Redlining and Blockbusting Then, Public Investment Now

In Roland Park, there was redlining.  Homebuyers who were Jews or Blacks were steered elsewhere.

In Edmondson Village, there was blockbusting. Whites were scared into selling their homes at rock bottom prices.  They were resold to Black buyers at higher prices.

I’m working on recreation projects in both communities.

The Roland Park Community Foundation will be converting 20 acres of private land into a public park.

A portion will be set aside for recreational use by students at Poly and Western, as well as other schools.

Today, I was updated on the status of the discussions about that site.

https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/baltimore-city/bs-md-ci-hillside-park-roland-park-recreational-space-20230109-bvtgoubmtrhwrajtx5ykss3bhu-story.html

There was a tragic shooting death of a 16-year old at the Edmondson Village Shopping Center last week.

My 41st District colleagues and I were already working on securing state funding for the redevelopment of the shopping center.  Enhanced security will be a part of that effort.

https://www.baltimoresun.com/opinion/columnists/dan-rodricks/bs-ed-rodricks-0108-edmondson-richardson-20230106-t4qlggmhvnc33pnn3pix6dpcza-story.html

The running track at Edmondson Senior High School needs to be restored.

Today, I researched a similar effort that we funded at Northwestern Senior High School a decade ago.

The legislative session starts on Wednesday.

Tell me what issues concern you most.

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfVyogpogMqoXi1a66g2hJZBSmvnpblr2ZMQBJ-wXyA4moGJQ/viewform?usp=sf_link

Bipartisanship 

The Baltimore Country Club property is precious open space in Roland Park.
I sledded down this hill with my brother Stewart.
I drove past the site on my way to City College.  To this day, we call Hillside Avenue “Snake Lane.”
In 2008, I joined the community in opposing the construction of a retirement facility on the property.
Two years ago, I got a phone call from the chair of the Roland Park Community Foundation, Mary Page Michel, “Can the State help us buy the property?”
We quickly agreed that state funding was doable if part of the property was dedicated to use by the students at Poly-Western across the street.
I spoke with Delegate Maggie McIntosh, chair of the Appropriations Committee, and she agreed to allocating $250,000 in Program Open Space funds.
Yesterday, an agreement was announced for the Foundation to purchase the 20-acre property to create a new public park.
It’s not often that a City graduate does something that benefits Poly, our arch rival.
In Baltimore, we call this bipartisanship.

Drawing maps and striking the right balance

                The most important legislation I worked on this past summer won’t have my name on it. 

                 The Governor introduces the resolution redrawing the boundaries for our legislative districts. 

                 If you can’t be elected in your new district, you can’t pass any bills. 

                 So my 41st District colleagues and I met early and often.  We proposed a map that looked very much like our existing district – geographically and demographically. 

                 The 41st District in the Governor’s plan meets both of those criteria. 

                We lose none of our current neighborhoods and add Roland Park below Cold Spring Lane, Sinai Hospital and its adjacent residential communities, and the Uplands redevelopment along the Edmondson Avenue corridor.

 —–  

                This morning, I introduced the first bill this session that will have my name on it.

                 House Bill 62 would exempt a professor’s research from a Public Information Act request. 

                  Translation: Someone who disagrees with a professor who took a stand on a public issue could not harass the academic by demanding a copy of his or her research. 

                  This is not hypothetical.  It happened during Wisconsin’s battle over union rights and government spending last year and a controversy over climate control research by a former faculty member at the University of Virginia. 

                   For HB 62 to pass, I must demonstrate that it strikes the right balance between the public’s right to know and academic freedom.

  • My Key Issues:

  • Pimlico and The Preakness
  • Our Neighborhoods
  • Pre-Kindergarten
  • Lead Paint Poisoning