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	<title>Red Line &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Red Line &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<item>
		<title>Will the Harm from Baltimore&#8217;s Highway to Nowhere Ever Be Repaired?</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/highway-to-nowhere-baltimore-expressway-demolished-black-neighborhoods/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Feb 2023 14:49:59 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Business & Development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barbara Mikulski]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brandon Scott]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gov. Larry Hogan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Highway to Nowhere]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Line]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wes Moore]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=137166</guid>

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<h3 class="text-center">In the late 1960s, Baltimore began demolishing Black neighborhoods to make room for an ill-fated expressway. Will the harm from the Highway to Nowhere ever be repaired?</h3>

<span class="clan editors">

<p style="font-size:2rem; padding-top:1rem; margin-bottom:0; ">By Ron Cassie</p>
<p style="font-size:1.5rem;">Photography by Isaiah Winters</p>
<p style="font-size:1rem;">Historical images by John Van Horn
and I. Henry Phillips</p>
<p style="font-size:1rem;">Opening spread: The image of the forlorn girl on the
outskirts of the Highway to Nowhere was shot by John Van Horn
in the fall of 1968 (see sidebar at the end of the story).</p>

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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">News & Community</h6>

<h1 class="text-center">Road to Ruin</h1>
<h4 class="deck text-center" style="padding-top:1rem; padding-bottom:1rem;">
In the late 1960s, Baltimore began demolishing Black neighborhoods to make room for an ill-fated expressway. Will the harm from the Highway to Nowhere ever be repaired?
</h4>

<h3 class="text-center">
By Ron Cassie</h3> 
<h5 class="text-center">Photography by Isaiah Winters</h5>
<h5 class="text-center">Historical images by John Van Horn
and I. Henry Phillips</h5>

<img decoding="async" class="mobileHero" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/FEB_RoadToNowhere_WebSpread_mobile.jpg"/>


 



<hr/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
<i><b>Opening Spread</b></i>
<br/>
The image of the forlorn girl on the
outskirts of the Highway to Nowhere was shot by John Van Horn
in the fall of 1968 (see sidebar at the end of the piece). <i>JOHN VAN HORN</i>
</h5>

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<h6 class="thin uppers text-center" style="color:#23afbc; text-decoration: underline; padding-top:1rem;">February 2023</h6>
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<p>
CLOSED THE CAR DOOR and stepped onto the
sidewalk in front of his childhood home when he recognized
an old friend coming toward him. “Chubb!”
Smith called out with a big smile. It was right before
Christmas and the two men, both in their mid-70s,
began reminiscing about growing up in the Rosemont
neighborhood, specifically the Lauretta Avenue
blocks around the Smith family’s corner rowhouse.
</p>
<p>
“‘Fort Lauretta,’ that was the Smith house,”
says Laneaue Burch, explaining that everything and
everyone had a nickname in the close-knit West Baltimore community. (“I got ‘Chubb’ because I was skinny.”) “This is
where we gathered and played football. I caught a lot of passes in
this street and that empty lot,” he continues, gesturing across the
intersection. “This time of the year, we’d be pulling out our new
footballs and roller skates—those metal skates you snapped over
your shoes. Skating in the streets was big. Oh man, we had fun.”
</p>

<p>
Ironically, a sign on the corner now reads: “No Ballplaying in
the Street,” though few kids appear to live or play here anymore.
</p>
<p>
Their neighborhood had everything a family needed in the
1950s and 1960s, says Smith, one of eight children raised by his
father, grandmother, and a half-dozen “block moms” after his
mother died. “This wasn’t the food desert it became. There were
corner stores and grocery stores, clothing, furniture, and hardware
stores, bakeries, pharmacies—mostly Black- or Jewish-owned—and
movie houses, like the Harlem Theater at Edmondson and Harlem,
the Bridge Theater at Edmondson and Pulaski,” he says, ticking
off two favorite Saturday hangouts. “I tell people it was a Norman
Rockwell existence.”
</p>
<p>
Then, in 1969, two years after Smith graduated from Edmondson
High, the city informed his family that their home stood in
the path of a planned expressway, and they intended to demolish
it. Originally named I-170 (later re-designated Route 40), it was
supposed to connect the booming white suburbs to Baltimore’s
downtown business district. It certainly wasn’t conceived to assist
Black commuters. The Franklin and Mulberry streets corridor had
first been identified in 1944 by consultant and notorious New York
highway builder Robert Moses as the path of least resistance—in
other words, low income and Black. Neither Smith’s father, a crane operator, nor Burch’s father, who cooked at a white
country club, owned a car. Before the expressway,
the city had a dependable transit system: streetcars,
and then buses, that reached Black neighborhoods.
</p>
<div class="picWrap">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/FEB_RoadToNowhere_Winters.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Glenn Smith sits on the steps of his childhood home on Lauretta Avenue in
Rosemont.
</h5>

</div>
<p>
“What choice did he have? My father took the
money offered and moved to Windsor Hills,” recalls
Smith, glancing down the hill to the near-empty
east-west expressway, or rather the 1.39-mile stub,
since known as the Highway to Nowhere because it
never got connected to I-70, I-95, I-83, or any other
major road. “Then, he had to get a car. My youngest
siblings moved with him. I joined the Marines and
the rest went on their own. I don’t think my father,
who’d come to Baltimore from North Carolina after
he got out of the Navy, ever adjusted.”
</p>
<p>
The dismantling of corridor neighborhoods had begun shortly
before the 1968 riots that followed the assassination of Martin Luther
King Jr.—and ramped up after them. Ultimately, 971 homes,
62 businesses, and one school were leveled, and more than 2,800
people were displaced. On Lauretta Avenue and elsewhere, almost
everyone Smith and Burch knew—whether homeowners, tenants, or
“rent-to-own” families—were forced out. It is a cruel twist that Fort
Lauretta was spared and resold by the city after construction began
in 1974. (Burch’s aunt was one person who did not sell, however, and
her Lauretta Avenue home was spared as well. Burch eventually took
over her home after she passed.)
</p>

<p>
For decades, Smith and Burch will tell you, their beloved neighborhood
has been a literal shell of what it was. Despite knocking
down 130 vacant homes and buildings in recent years, the city still
has 373 vacant building notices posted in the community. Next door
in Harlem Park, which took the brunt of the expressway’s wrecking
ball, there are 570. Long stretches on the Franklin Square and Poppleton
side of the Highway to Nowhere—less than a half mile from
the Edgar Allan Poe House Museum—have also been shuttered for
decades, although a driver coming in from Baltimore County can’t
really see the boarded-up neighborhood from the expressway’s voluminous
concrete valley, also referred to as “the Ditch.” Planners
intended to provide commuters with a “pleasant view” of the city
skyline on their approach into town.
</p>
<p>
“You know a funny thing that I notice when I come back to our
old house?” Smith says, pointing to the side of the Lauretta Avenue
rowhome. “The Formstone. I remember when my father had that put
up. Not a mark on it. Still perfectly intact.”
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The Highway to Nowhere, taken
from a drone in October. <i>—Video by Isaiah Winters</i> 
</h5>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
From top, women on Palm Sunday in the
late 1950s in Lafayette Square, a few blocks from the
Highway to Nowhere; a young girl in Lafayette Park, also
in the late 1950s. <i>I. HENRY PHILLIPS</i></i> 
</h5>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
A 1960 rendering of
the planned expressway through West Baltimore. 
</h5>

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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">I</span>
n his acclaimed book on blockbusting and the redlining
of Black communities, <i>Not in My Neighborhood: How Bigotry
Shaped a Great American City,</i> former <i>Baltimore Sun</i>
reporter Antero Pietila estimates that roughly 94,000
people—mostly Black residents—were dislocated between
1965 and 1980 by various expressway building, “slum clearance,”
and “urban renewal” efforts. Many affected families had come
to Baltimore looking for jobs after World War II, as part of <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/the-great-migration/">the Great
Migration</a>, and now they were uprooted again. Payouts offered to
homeowners in the Franklin-Mulberry corridor—based on declining “fair market” values in the area—were rarely enough to purchase a
comparable house in one of the few neighborhoods open to Black
homebuyers. (Future Hall of Famer Frank Robinson and his family
struggled mightily to find a home after he was traded to Baltimore
in 1966; his wife Barbara was so disgusted by the race-based real-estate
market she threatened to move back to California with the
couple’s two children.)
</p>
<p>
“Monuments to segregation,” ACLU lawyer Barbara Samuels
called the high-rises, all since imploded as failed housing
policy experiments.
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, the destruction in the neighborhoods split by the
Highway to Nowhere metastasized. The east-west expressway
plans had cast a pall over the Franklin-Mulberry corridor for two
decades, and when the condemnations began in 1966, and then
the demolitions a few years later, things quickly took a bad turn.
By the time the highway opened on Feb. 5, 1979, the surrounding
blocks—and their communities—had been gutted for a decade.
</p>
<p>
Today, residents in the Black neighborhoods divided by
Route 40 have the longest average commute times in Baltimore,
almost three times greater than in the city’s well-to-do
white neighborhoods.
</p>
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<p>
“The effects of that little underpass didn’t just
go into the 300 or 500 block [of a street in its corridor],”
Alton West, who later organized annual reunions
among those displaced, told an interviewer
back in 2009. “It just spread its wings either way.
Call it the ‘domino effect’ or whatever you want...[things] just fell and kept going. If the 400 block
was affected, now the 3 and the 5 are . . . and after a
while the 600 or the 100 [block]. I would say by the
mid-’70s to the late ’70s, it was like the spread of
cancer. It was just inoperable.”
</p>
<p>
As far as strategies to rehabilitate the community
after the fact, added West, a retired Baltimore housing
inspector, “I say ‘we’ as a city government—we
just probably didn’t have a clue.”
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The 1870-built Sarah Ann
Street rowhomes formerly scheduled for
demolition by the city. 
</h5>

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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">N</span>
ow, a half century after it consumed 52
acres of residential Black neighborhoods—and eight years after the Red
Line light rail was abruptly canceled by
a governor intent on building more
highways—there are hopes that the Highway to Nowhere
may finally be razed.
</p>
<p>
Passed in August, the Inflation Reduction Act,
which allocates $370 billion to address climate
change, includes $3 billion in Neighborhood Access
and Equity Grants that can be used to reduce the effects of urban heat islands,
for example, but also to remove
harmful infrastructure, such as
urban expressways.
</p>

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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The side-by-side
Carrollton Avenue rowhomes owned by Sonia
and Curtis Eaddy, who successfully fought the
city’s eminent domain plans for 18 years.
</h5>

</div>
<p>
That funding comes a year
after the federal government set
aside $1 billion in the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act for the Reconnecting Communities
Pilot Program, which was modeled off legislation co-sponsored
by Maryland senators Ben Cardin and Chris Van Hollen—with the
Highway to Nowhere in mind. In October, the city applied for a
$2-million grant through the program to study tearing up the ill-fated
highway. Recipients should be announced this spring.
</p>
<p>
“Baltimore is the poster child for this program, which is designed
to right a historic injustice the federal government helped facilitate,”
says Van Hollen, who, along with West Baltimore-raised Congressman
Kweisi Mfume, drafted a letter on behalf of the state’s Democratic
congressional delegation to U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete
Buttigieg, urging consideration of the city’s bid. “I bring this up to
Secretary Buttigieg every time I see him,” says Van Hollen. “He probably
wants to turn in the other direction when he sees me.”
</p>

