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HB 395Water Pollution Control - Discharge Permits - Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations

MD 2026RS session · introduced 2026-01-22

Repealing certain provisions of law requiring a person to hold a concentrated animal feeding operation (CAFO) general discharge permit issued by the Department of the Environment before the person may begin construction on any part of a new CAFO; and authorizing the Department, under certain circumstances, to authorize a person to begin construction on any part of a new animal feeding operation under a certain approval process established by the Department.

Latest action: Approved by the Governor - Chapter 254

Sponsors (19)
Action timeline (9)
  1. · house First Reading
  2. · house Hearing — Environment and Transportation
  3. · house Second Reading — Passed with Amendments
  4. · senate First Reading (cross-filed)
  5. · house Third Reading — Passed
  6. · house Committee Report — Favorable with Amendments
  7. · senate Second Reading — Passed
  8. · senate Third Reading — Passed
  9. · senate Committee Report — Favorable
Text versions (0)

No text versions on file yet — same ingest as the action timeline populates these. Each version has direct links to the XML / HTML / PDF at govinfo.gov.

Bill text (extracted)
Amendments
Congressional Research Service briefs (0)

CRS reports that cite this bill in their relatedMaterials — what Congress was reading on the topic. Click any report for its summary, formats, and bill-citation walk.

No CRS reports cite this bill yet.

Connected on the graph

2 typed relationships in the influence graph — 0 inbound, 2 outbound, grouped by type.

referred to committee (2)
datedirentityamountrolesource
Senate education, energy, and the environmentmd-leg
House environment and transportationmd-leg
Who matters on this bill

Who matters

Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.

#MemberRoleSpeechesVotedScore
1Regina T. Boyce (D, state_lower MD-43)sponsor05
2Barry Beauchamp (R, state_lower MD-38)cosponsor01
3Christopher T. Adams (R, state_lower MD-37)cosponsor01
4Dana Stein (D, state_lower MD-11)cosponsor01
5Darrell Odom (D, state_lower MD-27)cosponsor01
6H. Kevin Anderson (R, state_lower MD-38)cosponsor01
7Jay A. Jacobs (R, state_lower MD-36)cosponsor01
8Jefferson L. Ghrist (R, state_lower MD-36)cosponsor01
9Kevin B. Hornberger (R, state_lower MD-35)cosponsor01
10Marvin E. Holmes (D, state_lower MD-23)cosponsor01
11Mike Griffith (R, state_lower MD-35)cosponsor01
12Natalie Ziegler (D, state_lower MD-9)cosponsor01
13Robin L. Grammer (R, state_lower MD-6)cosponsor01
14Ryan Nawrocki (R, state_lower MD-7)cosponsor01
15Sheree Sample-Hughes (D, state_lower MD-37)cosponsor01
16Steven J. Arentz (R, state_lower MD-36)cosponsor01
17Teresa E. Reilly (R, state_lower MD-35)cosponsor01
18Thomas S. Hutchinson (R, state_lower MD-37)cosponsor01
19Wayne A. Hartman (R, state_lower MD-38)cosponsor01
Stance (positions taken)

Predicted vote

Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.

0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)

By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no

Timeline

Every typed-graph event involving this entity, newest first. Each row is one edge in the influence graph; the inline strip under the row shows the counterpart's own context (a bill's latest action, a hearing's chamber + date, a filing's form type + filed date, a clip's source + excerpt) so the timeline reads like a Wikipedia citation rail.

  1. 2026-05-24 · was referred to Senate education, energy, and the environment · md-leg
  2. 2026-05-24 · was referred to House environment and transportation · md-leg
News clips about this bill
Mentioned in /ask threads

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