Baltimore elections board posts meeting video and agenda online
The Baltimore City Board of Elections posted the Jan. 15 meeting agenda and video links, giving residents direct access to materials and participation rules that affect local races.

The Baltimore City Board of Elections has published its board meetings page with an entry for the Jan. 15, 2026 meeting that includes an agenda and links to the meeting video. The page details how meetings are broadcast, how the public can access board materials, and the rules for public participation, making the administration of local elections more visible to Baltimoreans.
Visitors to the page will find references to the Jan. 15 agenda and a video link, information that helps residents, campaign teams and observers follow the administrative steps behind candidate filings and the canvass process. The board indicates that meetings are broadcast on its YouTube channel and that archived agendas and minutes are available through the site, offering a persistent record for those tracking deadlines, procedures and official actions.
The board meetings page also provides instructions for accessing materials and contact information for the board office. Those elements are aimed at ensuring that anyone with an interest in local election administration can request documents, review past minutes or learn how to participate in the public comment portions of meetings. For campaign staff, lawyers and community organizations that monitor filings and canvass outcomes, the posted agenda and minutes are primary source material for verifying timelines and decisions.
Transparency in election administration matters locally because it shapes public confidence in candidate certification and vote counting. For a city with tightly contested local races and active grassroots organizing, clear access to meeting records and live broadcasts reduces barriers to oversight and allows Baltimoreans to hold officials to account in real time. Accessible video archives also help voters who cannot attend in person to see the deliberations that affect ballot access and procedural rules.
The board’s use of an online platform to post agendas and videos aligns with broader open-government practices that make municipal processes searchable and reviewable. Locally, the change reinforces habits among civic groups and journalists to consult the board’s archives when reporting on filings, complaints or post-election canvasses.
For readers, the practical next step is straightforward: review the Jan. 15 agenda and the posted video on the board meetings page or the board’s YouTube channel, and use the contact details on the page if you need copies of materials or guidance on participating in future meetings. Greater visibility of meetings now gives Baltimoreans clearer tools to follow and influence the administration of elections in the city.
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