<p>
At the same time, the state has a newly elected governor from
Baltimore. Wes Moore, the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/wes-moore-to-become-marylands-first-black-governor/">first Black governor</a> since the 1632
founding of the Maryland colony and just the third-ever elected in
the U.S., has vowed to jump-start the 14-mile, 19-stop Red Line light
rail initiative. As previously designed, it would have passed directly
through the long under-resourced Highway to Nowhere corridor.
</p>
<p>
With proposed stops at the West Baltimore MARC station—in
Rosemont, Harlem Park, and Poppleton, neighborhoods where up
to 60 percent of households don’t own a car—the anticipated light
rail promised reliable access to employment, the Social Security office
complex in Baltimore County, the University of Maryland, the
downtown business district and the Inner Harbor, as well as the
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. It meant access to schools,
grocery stores, healthcare, recreation, and entertainment.
</p>
<p>
The construction of the Red Line—pitched to help repair a half-century-
and-counting of damage from the Highway to Nowhere—was six months from putting out bids when former Governor Larry
Hogan <a hred="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/hogan-says-no-to-red-line/">canceled it without a single formal review</a> in 2015. The building
of the project alone was expected to create 15,000 direct and
indirect jobs. The Maryland Transit Administration was already
working with the state’s Department of Labor to create a training
program tailored for engineering, construction, and maintenance
positions at Glenn Smith’s old high school.
</p>
<p>
Today, any attempt to bring the now dust-covered Red Line plans
back to life faces enormous hurdles. The original price tag of $2.9
billion, which included $900 million in attached federal funding,
has climbed significantly with inflation. Federal transit funding remains
hyper-competitive, and winning back approval any time soon
is hard to imagine. (When Hogan sent that nearly $1 billion back to the feds, he also flushed away a dozen years and
$290 million in local and state planning.)
</p>
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<p>
Federal dollars also require a commitment from
the state, which will likely have to foot at least two-thirds
of the project again. Former Governor Martin
O’Malley increased the gas tax to generate revenue for
the Red Line, but that money is gone. How Moore intends
to raise funding remains to be seen. Not to mention,
recent residential and commercial developments
in Canton and Greektown will require new engineering
work-arounds. Environmental studies will have to
be repeated. Community outreach, always a contentious
process to some degree, will have to begin again.
</p>
<p>
While both Moore and Mayor Brandon Scott are
committed to bringing down the Highway to Nowhere—by no means a sure thing given the funding
necessary—the bigger question is: What should, or
will, come in its place?
</p>
<p>
Will Moore and Scott fight for a full light rail
plan like the one Hogan canceled and has the potential
to create the greatest economic impact? Or
will they settle for a less expensive—but more doable—rapid bus version of the Red Line? In an
interview, Scott said he’s committed to an east-west
light rail system while acknowledging a rapid
bus line may ultimately play a role. The removal
of the Highway to Nowhere and the once shovelready
light rail—linked by purpose and overlapping
geography—remain separate initiatives until
Moore and Scott decide on a common vision.
</p>
<p>
Former Maryland Department of Transportation
Secretary John Porcari was on the ground
floor when the ironically named Red Line (“redlining”
traditionally referred to mortgage discrimination
against Black home buyers) was first
conceived 20 years ago, in large part to address
systemic racism in transportion exacerbated by
the focus on building highways to accommodate
automobile drivers. He says that even with equity
and environmental justice as a priority at the
DOT under Buttigieg, funding for transit and expressway
removal remains exponentially harder
to win than highway-building dollars. That said,
the availability of Biden infrastructure money
and Reconnecting Community grants, according
to Porcari, “presents a unique opportunity that is not going to last forever. The city and state need to get their plans
together and act quickly.”
</p>
<p>
To Red Line advocates such as Samuel Jordan, a longtime community-
based organizer, the stakes could not be higher.
</p>
<div class="picWrap4">
<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/FEB_RoadToNowhere_Behind-Brandon-Scott.jpg"/>

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Mayor Brandon Scott, with
the Highway to Nowhere behind him, and elected
officials, including U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen
and Congressman Kweisi Mfume on his right.
</h5>

</div>
<p>
Jordan co-founded the <a href="https://moretransitequity.com/">Baltimore Transit Equity Coalition</a> with
Glenn Smith after the project was canceled by Hogan. In December,
the organization commemorated the 66th anniversary of the end of
the Montgomery bus boycott with a webinar update on its Red Line
and transit equity efforts.
</p>
<p>
“Frankly, this is a social justice and civil rights struggle,” says Jordan,
74. With Smith and two others, Jordan filed a federal civil rights
suit against the Hogan administration, as did the NAACP Legal Defense
Fund. A transportation economist using the state’s own models,
“found that whites will receive 228 percent of the net benefit from
[Hogan’s] decision, while African Americans will receive -124 percent.”
(The Obama Administration decided the NAACP case merited
an investigation, but that inquiry was dropped by former President
Trump’s Department of Justice without comment.) Jordan emphasizes
that at the same time Rosa Parks, Claudette Colvin, and others were
refusing to surrender their seats in Alabama, Baltimore’s politicians
and business community were planning to demolish Black neighborhoods
for an expressway to serve white automobile drivers.
</p>
<p>
“The racial equity struggle is more than just being able to sit wherever
you want on the bus,” he says. “What about the quality of the service itself? What about the racial disparity of transportation and
transit spending? That’s what our coalition seeks to eliminate. We
want to put a halt to, and address, the structural racism that has
always been central in public transit policy and that got us here.”
</p>
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A view of the Highway to
Nowhere from a bridge above the 1.39-mile
expressway.
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">R</span>
emarkably, Baltimore’s urban expressway system,
which also includes I-395 and crash-prone I-83,
could’ve been much worse. The concept of a cross-town
expressway was first studied by local engineers hired
in 1942. Baltimore passed the baton two years later to
the aforementioned Moses, and the New York highway builder’s
subsequent report originally called for displacing not the 2,800
residents eventually resettled, but an estimated 19,000 people. The
sprawling plan, tweaked a dozen times over the ensuing decades,
was initially intended to link an east-west expressway to Route 1
and Route 40, roads leading to Philadelphia and Washington. Bulldozing
Black neighborhoods was not the most controversial part at
the outset; it was plowing just south of The Walters Art Museum
and the Washington Monument in Mount Vernon to connect to the
Orleans Street viaduct and Route 40.
</p>
<p>
In fact, the bulldozing of low-income, minority neighborhoods
to alleviate congestion for white automobile drivers was sold as a
feature, not a bug. Moses, who interestingly never learned to drive,
did not understand that neighborhoods in older cities like New York
and Baltimore were like small towns or villages onto themselves.
Ambitious, arrogant, and particularly unconcerned with Black and
brown communities, he anticipated and dismissed citizen opposition
in Baltimore as he did in New York.
</p>
<p>
“Some of the slum areas through which the Franklin Avenue Expressway
passes are a disgrace to the community and the more of
them that are wiped out, the healthier Baltimore will be in the long
run,” Moses wrote in his Baltimore Arterial Report, the basis of which
laid the foundation for the Highway to Nowhere route. “Nothing
which we propose to remove will constitute any loss to Baltimore.”
</p>
<p>
Robert Caro, who covered Moses as a young reporter and then
profiled him in the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, <i>The Power
Broker,</i> characterized Moses as “one of the most racist men” he’d
ever encountered.
</p>
<p>
Citizen outrage against the Moses plan was immediate, with
some 1,500 people filling an auditorium for a city council hearing
on the proposal in early 1945. <i>Sun</i> columnist H.L. Mencken called the Moses plan “a completely idiotic undertaking.”
And a member of the traffic committee that
hired Moses said the plan “poses a mountain of
human misery.” Yet, Baltimore’s civic and business
elite pushed ahead.
</p>
<p>
A well-orchestrated protest by a bohemian collection
of artists, artisans, and LGBTQ community
members on a single, colorful block of Tyson Street
rowhouses—described as Baltimore’s mini-version
of Greenwich Village—helped quash the Mount Vernon
thruway. In its place, however, city planners in
1959 came up with an equally crazy scheme. The
new plans called for taking the Franklin-Mulberry expressway south to intersect with I-95 and I-83, which
were in the works, along with the Baltimore Beltway. Everything
was to culminate (see rendering) in
an overpass 40 feet above the Inner Harbor and a <i>14-lane
interchange</i> where Harbor East now sits. That expressway
proposal would have ripped through Gwynns Falls-Leakin
Park, the middle-class Black neighborhood of Rosemont,
the Franklin-Mulberry corridor, Sharp-Leadenhall
in South Baltimore—a one-time abolitionist hub established
by freed slaves—before lopping of the top of Federal
Hill and crossing over the Inner Harbor.
</p>
<p>
A great deal of Fells Point, written off by many as
a white working-class slum, was marked for the scrap
heap, which famously launched a then-social worker
from the area named <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/senator-barbara-mikulski-daughter-of-polish-grocers-rise-to-the-senate/">Barbara Mikulski</a> into action. And
if you now reside in Federal Hill, Fells Point, Canton,
or Harbor East—or simply enjoy the Inner Harbor, Rash Field, and the bars and restaurants along the city’s unique sevenmile
waterfront promenade—you have Mikulski and a scrappy
group of activists to thank. Born from the democratic idealism of
the 1960s, highway protestors formed grassroots organizations
with feisty names like M.A.D. (Movement Against Destruction),
a cross-city, biracial coalition of 35 neighborhood groups; R.A.M.
(Relocation Action Movement); and S.C.A.R. (Southeast Council
Against the Road).
</p>
<p>
“They would rather run the expressway through Black folks’
bedrooms than a white folks cemetery,” was a popular R.A.M.
slogan aimed at a plan to knock down homes in Rosemont to
avoid Western Cemetery. Together, they organized one of the
most successful, though not perfect, highway revolts in the
country. “We had maybe eight people when we started,” recalls
the 86-year-old Mikulski, referring to S.C.A.R. “We met almost
every night of the week in some bar or church basement to make
it look like we had a lot of support.”
</p>
<p>
In 1967, the inaugural Fells Point Fun Festival was organized
to raise funds for anti-highway legal efforts. Two years later at
the annual street party, which continues to this day, a then-33-
year-old Mikulski shouted her opposition as then-Council President
William Donald Schaefer, a big expressway proponent, tried
to speak. “The British couldn’t take Fells Point, the termites
couldn’t take Fells Point,” railed Mikulski, who would soon win her own seat on the City Council. “And we don’t think the State
Roads Commission can take Fells Point either.”
</p>
<p>
Paradoxically, as the federal government was doling out
billions for expressway expansion—funding 90 cents on the
dollar for highway projects—it eventually passed legislation
that would also prove a boon to local anti-highway activists.
</p>
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<p>
The Federal Aid to Highways Act and The National Historic
Preservation Act, both passed in 1966, had provisions to protect
natural habitat, park and recreation land, and historic
buildings. Those laws became vehicles for activists to delay
the Leakin Park, Federal Hill, and Fells Point sections of the
broader expressway system plans in court. Preservationists
got Fells Point placed on the National Register of Historic Places
in early 1969. Federal Hill won the designation a year later.
Both neighborhoods, then and now majority-white, would ultimately
be saved.
</p>
<p>
“The national highway system was truly a great American
achievement, that was Eisenhower’s plan,” Mikulski says.
“However, the Robert Moses approach, his vision destroyed
neighborhoods so he could create other neighborhoods.”
</p>
<p>
Several cities Mikulski is referencing—New York, Boston,
San Francisco, Oakland, Milwaukee, Chattanooga, Providence—have already converted urban expressways to more
neighborhood-friendly boulevards. Others are in process.
</p>
<p>
The tragedy is the city’s long effort to link the east-west
expressway to I-70, I-95, and I-83 was all but dead by 1974,
when then-Mayor Schaefer gave the final go-ahead to build
the now pointless 1.39-mile spur. Relatedly, Schaefer’s and
city leaders’ obsession with building highways through the
city is the reason Baltimore doesn’t have a full Metro system
like Washington, D.C., which did not have a thriving downtown
like today when planning began for that project in 1967.
</p>
<p>
“It was well beyond the time when a reasonable person
would have said, ‘Wait, it’s time to reevaluate,’” says Evans
Paull, a former city planner and author of <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/book-review-stop-the-road-e-evans-paull-discusses-baltimore-historic-road-wars/"><i>Stop the Road: Stories
from the Trenches of Baltimore’s Road War.</i></a> (See our full interview with Paull, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/book-review-stop-the-road-e-evans-paull-discusses-baltimore-historic-road-wars/">here</a>.)
“[He] was also a very strong pro-business
guy, and the Greater Baltimore Committee was the
No. 1 cheerleader behind the highway plan. . . . The
irony is that if the city business interests advocating
for highways had been successful, it would’ve
been economically disastrous for the city. The later
redevelopment of all those [Inner Harbor] neighborhoods
might not have happened if the highways
been built.
</p>
<p>
“I also don’t think the city would have ever entertained
an expressway through a comfortable
middle-class white neighborhood, the way it did
Rosemont, for example,” continues Paull. “I think
it’s just characteristic of the city’s low regard for African-
American neighborhoods that it was the only
section that got built in the end.”
</p>
<p>
To his point, just this summer, after an 18-year
battle with the city, Sonia and Curtis Eaddy saved
their rowhome, which sits a block south of the
Highway to Nowhere, from demolition. The city first
sent a condemnation notice to the Eaddys back in
2004, along with more than 100 of their Poppleton
neighbors, including dozens of homeowners. Baltimore
officials had decided to clear out the neighborhood
for a University of Maryland expansion and a
New York-based company’s proposed development.
</p>
<p>
The Eaddys’ struggle was part of a broader successful
community campaign to preserve a small
block of distinct 19th-century rowhouses around
the corner from their home on Sarah Ann Street.
Unfortunately, those residents were all forced to
leave before the homes were finally designated offlimits
and safe from development. Only a few, if
any, are likely able to return.
</p>

