The title of the article upset me so much that it took me a while to read it. And, when I did, the story it told was every bit as awful as I had feared. Police fatally shoot resident of Columbia complex that supports adults with disabilities , Matti Gellman, Baltimore Banner A man who was fatally shot by Howard County Police early Sunday was a resident of an apartment complex dedicated to supporting adults with disabilities, according to the group that manages the complex. In a statement, Mission First Housing Group said it learned Sunday morning that one of its residents at Patuxent Commons in Columbia was shot and killed outside the property after a wellness check by police. Some wellness check. And then I read the comments. I was not prepared for what I learned. The vast majority of them were compassionate and wise. I don’t know any of these people personally (at least as far as I know) but they are a cut above the folks who post on the HCPD Facebook page. Each bul...
A wise person once told me that the people who are the closest to the actual work of education have the least power/say/input of anyone in a school system. That would be teachers, and from my experience that’s true. Mindbogglingly stupid, but true. Today I’m writing because it seems that it may also be true in libraries, and it concerns me. I’ve been sitting on this for a while because I’m a huge fan of our library system and I didn’t want to see my words twisted by bad actors for their own purposes. The recent firing and then rehiring of library shelvers was the last straw for me. So, let’s look back a bit. These are the questions I was asking in November of 2025. This is very basic. Am I correct in assuming that workers would not go to the effort to organize/establish a union if their relationship with management was satisfactory? In other words, that unions come about because of an unresolved problem or problems? I reached out to a friend whose area of expertise is preci...