THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14 , 2019. THE WASHINGTON POST EZ RE B5
Bowie State President Aminta
H. Breaux said the university is
considering cutting some pro-
grams and trying to find a way to
keep staff whose salaries are
supported by federal funding.
The school is hoping to shift
other federal funding to offset
the loss of money earmarked for
minority-serving schools.
“What we’re doing is a real
juggling act,” Breaux said.
“Meanwhile, I spend a great deal
of time trying to garner private
support that we desperately
need, and many of our HBCUs
need, because we have such a low
endowment.”
Historically black institutions
have not benefited from the level
of private philanthropy that bol-
sters the endowments of majori-
ty-white institutions. Bowie
State has an $8 million endow-
ment to support academic pro-
grams and financial aid for more
than 6,100 students. By compari-
son, the University of Baltimore,
with about 4,400 students, has
an endowment of about $50
million.
With only a third of Bowie
State’s $146 million budget de-
rived from state appropriations,
all sources of revenue are vital
to the university’s sustainabili-
ty, Breaux said. She said Mary-
land has been generous with its
support, but for Bowie State
and other historically black in-
stitutions to be competitive,
more resources must be
brought to bear.
“We need the additional
funds to recruit more faculty to
scale up. We need to continue to
keep pace with developing our
curriculum, developing new
programs,” Breaux said. Pro-
ceeds from the settlement of the
coalition’s lawsuit “would be a
huge added value” to those
efforts.
Barnes, president of the Legis-
lative Black Caucus of Maryland,
said he is trying to garner sup-
port from the state Democratic
Caucus, hoping that a broader
coalition will stand with the
black caucus in its fight.
“This doesn’t just affect the
African American community,
but the state of Maryland with its
economy, with creating jobs,” he
said. “It has a long lingering
effect on where we are as a state
and where we are moving to.”
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O’Malley (D), whose final offer
was $40 million. “Gov. Hogan
has shown real leadership on
this issue where others have
repeatedly failed over the years,”
Shareese Churchill said.
In a letter to Jones (Baltimore
County), Hogan said he must
protect the state’s finances as
Maryland faces a $5 billion cash
shortfall between fiscal 2021 and
2024.
“As we approach the upcom-
ing budget process,” he told
Jones, “it is certainly within the
purview of you and your col-
leagues to attempt to find ways
to fund a settlement at the levels
you are seeking.”
Maryland is being asked to
atone for policies that the coali-
tion says have undermined the
state’s historically black institu-
tions. Years of allowing other
state colleges to duplicate pro-
grams that once attracted a di-
verse student body to the four
schools has impeded enrollment.
Advocates say that although
state spending has increased,
establishing parity within the
public university system re-
quires greater investment.
“Ultimately, the question is
whether you have the number
and diversity of programs and
services at our historically black
colleges as you have at the major-
ity institutions. And of course
you don’t,” said Earl S. Richard-
son, a former president of Mor-
gan State and a member of the
coalition. “The disparity in the
programming and infrastructure
gives historically white institu-
tions a great advantage over our
black schools.”
In a letter Jones sent Hogan in
October, she said the proposed
$577 million settlement could be
used to develop new academic
programs, hire faculty and ex-
pand the reach of state scholar-
ships.
“We cannot continue to allow
this lawsuit to languish, or risk
the potential that a higher feder-
al court will damage or eliminate
the important standards we have
in place,” Jones wrote.
Maryland appealed a 2017
court order to establish a set of
unique programs at each school
and provide additional funding
for marketing and scholarships.
The case remains in the hands of
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
4th Circuit, which has yet to rule.
If the state wins its appeal, the
alumni coalition could petition
the Supreme Court to take up the
case.
Del. Charles E. Sydnor III
(D-Baltimore County) said he
will work on legislation to settle
the lawsuit for at least $577
million if a resolution is not
reached by the time the General
Assembly convenes in January.
Sydnor, who organized
Wednesday’s rally, said the state
“has defaulted on the promissory
note” owed to the historically
black universities.
“We call on Governor Hogan
to stop the foot dragging and
delay,” he said as one attendee
yelled, “Pay up.”