<p>
“My dad grew up in this block,” says the 57-yearold
Sonia Eaddy. “He was at 329 Carrollton Avenue and I’m 319. He bought his house in 1969 or 1970, and that’s where I
grew up. ‘The Highway’ was up the corner. My grandmother and grandfather
moved to the 1200 block of Mulberry, across the street, so as a
kid, I remember when the city demolished their property. I remember
the gravel, the metal poles with the wire surrounding the blocks that
were demolished. We used to play on those lots and throw rocks. Then
when they started to dig, you had to take what we called ‘the bridge’
across to see friends, go to school or church, or go to Edmondson Avenue,
which had a lot of shops.
</p>
<p>
“I was young, I can’t speak directly to how people felt about the
city condemning their property at the time,” she continues, “but with
our home and the Sarah Ann Street homes, it was basically like, ‘You
don’t count. You don’t matter.’”
</p>
<p>
There are also historical echoes between the building of the Highway
to Nowhere and the cancellation of the Red Line.
</p>
<p>
Just two months before King’s assassination and the riots in Baltimore,
Mayor Thomas D’Alesandro III—in an address to the American
Road Builders Association, no less—acknowledged the dark truth that
the planned expressway, “will displace thousands of families, will
dismember neighborhoods and communities, will disrupt industry
and commerce, and will destroy parks and historical landmarks.” The
Little Italy native, whose father had been mayor when the east-west
expressway plans were first hatched, added that “the problem of dislocation
of people is particularly critical.” He even forewarned the
dislocations would become “a major cause of unrest.”
</p>
<p>
Nonetheless, as Paull highlights in his book, only two weeks after
the riots, D’Alesandro decided to stick with the final expressway design
that would devastate the Franklin-Mulberry corridor.
</p>
<p>
In an analogous gut-punch to a reeling West Baltimore, Governor
Hogan announced his decision to defund the Red Line two months
after the uprising following Freddie Gray’s death. At the same time, he
said he would increase infrastructure spending on roads and bridges
by $1.35 billion—“from Western Maryland to the Eastern Shore.”
</p>
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<p>
At a 2015 news conference, Hogan defended, at least in part, his
decision this way: “We just spent $14 million extra money on the riots
in Baltimore City a few weeks ago.”
</p>
<p>
Thirty years earlier, in the mid-1980s, Schaefer, on the cusp of
running for governor, approved a deal that sent $261 million of the
last of the unused city-expressway funding back to the state. Part of
that money was used for an I-68 project in Western Maryland. History,
as they say, may not repeat, but it often rhymes.
</p>
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Rowhouses in the Franklin-Mulberry streets corridor, which the city
had acquired, being demolished in 1968 to
make room for the Highway to Nowhere. <i>John Van Horn</i>

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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">I</span>
n hindsight, it is amazing how quickly the automobile
transformed American culture and transportation planning.
From 1945 to 1965, car ownership doubled in the
U.S., outpacing vehicle ownership rates in Europe by a
sometimes 4-to-1 margin. Americans still drive twice as
many per capita miles as Europeans.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
A 1959 rendering of the planned
14-lane interchange that was designed to
connect the future east-west expressway
with I-95 and I-83.
</h5>

</div>
<p>
In Baltimore and elsewhere, the automobile age was not just
driven by the Federal-Aid Highway act of 1956, which funded 41,000
miles of new highways over the next decade—then the largest public
works project in American history. It had been hastened a decade
earlier by the orchestrated collapse of streetcar and trolley systems.
</p>

<p>
Baltimore, where the first commercially operated
electric streetcar had been put into use in 1895,
boasted one of the densest networks. Routes ran
all through downtown and to the Catonsville, Towson,
and Dundalk suburbs, among others, knitting
the metro region together. It was the invention of
the streetcar that first led to the development of
the suburbs.
</p>
<p>
Gas and tires had been rationed during World
War II, a period when reliance on transit use
peaked in Baltimore. After the war, National City
Lines took over the privately owned and operated
Baltimore Transit Company in 1945, and purposely
began tipping the scales—in favor of cars
and the combustible engine. It sounds like a conspiracy
theory, but National City Lines was in fact
a holding company owned by General Motors, Firestone
Tire, Standard Oil of California, and Phillips
Petroleum. It acquired streetcar operations across
the country, then began systematically replacing
the Baltimore streetcars with GM-built buses and
Firestone tires, which of course also ran on Standard
Oil and Phillips Petroleum. They disinvested
in maintenance, cut back service, and started
dismantling streetcars, which often carried more than 100 people. Ridership dropped dramatically year over year.
You can see where this is going.
</p>
<p>
The major east-west line streetcar line, the No. 15, ran along Edmondson
Avenue, through the heart of West Baltimore, and almost
parallel to what replaced it, the Highway to Nowhere.
</p>

<p>
National City Lines wasn’t only to blame, however. City officials
and business leaders wanted the streetcars gone to make
room downtown for cars, especially after work began on the modernist
Charles Center. Expressways and automobiles, they were
convinced, were the future. Unfortunately, so was the air pollution
that disportionately affected Black communities and the public
health consequences of leaded gasoline, particularly for children
living near highways. The last two electric streetcar routes, the No.
15 and No. 8, which ran to Towson, were converted into bus lines
in November 1963.
</p>
<p>
In other words, the concept behind the east-west Red Line light
rail is not new. In 2015, projections estimated the project would
stimulate $4.6 billion in development along the route, with particular
hopes of sparking transit-oriented development around the Poppleton,
Harlem Park, Rosemont, and West Baltimore MARC stations.
</p>
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<p>
“Public transportation, good or bad, is the connective tissue between
everything else, whether that’s climate change, or employment,
economic development, and education—issues we know that
also underlie poverty and crime,” says Baltimore City state delegate
<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/gamechangers/del-robbyn-lewis-talks-public-health-transit-democracy/">Robbyn Lewis</a>, who, in 2011, as a community organizer founded
the grassroots Red Line Now PAC to lobby for the project. “I won’t
forget a Johns Hopkins study a couple of years ago that linked [the
Maryland Transit Administration] bus system waiting times for Baltimore
students to absenteeism, which is chronic in the city. After a
certain age, kids in the city can go to any school they want to, if they
get accepted. But the bus system, which is run by the state, is underfunded and unreliable. So, kids are late to school. I
met a mother in Brooklyn whose child had been accepted
at City College high school, a tremendous opportunity.
She just didn’t know how they were going
to get there.”
</p>
<p>
Or to put it more plainly: “There is just no separating
housing and transportation policy from white
supremacy and structural racism,” says Lewis, acknowledging
pushback from some residents in
white-majority Canton against the Red Line when it
was initially planned.
</p>
<p>
Given its density, the width of Boston Street, and
the fact it has the highest rate of automobile commuters
in the city, Canton would seem like an ideal
location for public transit. More recently, a “Save
Suburbia” campaign has begun in Baltimore County amid discussions
to build a city/county light rail in the York Road corridor. Sixty years ago, white residents in Anne Arundel County blocked a planned extension of the Baltimore Metro subway, deriding it as the “loot rail.” “We need a
light rail system, and we need more buses, and more bus drivers,”
Lewis says. “We need it all.”
</p>
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One of many stretches along the
Highway to Nowhere that suffered in its
aftermath.
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<p>
<span class="firstCharacter clan">L</span>
ike Glenn Smith, who ministers with a local faith
community and now lives in a senior apartment
building a dozen blocks away from his childhood rowhouse,
Denise Griffin Johnson grew up in the Franklin-Mulberry corridor.
</p>
<p>
Her parents separated when she was young, but her father rented
a home within walking distance to remain close to the children. He
lived on Franklin Street, the one-way parallel to Mulberry Street, until
he was forced to relocate for the Highway to Nowhere.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
Community
advocate Denise Griffin Johnson, who grew up
next to the Highway to Nowhere, in front of
the Arch Social Club, whose previous location
was demolished for the expressway.
</h5>

</div>
<p>
Johnson’s parents had migrated from Mississippi to Baltimore after
her father returned home from World War II and heard about jobs
at Bethlehem Steel open to Black workers. (One Black veteran spoke
up in a City Council hearing related to condemnation of the neighborhood,
saying that he’d fought in the war to save his country, only to
have to fight his country to save his home.)
</p>
<p>
“We used to go to Lexington Market together,” recalls Johnson,
now 64. “One of the things I remember is when he had to move after condemnation, he couldn’t take
his dog to his new house. It really
bothered him. He asked my mom to
take it, but she had seven of us to
take care of.”
</p>

<p>
A family counselor by profession
and community volunteer by practice,
Johnson co-founded Culture-Works in 2007 with artist Ashley Milburn, whose graduate Community
Arts thesis at the Maryland Institute College of Art focused on
the Highway to Nowhere. Four years later, they brought an annual
“Roots Fest” conference and arts festival to the same neighborhood.
</p>
<p>
“There had never been a public discussion by the former residents
who were displaced about what happened,” Milburn told the
<i>City Paper</i> at the time. “I attended a meeting during my first internship
at Bon Secours, and this one woman in her 80s stood up and
was talking about rampant crime and all this stuff, and then she
got on to the Highway to Nowhere, because she said, ‘It used to be
different.’ I turned around and looked at her and she was crying.
And I looked at other people’s faces and they had this empathy,
there was something here.” Baltimore artist and performer Sheila
Gaskins later wrote and directed a well-received play, <i>Last House
Standing</i>, based on Milburn’s research.
</p>

<p>
That sadness still exists for many of the older community
members, says Johnson. “The fact that this story continues to be
told and written about, you’d like to think there is the possibility at
some point, to tell a different story about what is occurring in the
space to benefit West Baltimore.”
</p>
<p>
She notes the walking paths, trees, benches, and exercise
equipment that have been added to the grassy knolls alongside
the Highway to Nowhere in recent years. But also that decades of
promises have failed to transform the 1.39-mile concrete desert.
</p>
<p>
In 1997, former Mayor Kurt Schmoke and his housing chief
pitched the idea of tearing up the road, filling in “the Ditch,” and
creating affordable homes that would once again connect Poppleton
and Franklin Square on one side with Harlem Park and Rosemont
on the other. “[The expressway spur] was a great mistake,
and we were thinking of ways to correct it—the money just wasn’t
there,” says Schmoke today. “When it was built, the federal government
was funding 90 percent of the cost. By the time I became
mayor, it was more like a 50-50 split, and let’s just say removal
projects were not the priority.”
</p>
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<p>
In 2010, Governor O’Malley and then-Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake touted a $2.5-million project to remove a small, elevated
piece of the Highway to Nowhere as a gamechanger. Headlines
hyped it, too. One read “Highway to Nowhere heads to the dump,”
but it merely replaced a short section with two additional MARC
parking lots. No subsequent development ensued.
</p>
<p>
For his part, Smith won’t be satisfied with any plan that
isn’t light rail. Even well-intentioned proposals like the razing of the Highway to Nowhere, a rapid-bus version
of the Red Line, more green space, or the
possibility of affordable homes in the corridor,
would still be a wasted opportunity, he says.
They won't do enough.
</p>
<p>
In terms of frequency, on-time dependability,
and the ability to move lots of people quickly, he
doesn’t believe light rail can be matched by rapid
bus service. Transit-oriented development traditionally
follows rail, he notes, which when built attracts
investment because of its permanence. New
bus lines, according to standard planning thinking,
don’t spur economic development; they follow it.
</p>
<p>
“No other project than the light rail will bring
relief and healing to the devastation we’ve been
through,” he says. “The impact must be equal to
the destruction.”
</p>
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<h3 class="text-center">Destruction of a Neighborhood: Baltimore's Highway to Nowhere

<h5 class="captionVideo thin">
The black and white photographs of the demolition of
the Franklin-Mulberry corridor that accompany this
story were captured by then-college student John Van
Horn. Now 72, Van Horn recently self-published a collection
of those photos. This is his memory of the images:
</h5>

