AG Brown Leads 17-State Coalition Filing Amicus Brief Defending Randolph-Sheppard Blind Vendors
Summary
Maryland Attorney General Anthony G. Brown is leading a multistate coalition of 17 attorneys general in filing an amicus brief in Taylor v. U.S. Department of Education, defending the Randolph-Sheppard Act program that grants blind vendors priority to operate food service facilities on federal property including military installations. The coalition opposes a December 2025 decision by the U.S. Secretary of Education granting the Army a broad, Army-wide exemption from the Randolph-Sheppard Act's priority, based on cost and performance concerns. The brief argues that the Secretary's decision ignored evidence that blind vendors have operated facilities efficiently and to the military's satisfaction, and that the sweeping waiver rested on incomplete and selective reasoning that federal law does not permit.
About this source
GovPing monitors MD Securities Regulator for new securities & markets regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 12 changes logged to date.
What changed
Maryland Attorney General Anthony G. Brown, joined by 16 other state attorneys general and the District of Columbia, filed an amicus brief in Taylor v. U.S. Department of Education challenging a December 2025 Federal Register notice by the U.S. Secretary of Education that granted the Army a broad, Army-wide exemption from the Randolph-Sheppard Act's priority for blind vendors operating dining facilities on federal property. The brief argues the exemption was based on isolated cost and performance concerns without adequate consideration of the program's overall effectiveness and the regulatory constraints on vendor costs.
State licensing agencies that recruit, train, and license blind vendors should monitor this litigation closely, as a ruling upholding the exemption could eliminate a significant revenue stream used to fund vendor training, equipment, and program administration nationwide. Military dining facility operators and potential blind vendor contractors should likewise track developments, as the program's survival affects competitive opportunities on federal installations.
Archived snapshot
Apr 24, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Attorney General Brown Leads Multistate Coalition in Filing Amicus Brief Defending Program That Expands Economic Opportunity for Blind Americans
Published: 4/24/2026
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Contacts [email protected]
410-576-7009
BALTIMORE, MD – Attorney General Anthony G. Brown is leading a multistate coalition of 17 attorneys general in filing an amicus brief in Taylor v. U.S. Department of Education, supporting a federal lawsuit challenging a decision by the U.S. Secretary of Education that stripped away a long-standing federal priority for blind vendors operating military dining facilities on federal property controlled by the Department of the Army.
The Randolph-Sheppard Act, enacted in 1936, established a cooperative federal-state program giving blind vendors priority to operate food service and other vending facilities on federal property, including military installations. Through designated State Licensing Agencies, Maryland and other states recruit, train, license, and support blind vendors, generating program revenue that funds those very operations. This decades-long partnership has created pathways to stable income and promoted entrepreneurship for blind Americans.
In December 2025, the Secretary of Education published a notice in the Federal Register granting the U.S. Army a broad, Army-wide exemption from the Randolph-Sheppard Act’s priority for the placement and operation of dining facilities, based on a small number of claimed cost and performance concerns, effectively removing blind vendors from consideration for military dining contracts across the country.
“This program exists to give blind Marylanders the tools, training, and access to build thriving businesses. Dismantling it doesn’t just close doors, it tears down the whole doorway,” said Attorney General Brown. “We will not stand by while the federal government attempts to strip those opportunities away.”
In their brief, Attorney General Brown and the coalition argue that the Secretary’s decision ignores what states actually know from years of administering the program on the ground – as a whole, blind vendors have operated dining facilities efficiently and to the satisfaction of the military itself. For example, Maryland vendors at Fort George G. Meade have been recognized by the U.S. Army for exceptional performance. The coalition further argues that the cost concerns cited by the Secretary do not hold up to scrutiny. Labor and food costs at military dining facilities are largely set by federal law and military procurement systems, not vendor discretion. Issuing a sweeping, nationwide waiver based on isolated examples, while ignoring this broader context, is the kind of incomplete and selective reasoning that federal law does not permit.
The stakes extend beyond individual contracts. Military dining facilities generate revenue that states use to fund vendor training, equipment, and program administration. Losing that pipeline weakens the infrastructure that supports blind vendors statewide. More broadly, curtailing the Randolph-Sheppard priority reduces the very business opportunities Congress designed the program to protect, leaving blind residents with fewer avenues to achieve the economic independence the law has long promised.
In filing the brief, Attorney General Brown is joined by the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, and Virginia.
Named provisions
Related changes
Get daily alerts for MD Securities Regulator
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Source
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from MD AG.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when MD Securities Regulator publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.