC. DANIEL PAUL TOMPKINS 520 Upper Chesapeake Drive, JAN MOYLAN WAGNER SUSAN SUMMERS FirstEnergy Suite 405 Central Scholarship Bureau, Inc. Bell Nursery 68 State Circle Bel Air, MD 21014 6 Park Center Court, Suite 211 7111 Troy Hill Drive Annapolis, MD 21401 Owings Mills, MD 21117 Elkridge, MD 21075 410-415-5558 THOMAS R. TOMPSETT JR. CARL M SZABO Maryland Multi-Housing V REBECCA WAGNER NetChoice Association ELLEN VALENTINO-BENITEZ Advocates for Children and Youth 1401 K Street NW Suite 502 1421 Clarkview Road, Suite 100B VBA, Inc. 1 North Charles Street Suite 2400 Washington, DC 20005-3417 Baltimore, MD 21209 30 Pinkney Street Baltimore, MD 21201 202-420-7485 443-322-1104 Annapolis, MD 21401 410-547-9200 40 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 41

GERARD M. WAITES MARCELINE WHITE LUCAS KENT WILSON JULIA PITCHER WORCESTER O’Donoghue & O’Donoghue Maryland Consumer Rights N/A Law Office of J. William Pitcher 4748 Wisconsin Avenue, NW Coalition 1155 F Street NW Suite 925 27 Maryland Avenue Washington, DC 20016 1209 North Calvert Street Washington, DC 20004 Annapolis, MD 21401 202-362-0041 Baltimore, MD 21202 410-268-0842 410-624-8980 MICHAEL JAMES WILSON DAVID GRAY WRIGHT ANNE WALLERSTEDT Food Research and Action Center Kahn, Smith & Collins, P.A. Maryland Catholic Conference PETER B WHITE dba Maryland Hunger Solutions 201 N. Charles St. Tenth Floor Association of Maryland Pilots 711 W. 40th Street, Suite 360 10 Francis Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Annapolis, MD 20851 3720 Dillion Street Baltimore, MD 21211 410-269-1155 Baltimore, MD 21224 ROBERT WRIGHT RONALD WAYNE WINEHOLT Indivior Inc. WILLIAM REED WHITE MARK L WASSERMAN Apartment & Office Building 11 Meadowsweet Court Capitol Strategies, LLC University of Maryland Association of Metropolitan Reisterstown, MD 21136 Medical System 1 State Circle Washington Annapolis, MD 21401 250 W. Pratt Street 24th Floor 86 State Circle Second Floor MAE WU 410-268-3099 Natural Resources Defense Council Baltimore, MD 21201 Annapolis, MD 21401 301-261-1460 (NRDC) ALICE WILKERSON CHLOE WATERMAN 1152 15th Street, NW Public Policy Partners American Society for the SALLY ANN WINGO Washington, DC 20005 48 Maryland Avenue, Suite 304 Capitol Strategies, LLC Prevention of Cruelty to Animals JOSEPH R. WYATT Annapolis, MD 21401 One State Circle 600 PENNSYLVANIA AVE SE STE JRW Associates 410-268-0990 Annapolis, MD 21401 450 801 Cromwell Park Drive Suite 100 WASHINGTON, DC 20003 KIMBERLY DENISE WILKS HICKS WINTERS Glen Burnie, MD 21061 NA 410-684-2101 KERRY RUSSELL WATSON Lafarge North America Inc.; Holcim 3200 Stonesboro Road (US) Inc.; Aggregate Industries MGM National Harbor Fort Washington, MD 20744 Inc. 101 MGM National Ave 240-475-1299 600 Pennsylvania Ave., SE Suite Y National Harbor, MD 20745 MICHAEL YAKI ALVIN WILLIAMS 410 JOY WEBER Washington, DC 20003 Renovate America, Inc. c/o Nadik Consulting, LLC 2350 Kerner Blvd., Ste. 250 Rifkin Weiner Livingston LLC Post Office Box 1354 J. STEVEN WISE San Rafael, CA 94901 225 Duke of Gloucester Street The Clarksburg, MD 20871 Schwartz, Metz & Wise, P.A. Annapolis, MD 21401 20 West Street RACHELLE YEUNG 410-269-5066 ANN MARIE WILLIAMS American Civil Liberties Union of Annapolis, MD 21401 Velocity BioGroup Corp Maryland 410-244-7000 TISHAN WEEARSOORIYA 3208 St. Stephens Way 3600 Clipper Mill Road Suite 350 ACLU Midlothian , VA 23235 JENNIFER WITTEN Baltimore, MD 21211 294 Tomato Ct 540-815-3841 Maryland Hospital Association Forest Hill, MD 21050 BOAZ YOUNG-EL CHRISTINA WILLIAMS 6820 Deerpath Road UFCW Local 400 MEREDITH R. WEISEL CLIA Elkridge, MD 21075 8400 Corporate Drive Suite 200 Jewish Community Relations 520 W. Fayette Street 410-379-6200 Landover, MD 20785 Baltimore, MD 21201 Council of Greater Washington WOMEN’S BAR ASSOCIATION OF 6101 Executive Blvd Suite 300 LISA B. WILLIAMS MARYLAND, INC. North Bethesda, MD 20852 Z Baltimore City Medical Society P.O. Box 10453 301-770-0881 NICK ZABRISKIE 1211 Cathedral Street Silver Spring, MD 20914 Uber Technologies, Inc. Baltimore, MD 21201 ELIZABETH WELLER NICOLE PALYA WOOD 1717 Rhode Island Ave NW Maryland State Education MARGARET E. WILLIAMS N/A Washington, DC 20036 Association 950 F Street, NW Suite 300 Maryland Family Network SUSAN ZELLERS 140 Main Street 1001 Eastern Avenue Second Floor Washington, DC 20004 Marine Trades Association of Annapolis, MD 21401 Baltimore, MD 21202 GARY JOSEPH WOODS Maryland P.O. Box 3148 JOSH WHITE ROBERT JOHN