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<p>
“In the fall of 1968, I was a freshman at Western
Maryland College, now McDaniel College. I was a history
major, but my passion was photography. As I
was driven into Baltimore on Route 40 by my college
friend Larry Sanders to go to a photography store, we
went through this neighborhood being demolished. I
returned on my own via a bus ride and a second time
with Larry to photograph the area.
</p>
<p>
I recall most vividly the series I took on my own
when I took the bus into Baltimore one early Saturday
morning. I was from a small town in New Jersey, photographing
a poor inner-city neighborhood. This was
1968, a year of political and racial violence and unrest,
with the Vietnam War always in the background.
However, the deserted neighborhood was just that,
deserted. I only saw a couple of children at play, which
I photographed, but don’t recall any interaction with
them or any of the few adults I encountered beyond
perhaps a ‘good morning.’
</p>
<p>
The initial reaction, that this destruction would be
interesting to photograph, soon turned into thinking of
what a waste this was. I was looking at rows of iconic
Baltimore rowhouses being destroyed . . . probably a
large part of some people’s identity. I saw the destruction
of a neighborhood, the homes, and the businesses.
The photos looked like images of a war zone, like those
of Europe during WWII and today from Ukraine. The
big difference is, war damage can be rebuilt and residents
return; here, it was final. These photos still bring
up deep feelings about injustices brought upon people
who had little or no voice in their destinies. Every time
I look at them, I have strong emotions. It is still hard to
decompress those emotions after 50 years."
</p>
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/highway-to-nowhere-baltimore-expressway-demolished-black-neighborhoods/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>How To Fix Baltimore</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/how-to-fix-baltimore/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Angeline Leong]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2020 08:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Business & Development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Science & Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore City]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[baltimore county]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[I-83]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maglev]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[political reform]]></category>
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  <div align="left"><div class="medium-6 push-5 columns" style="margin-left: -3%;"><h4 class="unit"><em>The greater metro region is one of the wealthiest anywhere. Here are some bold ideas to break down the city’s barriers.</em></h4>
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  <h4 class="deck">The greater metro region is one of the wealthiest anywhere. Here are some bold ideas to break down the city's barriers.
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  <p class="byline">By Ron Cassie | Illustrations by Andrew DeGraff</p>
  
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  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-6-100.jpg"/></span><p class="intro"><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>he march of floats</strong></span>, fire trucks, and drum and bugle corps drew some 30,000 spectators to stoops and sidewalks from Falls Road to Keswick Road. Lottie Carnell, just 17, was named “queen” of the massive parade, and the teenager and her court led a nearly two-hour romp through Hampden’s balloon-filled “jubilant streets,” according to press accounts. Afterward, there was public dancing late into the night on the closed-off streets of Elm and Hickory, just off The Avenue.</p> 
  <p>The twilight fete, including a bonfire, in the summer of 1948, capped off three days of celebration. Not to commemorate the end of a war, the community’s founding, or even an Orioles championship—the O’s were still a minor league club then—but, wait for it, the 60th anniversary of Hampden and Woodberry’s annexation from Baltimore County into Baltimore City. Hooray, indeed. Who could imagine Charm City today without those neighborhoods’ vital commercial districts, repurposed mills, and quirky “Hey, hon” vibe?</p>
  <p>Less than five months later, an overlooked referendum­—written by a Baltimore County politician at the behest of the local Democratic party machine—ensured there would be no more Hampdens and Woodberrys annexed into the City of Baltimore. Or for that matter, any other Highlandtowns, Lauravilles, Violetvilles, Ashburtons, Howard Parks, or Roland Parks. All those neighborhoods, among others, had been annexed from Baltimore County and into Baltimore City (along with roughly 50 square miles of Anne Arundel and Baltimore counties) decades before the Hampden-Woodberry-Baltimore City lovefest. </p>
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  <p>The change to the state constitution may have appeared innocuous. It merely required that a majority of residents living within the annexation area approve annexation. In fact, it was not. There had been a decade-long fight prior to the massive 1918 annexation, which, like previous annexations, enabled Baltimore’s jurisdictional reach to follow commercial and residential development as it inevitably expanded over the city line. Baltimore County powers behind the 1948 referendum intended to close the gates around the city, one of the densest in the U.S. at the time. The passage of the measure, as intended, meant the commercial growth, new schools, and residential property taxes in the booming ring of post-WWII suburbs and towns—subsidized by state and federal tax dollars as well as racially discriminatory housing practices and G.I. Bill and FHA lending policies—would forever remain beyond the city/county partition. </p>
  <p>It is no coincidence that Baltimore City’s population topped out two years later in the 1950 census and has been shrinking ever since. Subsequently, it has become one of the smallest major cities in terms of square miles. The closing of the city border was part of an even broader political effort that George Romney—the father of the Utah Senator Mitt Romney and Richard Nixon’s first Housing and Urban Development secretary—once characterized as a <a href="https://www.propublica.org/article/living-apart-how-the-government-betrayed-a-landmark-civil-rights-law"></a> “high-income white noose” placed around the nation’s urban core. Romney had seen it play out in Detroit when he served as governor of Michigan. </p>
  
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  <img decoding="async" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Map-htf.jpg" alt="A map of Baltimore and its counties.">
  <h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center><img decoding="async" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Arrow-up.png" alt="arrow in a pink circle pointing up" style="height: 15px;"> The Baltimore Metropolitan Area, among the wealthiest in the country, continues to see growth—at the exclusion of the city itself.</center></h5>
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  <p>From the approval of the ’48 referendum to the end of the last century, Baltimore County quadrupled its population and surpassed the city. (The restrictive 1924 Immigration Act, which plummented immigration to historic lows until the 1970s, didn’t help cities like Baltimore replace its losses, either.) Not surprisingly, the income gap—virtually nonexistent between the city and county in 1950—widened exponentially. Entire neighborhoods of low-income families were boxed in by segregated public housing that lacked effective public transportation and access to livable wage jobs, which were departing to the county as well, but also for the non-union Sun Belt and later to Mexico and China.</p>
  <p>If you wanted to create a city plagued by segregation, you could not have planned it better. By 1993, in his seminal work, <em>Cities Without Suburbs</em>, urban expert and former Albuquerque Mayor David Rusk described Baltimore and other “inelastic” Rust Belt legacy cities, including Cleveland, St. Louis, Milwaukee, Newark, and Camden, as beyond the point of return without dramatic restructuring and regional governance. Targeted “urban” programs such as empowerment zones—no matter how well-intentioned—would never move the needle. Three decades later, the book—and its 1995 follow up, <a href="https://www.abell.org/sites/default/files/publications/arn1095.pdf"> Baltimore Unbound</a>—remains prescient. There were six Baltimore City census tracts where poverty was above 60 percent in 1990; that number had not budged by 2015, the year of Freddie Gray’s death and the subsequent riot and uprising.</p>
  <p>Meanwhile, thriving “elastic” cities such as Charlotte, Jacksonville, Raleigh, Indianapolis, Nashville, Austin, Houston, Columbus, Madison, and Albuquerque expanded their footprints anywhere from more than 250 percent to 2,000-plus percent from 1950 to 1990. Baltimore football fans will recall Charlotte and Jacksonville beat them out for NFL expansion franchises in 1993.</p>
  <p>“It’s hard to think, looking back, of any single public decision that’s proved to be more important to Baltimore City than that question in the 1948 election,” former City Councilman and current Abell Foundation president Robert Embry told <em> Baltimore </em> years ago. “It was a very shortsighted decision.” </p>
  <p><br></p>
  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-5-100.jpg"/></span>n hindsight, there was frustratingly little coverage of the 1948 anti-annexation referendum. The Truman-Dewey presidential race and 22 other ballot questions—including funding for Memorial Stadium, a term limit for Maryland governors, and a Red Scare measure forbidding officeholders who advocated the violent overthrow of the government—overshadowed the proposal. That said, alert city activists, leaders, and <em>The Sun</em>’s editorial writers recognized the referendum spelled trouble. 
  A sharp, opinionated gadfly known as “Mrs. B,” a thorn in the side of a half-century of City Hall administrations, called the annexation referendum “ridiculous.” Famous for her election-eve broadcasts, Mrs. B (real name: Marie Oehl von Hattersheim Bauernschmidt) correctly declared passage would “prevent the development of the city.” “Suppose,” she said, “annexation [into the city] had been unlawful and our boundary line would’ve been 25th St.?”</p>
  <p>City residents agreed. They voted against the measure by a large count. Baltimore County, however, in what seems a suspiciously high 93 percent turnout looking back, voted in favor by more than 5 to 1. The huge numbers out of the county overrode the city tally and were enough to carry the measure statewide.</p>
  <p>Ironically, up until 1853, the city and county had essentially been a single political entity. Initially, it was the city that seceded because of its diverging needs as a burgeoning urban center. By 1952, four years after the approval of the referendum, folks like then City Councilman Frank Flynn were already highlighting that the county was becoming less rural and more suburban and urban. Whatever the distinctions that previously existed, Flynn said, the political boundaries between the two jurisdictions—given their shared geography, economy, and infrastructure—no longer made sense. He noted, as many do today, that county residents took advantage of their proximity to the metro region’s economic and cultural engine, but without paying a fair share of the tax burden. Almost 70 years ago, Flynn proposed considering, if not more annexation into the city, then an even bolder idea—formal reconsolidation.</p>
  
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  What if the city had added Catonsville, Rosedale, and Pikesville, local historian Gilbert Sandler once asked. And it had </em><span style="color: #29726c;">annexed Towson</span><em> in 1960?</em></h5></th></tr></table>
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  <p>Legendary former state comptroller Louie Goldstein floated the same idea in reverse. He suggested the county annex the city. Needless to say, neither plan took root. The subsequent construction of the Baltimore Beltway and the urban expressways of I-83 and I-170, aka <a href="https://communityarchitectdaily.blogspot.com/2016/04/the-ultimate-insult-highway-to-nowhere.html"> The Road to Nowhere, </a>exacerbated existing problems in a way that Councilman Flynn and Mrs. B could not have envisioned. </p>
  <p>Baltimore, a mid-century economic giant, losing a third of its population? Unimaginable in 1948. Also, not inevitable. Taken together, the city and county would comprise the eighth largest city in the country today. What’s more, the city's problems would be less concentrated and more manageable. Rusk’s research found areas that created metro governments through consolidation were less segregated by race and class, more fiscally sound, and economically healthier. A plan to reduce school segregation could be worked out if the two systems combined efforts. </p>
  <p>Consider if Baltimore had continued to annex parts of the county and maintained its status as a top 10 U.S. city. What if, in the 1950s, as beloved city historian Gilbert Sandler once asked, it had added Catonsville, Rosedale, and Pikesville? Annexed Towson in 1960? What if those light rail stops past Woodberry—Lutherville, Timonium, and Hunt Valley—were in the city? What would it mean to Baltimore’s clout in Annapolis and ability to attract Fortune 500 companies?</p>
  <p>Of course, more annexation, or even merging the city and county completely, would not have alleviated all of Baltimore’s problems. But it would’ve had a strong palliative effect. Obviously, neither is politically feasible at the moment. Although there have been relatively recent mergers, most of the last big city/county mergers in the U.S. took place in the 1960s. There’s too much entrenched division now. Also, the metro area has expanded—Anne Arundel, Carroll, Harford, Howard, and Queen Anne’s are part of the equation. But as the recent COVID-19 crisis and its economic fallout demonstrates—along with issues like globalization and climate change—the city’s fate is inextricably linked to the wider world. It’s all the more evidence that Baltimore can’t go it alone in tackling its big problems. We need to act as one metro region if the next half century is going to be different than the last. </p>
  <p>One bold idea kicked around in the early years after the passage of the 1948 referendum was a proposal for a federated model of the Baltimore metro region government—with each existing jurisdiction keeping some internal autonomy. In other words, the city and the surrounding metro counties would form something like the consolidated working arrangement that exists in cities like Toronto, London, and New York—think of the five boroughs—as well as Portland, Oregon, and the Twin Cities. Currently, there is an organization, the Baltimore Metropolitan Council, which in theory oversees regional planning, but it avoids controversy and has little power. No doubt few readers have heard of it.</p>
  <p>“Someday it will almost certainly be adopted here,” a <em> Sun </em>editorial said of the federated government model proposed in 1956. “The question is, when and how?” </p>
  <p>Over the next six pages, we look at 12 bold ideas to move Baltimore forward in the 21st century after decades of segregation, isolation, and stagnation. Some are successfully employed elsewhere, some are new, and several are being explored. One worked here before. The overarching theme is Baltimore will remain stuck in place until its internal physical barriers and its city line—a de facto border wall—are torn down.</p>
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  <h5 class="clan" style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong><span style="color: #e0e23d;">Big Idea:</span> Urban Planning</strong></h5>
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  <div style="padding-left: 10%; padding-right: 10%;"><h4>Baltimore should turn the dangerous JFX into a grand city boulevard and connect downtown and Mt. Vernon with Oldtown and the Eastside.</h4></div></div>
  
