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City leadership struggles with blizzard; Baltimore’s Katrina

Posted on Wednesday, February 10th, 2010 at 12:17 pm

This house in the 1100 block of N. Carrollton Ave. in Sandtown burned Saturday night. While nobody died, 7 people were displaced. The Red Cross has since assisted them. However, three other houses were burned as well. Why? Because unplowed snow prevented the city fire trucks from getting there in time.

This house in the 1100 block of N. Carrollton Ave. in Sandtown burned Saturday night. While nobody died, 7 people were displaced. The Red Cross has since assisted them. However, three other houses were burned as well. Why? Because unplowed snow prevented the city fire trucks from getting there in time.

NOTE: The following was my initial thought on how the City handled the 1st part of the blizzard and written Monday night. Bottom line: a lack of plowing. Since then, the City seems to have upped their game.  

TGR: The Blizzard of 2010: 1 Down, 1 to Go!

Welcome to Baltimore’s Katrina: “Nobody hears our cry!”

A state of emergency: National Guard in hummers In a city where citizens get taxed to death for everything from parking tickets to cell phones, where is the love? Like the songwriter sings, “Ain’t no love in the heart of the city!”

 

Oh, and get this: Another foot of snow on schedule for tomorrow.

Here’s the official line from City Hall: “As of 9:30am this morning more than 72% of secondary roads have been plowed once. 36% have been plowed two or more times.”

C’mon, man!

“Ironing boards, trash cans, stolen city cones, and chairs put out to save parking spaces. My question is anybody recording the acts of violence directly related to the Blizzard of 2010?”, asks WEAA radio talk show host David Brown.

He added, “It’s ridiculous!” 

The situation in Baltimore is a 9-1-1, despite what officials want us to believe. Crime is up! Anybody from Baltimore knows that you can do what you want to do when the police are at bay: Sell dope; loot; kill; steal; destroy!

Actually, tonight I saved 3 young black youths from getting the crap beat out of them from a small crowd of angry youth – pushed on by teenage drug dealers who insisted that violence is something normal and deserved to otherwise good kids who didn’t mean any harm to nobody.

I could not believe I was watching youngsters raised with my son who felt like they had an obligation to kill another without regard for law, mercy, grace, nor justice – just because they could.

This is a 9-1-1!

I believe that acts of violence in Baltimore have escalated during this storm because of a cornucopia of inter-related issues: violence; the recession; walking on snow while ducking cars who insist you have no right; taking parking spaces; and, oh – I cannot forget – no snow plows.

This morning, I attempted to ride the subway. Guess what, a multitude of delays. Said one man, “No snow trains.” What’s a snow train? It helps keep the lines warm during … a blizzard.

So, who is to blame?

Well, one thing I learned is that Baltimore and DC are not far apart in terms of transportation. They both got fed dollars around the same time: about the 60′s; while DC used theirs for subways, Baltimore put their dollars on highways.

Baltimore finally got a subway system around … ’83 … that went from downtown to the northwest (kinda like the highway to nowhere). And that was it. Race and class disaffected otherwise intelligent thinking and urban planning – going back to what one mentor calls “the Negro problem”.

Makes me think who really runs this place. Nonetheless, that racial serpitude that insists that blacks deserve this and others deserve that is so warped and spun, I think; such are the grounds, I would think, for a class action law suit for a multitude of inter-disciplinary changes in Baltimore – it’s transportation, education, housing, et al.

NY and Phillie, however, have transpo systems that are about a century old – along with Boston. Snow means literally nothing to them. It’s about … get this, people.

Yet, Atlanta began a transpo system not that long ago, before Baltimore. Instead of the one-legged approach to serve a certain area, theirs – no doubt due to progressive leadership – was built with a modicum of intelligence: an east-west rail; a north-south rail. Bottom line: logic. Democracy. Something for everybody, not just something for those who could do exactly what they wanted to do – like in Baltimore, a still otherwise racist, retarded, and tainted town; the place I call home.

