By STEPHEN NEUKAM and E. A. BREEDEN, Capital News Service
ANNAPOLIS – More than 100 Maryland organizations have called on the state Senate to continue live video testimony at committee hearings after the chamber’s leadership announced it would end the option Monday when the Senate transitions back to in-person meetings.
The organizations, which include leading labor unions and social justice, voting rights and government accountability groups, released a statement Thursday saying ending the virtual testimony option would limit vital input from everyday Marylanders.
Primarily, the organizations said, people of color, immunocompromised individuals and workers whose schedules do not allow them time to attend meetings in Annapolis would have fewer opportunities to contribute.
The Senate and the House of Delegates have allowed remote testimony the last two sessions during the daily hearings due to concerns about COVID-19.
The House has maintained it will continue with remote meetings and hearings throughout the legislative session.
In a memorandum to the chamber, Senate President Bill Ferguson, D-Baltimore, said his decision to move to in-person hearings was based on improved pandemic metrics. The decision to exclude live video testimony was in part because of technical difficulties.
“Due to the logistical challenge of appropriately streaming in-person and Zoom testimony simultaneously, we will not be allowing hybrid testimony for bill hearings,” Ferguson’s memorandum said.
Ferguson said in “extraordinary circumstances,” committee chairs could choose to allow witnesses to send pre-recorded video testimony if they cannot testify in person.
But some, like Executive Director of Common Cause Maryland Joanne Antoine, said the Senate has not provided the means or guidance for witnesses to provide alternative video testimony.
“There is no guidance on the length of video testimony, nowhere to submit video on the website, and no guidelines for what circumstances would allow video testimony to be accepted,” Antoine told Capital News Service. “If you’re not providing guidance on how to use these tools, then it’s just a line just to be there.”
Ferguson’s director of communications, David Schuhlein, said new guidelines for witness testimony would be posted online by committees starting Friday.
As of 3 p.m. Friday, four of the seven standing Senate committees had released updated guidelines that specified testimony at hearings would be in person. None of the documents mentioned protocols for pre-recorded video testimony. The other three committees had not released updated guidelines.
Part of Ferguson’s decision is linked to a belief about the General Assembly that is separate from health or technology, according to a statement released by Schuhlein.
“From the beginning of the 2022 Legislative Session, the Senate President has believed that a core part of the democratic process is having the public in person when safe to do so,” he said. “Key health metrics are returning to pre-omicron levels, and as such, the Senate president is moving forward with the plan.”
Ferguson said publicly in January that if health conditions permitted, the Senate would transition back to in-person hearings.
But some organizations argue a return to the status quo excludes many constituents.
CASA de Maryland, an immigration advocacy organization, has had members and representatives provide virtual witness testimony at hearings this session.
“Pandemic or not, failure to extend a virtual option only excludes the voices that legislators need to hear the most,” said Cathryn Paul, government relations and public policy manager at CASA de Maryland. “Black and brown Marylanders are those who will be impacted the most. The Senate should be maximizing access, not limiting it.”
Nikki Tyree, executive director of the League of Women Voters of Maryland, said her conversation with Ferguson’s office earlier this week made clear that the chamber is “dug in” on its position to eliminate live virtual testimony.
“This move was deliberate,” Tyree said in an interview. “It shouldn’t be seen as anything other than closing the door on Marylanders.”
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