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  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-7-100.jpg" alt="F"/></span><p><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>or most of the country,</strong></span> the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake is remembered because it occurred during the live pre-game broadcast of Game 3 of the World Series at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park. But among public transportation wonks, it’s recalled as a turning point in the effort to undo damage created by two-plus generations of urban highway development. The California DOT intended to repair the busted-up <a href="https://slate.com/human-interest/2010/12/san-francisco-the-embarcadero-freeway.html"> Embarcadero Freeway</a> after the earthquake, warning chronic congestion would ensue with its closure. Instead, then San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos offered a bold alternative: Level the rest of the elevated, 1968-built Embarcadero and replace it with a tree-lined, pedestrian-friendly boulevard and streetcar line. Support coalesced around Agnos’ plan, and the Embarcadero—along with several miles of the similarly damaged Central Freeway spur—was bulldozed. Traffic problems? They never materialized, and public transit trips in the area increased by 75 percent. The number of people living and working near the new Embarcadero boulevard jumped. Meanwhile, the neighborhood’s historic Ferry Terminal was reconnected to its surroundings by new development. </p>
  <p>San Francisco is hardly alone today. A stretch of Boston’s I-93 has been buried under a series of parks, connecting downtown to the waterfront. In 2002, Milwaukee tore down a section of its 1960s-built Park East Highway.</p> 
  
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  <h5 class="unit" style="letter-spacing: 1px;"><em>Worried about the farmers’ market? There’d be </em><span style="color: #29726c;">less cramped space</span><em> available up the street under the Orleans Viaduct.</em></h5>
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  <p>Now consider I-83, a nearly 60-year-old concrete partition between City Hall and Mt. Vernon and Oldtown. It’s elevated for six blocks over its final stretch downtown before coming to ground-level at Fayette Street. In other cities, well-designed boulevards have increased use of public transit and are shown to be effective at moving JFX volumes of traffic. Liberal pie-in-the-sky? Jay Brodie, past president of the Baltimore Development Corporation, pitched knocking down the JFX in the <a href="https://www.bizjournals.com/baltimore/blog/real-estate/2015/08/jay-brodie-demolish-the-elevated-section-of-i-83.html"> <em> Baltimore Business Journal </a></em>several years ago—“Let’s plan now to demolish this elevated, archaic section of I-83”—citing a 2007 study showing the concept was viable.</p>
  
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  <div align="center"><h4 style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 1px;"><u>problem</u>: high city emissions<br />
  <span style="color: #af347d;"><u>SOLUTION</u>: car-free streets</h4></span>
  <h4>&#9660;</h4></div>
  
  <div style="padding: 0 5%;"><p>Four months ago, a two-mile stretch of San Francisco’s busiest, most iconic artery went <a href="https://www.citylab.com/transportation/2020/01/market-street-car-free-san-francisco-bike-lanes-transit/605674/">car-free,</a> with automobiles banned in favor of pedestrians, bicyclists, taxis, and bus riders. “If there was a street synonymous with San Francisco, it’s Market Street,” Mayor London Breed said during the announcement, describing the historic thoroughfare as “the everyday backbone of the city.” It may seem counterintuitive, but as the Golden Gate City grew from 50,000 to 800,000 residents since Market Street’s construction, it became obsolete for personal automobiles, which take up too much space to transport one person.</p> 
  <p>Following the lead of European cities, <a href="https://northamerica.uitp.org/miracle-new-york’s-14th-street">New York banned cars</a> on 14th Street—a major east-west thoroughfare—in October. The endeavor has gone so well it has been nicknamed ‘The Miracle on 14th Street.” Harbor East and Fells Point, which tried an inaugural car-free, al fresco dining night last summer, seem tailor-made for car-free weekends, which reduce emissions, promote public transit, and add to family-friendly walk- and bikeability. But in Baltimore, the game changer would be a Charles Street car ban, which  <a href="https://twitter.com/ElectRyanDorsey/status/1112841763637657600">City Councilman Ryan Dorsey </a>suggested while retweeting a <em>Bloomberg</em> story earlier this year that highlighted successes in other cities. “Congestion disproportionately affects vulnerable communities,” Tilly Chang, head of San Francisco’s transportation authority, said in the piece. “Less traffic means improved travel times for public transit, which many people rely on, as well as improved air quality,” which then improves public health. </p>
  
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  <div align="center"><h5 class="clan" style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong><span style="color: #d6b7ca;">Big Idea:</span> Education</strong></h5>
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  <div style="padding-left: 10%; padding-right: 10%;"><h4>Magnet schools on the city/county line open to students in both districts can be a start. 
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  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-2-100.jpg"/></span><p><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>lthough Baltimore</strong></span> was one of the first cities to desegregate its schools following the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, hopes for an <a href="https://tcf.org/content/facts/the-benefits-of-socioeconomically-and-racially-integrated-schools-and-classrooms/">integrated school system </a> evaporated as white families fled to the counties or enrolled their kids in private schools. What ensued we all know: a low-income, hyper-segregated, chronically underfunded  system with a graduation rate roughly 20 percent lower than the metro region overall. Why does school integration matter? Students in integrated schools post significantly higher average test scores, are less likely to drop out, and are almost 70 percent more likely to attend a four-year college—even after students’ individual socioeconomic status is taken into account. The good news is the time for action may have arrived.</p>
  <p>Baltimore City state senator Bill Ferguson, a former teacher and Annapolis’ new Senate president, has long sought to address the achievement gap created by school segregation. So how to do it?  </p>
  <p>In 2015, Ferguson authored legislation specifically intended to create diverse, socioeconomically integrated, multijurisdictional schools that would attract kids from the city and the surrounding county school districts. A proposal like that could at least start chipping away at the city’s concentration of hyper-segregated schools. Ideally, it would lead to fuller cooperation between school districts. There are steep political obstacles, of course, which is why the measure didn’t move five years ago. But the state’s new House leader, Del. Adrienne Jones, who is from Baltimore County, could prove a valuable Ferguson ally if she got on board. “<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/2015/4/29/the-past-as-prologue">More than 50 years of research </a> affirms that poor and minority children perform best when they are not trapped in schools weighed down by concentrated poverty,” retired Johns Hopkins University sociologist Karl Alexander wrote in a 2018 paper. The key to encouraging more families to move to and stay in the city, he adds, “is in growing the base of genuinely high-quality schools that look like all of Baltimore in their makeup.” </p>
  
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  <div align="center"><h4 style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 1px;"><u>problem</u>: too much mayoral power<br />
  <span style="color: #86c1a5;"><u>SOLUTION</u>: charter reforms</h4></span>
  <h4>&#9660;</h4></div>
  
  <div style="padding: 0 5%;"><p>First things first. Among the slew of reform measures under consideration by the City Council is a charter amendment that would give the council the authority to oust a mayor for gross misconduct. But that’s just the start. Reform is needed of Baltimore’s so-called <a href="https://www.governing.com/topics/politics/gov-baltimore-mayor-power.html"> “strong mayor” system, </a>which places more power in our top elected official than almost any mayor in the country. For example, only the mayor can make additions to the city budget during negotiations; City Council can merely seek cuts.  In 2016, Councilman Bill Henry, currently running for comptroller, sponsored a change that would allow council members to make additions if the money was subtracted elsewhere. It was vetoed, not surprisingly, by former Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake.</p> <p>Which brings us to another key reform—making it easier for the council to override vetoes. The current threshold requires three-fourths of the council, 12 of 15 members—a near-impossible margin for decades—to override. A two-thirds vote, the margin required in Congress, would require 10 votes. Also needed: the closing of a scheduling loophole that allows the mayor to avoid override votes entirely. Currently, a dozen-plus amendment bills have been introduced, but getting these three on the ballot in November is a must. 
  Finally, the General Assembly must give Baltimore the right to implement a <a href="   https://ballotpedia.org/Ranked-choice_voting_(RCV)">ranked-choice voting</a> system. With more than 20 Democrats running for mayor, there’s every chance the next mayor will win the Democratic primary, and, for all intents and purposes, the city’s highest office, with less than 25 percent of the vote.</p>
  
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  <h5 class="clan" style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong><span style="color: #e0e23d;">Big Idea:</span> Urban Planning</strong></h5>
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  <div style="padding-left: 10%; padding-right: 10%;"><h4>The need for a transformative East-West line remains.</h4></div></div>
  
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  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-7_3-100.jpg" alt="S"/></span><p><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>hortly after</strong></span> taking office, <a href="https://www.naacpldf.org/case-issue/baltimore-red-line/">Gov. Larry Hogan </a>quashed the city’s long-anticipated Red Line, the federally approved $2.9-billon east-west subway, without producing as much as a single formal review of the project. Hogan later spread the state’s share of the savings on various, and perhaps ethically questionable, highway projects. So, while roughly 30 percent of Baltimore households don’t have access to a vehicle, the city remains handicapped with a single subway track and single north-south light rail line that plods through downtown. Ultimately, building the Red Line is about more than just providing a way to get from West Baltimore to East Baltimore (and linking residents to thousands of jobs at the Social Security Administration and Johns Hopkins Bayview), critical as that is. It’s also central to <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/lack-of-transport-is-a-major-obstacle-to-employment-for-americas-poor-2018-1">connecting underserved </a>city residents to more destinations in the broader regional transit network. Plus, it has the potential to spark creative investment in the Road to Nowhere corridor (see illustration), the long-since scrapped urban highway that was supposed to connect I-70 to downtown in the 1960s. “The Road to Nowhere broke up West Baltimore communities that are still trying to recover two generations later,” Glenn Smith, 71, vice president of the <a href="https://www.moretransitequity.com"> Baltimore Transit Equity Coalition (BTEC), </a>told <em>Baltimore</em> four years ago. “My family was one of those displaced. Those 19 stations along the Red Line would’ve brought considerable investment to the community.” Smith noted that studies show long mass-transit commute times are linked to unemployment in low-income neighborhoods.       
   </p>
  <p>The BTEC proposes that the state legislature create a regional transportation authority, similar to the Washington Metro Area Transit Authority, the operator of the D.C. Metrorail system, which could raise fees, taxes, fines, bonds, and licensing as done in numerous regions around the country. </p>
  
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  <div align="center"><h4 style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 1px;"><u>problem</u>: collapsing infrastructure<br />
  <span style="color: #65bbd3;"><u>SOLUTION</u>: leverage city municipals</h4></span>
  <h4>&#9660;</h4></div>
  
  <div style="padding: 0 5%;"><p>Baltimore’s infrastructure problems are legion—an ongoing sewage system crisis, the state's oldest schools, lead paint, a lack of healthy affordable housing, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/climate-change-wreaking-havoc-baltimore-infrastructure-public-health">streets collapsing</a> under the weight of age and heavier rainfall, and low-income neighborhoods suffering from air pollution and the heat-island effect. Some news? Two years ago, the city partnered with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation to create Environmental Impact Bonds—also known as <a href="https://www.cbf.org/how-we-save-the-bay/programs-initiatives/environmental-impact-bonds-frequently-asked-questions.html"> “green bonds,” </a>and part of a World Bank initiative. They allow investors to pay for projects that minimize pollutant runoff and heal streams and the Inner Harbor and recoup their investments if the projects are successful. The Department of Public Works will use up to $6.2 million in those bonds to help construct 115 bioretention facilities and remove impervious surfaces. It’s an example of creative infrastructure funding the city needs more of.</p> <p> The time has also come for the city to fully leverage its AA long-term bonding restored, to her credit, by former Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake six years ago. (The last time Baltimore’s bond rating was so high was 1963.) It should be used to fund city projects that will improve public health and help stave off the worst effects of climate change, and not just float Inner Harbor and Port Covington development projects. Finally, crowdfunded smaller municipal bond projects have launched more than 1,200 infrastructure campaigns elsewhere since 2010. In <a href="https://www.denvergov.org/content/denvergov/en/denver-department-of-finance/our-divisions/cash-risk-capital-funding/InvestorRelations/minibonds.html"> Denver,</a> the city issued $500 “mini-bonds” limited to residents of Colorado as a means of funding certain infrastructure projects. Adding to Baltimore’s bicycle network and expanding broadband—at-risk communities remain separated by a widening digital divide—are potential uses. </p>
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  Two years ago, the city partnered with the </em><span style="color: #86c1a5;">Chesapeake Bay Foundation</span><em> to create Environmental Impact Bonds.</em></h5></th><th style="margin: auto; color: #86c1a5; vertical-align: middle; font-size: 25px;">&#9664;
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  <h5 class="caption text-right thin"><em>-John Patterson</em></h5>
  <h5 class="clan" style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong><span style="color: #d6b7ca;">Big Idea:</span> Public Safety</strong></h5>
  <img decoding="async" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/ALL-HANDS-ON-DECK-2.png" alt="All Hands On Deck">
  <div style="padding-left: 10%; padding-right: 10%;"><h4>Baltimore needs to follow Chicago’s lead.</h4></div></div>
  
