February 2026 Newsletter

The Data Is Clear — and So Is the Moment

As we move deeper into 2026, recent reporting and on-the-ground incidents in Howard County point to a troubling reality.

Recent Howard County Police Department (HCPD) hate-bias reporting shows that Jewish residents are the most frequently targeted group in Howard County on a per-capita basis, surpassing every other protected class. This isn’t a perception problem. It’s a measurable reality.

At the same time, we are seeing something equally troubling:
language, symbols, and political positions appearing locally that normalize or excuse hostility toward Jews.

This is how antisemitism operates in real life — often indirectly, and often without being named as such. It shows up as:

  • Double standards applied to Jews that are not applied to any other group
  • Demonizing language about Jews that would be unacceptable if aimed at any other community
  • Political symbols and messaging targeting Jews appearing in schools, parks, and public spaces
  • Failure by leaders and institutions to respond with the same urgency shown for other groups

These patterns are not new. What is new is how openly they are appearing in local politics, schools, and public spaces — and how quickly they spread when left unchallenged.

HoCoJAG exists to address exactly this moment.

Right now, we are:

  • Meeting directly with candidates ahead of the June primaries
  • Vetting rhetoric, positions, and public records
  • Educating elected officials and staff using primary sources and civil rights law
  • Preparing community members to ask informed, direct questions

Why the primaries matter:

In Howard County, the Democratic primary is the election. If we wait until after June, the decisions will already be made.

Save the Date: February 22

Please join us on February 22 at 9:30am for our next members-only meeting.  

You’ll learn:

  • What the data actually shows about antisemitism in Howard County
  • What we’ve already done — quietly and strategically
  • What’s coming next as the primaries approach
  • How you can help, in ways that fit your comfort level

This is about clarity, preparation, and refusing to let others define what is “acceptable” when it comes to Jewish safety.

More details soon. Click here to join HoCoJAG

HCPD Hate-Bias Incidents: What the Data Shows in Howard County

HoCoJAG reviewed hate-bias incident data published by the Howard County Police Department (HCPD), compiled from HCPD records pulled January 14, 2025 (covering 2024) and January 23, 2026 (covering 2025).

Howard County Has a Hate Problem

Howard County likes to think of itself as welcoming. The police data tells a harder truth: reported hate-bias incidents are not rare here — and the Jewish community is hit disproportionately.

When you account for population size, Jews show the highest per-capita rate of reported hate-bias incidents among the groups tracked in this dataset. That is not a talking point. It’s a warning sign.

This is a community safety issue that HoCoJAG continues to address with the schools, the County Council, and State Legislators. 

What you can do

If you experience or witness a hate-bias incident, report it to HCPD. If you want Howard County to respond seriously, join HoCoJAG—because communities don’t get safer by hoping.

Source: Howard County Police Department hate-bias incident records compiled by HoCoJAG (2024–2025).

FAQ

What is this data?

This page summarizes reported hate-bias incidents recorded by the Howard County Police Department (HCPD) and compiled by HoCoJAG into a spreadsheet for easier analysis.

What is a “hate-bias incident”?

A hate-bias incident is an incident reported to police that includes indicators the incident may have been motivated by bias (for example, slurs, symbols, targeting tied to identity, or other bias indicators documented in a report). It is not the same thing as a criminal conviction, and it may include a range of behaviors from harassment and threats to property damage or assault.

Does this prove intent or motive in every case?

No. Police datasets like this reflect reported incidents with documented bias indicators. They can show patterns of targeting across a community, but they don’t establish motive beyond doubt in each individual incident.

Does this include everything that happens?

No. Like all bias reporting, this is limited to what is reported and recorded. Many incidents are never reported, and communities can differ in reporting behavior. That’s a limitation of every police-based dataset—not a reason to ignore the pattern.

Why do you use “per capita” rates?

Because raw counts can mislead. Communities vary in size. Per-capita rates help show disproportionate impact—whether a group is being targeted at a higher rate relative to its population.

January 2026 Newsletter

Happy New Year

As we begin 2026, one thing is clear: this year matters.

The upcoming primaries will shape the leadership of Howard County, and the stakes for the Jewish community are real.

