Current:Home > reviewsMaryland Gov. Wes Moore lays out plan to fight child poverty -AssetVision
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore lays out plan to fight child poverty
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:30:00
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — Maryland Gov. Wes Moore presented legislation he’s championing to address child poverty to state lawmakers on Wednesday, laying out a locally focused plan to attack the root causes of concentrated poverty statewide.
Moore, who served as the CEO of one of the nation’s largest poverty-fighting organizations before he was governor and has made addressing child poverty a top priority of his administration, testified on one of his signature measures this legislative session.
The Democratic governor said the ENOUGH Act, which stands for engaging neighborhoods, organizations, unions, governments and households, represents a statewide effort to channel private, philanthropic and state resources to communities with the highest rates of generational child poverty.
“Together we are going to target the places most in need of help, and we’re going to uplift those communities in partnership, because we believe that to fully address the challenge of poverty you need to actually engage the people on the ground, and that goes from urban cities to rural towns and to everywhere in between,” Moore told the Maryland House Appropriations Committee.
The measure would guide place-based interventions in communities with disproportionately high numbers of children living in poverty. The measure includes $15 million to provide grants to help communities in what the governor described as a bottom-up initiative that puts an emphasis on local input.
“The premise is simple: Our communities will provide the vision. The state will provide the support, and not the other way around,” Moore said.
Testifying in person, the governor held up a map that showed pockets of concentrated poverty throughout the state. He noted that the map hasn’t changed much in decades, a point of embarrassment for a state often cited as one of the nation’s wealthiest.
Moore said the program will focus on three core elements: safety, economically secure families and access to education and health care.
To illustrate poverty’s impacts, Moore testified about receiving a call from Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott in the middle of the night last year. The mayor had called to inform him about a mass shooting in south Baltimore’s Brooklyn Homes public housing complex during a neighborhood block party. Two people were killed, and 28 were hurt. Moore said while one out of eight Maryland children live in poverty, one out of two children in that community do.
“You cannot understand what happened that night unless you’re willing to wrestle with what has been happening many, many nights before,” Moore said. “Child poverty is not just a consequence. It is a cause. It causes pain to endure. It causes full potential to lie dormant, and that harsh reality is played out everywhere from western Maryland to the eastern shore, everywhere in between again and again and again.”
While local jurisdictions around the country have used similar placed-based initiatives to address poverty, Moore described this initiative as a first-of-its-kind for taking a statewide approach to it.
Carmel Martin, special secretary of the Governor’s Office for Children, said the initiative will enable communities to partner with government, nonprofits, faith-based organizations, philanthropic groups, labor unions, small businesses and corporations, with state guidance.
“The bottom line is that the ENOUGH Act will spur philanthropic and federal investment, revitalize communities and drive the state’s economic competitiveness for the long term,” Martin said.
The measure has bipartisan support.
“From Crisfield to west Baltimore to Cumberland, to everywhere in between, I haven’t been this excited about a piece of legislation in a long time, and I just want you to know, man, I’m in,” Del. Carl Anderton, a Wicomico County Republican, told the governor.
veryGood! (6675)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Would David Wright be a Baseball Hall of Famer if injuries hadn't wrecked his career?
- NFL All-Pro: McCaffrey, Hill, Warner unanimous; 14 first-timers
- Navy helicopter crashes into San Diego Bay, all 6 people on board survive
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Mike Tomlin pushing once-shaky Steelers to playoffs is coach's best performance yet
- War in Gaza, election factor into some of the many events planned for MLK holiday
- Blinken meets Chinese and Japanese diplomats, seeks stability as Taiwan voters head to the polls
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- How much do surrogates make and cost? People describe the real-life dollars and cents of surrogacy.
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- As Vermont grapples with spike in overdose deaths, House approves safe injection sites
- Ukrainian trucker involved in deadly crash wants license back while awaiting deportation
- Los Angeles man pleads not guilty to killing wife and her parents, putting body parts in trash
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Mary Lou Retton's health insurance explanation sparks some mental gymnastics
- Google layoffs 2024: Hundreds of employees on hardware, engineering teams lose jobs
- Ukrainian trucker involved in deadly crash wants license back while awaiting deportation
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
State trooper plunges into icy Vermont pond to save 8-year-old girl
They’re not aliens. That’s the verdict from Peru officials who seized 2 doll-like figures
Biden says student borrowers with smaller loans could get debt forgiveness in February. Here's who qualifies.
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Former Pennsylvania defense attorney sentenced to jail for pressuring clients into sex
A 4th person has died after fiery crash near western New York concert, but motive remains a mystery
Mass shooting at Buffalo supermarket now Justice Department’s first death penalty case under Garland