Maryland over the next four years Tuesday night at the Caucus of African American Leaders’ monthly meeting.
Moore, an author and nonprofit leader, greeted a full house at the Wiley H. Bates Legacy Center in Annapolis where he promised to make education more accessible, and create more pathways to well-paying jobs. When discussing his plans to bolster mental health resources in schools, Moore praised Anne Arundel County for its efforts to create a consolidated 911 center that will integrate more kinds of expertise in responding to emergencies.
Commuters on Camden and Brunswick MARC lines to see disruptions if rail workers strike Friday; some long-distance Amtrak trains canceled
“We are going to have a state that is going to prioritize mental health supports both for veterans and their families,” Moore said. “We can’t stop there because the mental health challenges that we continue to see throughout our state, they are real, they are urban, they are rural, they are suburban.”
Click here to read the rest of the article written by Dana Munro over at The Baltimore Sun