While historically black col-
leges and universities fight for
greater state investment, they
are grappling with the loss of
federal money. Congress did not
reauthorize $255 million in man-
datory funding for minority-
serving colleges in September,
leaving Maryland’s four histori-
cally black institutions without
more than $4 million in federal
assistance.
Money from the current ap-
propriation will carry over into
next year, but the uncertainty
around future funding is already
affecting local schools.
EVELYN HOCKSTEIN FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
A bulldog mascot sits outside Bowie State University. The university is one of four historically black
colleges in Maryland that would receive part of a settlement from the state over inequitable funding.
BY DANIELLE
DOUGLAS-GABRIEL
AND OVETTA WIGGINS
Advocates for four historically
black colleges and universities in
Maryland are waging a public
campaign to draw attention to a
13-year-old lawsuit over inequi-
table funding and to call for a
resolution of a case that House
Speaker Adrienne Jones (D) calls
a “stain on the national reputa-
tion of Maryland’s higher educa-
tion system.”
The effort arrives at a critical
time for the roughly 100 colleges
and universities nationwide des-
ignated as historically black in-
stitutions. Many are contending
with slowing enrollment, paltry
state investment and dwindling
federal support. While these eco-
nomic head winds are broadly
affecting higher education, they
are endangering historically
black schools — widely known as
HBCUs — that already have lim-
ited resources because of the
legacy of discrimination.
States, including Alabama,
Louisiana and Mississippi, have
been forced to reckon with that
legacy through the courts. But
the history of neglect still places
historically black schools at a
disadvantage not easily reme-
died, some lawmakers and advo-
cates said.
“It’s bigger than Maryland, in
my opinion,” said Del. Darryl
Barnes (D-Prince George’s), pres-
ident of the Legislative Black
Caucus of Maryland. “It’s a na-
tional issue, and we’re trying to
bring national attention to it.”
The caucus is working with
graduates of Maryland’s histori-
cally black institutions on a
campaign, and alumni have cre-
ated a video detailing the history
of the case.
That campaign culminated
Wednesday when, just steps
away from the Thurgood Mar-
shall memorial in Annapolis,
hundreds of college students,
alumni and members of the Leg-
islative Black Caucus rallied to
demand that Gov. Larry Hogan
(R) settle the lawsuit for no less
than $577 million.
“We are here to fight for funds,
we’re here for equal facilities,
we’re here to fight for our future
and what is long overdue,” Fedel-
is Tucker, 26, a junior studying
communications at Bowie State
University, yelled from a plat-
form.
Negotiations between the
state and the Coalition for Equity
and Excellence in Maryland
Higher Education are at an im-
passe after several failed rounds
of court-ordered mediation.
The coalition, composed of
graduates from Maryland’s his-
torically black institutions, pro-
posed a $577 million settlement
in September. An attorney for
Hogan countered with what he
described as a final offer of
$200 million, which would be
divided over 10 years among
Morgan State University, Coppin
State University, Bowie State
University and the University of
Maryland Eastern Shore.
Barnes said it was “shame-
ful” that Hogan sent a letter
saying “take this $200 million
or leave it” when there should
have been discussion about a
path forward. He and other
lawmakers said the governor’s
proposal is not enough to reme-
dy decades of disparities al-
lowed by the state.
Hogan, like his predecessors,
has acknowledged Maryland’s
troubled history of segregation
in higher education but insists
that the state has made signifi-
cant strides to remedy the prob-
lem.
A Hogan spokeswoman said
Wednesday that Hogan “dramat-
ically increased” the offer made
by former governor Martin
MARYLAND
Settlement sought for
historically black colleges
Advocates hoping to end
13-year-old lawsuit over
inequitable funding
than heroin. And that, in the eyes
of Montgomery County police,
who have arrested and charged
him, renders the alleged actions
by Arrington a homicide.
The 47-year-old Rockville resi-
dent is being held in jail without
bond, charged with one count of
second-degree murder in the
death of Theresa Mcintire on the
basis of what investigators de-
scribed as Arrington’s “extreme
depraved indifference to human
life.” Arrington also faces charges
of distribution of fentanyl.
