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Anne Arundel Co. seeks teenagers to help in the election process

Anne Arundel is joining several other Maryland counties in trying to get younger teenagers involved in the election process.

The county Board of Elections will take part in a state program that allows students ages 14 and 15 to get service hour credit for working four-hour shifts on Election Day. Students 16 and older are eligible to register as election judges, and are encouraged to do it.

Under the program, the 14- and 15-year-olds would answer questions from voters who come to polling stations. The hope is that students will want to be more involved in the political process and register to vote.

Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, and Baltimore City, already participate in the program.

Students can sign up on the state board of elections website.

66-year-old man charged with hate crimes after vandalism at Anne Arundel Co. church

On Friday, police in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, arrested and charged a 66-year-old man with hate crimes after he allegedly defaced a church in Gambrills, Maryland, with hate-motivated graffiti. Police say that on August 3, Donald Eugene Hood, Jr., of no fixed address, inscribed an offensive message on the inside of a door to the Kingdom Celebration Center, which is located at 952 Annapolis Road.
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