get these nets
Veteran
06/20/25
ANNAPOLIS, MD — Governor Wes Moore today announced additional action to close the racial wealth gap and expand access to work, wages, and wealth for Black Marylanders. Before a congregation of 200 at Bethel AME Church in Cambridge, the governor made official new Just Community designations to prioritize up to $400 million in competitive state investments in communities that have been historically impacted by exclusionary policies
Governor Moore signed Just Community legislation in 2024 to target state investment in communities that have experienced decades of discriminatory policies like redlining, urban renewal projects, high incarceration rates and disproportionate exposure to environmental and health hazards. The legislation promotes equal opportunity by working to more systemically uplift historically underserved communities.

Using racial equity and social justice framework, program evaluation, and community engagement, the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development developed recommendations over the past year to designate 419 of Maryland’s 1,463 census tracts as Just Communities, representing 17 counties and the City of Baltimore.

The five-year designation will create priority consideration for competitive state funding in FY 2026.
Governor Moore made the recommended designations official today, to take effect July 1.
The governor also announced pardons for 6,938 additional convictions for simple cannabis possession, an expansion of the historic executive clemency order that pardoned more than 175,000 convictions—the largest pardon for misdemeanor cannabis possession charges for any state in the country. The additional pardons are the result of continued partnership with the Maryland Judiciary to review cases since the first order was signed last June.
As required by the governor’s Expungement Reform Act, all pardoned cannabis possession offenses will be removed from public view by January 31, 2026. The Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services will also indicate pardoned convictions on criminal background checks.