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  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-7_2-100.jpg" alt="R"/></span><p><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>emember when</strong></span> Chicago and Baltimore were linked in headlines for both cities’ skyrocketing homicide rates? In 2015, in the aftermath of the death of Freddie Gray, Baltimore suffered one of its most deadly years. Five years later, there’s no end to the violence in sight. After some if its lowest homicide numbers in decades in the early 2010s, Chicago’s homicides spiked 56 percent after unarmed 17-year-old Laquan McDonald was shot 16 times and killed as he walked away from police. The dashcam video of the shooting, finally released in late 2015, sparked widespread protests and exposed longstanding grievances over policing in Chicago. Sound familiar? There’s more. In 2017, a damning Department of Justice investigation concluded Chicago police officers were poorly trained and quick to turn to excessive and deadly force, most often against citizens of color, without facing consequences. Since? Chicago’s homicides have <a href="https://www.thetrace.org/2019/01/chicago-gun-violence-decline-crime-lab/">fallen nearly 37 percent. </a> After 2016, Chicago realized it needed an all hands on deck approach to address gun violence, and, critically, the effort had to be coordinated—no more working in silos.</p> <p> More than 40 foundations and funders now make up the <a href="https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/30-million-committed-to-partnership-for-safe-and-peaceful-communities"> Partnership for Safe and Peaceful Communities, </a>a philanthropic community that works together to identify and support, with nearly $75 million since its inception in 2016, community-designed, evidence-based solutions that the public sector can use as a blueprint to battle the public health crisis that is gun violence. Among the key projects funded by the partnership is READI Chicago (Rapid Employment and Development Initiative), an ambitious 24-month-long transitional job, behavioral therapy, and training program that engages those at the highest risk for gun violence. Baltimore’s ongoing Ceasefire initiative has demonstrated our everyday citizens are willing to do their part, and Chicago’s example shows gun violence reduction is doable. Anti-blight, anti-poverty, and school investment also can’t be ignored and reduce violence in the long run. But in the short term, reducing the homicide rate requires focused attention on the relatively small group of people likely to use a firearm.
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  <div align="center"><h4 style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 1px;"><u>problem</u>: kids need a place to go for activities<br />
  <span style="color: #af347d;"><u>SOLUTION</u>: state-of-the-art rec centers</h4></span>
  <h4>&#9660;</h4></div>
  
  <div style="padding: 0 5%;"><p>In the 1980s, Baltimore City operated more than 100 rec centers. Today, it’s 44, most of which are 50 to 60 years old and spent the past few decades closed on weekends. The physical deterioration and shuttering of Baltimore’s rec centers has been perhaps the most glaring example of the city’s <a href="https://therealnews.com/stories/baltimore-emphasized-policing-over-recreation-and-it-failed">misplaced budget priorities</a>. Over the past 30 years, Recs and Parks funding has remained nearly flat while the police department's budget has tripled. Recently, corrective steps are being made, but they must continue. The first new rec center in more than a decade was built in 2014. West Baltimore’s Crispus Attucks and Harlem Park rec centers both recently reopened. And last September, city rec centers also opened on Saturdays for the first time since the 1970s. Other new efforts include the planned Middle Branch Fitness & Wellness Center, situated near Cherry Hill and the Gwynns Falls Trail, which will include a turf field for football, lacrosse, and soccer, and an outdoor pool. Also in the works is a nearly 50,000-square-foot <a href="https://www.gwwoinc.com/projects/cahill-fitness-wellness-center’">Cahill Fitness & Wellness Center, </a>which will be built into the 1,000-acre Gwynns Falls/Leakin Park area. Reginald Moore, executive director of Recreation and Parks, now wants to create a state-of-the-art regional facility that will not just pull kids from the city, but host elite basketball, cheerleading, robotics, and gaming competitions. “The goal,” Moore says, “is that Baltimore kids won’t have to travel to participate in AAU basketball, cheerleading, and gaming tournaments. We want people to come here, to our amenities.”</p>
  
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  <h5 class="caption text-right thin"><em>-Shutterstock</em></h5>
  <h5 class="clan" style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong><span style="color: #e0e23d;">Big Idea:</span> Politics</strong></h5>
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  <div style="padding-left: 10%; padding-right: 10%;"><h4>No way around it, the city and county need to merge.</h4></div></div>
  
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  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-7_1-100.jpg" alt="N"/></span><p><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>ashville, the first city </strong></span>of country music, is also a pioneering example of progressive governance. A long-segregated city—just like Baltimore—<a href="https://www.nashville.gov/Portals/0/SiteContent/Government/docs/MetroHistoryBucy.pdf">Nashville</a> also saw its population decline at the outset of the post-World War II suburban boom. But in 1963, after a decade of political wrangling, Nashville’s civic leaders worked together to consolidate local governments within Davidson County to create the Metropolitan Government of Nashville. Since the merger, Nashville’s population exploded from just over 170,000 to nearly 700,000 today. Similarly, Jacksonville, Florida, consolidated with Duval County in 1968 after the industrial city began experiencing its own symptoms of downtown decline. Indianapolis, led by Republican mayor and future U.S. Senator Richard Lugar, merged with surrounding Marion County in 1970—known colloquially as “Unigov”—through an act of the state assembly. More recently, in 1997, <a href="https://www.governing.com/columns/public-money/col-cities-counties-consolidation.html">Kansas City, Kansas, </a>consolidated with Wyandotte County and ever since has seen its population grow. Other consolidated city governments with populations larger than 500,000 include the city and county <a href="https://www.nlc.org/resource/cities-101-consolidations">governments</a> of San Francisco, Denver, Philadelphia, Boston and Suffolk County, and, of course, New York and its boroughs. All of have flourished in recent decades (even Philadelphia’s population jumped by 4 percent in the last count). Merging governments isn’t that hard structurally—most have an elected chief executive, a fairly large district-member council, plus at-large members. </p> <p> Baltimore City’s population will never fully recover, for example, as long as its effective property tax is far and away the highest in the state and one-third higher than Baltimore County. Yes, city/county consolidations can take a generation or two to make substantial impact. But there is no quick fix. “The public services efficiencies [police, fire, sanitation, sewage, water, etc.] are important,” Baltimore native Spencer Levy, chairman of the international real estate services company CBRE, said in a <em> Sun </em><a href="https://www.baltimoresun.com/opinion/op-ed/bs-ed-op-0606-baltimore-reset-20190604-story.html"> op-ed</a> last year while making the consolidation case, “but mitigating reasons for urban flight—largely schools, taxes, and crime—are paramount.” </p>
  
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  <em>Merging Baltimore City and Baltimore County is no magic wand, but it </em><span style="color: #d6b7ca;">offers the only solutions</span><em> to addressing the city’s stickiest problems.</em></h5></th><th style="width: 20%;"><img decoding="async" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-27_200427_131447.png" alt="icon of a water tap"></th><th style="margin: auto; color: #d6b7ca; vertical-align: middle; font-size: 25px;">&#9664;
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  <div align="center"><h4 style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 1px;"><u>problem</u>: corruption<br />
  <span style="color: #65bbd3;"><u>SOLUTION</u>: ethics reforms</h4></span>
  <h4>&#9660;</h4></div>
  
  <div style="padding: 0 5%;"><p>If only city corruption was limited to the crimes of recent mayors Sheila Dixon and Catherine Pugh. In 2018, former state Sen. Nathaniel Oaks pleaded guilty to accepting bribes from an FBI informant posing as an out-of-town developer. Earlier this year, former state Del. Cheryl Glenn pleaded guilty to accepting bribes to help a cannabis company. In March, the city Office of the Inspector General (OIG) found <a href="https://baltimorebrew.com/2020/03/19/potential-conflict-of-interest-votes-by-pratt-total-48-million-inspector-general-finds/">Comptroller Joan Pratt </a>voted 30 times to approve spending involving organizations that she appears to have relationships with. </p>
  <p>The endemic corruption within the police department continues—at least 20 officers arrested, suspended, or convicted last year. Meanwhile, <em>The Sun</em> reported police overtime cost the city nearly $50 million last fiscal year, and the Inspector General’s office found the <a href="https://baltimorefishbowl.com/stories/oig-report-calls-out-city-trash-workers-dpw-for-unearned-overtime-and-early-ends-to-shifts/">Bureau of Solid Waste</a> more than tripled its allotted overtime budget in fiscal year 2018. We could go on. </p>
  <p>Councilman Ryan Dorsey introduced a bill last year that would move the ethics board—responsible for enforcing conflict of interest rules and maintaining city employees’ financial disclosure records—to the Inspector General’s office, which was recently granted independence. Dorsey has also introduced legislation prohibiting city officials from retaliating against whistleblowers. Both efforts need to move forward, as does legislation introduced by <a href="https://www.governing.com/columns/public-money/col-cities-counties-consolidation.html">Gov. Larry Hogan</a> in Annapolis that will increase fines for bribery, require that convicted lawmakers forfeit their taxpayer-funded pensions, and expand prohibitions on misuse of confidential information by public officials. But it’s just a start if Baltimore’s faith and hope in its elected officials and city agencies are ever to be regained.</p>
  
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  <h5 class="clan" style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong><span style="color: #d6b7ca;">Big Idea:</span> Transportation</strong></h5>
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  <div style="padding-left: 10%; padding-right: 10%;"><h4>Build out the Maglev and Penn Station to keep and attract new, younger residents.</h4></div></div>
  
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  <p><span class="firstCharacter"><img decoding="async" STYLE="MAX-HEIGHT:105PX; width:auto;" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-6-100.jpg" alt="T"/></span><p><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>he biggest</strong></span> promise of the 300-plus-mile-per-hour superconducting <a href="https://northeastmaglev.com">maglev,</a> touted as the world’s fastest train, isn’t cutting the commute to Washington to 15 minutes, including a stop at BWI Airport—although that would be amazing. It’s that the entire trip from D.C. through Baltimore, Wilmington, and Philadelphia to New York—including stops at airports in Philly and Newark—would take one hour. Baltimore has a potentially strong transportation network, including BWI, I-95, I-70, I-695, and the Port of Baltimore. But for Northeast Corridor commuters, the options remain crowded highways or an outdated regional Amtrak system. The city <a href="https://ggwash.org/view/73545/baltimores-pennsylvania-station-is-getting-an-upgrade"> sits uniquely</a> poised to take advantage of the first-of-its-kind high-speed rail in the U.S. One reason is it could help the city’s two- and four-year college-graduate retention rate—at 44 percent, the city ranks among the lowest of the largest metro areas in the country (and that was before the upsurge in violent crime in recent years was taken into account). Baltimore also presents a strong option in the Northeast Corridor for remote workers because of its comparatively low cost of living, according to a more recent study. Finally, building the maglev is estimated to create 74,000 construction jobs in the state, which is why its has won support from<a href="https://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bs-md-naacp-maglev-20190628-story.html"> Maryland NAACP leaders.</a></p>
  <p>Meanwhile, it’s important to keep in mind that this should not be, and can’t be, a choice between moving forward with the maglev or building the Red Line or upgrading Amtrak and the MARC. The cost of a maglev ticket alone will certainly price out many residents. The city needs all of the above. Each transit option serves different purposes and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. But it’s also important that renovation and expected development around Penn Station, which help link West and East Baltimore, continues as planned. 
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  <div align="center"><h4 style="text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 1px;"><u>problem</u>: unaffordable city housing<br />
  <span style="color: #86c1a5;"><u>SOLUTION</u>: bring back the $1 house program</h4></span>
  <h4>&#9660;</h4></div>
  