WILLICK Associated Gun Clubs of Baltimore Annapolis, MD 21403 Perry, White, Ross & Jacobson 11518 Marriottsville Road Maryland Campaign for Liberty 410-269-0741 125 Cathedral Street Inc. Marriottsville, MD 21104 Annapolis, MD 21401 PO Box 937 ROBERT M. ZINSMEISTER 443-994-5620 Rising Sun, MD 21911 JOHN R WOOLUMS Associated Builders & Contractors, Maryland Association of Boards of Metro Wash KARLA BECKNER WHITE LARA D. WILSON Education 6901 Muirkirk Meadows Drive CSL Behring Maryland Rural Health Association 621 Ridgely Avenue, Ste 300 Suite F 1020 First Avenue PO Box 41 Annapolis, MD 21401 Beltsville, MD 20705 King of Prussia, PA 19406 Oakland, MD 21550 410-841-5414 301-595-9711 40 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 41 PRESENTING SPONSOR n The MSBA provides members with up to 50 live pro- grams and over 100 online, on-demand programs across 28 areas of law every year, ensuring members have the resourc- es they need to sharpen their skills and better serve their clients. n Free access to legal research services, over 200 CLE publications, and discussion groups means learning doesn’t end once the CLE credit is earned. n A variety of subscription publications bring the latest legal news and developments to thousands of members every month. We also recognize that lawyers and legal professionals are more than their job title – they are human beings. Our Lawyer Assistance Program provides health, wellness, and confidential counseling support to help members in need. For our members. For the profession. Our members interact with clients, employers, coworkers, and families. Founded more than a century ago in 1896, the Maryland State Bar Association (MSBA) is the state’s leading organi- Serving The Profession zation for legal professionals. We exist in order to advance a single mission: to effectively represent Maryland’s lawyers, The MSBA works diligently to advocate on behalf of the to provide member services, and to promote professionalism, legal profession in Annapolis, making sure all of our mem- bers have a seat at the table during the legislative process. diversity in the legal profession, access to justice, service to This goes beyond lobbying – we provide the context that the public, and respect for the rule of law. members need to stay informed and engaged in the public Who We Are policy debate, seeking outcomes that, above all else, enable us to pursue our mission. The MSBA’s membership is diverse and dynamic. MSBA members are found in academia, government, small and Serving The Public large firms, and at every transition point in between. We The legal system can be confusing and complex, and the represent legal professionals at all stages of their careers, MSBA offers valuable resources to help the public navigate it from those newly admitted to the Bar to those with decades of successfully. We are committed to our clients as well as the experience. We believe in the importance of serving and rep- common good. resenting members in all segments, at all stages, and through all transitions in their careers, because each of us contributes n The Pro Bono Resource Center of Maryland provides a uniquely valuable voice. We take many paths, but are one Maryland’s poor with equal access to justice through volun- profession. teer legal services. We match volunteer attorneys with legal services organizations dedicated to serving the unrepresent- The MSBA encourages members to interact within and ed. across disciplines, specialties, and experience levels. We offer more than two dozen Sections for members to share n The MSBA has jurisdiction to investigate and fee dis- ideas, news, and career & networking opportunities with putes between clients and their attorneys in most Maryland other members in the same field of study. Our Committees counties. provide valuable professional resources and leadership n The MSBA Speakers’ Bureau helps community groups, opportunities. And we also host events throughout the year schools, and other associations find MSBA members who to give our members the opportunity to network and learn are qualified and willing to speak to the public about a wide together. range of legal topics. The legal profession is ultimately about people and Join Us relationships, and the MSBA is committed to fostering the development of both. At the core, the Maryland State Bar Association is a group of thousands of lawyers and legal professionals committed to Serving Our Members