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Maryland House adopts conference reports, passes budget bills after late-night votes
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Summary
After late-night debate and procedural objections about limited reading time, the Maryland House adopted the conference committee report on the operating budget (Senate Bill 282) and passed the Budget Reconciliation and Financing Act (Senate Bill 284); votes and roll calls recorded significant majorities and a failed special-order motion earlier in the evening.
The Maryland House of Delegates late Monday adopted conference committee reports on the state’s fiscal 2027 budget and approved related budget legislation after extended debate over timing and disclosure.
The conference committee chair told the House the committees had reconciled differences between the chamber and the Senate and presented a compromised version of Senate Bill 282, the operating budget for fiscal 2027. The chair summarized priorities in the package, saying the budget would leave a $250 million cash surplus, maintain more than $2 billion in the rainy day fund and invest more than $10 billion in public schools. The report was put to a roll-call vote and was adopted with 102 votes in favor and 13 opposed; Senate Bill 282 was then readied for third reading and final passage.
Several members objected to the timing and availability of the conference report. A delegate who identified herself as from Baltimore County said the membership had not been given 24 hours to read the committee report and said she would vote no. "I am really surprised that you're calling a vote on this before you gave us a chance to read the bill," she said. The conference committee chair responded that conference committee reports are not amendable on the floor and that members had committee and report access; the chair said some changes were limited and that Department of Legislative Services had instructed leadership about the timeline.
Earlier in the evening a motion to special order Senate Bill 283 (the Maryland consolidated capital bond loan of 2026) until Tuesday, March 31 passed on the floor. Later, a motion to special order Senate Bill 284 (the Budget Reconciliation and Financing Act) initially failed on a roll-call (24 in favor, 94 opposed), prompting further questions and a request that the bill be laid over to give members time to review. After additional clarification on specific items in the