  <div style="padding: 0 5%;"><p><a href="https://www.wypr.org/post/dollar-house-program-discussed-city-council-committee">City Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke </a>remembers the city’s famous “Dollar Houses” program of the 1970s, which offered incentives for homesteaders to claim vacant city houses for next to nothing. The initiative was the brainchild of <a href="https://baltimoreheritage.org/remembering-william-donald-schaefer/">Mayor William Donald Schaefer’s </a> then housing commissioner, current Abell Foundation president <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/gamechangers/q-a-abell-foundation-robert-embry-jr"> Robert Embry. </a>It matched qualifying middle- and low-income homeowners with below-market-rate rehab loans and home improvement professionals, and it was a hit in neighborhoods like Otterbein, Federal Hill, Fells Point, Pigtown, Ridgely’s Delight, and Butcher’s Hill. “Part of why the ‘dollar houses’ were a big deal was the idea itself—a spirit of possibility took hold in the city,” Clarke says. (One of those attracted by the potential of the program was future developer <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/businessdevelopment/bill-struever-revives-baltimore-city-renovation-harbor-neighborhoods-maryland-charm-city">Bill Struever</a>, just out of college.) The project proved most effective in Otterbein, where a significant number of homes were clustered. </p> <p>Today, with 16,000 vacant properties in the city and the population falling below 600,000 for the first time in a century, Clarke has been trying to revive the program with a local group called “H.O.M.E.S”—Homeownership, Opportunity, and Mentorship for Economic Success—and got a resolution passed three years ago to study the plan. So far, city officials have told her that the obstacle is finding and pulling together revivable, vacant, city-owned properties in blocks where investment is likely to pay dividends. Clarke doesn’t believe it’s an insurmountable hurdle. “More than anything else, ‘Dollar Houses’ is the one I’d like to see get started before my time is up,” says Clarke, who is retiring at the end of this year.</p>
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  “Part of why the ‘dollar houses’ were a big deal was the idea itself—a </em><span style="color: #e0e23d;">spirit of possibility </span><em>took hold in the city.”.</em></h5></th><th style="margin: auto; color: #e0e23d; vertical-align: middle; font-size: 25px;">&#9664;
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		<title>New Book Tackles Tangled History of Baltimore Politics</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/new-book-tackles-tangled-history-baltimore-politics/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ron Cassie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Sep 2017 13:28:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freddie Gray]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Johns Hopkins University]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Larry Hogan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Line]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[William Donald Schaefer]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=28698</guid>

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			<p>Baltimoreans appreciate our beloved hometown for its great neighborhoods, eccentricity, and “Smaltimore” feel, but political disarray, inequality, and violence have also long-plagued the city.</p>
<p>Matthew Crenson, professor emeritus of political science at Johns Hopkins University, is the author of <em>Neighborhood Politics </em>and the co-author of <em>Downsizing Democracy: How America Sidelined Its Citizens and Privatized Its Public</em>. In his new book, <em>Baltimore: A Political History</em>, he tackles the tangled history of the city’s political and cultural disjointedness, examining the role of race and politics from the 18th-century through to our present circumstances  </p>

