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Act Now: The Bill That Would Keep Maryland Employees in the Dark

Mar 19, 2026

SB 417 is less about protecting workers and more about limiting the flow of information to them

A bill currently moving through the Maryland General Assembly and would restrict employers from holding meetings to communicate to their own employees about legislation, regulations and public policy that directly affects their business and their industry.

SB 417 is framed as protecting workers — until you look at what it actually covers. In fact, the bill silences the voice of employers and prohibits them from holding meetings with workers to discuss pending legislation and potential changes to public policy that impact their business and industry. That's not protecting workers. That's silencing the voice of the business community.

That's not protecting workers. That's limiting the flow of information to them.

What the Bill Actually Does

SB 417 would prohibit employers from taking adverse action against an employee who declines to attend a meeting where the employer expresses an opinion on "political matters" or "religious matters."

The bill defines "political matters" to include any proposal to change legislation, regulations, or public policy. That definition is extraordinarily broad — and that's where the damage gets done.

Think about the workplace conversations that happen every day across Maryland — the ones employees actually need:

  • A workplace safety regulation is changing and employees need to know how it affects their daily responsibilities
  • A new labor law is taking effect that changes how overtime is calculated, and workers deserve to understand what that means for their paycheck
  • A tax proposal could affect whether a company can afford to keep hiring — information employees need to understand their own job security
  • An environmental regulation is changing how a facility operates, and the people working there need to know what's coming before it does
  • A healthcare regulation is shifting what benefits employers can offer, and employees need to know before open enrollment

Under this bill, an employer who walks their team through any of these conversations could face fines up to $10,000 for a first violation and $25,000 for every violation after that — plus damages and attorney's fees. The result: employers go quiet. And employees lose access to information they need.

Workers Already Have Protections. This Goes Much Further.

Maryland already has robust protections for workers — protections that address real, documented workplace concerns. This bill goes far beyond those, using language so sweeping it would chill the kind of open, honest workplace communication that employees depend on.

Maryland businesses want their employees informed about the regulations, legislation and policy changes that affect their work and their livelihoods. Employers and employees are on the same side of this. When legislation affects a business, it affects every person who works there — and those workers deserve to know about it.

This bill would get in the way of that. Employers will hesitate. Conversations won't happen. And workers will be left in the dark about the very issues shaping their jobs and their financial security.

That is not worker freedom. That is workers being kept uninformed — by law.

What We're Asking

This bill is moving. The window to influence it is closing. We're asking lawmakers to recognize that silencing workplace conversations about public policy doesn't protect Maryland workers — it leaves them less informed and less prepared for the changes affecting their lives and livelihoods.

Contact your legislators now and tell them to vote no on SB 417. Open, honest workplace conversations about legislation and public policy aren't a threat to workers. They're information workers deserve to have.

Contact Your Legislators