We are already seeing candidates step forward whose rhetoric and positions are openly hostile to Jews. This isn’t theoretical, and it isn’t something we can afford to ignore or address after the fact. Preparation now is essential.

That’s where HoCoJAG comes in — and where we need you.

Over the coming months, we will be:

  • Vetting candidates at every level
  • Meeting directly with those running for office
  • Hosting candidate meet-and-greets so our community can ask questions and hear clearly where candidates stand

This work takes people, time, and engagement from our community.

Save the Date: February 22

Please mark your calendar for our February 22 HoCoJAG members-only meeting.
At this meeting, you’ll hear:

  • What we’ve already been doing behind the scenes
  • What’s coming next as the primaries approach
  • How you can support this work — whether through time, outreach, or resources

If we want leaders who take antisemitism seriously and understand the responsibility of public office, we have to show up, stay organized, and make our voices heard.

More details to come — but for now, save the date and stay engaged.

Join HoCoJAG!

Why HoCoJAG Responded to “Maryland Matters”

HoCoJAG Responds to Maryland Matters on Antisemitism and Jewish Politics

Dear HoCoJAG Members,

HoCoJAG sent a letter responding to a recent Maryland Matters article on Jewish politics and antisemitism in Maryland, “Analysis: Is Gaza a sleeper issue in the Maryland midterms?

The article relies on perspectives that do not represent mainstream Jewish views — while overlooking what is actually happening here in Howard County, where antisemitism is shaping school environments and local political races.

Our response to Maryland Matters explains why HoCoJAG exists, what we are seeing on the ground, and why Jewish voters want local officials focused on local governance — not importing antisemitism’s modern form of antizionism into county and state politics. See our response to Maryland Matters below.

If you believe, as we do, that Jewish safety in Howard County requires direct political action, please donate to support HoCoJAG’s work in the upcoming primary elections: https://www.zeffy.com/en-US/donation-form/ed113781-8649-4828-8f06-d524d1c0cdfa

Thank you for standing with us,
Trevor Greene
—————————————————————————————————–
Dear Josh Kurtz and the editors at Maryland Matters,

I am writing on behalf of the Howard County Jewish Advocacy Group (HoCoJAG) in response to your recent piece examining the growing role of antisemitism and Israel-related rhetoric in Maryland’s political landscape, “Analysis: Is Gaza a sleeper issue in the Maryland midterms?” .

While the article prominently features J Street, it also relies heavily on commentary from Joel Rubin, a former policy advisor to Sen. Bernie Sanders, and former state Del. Saqib Ali. Collectively, these voices are not representative of mainstream Jewish perspectives, particularly at the local community level. Presenting their views as proxies for “the Jewish view” distorts how most Jewish families in Howard County and across Maryland actually understand antisemitism and its political consequences.

In Howard County, antisemitism is not abstract or theoretical. Multiple candidates currently running for local office are advancing rhetoric that most Jewish residents clearly recognize as modern antisemitism expressed through obsessive, one-sided antizionism. This is not legitimate policy debate about Israel; it is the singling out of Jews, the delegitimization of Jewish identity, and the importation of a global ideological conflict into local government where it has no place.

HoCoJAG exists precisely because these narratives fail to reflect what Jewish communities are experiencing on the ground. We are a single-issue organization focused on Jewish safety and combating antisemitism through civic engagement, political education, and direct political accountability. In 2024, HoCoJAG endorsed Sarah Elfreth because she demonstrated a clear understanding of antisemitism and a willingness to stand with the Jewish community. We will again endorse and actively support candidates in the 2026 cycle who meet that same standard.

It bears emphasizing that Jewish voters in Howard County are not asking local officials to litigate the Middle East. We want our county executive, county council members, school board members, and state representatives focused on local governance — education, public safety, infrastructure, and community wellbeing — without importing antisemitism’s modern form under the label of antizionism into local politics.

Any serious examination of how these issues are shaping Maryland elections must include voices from organizations confronting antisemitism at the local level, rather than relying on advocacy groups or political figures whose views fall well outside the mainstream of the Jewish community they are presented as representing.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

Sincerely,
Trevor Greene, DDS
Board President
Howard County Jewish Advocacy Group (HoCoJAG)