A record should answer real resident questions
District 45 families do not need abstract campaign language. They need to know whether their delegate is working on issues that show up in daily life: neighborhood safety, school support, housing stability, youth protection, and a government that responds when people ask for help.
Caylin Young's record connects legislative work with community-facing service. The campaign's case for reelection is that District 45 should keep representation that understands both Annapolis and the neighborhoods affected by state decisions.
Schools and family support
Caylin Young's background includes work as a Baltimore City Public Schools mathematics teacher. That experience shapes how the campaign talks about education. The issue is not only school funding in the abstract. It is whether families, students, teachers, and community school coordinators have people in public office who understand what support looks like on the ground.
Education work also connects to youth opportunity, family stability, and public safety. Strong schools are part of how neighborhoods become safer and more stable over time.
Public safety and accountability
District 45 residents deserve safety and accountability at the same time. Caylin Young's public record includes work connected to police standards, neighborhood accountability, and support for families affected by violence.
That approach treats public safety as more than enforcement. It includes prevention, relocation and recovery support, school investment, and resident voice in decisions that affect Baltimore neighborhoods.
Housing, jobs, and stability
Housing instability and economic pressure shape what many District 45 families experience every month. The campaign's message connects housing stability, tenants' rights, jobs, small business opportunity, and pathways to ownership.
That is why the record page matters. Voters should be able to see how campaign claims connect to policy work and public service, then decide whether that work matches what East and Northeast Baltimore needs next.