Relating to rent increase limits.
Maryland requires the Dept. of Commerce to run a public portal for complaints about processing delays over 60 days on licenses/permits, plus an annual report to the Legislature.
Maryland requires the Dept. of Commerce to run a public portal for complaints about processing delays over 60 days on licenses/permits, plus an annual report to the Legislature.
Summary
SB 496 requires the Maryland Department of Commerce to create and maintain an online complaint portal that allows businesses and nonprofit organizations to report when a government entity (state or local) takes longer than 60 days to process an application for a license, form, certificate, certification, permit, or registration. The Department must compile and submit an annual report on portal complaints to the General Assembly.
Key purpose / intent
- Increase transparency and oversight of government processing times for business and nonprofit licensing-related applications.
- Provide lawmakers with data to identify agencies or processes that cause persistent delays and inform potential policy or operational fixes.
Major provisions
- Portal creation and scope
- Commerce must create and maintain a public-facing portal on its website for complaints about processing delays exceeding 60 days.
- “Governmental unit” is broadly defined to include counties, municipal corporations, state units, local units, and other public bodies created by law, ordinance, or resolution.
- A complaint may not be filed through the portal if a state or local law, ordinance, or resolution explicitly authorizes the governmental unit to take longer than 60 days to process the application.
Annual reporting
Effective date
Who is affected
- Businesses and nonprofit organizations applying for licenses, permits, registrations, certificates, or similar approvals from state or local government entities in Maryland.
- State and local governmental units that process such applications (may be named in reports).
- The Department of Commerce (responsible for portal and reporting).
Fiscal and practical impact
- Commerce has indicated it can meet the bill’s requirements using existing resources; no revenue impact.
- The bill is not expected to materially affect local government finances or operations.
- Impact on small businesses is minimal: the portal provides a new mechanism to report delays and may help speed corrective action over time.
Procedural / status notes
- Sponsor: Senator Ellis (Maryland).
- Hearing: noted as scheduled for 2/13 at 1:00 p.m. (finance/administration committee assignments per docket).
- Cross-file / related legislation: HB 1038 (cross-file noted in fiscal analysis).
Potential effects to monitor
- Whether Commerce has sufficient staffing and IT capacity to maintain the portal and produce meaningful, anonymized reports.
- How frequently reported delays identify systemic bottlenecks and whether the General Assembly or agencies adopt remedies.
- The practical interaction between the 60‑day threshold and statutory timelines that already authorize longer processing periods.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.