ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND — A bill that would make it illegal for landlords to discriminate against voucher holders is the top priority of the new chairman of the state’s powerful Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee.
Sen. William “Will” Smith Jr., D-Montgomery, will also push to require background checks for private sales of rifles and shotguns, appropriate more funds to hire state prosecutors and address racial disparities in the state’s prison population.
Smith sponsored but withdrew the housing bill last session, when the committee was led by his predecessor, Sen. Bobby Zirkin, D-Baltimore County, who resigned from the Senate in December.
If made law, the Home Act would forbid landlords in Maryland from discriminating against would-be renters paying with government housing vouchers. The legislation has yet to be filed in either chamber of the General Assembly this year but was filed in each of the last three years.
It has been opposed by housing and real estate agent associations that have said voucher programs burden landlords with more rules than they would otherwise face.
Passing the legislation addresses another of Smith’s priorities.
“It’s part of a comprehensive approach to reduce crime,” Smith told Capital News Service, emphasizing that “providing economic opportunities” can be an effective tool to fight crime.
The 348 deaths in Baltimore in 2019 loom over the General Assembly’s proceedings. Fighting crime in Baltimore is a top priority of Gov. Larry Hogan, R, and Democratic lawmakers in both chambers.
Hogan has said that he would put legislation forward that would increase penalties against offenders who use or possess illegal guns, require restitution for crime victims, and crack down on witness intimidation. Smith said he would not comment on the proposals until he had read them. Hogan has also proposed funding 25 more prosecutors.
The “long guns” legislation was another bill introduced last session that didn’t make it to the governor’s desk. Zirkin angered the bill’s supporters by delaying a Judicial Proceedings Committee vote until late in the session. The delay ultimately meant lawmakers ran out of time to pass identical bills in both chambers.
Last year’s sponsor, Sen. Susan Lee, D-Montgomery, is also a member of the committee. She said the bill — still not filed in the Senate this session — is a priority.
“We need to stand up as a state and pass it,” she said.
She expects Smith to help get it through.
“He’s been very good. He understands the issues,” Lee said. “I’m very, very happy he is our leadership.”
In his first committee meeting Thursday, Smith said he wanted members from both parties to come to a consensus, or he would at least “ensure that everyone had their fair say.” Keeping things non-partisan was “one thing that Bobby got right,” he said.
Smith’s commitment to bipartisanship is important to Sen. Michael Hough, R-Frederick and Carroll, a member of the Judicial Proceedings Committee since 2015.
“We have to be,” Hough said. “We are the one committee that, if we make a mistake, it can mean people’s lives.”
Smith made news last session when he was deployed to Afghanistan 10 days before the end of the 2019 session. He is a lieutenant in the United State Navy Reserve. He returned home in October.
The committee is scheduled to hear a briefing on the racial disparity among the incarcerated in Maryland at 1 p.m. Thursday. A hearing on “long guns” is scheduled in the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday at 1 p.m.
A November report from the Justice Policy Institute found that black people makeup 71% of the state’s prison population — the highest disparity in the nation and more than double the national average of 32%. Black people made up 31% of the state’s 2018 population, according to estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau.
“That should raise eyebrows,” Smith said. “And no one is talking about it.”