Baltimore City Council
File #: 17-0012R    Version: 0 Name: Request for State Action - Support HB 1504 to Restore Full City Control Over the Baltimore City Police Department
Type: City Council Resolution Status: Adopted
File created: 2/27/2017 In control: City Council
On agenda: Final action: 2/27/2017
Enactment #:
Title: Request for State Action - Support HB 1504 to Restore Full City Control Over the Baltimore City Police Department For the purpose of calling on the Maryland General Assembly to enact, and the Governor to sign, HB 1504 or similar legislation to remove the Baltimore City Police Department’s status as an instrumentality of the State of Maryland and place the Department completely under the unrestricted control of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.
Sponsors: Brandon M. Scott, Bill Henry, Mary Pat Clarke, John T. Bullock, Sharon Green Middleton, Zeke Cohen, Kristerfer Burnett, Isaac "Yitzy" Schleifer, President Young, Eric T. Costello, Ryan Dorsey, Leon F. Pinkett, III, Robert Stokes, Sr., Shannon Sneed, Edward Reisinger
Indexes: Baltimore City, Police Department, Request for State Action
Attachments: 1. 17-0012R~1st Reader
* Warning: This is an unofficial, introductory copy of the bill.
The official copy considered by the City Council is the first reader copy.
Introductory*

City of Baltimore
Council Bill R
(Resolution)

Introduced by: Councilmembers Scott, Henry, Clarke, Bullock, Middleton, Cohen, Burnett, and Schleifer



A Resolution Entitled

A Council Resolution concerning
title
Request for State Action - Support HB 1504 to Restore Full City Control Over the Baltimore City Police Department
For the purpose of calling on the Maryland General Assembly to enact, and the Governor to sign, HB 1504 or similar legislation to remove the Baltimore City Police Department’s status as an instrumentality of the State of Maryland and place the Department completely under the unrestricted control of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.
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Recitals

The Baltimore City Police Department occupies an unusual legal position as a creature of State, rather than City, law, officially an “agency and instrumentality of the State of Maryland”, that operates only on territory controlled by Baltimore City and that for most, but not quite all, purposes is treated like any other City Agency.

The handful of ways that this unusual arrangement causes the Police Department to differ from other City departments are unfortunately not all trivial. In fact, they seriously undermine the City’s ability to quickly, efficiently, and effectively respond to some of its most pressing problems.

Provisions in the State Public Local Laws exclusively affecting Baltimore City, and in the basic powers granted by the State to Baltimore in the City Charter, have been interpreted as making it imp...

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