He is due in court again
Nov. 22. It is not clear from court
records whether he has retained
an attorney. A woman who on
Tuesday answered a phone num-
ber listed for someone who ap-
pears to be a relative of Ar-
rington’s declined to comment on
the case.
For several years, prosecutors
DEATH FROM B1 in Maryland have tried to build
homicide cases against drug deal-
ers in cases where the dealers’
customers have fatally over-
dosed. Judges have taken a mixed
view of that approach, with Mary-
land’s Court of Special Appeals
overturning a manslaughter con-
viction. But that opinion was
reversed in a 60-page opinion in
June from the Maryland Court of
Appeals, the state’s highest court.
“It was nearly impossible to
bring forth these cases before
that Court of Appeals opinion,”
said John McCarthy, the top pros-
ecutor in Montgomery County,
while declining to discuss the
Arrington case specifically.
For prosecutors, the challenge
comes in connecting two ele-
ments: that the dealer knew he
was selling a lethal product and
that the victim died of using that
particular substance. “It’s a dou-
ble linkage,” said Baltimore
County State’s Attorney Scott D.
Shellenberger.
The June opinion sets fairly
stringent standards for establish-
ing the linkage, Shellenberger
said, but it did affirm the practice.
He said that prosecutors could
take the same reasoning in the
opinion used for manslaughter,
which requires a grossly negli-
gent act, to try to file an enhanced
charge of second-degree murder.
“At least we now have guidance
on what the standards are,” Shel-
lenberger said.
In the Montgomery County
case, investigators appear to have
at least one witness saying that
Arrington sold a bogus Percocet
pill to Mcintire on the day she
died, according to court filings.
Court papers attribute her death
to “the combined effects” of fen-
tanyl, cocaine and alcohol.
The case began for county
police the night of Aug. 19 when
officers were called by Mcintire’s
daughter to their home in Ger-
mantown.
The daughter — who spoke on
the condition of anonymity out of
fear for her safety — had arrived
home and found the light on in
her mother’s bedroom, visible
under the closed door. Her moth-
er’s cat, Red, also was making a
lot of noise. The daughter entered
the room to check on her mother.
Her mother was slouched and
partially resting on a set of steps
that Red used to climb into the
bed, according to the daughter
and to Tracey Plummer, one of
Theresa Mcintire’s three sisters.
The tablet she took had such
an immediate effect, Plummer
said, that her sister couldn’t call
for help. “I don’t think Theresa
had a chance,” Plummer said.
She and her sisters grew up in
the Derwood section of Mont-
gomery County. Theresa Mcintire
also has a teenage son.
“Theresa’s life was centered on
those kids. They were her focus,”
Plummer said.
Her sister tended bar for years
at restaurants in Germantown.
She did not have health insur-
ance, according to Plummer, and
sometimes bought pills to man-
age the effects of arthritis and
back pain after an epidural acci-
dent during childbirth.
“My sister wouldn’t have
bought anything she didn’t think
was legit. She trusted him,” Plum-
mer said of Arrington. “That trust
got her killed.”
As investigators probed the
death, they learned that Mcintire
had purchased a single pill from
Arrington, according to findings
they filed in a court affidavit.
That led them to another woman,
who had allegedly bought five
pills from Arrington the same
day.
That woman told detectives
that she had confronted Ar-
rington, whom she said she knew
as “Pete,” after recovering from
her overdose and after learning
what had happened to Mcintire
— telling investigators, they
wrote in court records, that, “he
was clearly upset and wanted to
avoid any conversation of Mcin-
tire’s death.”told detectives that
she had confronted Arrington
after recovering from her over-
dose and after learning what had
happened to Mcintire — telling
investigators, they wrote in court
records, that “he was clearly up-
set and wanted to avoid any
conversation of Mcintire’s death.”
Of the four remaining pills, the
woman returned three to Ar-
rington for the original $100
purchase price, police said. She
kept the last pill, which detectives
were able to obtain.
Testing showed it contained
fentanyl but no trace of oxy-
codone and acetaminophen, the
two active ingredients in Perco-
cet, according to investigators.
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Murder charge in overdose death filed on basis of Md. high court ruling
customers were scarce at Frank-
lin Square, normally a lunchtime
hot spot.
