Government in Maryland

Maryland Government Intel

Friday, May 22, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on government developments in Maryland. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on maryland government headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Maryland Government Headlines

1 story

1.1

Montgomery County Council Meeting Materials Now Centralized Online for MD Professionals.

The Montgomery County Council has consolidated access to current and archived meeting agendas, speaker lists, testimonies, staff reports, and on-demand videos through its Legislative Information Services.

Why It Matters

MD government professionals can efficiently track legislative developments, prepare for public testimony, and research historical council actions in one of the state's largest jurisdictions.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Municipal bond continuing-disclosure events most issuers miss.

MSRB Rule 15c2-12 requires issuers to file notice of certain events within 10 business days. The list runs to 16 categories now, including some (insolvency of obligated person, modifications to rights of bondholders, financial obligations material to investors) that are easily missed without a tracking process.

Why It Matters

A pattern of late or missed event filings can trigger SEC enforcement and impair the issuer's future market access. The reputational cost outlasts the immediate penalty.

2.2

When a FOIA fee waiver actually has to be granted.

Federal FOIA fee waivers must be granted when disclosure is "in the public interest" and not primarily commercial. The four-factor analysis (subject matter, informative value, contribution to public understanding, requester's commercial interest) is well-established but routinely misapplied by agencies as discretionary when it is mandatory if the factors are met.

Why It Matters

A properly framed waiver request that addresses each factor explicitly is hard for an agency to deny without creating an appellate record. Most denials lose on appeal when the requester points to the framework.

2.3

Hatch Act restrictions that catch federal employees off-guard.

Less-restricted federal employees may engage in partisan political activity off-duty — but never on-duty, never in the workplace, never using government property, and never while wearing identifying agency clothing. Social media posts from a personal device while on duty count as on-duty activity.

Why It Matters

Hatch Act violations carry penalties from reprimand to removal. Career employees with strong records have been removed for posts that took 30 seconds to write at lunch.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 22, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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