Skip to main content

Hannah Gaskill - page 6

Reporter

Hannah Gaskill was a reporter for Maryland Matters. She left the publication in May 2022. Gaskill received her master’s of journalism degree in December 2019 from the University of Maryland. She previously worked on the print layout design team at The Diamondback, reported on criminal justice in Maryland for Capital News Service and served as a production assistant for The Confluence — the daily news magazine on 90.5 WESA, Pittsburgh’s NPR member station. Gaskill has had bylines in The Baltimore Sun, The Washington Post and The Chicago Tribune, among other publications. Before pursuing journalism, she received her bachelor’s of fine art degree from Carnegie Mellon University in 2016. She grew up in Ocean City.

The House and Senate took vastly different approaches to craft policy prohibiting unserialized ghost guns on Wednesday.

The House chamber moved consequential abortions access legislation one step closer to the Senate after an hour-and-a-half of respectful debate on Wednesday.

Public Defender

House and Senate lawmakers are making another attempt this session to limit criminal penalties for Marylanders who use illicit drugs. House Judiciary Committee Vice…

Lawmakers amended a proposed elections cost-sharing agreement to ban election officials from asking courts to push back the upcoming primary election beyond July 12…

Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) met the press on Friday, offering his assessment on where the General Assembly session is at a little past the halfway point.

An omnibus juvenile justice reform bill seeks to stop charging children for petty crimes and focus resources on kids who are in need of intervention services.

The House of Delegates gave unanimous approval Thursday to a trio of bills that would cut sales tax on commonly used baby care and…

Members of the General Assembly rolled out a package of bills to offer more protections to state and local government online networks on Wednesday.

Transparency

The bill would mandate minimum security requirements for licensed gun dealers to prevent their shops from being robbed.

A backlog of invoice payments that the Maryland Department of Health owes to public health contractors has hampered their ability to assist those most in need.