serving their profession, their communities, and each other. Success in the legal world demands a lifelong commitment We encourage you to reach out and find out more about us to learning. online at www.msba.org. 42 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 43 LEGISLATIVE SPONSORS Chimes was founded in Chimes Family suite of services fall predominantly within 1947 as a school for five three distinct, but aligned businesses: children with moderate Behavioral Health, which encompasses mental health and intellectual disabilities substance abuse—two conditions that are often intertwined. For whose parents rejected the decades, Holcomb Behavioral Health Systems, based in Exton, then prevailing wisdom Pennsylvania, has been a leader in this area. Holcomb has that their children would improved the lives of thousands of people with a wide range of never achieve meaningful or productive lives. From those modest diagnoses, including the growing scourge of opioid abuse. In beginnings, Chimes has grown into one of the industry’s largest addition to treatment programs, Holcomb operates preventative providers of services and supports for people with barriers to in- education programs in many area schools designed to help shape dependent living. Today, Chimes Family Services offers a wide the behaviors of adolescents and young adults, providing them range of programming, including day habilitation, residential, the tools and guidance necessary to avoid the perils of addiction. educational, vocational, employment, and behavioral health services and supports for nearly 20,000 individuals annually Employment Services Chimes supports those who need a in six Mid-Atlantic States. Chimes is also closely affiliated with hand up, not a handout. Our employment-services business Chimes Israel through Board representation, and assistance with provides opportunities for nearly 1400 individuals with disabil- program design and funding. Chimes distinguishes itself from ities in one of the nearly 50 contracts we service throughout the other disability service providers through its unique emphasis mid-Atlantic. With a good, honest job and the supports needed on client-centered, evidence-based program design. to succeed in that job Chimes employment-services employees are building for themselves lives of dignity, accomplishment and Chimes has been making a positive difference in the lives of independence. the individuals we serve for 70 years. We see potential in ev- eryone, and we’ve proven adept at helping our individuals Intellectual and Developmental Disability Services It is achieve that potential. We are driven to help the individuals impossible to overestimate the impact that supporting someone we serve achieve three main goals: with special needs has, not just on the individuals themselves but on their families and caregivers as well. Chimes is uniquely po- To live as independently as possible, guided by choice sitioned to lead the way in delivering individualized supports to To understand, respond to and realize the potential of their help educate, train, employ, house, and otherwise assist vulnera- capabilities, and ble and under-resourced population. To serve as productive, contributing members of their commu- To learn more please call: 410-358-6400, or visit www. nity. chimes.org

your issues through coalition building, • RFP/RFQ/RFIs advocacy days, messaging and press rela- tions, and legislative expertise - drafting • Contract negotiation and formation legislation, amendments, and testimony. • Protests/Appeals We guide clients through every step of the legislative process to overcome obstacles • Minority Business Enterprise/Mary- and our expertise on a variety of issues, land Minority Certification Alexander & Cleaver, P.A is proud of our including energy, gaming, health care, • Government bond funds accomplished team of lobbyists. Collec- large and small business issues, munici- tively, we bring 150 years of government pal governments, and nonprofits, means • Ethics provisions and regulations relations expertise on many issues at we can work with the General Assembly to compliance every level of government. accomplish your goals. • Interface with the Board of Public The 2018 legislative session is quickly Our in-house budget experts help clients Works approaching and we’re here to help – call navigate the capital and operating budget The law firm of Alexander & Cleaver, us today at 410-974-9000! process, starting