The inside of the General Assembly chambers in Annapolis. Photo by Roxanne Ready, via Flickr, used with a Creative Commons license.

By Daniel Oyefusi
Capital News Service

ANNAPOLISโ€”Maryland school districts will now have the ability to again start their school year before Labor Day, overturning a previous executive order by Republican Gov. Larry Hogan.

One day after the Maryland Senate voted to override Hoganโ€™s veto of a bill that would give power to local school boards to determine their respective calendars, the House of Delegates voted Friday to override the measure as well.

The House voted 93-43 to join the Senate in overriding Hoganโ€™s veto.

Delegate Anne Healey (D-Prince Georgeโ€™s County), who served on a year-long task force to study a post-Labor Day start for Maryland public schools, said Hoganโ€™s veto โ€œshort circuitedโ€ the work of the task force.

Healey said more flexibility was required for schools that needed to account for additional religious holidays and athletics.

Delegate Haven Shoemaker (R-Carroll County) argued against overriding the veto, pointing to numerous businesses that would benefit from the additional week of summer vacation.

On Thursday, the Senate voted 32-15 along party lines to override Hoganโ€™s veto.

Hogan on Wednesday vetoed Senate bill 128, saying that the legislation โ€œunravels years of bipartisan work and studyโ€ and citing polls revealing that the bill runs counter to the wishes of most Marylanders.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Paul Pinsky (D-Prince Georgeโ€™s County), overturns Hoganโ€™s 2016 executive order mandating schools start after Labor Day.

โ€œThe executive order does not respect the diversity of our state,โ€ said Del. Eric Luedtke (D-Montgomery County).

This was the last of three veto overrides to occur this week. Both chambers also voted Thursday to override Hoganโ€™s veto of a bill to strip alcohol and tobacco regulation from the state comptroller, and a bill to gradually increase the minimum wage to $15.

CNS reporter Natalie Jones contributed to this story.