Appointed by Governor: Theresa A. Daytner; Kien S. Lee; Michael C. Lin, Ph.D.; J. Henry Montes; Sylvia Ontaneda-Bernales, Esq.; Naima Said, Esq.; one vacancy. Terms expire 2011.
Appointed by Senate President: Joan Carter Conway; Richard S. Madaleno, Jr.
Appointed by House Speaker: Susan L. M. Aumann; James E. Malone, Jr.
Representing Immigration Section, Maryland State Bar Association: Mark J. Shmueli, Esq.
Ex officio: Peter V. R. Franchot, Comptroller of Maryland; Christian S. Johansson, Secretary of Business & Economic Development; John M. Colmers, Secretary of Health & Mental Hygiene; Brenda Donald, Secretary of Human Resources; Alexander M. Sanchez, Secretary of Labor, Licensing, & Regulation; Richard E. Hall, Secretary of Planning.
Staff: Jeffrey Werling, Ph.D.
c/o Inforum, Dept. of Economics
University of Maryland, College Park
College Park, MD 20742
(301) 405-4607
e-mail: werling@econ.umd.edu
Staff: Hiram L. Burch, Jr.
c/o Dept. of Legislative Services
Legislative Services Building, 90 State Circle, Annapolis, MD 21401
(410) 946-5530, (301) 970-5530
In June 2008, the Commission to Study the Impact of Immigrants in Maryland was authorized (Chapter 553, Acts of 2008). The Commission is to study the demographic profile of immigrants and their impact on Maryland. The study will consider the growth rate and national origins of Maryland's immigrant population; its geographic, size and age distribution; and whether Maryland's immigrants are similar in demographic profile to the national immigrant profile. It also will determine the impact of immigrants on the State's population growth, birth rate, and public school enrollment; the impact, growth rate and partipation rate of immigrants relative to the State workforce; and the socioeconomic profile of the immigrant population. Further, the Commission will examine the economic and fiscal impact of immigrants on the State, including immigrant contributions to the economy and tax base; immigrant consumer spending; and public expenses incurred by the State on their behalf. The Commission also will consider direct and indirect tax contributions of immigrants; net benefit or cost of immigrants on the State budget; their importance to State economic output; the potential for increased revenue from immigrant workforce availability and spending for local businesses; the projected economic impact of immigrants, the constraints on immigrants and their businesses in the State; and how to expand trade with immigrants' countries of origin.
Authorization for the Commission extends through May 31, 2011.
© Copyright Maryland State Archives