with fiscal analysis, consultations on budget requests, and de- P.A. is ready to help you at one of our six Alexander & Cleaver boasts a team of fending items in the budget during tough offices in the regions. We’re located in skilled government relations professionals negations in both chambers. Our bond Annapolis, Fort Washington, La Plata, that include former members of the Sen- bill successes on behalf of our nonprofit Cumberland, Rockville and Alexandria, ate, House, and staff to elected officials in and local government clients tally into the Virginia. Our firm includes attorneys who county, state, and executive branch areas millions – just in the past few years. are licensed to practice in Maryland, the of government. Procurement District of Columbia, Virginia, Delaware, Legislation and Public Policy New York, Florida and New Jersey. Our track record on procurement can’t Alexander & Cleaver is a full service be beat. We offer legal and government We are available 24 hours a day to han- legal and lobby firm, and we truly do it relations services to assist clients through- dle your most urgent needs. Call us today all. On behalf of our clients, we coordinate out all phases of state, county and local at 410-974-9000. See more at: http://www. targeted legislative strategy to win on procurement matters, including: alexander-cleaver.com. 42 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018 43 SUPPORTING SPONSOR Since 1865, the Maryland State Education Association (MSEA), formerly known as the Maryland State Teachers Associa- tion, has been the state’s leading voice for public education. Whether we’re lobbying for school funding in Annapolis, fighting for civil rights, or making sure that every student receives the attention they need, our association has been a successful and powerful force for progress in Maryland. Our members are teachers, education support professionals, administrators, certificated specialists, higher education faculty, and student and retired members whose mission is to create great public schools for every child in Maryland. Maryland educators and school employees are on the front line every day doing what they do best—educating, nurturing, and encouraging students in public schools in communities across the state. Their jobs are fulfilling—and demanding—with ever-changing school and student needs and professional expectations. MSEA helps student educators jump start their careers, advocates for quality schools and professional support for active edu- cators and school employees, and works to protect pension benefits and maintain career and community connections for retired members. We help educators improve student achievement by advocating for school funding, small class sizes, better working conditions, quality professional development, less mandated standardized testing, competitive salaries and benefits, and other keys to school and student success. Learn more at marylandeducators.org.

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Katie Allston, LCSW-C *Maria Johnson Darby 2017 Amy E. Askew *Sen. Cheryl C. Kagan Real Estate Insider Debra Reznick Attman Dr. Rita Rastogi Kalyani Report says high-end apartments doing well, Mythili “Lee” Bachu Dr. Shohreh A. Kaynama Child abuse lawsuit plus other deals, leases and relocations. Victim sues Prince George’s County school system, Zoa D. Barnes Marguerite O. Kelley 9A alleging hire made despite criminal record. Angie Barnett Sharon Krevor-Weisbaum Walakewon Blegay Bonnie Krosin 10A Dr. Mary Way Bolt Sharon Kroupa Tammy Brumwell Bresnahan Bonnie N. Luna *Alison Gates Brown 2017 Ganesha Martin Rev. Lettie Moses Carr, Esq. Robin McKinney Nona Carroll Karen S. Cherry Jennifer Meyer Karen C. Miller Robin Motter-Mast, D.O. Leadership Thursday, April 7, 2016 Kathleen M. Murphy Hon. Karen Murphy Jensen Volume 127 | Number 128 Maryland’s trusted source of business, legal and government news in Martha Nathanson Law Candace Breland Osunsade TheDailyRecord.com Cecilia B. Paizs *Hon. Nicole Pastore-Klein Del. Edith J. Patterson Katherine Pinkard ‘Black Panther’ a hot item June A. Poole Bill jailing Cynthia Blake Sanders Md. comic book stores report strong interest in Ta-Nehisi Coates series Ronnie Lapinsky Sax Dr. Kim Schatzel hosts of Tina M. Corner Marianne Schmitt Hellauer *Carol Coughlin Nichelle D. Schoultz Corryne Deliberto *Joan Webb Scornaienchi Cari DeSantis Stephanie L. Shack teen parties Kimberly Conway