Forgive me, Lord!     

So, all of this begs the question … to me: Who really loves Baltimore? Who really cares about its people? The politician, the social activist, the community organizer, the Civil Rights leader, the white guy, the black guy, the woman? Who understands the intricacies and ideosyncrasies and devaluations that have occured over the years? Who can truly put their finger on the pulse of the people with any semblance of a basic understanding of the landscape? Who can deliver? Who can put their own inner-circle at a distance so as to deserve with honor and distinction the true needs of the people? A Poly grad? A Dunbar grad? A City grad? A Western grad? Or, a person with a GED?

We’ve got more nuances, as a major city, than Willie Lynch. And I’m sick of it!

I don’t know about you, but for me … something has to really change in order for me to believe … in my hometown.

********************
Wednesday, 2.10.10 – 10 am – Snow plows are videotaped out and working.
http://www.bmorenews.com/video/baltimore-gets-plowed-21010.shtml

********************
Monday morning – it was like Katrina in the 1100 block of N. Carrollton Ave. in Sandtown – http://www.bmorenews.com/video/bmore-katrina-i-1100-north-carrollton-ave.shtml

Monday night, this video seemed to express the sentiments of many – black and white – http://www.bmorenews.com/video/baltimore-blizzard-2010-ms-shirley-speaks.shtml

Filed in: Uncategorized.



 

3 Responses

  1. After 4 days, several phone calls and emails to City Hall our street was finally plowed. The truck stalled several times, had a flat tire and then blocked the intersecting street with a mountain of snow. This has been the worst service of any administration from City Hall!!!

    Judge Sweeney erred when he accepted the plea deal from Mayor Dixon. The plea deal should have included a contingency clause, “in the event of an emergency in the City of Baltimore within the first 5 days of your resignation you will serve as an unpaid consultant. You will not lead but provide technical support to the city that you claim to love. The hours that you serve as a consultant will be deducted from the 500 hours of community service.”

    I am aware that Mayor SRB may not want any assistance from Mayor Dixon but judging from her performance she needs the help.

    You can say whatever negative things that you want about Mayor Dixon but my street was plowed at least 6 times during the first 3 days of any storm. The major streets were plowed and we had more than one driving lane. Please don’t remind me that we have never had a storm like this before.

    Where is Council President Jack Young? He has not been seen or heard from since his swearing in. I raise this question because this maybe a potential problem that will rear its ugly head. Council President Jack Young should be involved in every aspect of the Snow Emergency Management Center. He should know what is going on as opposed to being briefed if he is being briefed. Mr. Young should be learning what to do and what not to do during this crisis situation. When Mayor SRB is on television or radio Council President Jack Young should be there also. Without Mr. Young being actively invovled God forbid that something happens to Mayor SRB will the citizens of Baltimore be subjected to more of this horrendous service?

  2. [...] Read the rest here: City leadership struggles with blizzard; doing better with round 2 … [...]

  3. Great article on the Baltimore blizzard Doni Glover. Ms. Shirley put an intelligent, concerned, well-spoken, tax-paying face on an otherwise perceived illiterate inner-city resident. You and Ms. Shirley got those Baltimore City streets plowed. But we will keep that a secret. Oops! Secret’s out.

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  • About Doni Glover

    Doni Morton Glover, the founder and publisher of www.bmorenews.com, has been a journalist for the past 15 years. He is a writer, photographer, and a political analyst for WBAL TV 11. Additionally, he is a local radio personality and host of “Empower Hour” on Radio One’s WOLB 1010 AM. The show is now in its 10th year and is the longest-running customized program on the station.

    With a forte in politics and minority business, Glover has been quoted by a number of publications across the state of Maryland and Washington, DC. Often considered a go-to guy for politicians, he has consulted a number of politicians and is considered a premier minority business advocate in the state.

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