Remembering Sen. Paul Sarbanes

Jan Plotczyk • December 15, 2020

Paul Sarbanes, former U.S. senator from Maryland, died December 6. He was 87.

An effective legislator who shunned the limelight, Sarbanes was a statesman of great intellect and integrity. He will be remembered as the man who drafted and introduced the first article of impeachment against President Nixon; the co-author of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a financial reform law to protect American consumers from fraud; and a determined protector of the environment and champion of the Chesapeake Bay.

Paul Sarbanes had deep and humble Eastern Shore roots. He was born and raised in Salisbury and attended Wicomico County schools. His parents, Greek immigrants, owned the Mayflower Grill, a well-known diner in Salisbury, where Paul and his brother and sister waited on tables, washed dishes, and mopped floors after school and on weekends.

Sarbanes left Salisbury after high school graduation, and went to Princeton University on scholarship, graduated magna cum laude, studied as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, and graduated from Harvard Law School with honors before working his way up the political ladder. A long-standing public servant, the Democrat served in the Maryland House of Delegates for four years (1967–1971), the U.S. House of Representatives for three terms (1971–1977), and the U.S. Senate for 30 years (1977–2007) before retiring. He was the longest-serving senator in Maryland until Sen. Barbara Mikulski beat him by one day (due to a different number of leap days during her 30-year tenure).

Sarbanes was a thinker and a principled lawmaker, known for backing liberal legislation. Environmental protection was a major legislative focus. He did not write or introduce many bills, but preferred instead to do the important work of negotiating to get bills passed. Sarbanes used to say that, “You can get a lot done if you let others take some, maybe all, of the credit for it.” In a campaign debate he was called a “stealth senator,” a would-be insult he embraced.

Sarbanes helped enact every major piece of national environmental protection legislation including the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Endangered Species Act, and Superfund. But Maryland was fortunate to have in him an advocate for the Chesapeake Bay who worked tirelessly to protect the estuary and its waterways. Environmentalists credit Sarbanes with being one of the early supporters of Bay restoration in Annapolis and on Capitol Hill.

According to Joel Dunn, the Chesapeake Conservancy’s president and CEO, “Sen. Sarbanes often said, ‘If a state could have a soul, Maryland’s would be the Chesapeake.’”

Among his environmental legislative accomplishments for the bay are the Chesapeake Restoration Act, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Bay Education Program, the federal native oyster restoration program, the National Park Service Chesapeake Gateways and Watertrails Program, and the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail. The Paul S. Sarbanes Ecosystem Restoration Project is the formal name for the reconstructed Poplar Island wildlife haven in the middle of the bay, to mark the lawmaker’s support for that project.

Sarbanes was a longtime member of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and a member of the Chesapeake Conservancy’s board of directors. He received numerous environmental and conservation awards and recognition from many organizations, including the League of Conservation Voters, the Waterkeeper Alliance, and the Chesapeake Conservancy.

Chesapeake Bay Foundation President William C. Baker said, “The Bay lost a great champion yesterday, when Paul Sarbanes, former U.S. senator from Maryland, died. At the top of his priority list was protecting the environment. And at the top of that list, saving the Chesapeake Bay.”

Senator Sarbanes made a lasting impact on our country and our state. Our lives are better because of him.


Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.

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