Vendor Alex Cho, who has op-
erated food trucks since 2011,
stood in his new District Bowl
truck with a space heater running
off the vehicle’s generator. No one
was lining up to eat.
“Who wants to eat on a patio
when it’s cold outside?” Cho said.
“When it’s cold, everything takes
a hit.”
While it wasn’t the best weath-
er day to test out his new food
concept — “from the fire, straight
to your bowl,” as he put it — Cho
said he saw the slowdown as tem-
porary. When warmer weather
returns, the customers will be
back.
“It takes maybe a day or two —
up to a week — for people to get
adjusted to the cold,” he said. “The
change of weather is so drastic.
After that, it starts picking back
up.”
The D.C. region wasn’t the only
area hit with early-season cold.
The Capital Weather Gang said
“record-crushing cold” and snow-
fall was hitting the eastern half of
the country, unleashing histori-
cally low temperatures for this
time of year.
The Arctic blast stretched from
parts of southern Texas to west-
ern New York, setting hundreds of
record lows, many of which had
stood for more than a century.
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BY DANA HEDGPETH,
JUSTIN WM. MOYER
AND JASON SAMENOW
The Washington region awoke
Wednesday to the coldest temper-
atures of the season, a record-set-
ting chill that felt more like Janu-
ary than mid-November.
Temperatures across the area
dipped into the upper teens to
mid-20s, while wind chills sank
into the teens. The mercury plum-
meted to 19 degrees at Dulles
International Airport, breaking a
record low for the date. Balti-
more-Washington International
Marshall Airport’s low of 22
matched a record set in 1911.
Washington’s official low of 26,
measured at Reagan National Air-
port, fell four degrees short of
breaking a record set in 1911, but
still was about 15 degrees below
normal. It was colder in Washing-
ton on Wednesday than in An-
chorage and parts of Greenland.
The early-season chill was a
possible factor in water main
breaks in the region. Hypotherm-
ia shelters opened in the District
for those in need, while residents
across the Washington area strug-
gled to keep warm.
Outside the Farragut North
Metro station on Wednesday, 45-
year-old Clyde Rogers lay hud-
dled beneath a cardboard sign
that read, “Hello I’m homeless ...
help me out with jacket please.”
Fearful of shelters after six
years on the street, Rogers spent
the night in McPherson Square
beneath trash bags. He said the
plan for Wednesday night was the
same.
“It was hectic,” he said. “I got in
corners to try to block that wind,
but I found a spot where I can cut
off the wind and just wrap myself
up and stay warm. Now I’m out
trying to get a coat, because I
don’t have nothing but this little
jacket.”
The cold was possibly a factor
in at least two water-related prob-
lems Wednesday in the District.
D.C. Water crews worked to
repair an eight-inch water main
that broke in the unit block of K
Street NE. On 16th Street NW, a
leaking water valve slowed traffic
during the morning commute
near Whittier Place, closing
southbound lanes for hours.
Pamela Mooring, a spokes-
woman for D.C. Water, said a crew
determined that the broken valve
THE REGION
Cold breaks records —
and possibly water pipes
was not “leaking as badly” by
midafternoon, and it was expect-
ed to be replaced Thursday. She
said it wasn’t known whether the
cold was a factor in each incident,
but “this is the time of year we
tend to get breaks with the tem-
perature changes.”
The National Weather Service
for the Washington area tweeted
Wednesday that it is “very cold for
this time of year, despite sunshine
today.” The District activated a
hypothermia alert and was offer-
ing transportation to shelters that
opened as the mercury dropped.
The Washington Post’s Capital
Weather Gang said midweek felt
more like midwinter.
High temperatures stayed in
the 30s Wednesday, the coldest
day of the week. By Thursday,
temperatures are expected to rise
to the 40s, with 50s on Friday
before plunging again over the
weekend.
Parts of the region saw snow
flurries earlier this week, al-
though accumulation generally
was restricted to the higher eleva-
tions of Virginia and Maryland.
Even in the bright noon sun-
shine Wednesday, food trucks and
JAHI CHIKWENDIU/THE WASHINGTON POST
Pedestrians brace themselves against cold weather in the District on Wednesday. A powerful cold front
led to hundreds of record lows across the country, from southern Texas to western New York.