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			<p><strong>Why this book and why now?<br /></strong>Like many Baltimoreans, I was curious about the city’s many curiosities. And it has been a long time since anyone told the city’s story. The second edition of urban geographer Sherry Olson’s book, <em>Baltimore: The Building of an American City</em>, appeared 20 years ago, and it concentrates on the physical development of Baltimore, not its political history.  </p>
<p>One vital research source also became more accessible when the Baltimore City Archives relocated and reorganized in 2010. The Archives are essential for understanding the city’s political past, but only a few authors have relied on these records.      </p>
<p>Of course, I could not have foreseen the death of Freddie Gray or the turmoil that would follow it [when I started working on the book]. Retracing the path by which we got here now seems even more vital than when I began. </p>
<p><strong>You make the case that Annapolis, the state capital, long held political sway over Baltimore. Do you think that’s still the case?<br /></strong>Because Baltimore was a late-blooming city, there was already an entrenched political establishment in Annapolis at the time of the town’s birth. It cast its shadow over Baltimore from the time it received its town charter in 1729. Even after it became a supposedly self-governing municipality in 1797, the city’s powers were limited by the state. The city, for example, could levy property taxes, but for decades after it became a city, the state legislature decided what the tax rate would be. </p>
<p>Baltimore can fix its own property tax rate today, but the city’s police department is still technically a state agency, as it has been since just before the Civil War. The Governor’s cancellation of the Red Line reminded Baltimoreans of just how much control the state has over the city’s public transportation system. Then there’s the Maryland Stadium Authority. In 1997, Baltimore’s mayor conceded partial control of the city’s school system to the state in return for increased state funding. Governor Larry Hogan closed the city’s detention center (probably a good decision), but without consulting any city officials in advance. Baltimoreans are reminded of their exposure to state government every time the General Assembly convenes.    </p>
<p><strong>Baltimore was home to the largest number of free African-Americans in the South in the decades before the Civil War—some 92 percent of black Baltimoreans were free at the time of the Emancipation Proclamation. But you conclude white Baltimoreans were always afraid to address the issue of race head on. What drove you to that conclusion? Do you believe that’s still true?<br /></strong>As early as 1817, when prominent Baltimoreans became advocates of the American Colonization Society, the city’s leading whites have repeatedly practiced evasion or equivocation when confronted with issues of race or slavery. The Colonization Society proposed sending African Americans to Liberia. On the one hand, they argued that exporting free black people to Africa would help to preserve slavery in this country, because the presence of free black people made slaves restless.  On the other, they claimed that slave owners would be more likely to manumit their slaves if they could send them to Africa, instead of having to live with them after they were free.  Baltimoreans, in other words, managed to come down on both sides of the slavery question. Colonization would preserve slavery while eroding slavery. </p>
<p>A long series of similar dodges led me to conclude that the city’s white leadership was leery about confronting the issue of race head-on,  perhaps because Baltimore is a border city where whites are unlikely to be united on issues of race. And then, soon after World War II, many whites abandoned the city for the suburbs. The exodus accelerated after the 1968 riots. Much of Baltimore’s former white population can now avoid the race issue—and practice segregation—without thinking or feeling like racists. </p>
<p><strong>Can you tell us when the division between Baltimore City and Baltimore County was created and why?<br /></strong>This is complicated. </p>
<p>The separation was a two-step process—maybe three. In 1850, the General Assembly passed legislation that would enable the residents of Baltimore County to vote on whether to separate from Baltimore City. (The legislators held that this would be advantageous to Baltimore County.) The voters were also to elect a commission whose members would decide where to put “public buildings”—a courthouse, a jail, and a poorhouse—facilities which the County had previously shared with the City. The voters decided to disengage County from City. The Commission was elected, but couldn’t agree on where to put the public buildings. The commission divided down the middle on whether to leave the City.</p>
<p>In the meantime, the voters of the state approved the calling of a constitutional convention. When the convention completed its work in 1851, it placed Baltimore City and Baltimore County in separate judicial districts, requiring them to have separate courts and jails. In 1852, the General Assembly repealed its act of 1850 calling for the election of a commission, thereby depriving the commission of its authority to make decisions for the County.</p>
<p><strong>If we can go back, say, before William Donald Schaefer, what important character, politician or leader should Baltimoreans know about—but probably don’t?<br /></strong>Mayor James H. Preston [in office from 1911-1919] was a creature of the Democratic political machine. But he had vision. He proposed a gradualist alternative to annexation. It would have created four “boroughs” outside Baltimore City, one in each quarter of the compass. The boroughs would be governed by their own councils and could purchase services from the City. As they bought in to more city services, they would eventually become parts of the City, which would achieve annexation, but without suddenly imposing high city taxes on former suburbanites. Unfortunately, politicians from Baltimore and Anne Arundel Counties prevented Preston’s plan from becoming law. If they had agreed to it, we might have a viable metropolitan area government today—like Miami-Dade and Indianapolis.</p>
<p><strong>Who is your favorite historical Baltimore political figure? And why?<br /></strong>This is hard. There’s John Pendleton Kennedy—novelist, politician, and designer of an iron bridge over the Jones Falls that would stand up to floods. Then there’s Samuel Smith—businessman, politician, and military tactician who anticipated every move that the British would make in their 1814 assault on Baltimore. And of course, there’s Frederick Douglass, who learned to read in Baltimore, and became the country’s premier writer and orator in the struggle against slavery. </p>
<p>But I have a special admiration for Samuel Purviance, a forgotten Baltimore revolutionary. He chaired the city’s Committee of Observation during the Revolutionary War. It functioned as the town’s government, struggling to maintain public order in the face of the city’s anti-British hotheads, one of whom was Samuel’s brother, Robert. He also had to contend with a revolutionary government in Annapolis that was far from revolutionary. As late as January, 1776, the provincial convention declared its “affection for, and loyalty to the house of Hanover” [the British dynasty the produced six monarchs, including George III] and its conviction that to be British subjects “is to be the freest members of any civil society in the known world.” Purviance endured censure by the Annapolis authorities for trying to take the royal governor into custody. (The royal governor had been providing intelligence to the British military about prospects for invading the Chesapeake.) Purviance’s business interests collapsed in the recession that followed the Revolution. He tried to retrieve his fortunes in the West, but was captured by Indians while traveling by boat on the Ohio River, and was never heard from again.  </p>
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/new-book-tackles-tangled-history-baltimore-politics/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Governor Larry Hogan Announces BaltimoreLink Plan to Redesign Bus System</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/governor-larry-hogan-announces-baltimorelink-plan-to-redesign-bus-system/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Oct 2015 11:29:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[BaltimoreLink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Larry Hogan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Line]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=68227</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[In response to heavy criticism of his decision to cancel the Red Line, today Governor Larry Hogan announced a $135 million plan to redesign Baltimore&#8217;s bus system, adding 12 new routes and connecting them more cohesively with other transit in the city, like the Light Rail and Metro Subway. The new plan is called BaltimoreLink &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/governor-larry-hogan-announces-baltimorelink-plan-to-redesign-bus-system/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In response to heavy criticism of <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/2015/6/25/hogan-says-no-to-red-line">his decision to cancel the Red Line</a>, today Governor Larry Hogan announced a $135 million plan to redesign Baltimore&#8217;s bus system, adding 12 new routes and connecting them more cohesively with other transit in the city, like the Light Rail and Metro Subway.
</p>
<p>The new plan is called <a href="http://mta.maryland.gov/BaltimoreLink" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">BaltimoreLink</a> and, accordingly, calls to rename other MTA systems: the LocalLink (bus), Light RailLink, Metro SubwayLink and MobilityLink, in order to &#8220;create an interconnected transit system.&#8221;
</p>
<p>“For years, Maryland&#8217;s largest and most important city had an antiquated and broken transit system,&#8221; Governor Hogan said in a press release. &#8220;But with this vision, the people of Baltimore and surrounding jurisdictions will finally be able to travel conveniently, efficiently and affordably from where they live to where they work.”
</p>
<p>Probably the biggest component of the new BaltimoreLink plan is the 12 new color-coded bus routes that aim to give riders better access to Amtrak, Marc, Light Rail, Metro Subway, and the city&#8217;s surrounding suburbs. The routes will apparently run every 10 minutes, and every 15 minutes during midday, and will also be branded with easy-to-read signage and detailed maps.
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<p>Many Baltimore transportation advocates are criticizing the plan, saying that it&#8217;s merely a new bus redesign, but hardly the transformative initiative that local transportation needs.  </p>
<p>“Larry Hogan traded a $1 billion federal investment in regional rail for a souped-up version of the Charm City Circulator, so he could fund pork projects in other parts of the state,&#8221; Maryland Democratic Party executive director Pat Murray said in a statement. &#8220;It’s a bad deal for Baltimore, but a good deal for Hogan’s friends. That isn’t change. That&#8217;s just partisan politics as usual.&#8221;</p>
<p>Though both sides of the party line can likely agree that the MTA bus system has needed an upgrade for many years. And, of course, this will all be dependent of just how effectively the BaltimoreLink changes will be implemented, which won&#8217;t officially begin until June 2017.</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/governor-larry-hogan-announces-baltimorelink-plan-to-redesign-bus-system/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Rawlings-Blake Announces She Will Not Seek Re-Election</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/rawlings-blake-will-not-seek-re-election/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ron Cassie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Sep 2015 11:11:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Carl Stokes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Catherine Pugh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Freddie Gray]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jill Carter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Larry Hogan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nick Mosby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Line]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sheila Dixon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stephanie Rawling-Blake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wes Moore]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=68520</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Baltimore mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake announced this morning at City Hall that she will not seek re-election in 2016, saying that the political distractions of running for office would interfere with the current challenges facing the city in the coming months. “As I prepared to engage in a vigorous mayoral campaign and participated in planning meetings &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/rawlings-blake-will-not-seek-re-election/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Baltimore mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake announced this morning at City Hall that she will not seek re-election in 2016, saying that the political distractions of running for office would interfere with the current challenges facing the city in the coming months.
</p>
<p>“As I prepared to engage in a vigorous mayoral campaign and participated in planning meetings with my campaign team and volunteers, I came to the realization that every moment that I spend running for mayor would take away from the urgent responsibilities to the city that I love,” Rawlings-Blake said in a statement. “Over the next 15 months, my time would be best spent focused on continuing to move the city forward and building upon our progress, without the distraction of campaign politics.”
</p>
<p>Coming a day after the <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2015/9/10/freddie-gray-trial-will-stay-in-baltimore" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">second pre-trial motions</a> hearing in the Freddie Gray cases, Rawlings-Blake&#8217;s announcement Friday came as a major surprise to political observers and shakes up a suddenly wide-open Democratic race for mayor with the primary still seven months away.
</p>
<p>In making the announcement, Rawlings-Blake stressed her decision was not made out of a fear of losing the upcoming election and highlighted her accomplishments while in office, including reforming the city’s pension system, improving Baltimore’s bond rating and overall financial picture, reducing property taxes, prioritizing the <a href="http://www.vacantstovalue.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Vacants to Value</a> initiative, and helping secure more than $1 billion for school construction.</p>
<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t lost a race since middle school,&#8221; Rawlings-Blake said, jokingly noting that the opponent who beat her then—a boy named Anthony Watson—isn&#8217;t among the current field of candidates.</p>
<p>She said she has no immediate plans to run again for political office, but did not rule out doing so in the future. Part of the reason that the decision not to run for re-election comes as a surprise is that Rawlings-Blake seemed on firmer political ground in recent weeks after firing former police commissioner Anthony Batts and naming interim commissioner Kevin Davis to take over. That move that appeared to be supported by the Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police leadership, from whom Rawlings-Blake has taken a great deal of heat since the April unrest, and seemed to be steadying the ship at the police department, at least publicly, and in terms of managing the more recent protests around the courthouse.</p>
<p>&#8220;Much work remains to be done, and I will spend the remaining 15 months of my term as Mayor continuing to be focused on our city’s future and moving this city forward,&#8221; Rawlings-Blake said. &#8220;I will continue efforts to improve police-community relations and decrease violent crime. I will continue to fight for City Council approval of my ambitious plan to invest $136 million in recreation centers for our communities. I will continue to create opportunities for new jobs and attack neighborhood blight.&#8221;</p>
<p>Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican who has clashed with Rawlings-Blake at times over the response to the protests and riots after Gray&#8217;s death from injuries suffered while in police custody and his decision to cancel Baltimore&#8217;s <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/did-killing-baltimores-red-line-ruin-hogans-political-fortunes-in-the-city/2015/07/12/57e95fc8-2733-11e5-b72c-2b7d516e1e0e_story.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Red Line</a> mass transit project, released the following statement: “It takes courage and strength to lead one of America&#8217;s great cities, and Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake stood up and has served the city she loves over the course of two decades. I value my working relationship with the mayor and thank her for her service. Our administrations will continue working together to make Baltimore a better and stronger city.”</p>
<p>Rawlings-Blake said a decision not to seek re-election had been percolating for several months as her administration prepared for the legal issues surrounding the Gray case.  The announcement follows by two days her administration’s agreement—and the City’s Board of Estimates approval—of a <a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2015/9/8/city-to-pay-freddie-grays-family-6-4-million-in-settlement" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">controversial $6.4 million</a> wrongful death settlement with Gray’s family that accepted all civil liability, but expressly did not acknowledge guilt by the police officers charged in the case.</p>
<p>Rawlings-Blake’s decision obviously opens up space for April’s Democratic primary contestants, a field which includes former mayor Sheila Dixon—who announced<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2015/7/1/sheila-dixon-is-running-for-mayor" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> she was running</a> in July—and state Sen. Catherine Pugh and City Councilman Carl Stokes, who both announced Tuesday that they were entering the fray.</p>
<p>Dixon, in a statement, commended Rawlings-Blake, a former City Council member who rose to City Council president when Dixon became mayor. &#8220;She and her family have made many sacrifices and I think earned the right to pursue other goals.&#8221;</p>
<p>Rawlings-Blake was initially appointed mayor in 2010 when Dixon was forced to resign as part of a plea deal after stealing gift cards intended for the poor. Rawlings-Blake, whose father, Howard P. &#8220;Pete&#8221; Rawlings, was a widely respected state delegate from Baltimore City, was elected in her own right in 2011.</p>
<p>Stokes, near his City Hall office, said he was surprised by the mayor&#8217;s announcement, but praised Rawlings-Blake&#8217;s decision to place managing the city through its current struggles over running a re-election campaign.</p>
<p>&#8220;I know it&#8217;s a hard decision for her,&#8221; Stokes said.</p>
<p>By stepping aside, Stokes added, the mayor, City Council, and various City departments should be able to address and communicate about issues more directly, without worrying about how they will play out or be spun in the context of a political campaign.</p>
<p>City Councilman Brandon Scott, who got his start in politics as a community outreach worker for Rawlings-Blake and is also considering a bid for mayor, said he respected the mayor&#8217;s decision. &#8220;She came into the City Council when she was 25 and is leaving at 45, 46 [when her term expires]. She gave the prime of her life to the city,&#8221; Scott said. &#8220;History will look back and see the mayor did some great things.&#8221;</p>
<p>Other potential contenders for mayor include businessman and best-selling author Wes Moore, who is <a href="http://www.baltimorefishbowl.com/stories/wes-moore-nick-mosby-contemplating-mayoral-campaigns/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">said to be </a>considering a bid; state Del. Jill P. Carter, whose supporters have launched a <a href="https://www.facebook.com/groups/867013743363865/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Facebook page</a> with almost 2,700 followers encouraging her to run; and City Councilman Nick J. Mosby, who represents West Baltimore and is married to City State&#8217;s Attorney Marilyn Mosby.</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/rawlings-blake-will-not-seek-re-election/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>​Hogan Puts Brakes on Red Line</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/hogan-says-no-to-red-line/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Ron Cassie]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Jun 2015 19:45:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Ferguson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Elijah Cummings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Greater Baltimore Committee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kevin Kamenetz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Larry Hogan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pete Rahn]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Purple Line]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Line]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stephanie Rawlings-Blake]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=68951</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[The Red Line mass transit project came to a screeching halt Thursday afternoon. At an Annapolis press conference, Gov. Larry Hogan said the long-planned Baltimore Red Line is not cost-effective, in particular, highlighting the planned 3.4-mile, $1 billion tunnel through downtown, Harbor East, and Fells Point. Years in the works, with millions already spent on &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/hogan-says-no-to-red-line/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Red Line mass transit project came to a screeching halt Thursday afternoon.</p>
<p>At an Annapolis press conference, Gov. Larry Hogan said the long-planned Baltimore Red Line is not cost-effective, in particular, highlighting the planned 3.4-mile, $1 billion tunnel through downtown, Harbor East, and Fells Point.</p>
<p>Years in the works, with millions already spent on environmental impact studies, design, and engineering, the 19-station, east-west <a href="http://www.baltimoreredline.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Red Line</a> was expected to run from Woodlawn and the Social Security Administration in Baltimore County to Greektown and Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center in east Baltimore City. Pitched as a transportation, jobs, and economic game-changer for the city, the federal government has already given preliminary federal approval and provided a $900 million commitment toward the project.</p>
<p>At the same press conference, Hogan announced that the state would go ahead and build the Purple Line, which will connect Montgomery County and Prince George’s County, given several conditions, namely that those two counties pick up a greater share of the construction costs. That 16-mile track will connect Bethesda in the west to New Carrollton in the east. </p>
<p>“I have always said this [Purple Line] decision was never about whether public transit was worthwhile, but whether it is affordable and makes sense,” Hogan said. “In reducing costs here, hundreds of millions of dollars will become available for other important projects. Our administration promised to chart a new course for Maryland—one where economic development and jobs are our top priority. The <a href="http://www.purplelinemd.com/en/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Purple Line</a> is a long-term investment that will be an important economic driver for our state.”</p>
<p>Hogan also announced that he would increase <a href="http://governor.maryland.gov/2015/06/25/governor-larry-hogan-announces-1-97-billion-in-transportation-funding/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">infrastructure spending</a> on roads and bridges by $1.35 billion—“from Western Maryland to the Eastern Shore,” according to a statement from the governor’s office—in coming years, with priority projects slated to begin in 2018. When asked, according to the <em><a href="http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-hogan-transportation-20150624-story.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Baltimore Sun</a></em>, if any of the total $1.97 billion in roads and bridge projects were located in Baltimore City, Hogan said, &#8220;Not that I know of.&#8221;</p>
<p>Both the Red and Purple line projects were immediately viewed as in jeopardy after Hogan’s upset of former Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown last fall. Hogan, a Republican, pledged to reduce taxes and keep a lid on spending while running against Brown, a Democrat, and has said the state could not afford two, $2.5 billion-plus projects. He later walked those remarks back a step, saying that he and his new transportation secretary, Pete Rahn, would study the initiatives before making a final decision.</p>
<p>Earlier this year, Red Line advocates reached out to local business groups to help sustain momentum for the project and to try to win Hogan over, touting the effort’s potential as an economic engine for Baltimore. The<a href="http://gbc.org/join-baltimore-red-line-support-summit/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"> Greater Baltimore Committee</a>, for example, held three Red Line rallies last month.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Screen-shot-2015-06-25-at-5.51.01-PM.png"></p>
<p>But ultimately, it’s hard to imagine that Hogan’s decision on the Red Line came as a complete shock to anyone. While earning kudos for largely governing from the center during the General Assembly this winter, the twin Red and Purple line decisions—and potential for real partisan conflict—have loomed since November. Some observers may even interpret Hogan’s decision to block the Red Line and support the Purple Line as a choice to appeal to Washington suburban voters—he was born in Washington, D.C., <a href="http://governor.maryland.gov/governor-larry-hogan/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">raised in Landover</a>, and his father once represented Prince George’s as a congressman and county executive—over Baltimore City voters. </p>
<p>Not surprisingly, Baltimore area politicians were quick to express their displeasure with Hogan’s decision. On his <a href="https://www.facebook.com/wcferguson" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Facebook</a> page (see below), state senator Bill Ferguson re-posted a Hogan Administration map—which was originally pushed on social media by the administration to tout their statewide transportation infrastructure plans—but that also erased Baltimore City as a jurisdiction. &#8220;See the gaping hole?,&#8221; Ferguson wrote, noting the city&#8217;s transportation and transit problems, and their economic impact. &#8220;This is not a solution.&#8221;</p>
<p><img decoding="async" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/11215114_771472186538_4500618762871364285_n.jpg">Here’s what Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Rep. Elijah Cummings, and Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz had to say:</p>
<p>Rawlings-Blake:</p>
<p><i>“I am disheartened that Governor Hogan has chosen to ignore the needs of Baltimore City residents by cancelling current plans for the Red Line. Although the Governor has promised to support economic growth in Baltimore, he cancelled a project that would have expanded economic development, created thousands of jobs, increased access to thousands more, and offered residents better health care, childcare, and educational opportunities. I remain committed to working with my partners in government, the business community, and all our community partners to fight for transit opportunities for Baltimore&#8217;s residents.&#8221;</i></p>
<p>Cummings:</p>
<p><em>“By refusing to build the Red Line, Governor Hogan is telling the City of Baltimore that he doesn’t want our residents to have the jobs and economic opportunities that this project would create. He is also leaving up to $900 million in federal taxpayers’ money on the table to be invested in a state that wants to build the better future a new transportation system brings.  Governor Hogan’s decision will haunt Baltimore for decades and I oppose the decision in the strongest possible terms.”</em></p>
<p>Kamenetz: </p>
<p><i>“Given Governor Hogan’s announcement that he will cancel the Red Line as currently planned, it is imperative that he tell us what he proposes as an alternative. The Baltimore region still needs reliable and accessible transportation options other than automobiles to allow people to get to and from work.  Baltimore County is home to Social Security and CMS headquarters, with more than 16,000 employees, many of whom would have used the Red Line to come to work. Without presenting viable alternatives, the State not only forfeits available federal funding, it leaves Baltimore County, Baltimore City and the region stuck in traffic.”</i></p>

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