Indira K. Sharma Dumpson, Esq., CFRE Michele A Shermak, MD, FACS Margaret Dunkle *Terry D. Sherman Ralston weakened Lynette Maria Entzian Jane Frankel Sims Kirsten M. Eriksson Michelle Daugherty Siri Key senator concerned Christine Espenshade Angela H. Spencer Hon. Deborah Sweet Eyler *Bonnie B. Stein college students could Susan Finlayson Denise A Sullivan Christina Fitts *Karen T. Syrylo end up behind bars Barbara Gassaway Courtney A. Thomas By S Julie Gaver Faith Thomas teve LaSh Elizabeth A Green, Esq. [email protected] Sherita Thomas Dominica Groom Dr. Joan Tilghman Susan M. Hahn ANNAPOLIS – The Senate Ju- Subscribe Today! Jackie Harris *Michele Bresnick Walsh dicial Proceedings Committee on Zaneilia Harris Salli J. Ward Wednesday approved watered-down Nicole L. Harrison, M. Ed., M.S. M. Courtney Watson legislation that would permit par- *Mary Hastler Dana Weckesser ents and Del. Anne Healey Laura E Weeldreyer other adults Hon. Wanda Keyes Heard Elizabeth Weglein to be jailed for up to ANNAPOLIS Beth Hehir Dr. Leana Wen one year for Lt. Col. Laura L. Herman Alicia Lynn Wilson p r o v i d i n g 2016 Rev. Debra Hickman Sky Woodward n Lawmakers approve alcohol to proposal to rein in mis- Tina Hike-Hubbard Michelle Wright or hosting Kristine K. Howanski Dr. Marylou Yam leading behavior by for- d r i n k i n g profit higher education MaryBeth Hyland Julianne S. Zimmer parties at- Bryan Levy, manager of Collectors Corner comic book store on Charles Street in Baltimore, displays the first issue of ‘Black Panther,’ institutions.See 7A Tracy Imm tended by written by Baltimore native Ta-Nehisi Coates. n Board of Public Ngozi Irondi-Azubike * Denotes Circle minors who Works approves $5.6 D’Ana E. Johnson of Excellence honorees By anamika MAXIMILIAN FRANZ become im- Get Maryland’s daily statewide source roy billion Purple Line con- [email protected] first issue in the series was released on paired and tract.See 8A s e r i o u s l y Wednesday and local comic store own- copies ahead of time. n Senate panel OKs “Black Panther,” a highly anticipated ers saw it fly off the shelves. injure them- $37.5M tax break for comic written by Ta-Nehisi Coates, has “Ta-Nehisi Coates is still seen as selves or “This sold faster and better and a son of Baltimore,” Ray said. “He’s a Northrop Grumman. been making waves among comic fans others in quicker than any comic we’ve ever very popular writer and a very relevant See 8A and mainstream audiences since Mar- driving from had,” said Benn Ray, co-owner of writer.” vel announced in September that the the event. Atomic Books in Baltimore’s Hampden “Black Panther,” illustrated by Brian Baltimore native was writing the series The committee’s action rep- neighborhood. Stelfreeze, takes place in a fictional about one of the first black superhe- resents a dramatic weakening of In the first hour, Atomic Books sold wealthy African nation called Wakanda. roes in a major American comic. The bills that the Senate and House ap- 50 copies and set aside an additional 50 The country is run by monarchs called for people who had called and reserved proved earlier this General Assem- bly session in memory of two recent SEE COMIC 3A for business, law, government and SEE UNDERAGE 11A Hogan, Franchot say they’ll ignore ‘I promise you this is going lawmakers’ edict on school hearings to bring more transparency, more account- By B ryan P. SearS ability, more [email protected] increase their efforts despite a legislative scrutiny,’ says edict meant to diminish their roles. Comptroller ANNAPOLIS — Maryland’s Republi- The tough talk from the state comp- Peter Franchot can governor and Democratic comptrollertroller and the governor comes just a day of a law de- vowed to continue to call school officials after Gov. Larry Hogan announced he signed to allow real estate news. to account for how construction and ren- would allow his capital budget to become schools offi- ovation funding is spent and promised to cials to avoid testifying on SEE OVERSIGHT 8A construction projects. Auction sales Calendar 14B INDEX News briefs Employment 6A Law briefs 4A Lawyer to lawyer FILE PHOTO 18A Litigation support 12A Online today 12, 19A 12, 19A $269 per year Public notice 2A For subscriptions 1B $2 per copy call 1-800-451-9998 or email TheDailyRecord.com/subscribe • 800-451-9998 [email protected] TheDailyRecord.com/subscribe • 800-451-9998 44 ANNAPOLIS SUMMIT 2018

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