Posts Tagged ‘BDC’

Baltimore does not need a new arena- Our current arena is the top grossing arena of its size

Posted by ameister on Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

First Mariner Arena is ranked as the top grossing venue of its size!

For years I have been writing about how we do not need a new arena especially in such a bad economy in a downtrodden city.

The BDC thinks otherwise.

Our current arena is not broken, in fact it is doing very well. How could the city come out ahead economically with a new arena that is publicly subsidized in some way?

The new arena is an unnecessary BDC initiative that our friends from Occupy Baltimore should be jumping all over. The latest good economic news about our current arena solidifies my stance on this issue. Just because county residents think the current arena is dirty, old, and dingy does not mean we should build a new one.  It should boil down to dollars and cents and financially we currently have a money maker here.

My foreshadowing article about the Parkway Theatre from 2008

Posted by ameister on Sunday, December 4th, 2011

The Parkway Theatre is in the news again. The BDC selected developer has failed miserably and has been terminated. The Baltimore Brew article only glances over the previous owner Charles Dodson. Dodson purchased the theater before the government had serious interest in it (they could have purchased it if they wanted it early in the 2000′s).  He wanted to make the theater an attraction and he worked hard on it and spent his own money on it. The BDC and the city should have let him keep working on it instead of taking it from him. What was the worst thing that could have happened? We are now stuck with an empty building that has not been worked on in years and will not be worked on until 2013 at the earliest (probably 2014!).  If they would have let Dodson keep the place he would have been working on it in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013. Now NO WORK will have been done during that time period.  We need to go back to a normal development system where owners get to work on their properties and not fear that the government will try to take what is theirs. Below is my original article about the Parkway Theatre from 2008:

“BDC To Seize Parkway Theater On North Avenue
September 22, 2008 –

The city/BDC is on the verge of seizing the Parkway Theater from its owner Charles Dodson.

I have spoken to Charles Dodson a few times and he has told me a lot about the situation. The man had every intention of fixing up the place. I have been by the building many times and compared to the rest of the North Avenue area it is in fine shape. Dodson legally purchased this property in an area where the BDC already had plans. It’s clear to me that Dodson did not fit in to their plans. You see Dodson is not a connected developer or a political contributor. He is not an insider and when you are not an insider the big boys find ways to beat you.

How many empty buildings does the city of Baltimore own? How many empty buildings does the BDC own? Shouldn’t we as tax payers be able to “quick take” them since we are the ones who fund the city and BDC?

Why is an unelected shadow government type organization allowed to decide who gets to keep what they own and who does not?

So now the BDC will give Dodson less than what the building is worth and then they will give it to a connected “developer” (who will take his time to renovate it by the way) in better shape than it was in 2002 when Dodson purchased it. Meanwhile thousands of city owned properties sit vacant and trashed.”

Occupy Baltimore should be all over this situation!

Occupy Baltimore occupiers should prepare for the end of the physical occupation

Posted by ameister on Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

The following is another reason why Occupy Baltimore should be ready to morph into becoming a movement that is not centered around a physical location. It is important to note that the BDC event was a great step in attaining the above goal.

Over the last few days we have seen some of the physical  spaces of the stronger occupy groups totally cleaned out in organized night raids. The clearing out technique seems to be very successful and easily replicable. The mayor of Oakland told the BBC that eighteen cities were recently part of a conference call (that most likely had something to do with the US Conference of Mayors) where participants talked about handling the physical occupations. It would not surprise me if the night raid technique was discussed. I have no idea if the mayor of Baltimore was part of this call, but it is clear that somehow (possibly by some sort of coordination) elected leaders across the country have come up with a way to clear out the physical occupy  spaces. Occupiers in Baltimore have to assume that it is only a matter of time before the police show up at their space in the middle of the night.

In the long run I think the clearing of the spaces is a good thing and a true test of the long-term strength of this political movement.

The end of the BDC as we know it?

Posted by ameister on Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

Last night I attended the outdoor meeting between BDC President Jay Brodie and “the people” gathered up by AnotherBDCisPossible.org. Jay Brodie showed up. This fact shocked a lot of people. I think Brodie understood that given the current political unrest that a no-show would be much worse than a possible scream-fest.  Mr. Brodie definitely made a wise decision. During my time at the meeting things were very calm and polite. Brodie was definitely a good sport about things. He seemed to be willing admit mistakes and he did have an air of responsibility about him which was quite different than the tone of this Baltimore Brew article where it seems like he does not understand why people dislike the BDC.

You can read some blog posts by other people that were written before the meeting here and here.

There were a few moments in the first thirty minutes of the meeting that really summed up the current situation:

- AnotherBDCisPossible.org tried to interject race into the situation. I think this was a horrible mistake given the fact that Kurt Schmoke started the BDC and that at the start of the meeting the crowd was made up of about three black people and over 100 non-black people. Eventually Brodie said his one demand was that any delegation he meets with represent the black community. Ouch, he basically just (temporarily) beat the overwhelmingly white AnotherBDCisPossible.org group at their own game. This is NOT about race.  If you play into the BDC’s hands and make it about race then you will not be able to change a darn thing. They will easily be able to use race to stall and distract.  It is about the economic direction of Baltimore. I think Benn Ray summed it up nicely when he said that he would like to see the BDC act like a government and not like a corporation. A government is elected by the people and is supposed to work for the best interest of the people. An elected government that does not outsource its business decisions would have figured out a way to sell empty city-owned houses QUICKLY at some point over the last 15 years!

-I also thought AnotherBDCisPossible.org made a mistake by trying to include ‘United Workers” issues in this discussion.  What is Brodie supposed to do about harbor workers not getting paid a lot of money? Yes some of the harbor workers’ bosses get money from the BDC, but I think there are more direct BDC issues that need to be addressed before this one. The United Workers should have their own rally. It also was a mistake to let the Spanish speaking United Workers representative speak and then have a translator translate. It lasted too long and seemed out of place. The amazing part of this part of the night was that it exposed Brodie’s major disconnect with the younger generations. After the boring Spanish segment was done he tried to make some Spanish jokes and tried to communicate with the Spanish speaker. This situation was awkward. One would think the President of the BDC would have a clue about this kind of thing. He seemed like a relic from another generation. He talked about how his own parents were hard-working Russian immigrants. We have all heard these great stories before, but the person telling them usually is telling us about our Great-Grandparents.  In the past I have begged young Baltimore voters to vote so we don’t let Senior Citizen buildings dictate the future of this city.  How can I sit here and allow an UNELECTED 75-year-old architect lead Baltimore into the economic future?

Mr. Brodie came off as a nice person, but after 15 years at the helm nice is only going to earn you so much. In 1996 most of  the people in attendance were in elementary or middle school. The BDC is clearly a relic from the long forgotten Kurt Schmoke era and its leader is the perfect leader for this outdated  form of quasi-government. Let’s keep it real simple, we should let government agencies that answer to elected officials who in turn answer to the voters, control the economic development of Baltimore. If an elected leader thinks a hotel is a great idea then let him tell a city department to draw up some plans and present them to the people. If the leader sees that he will eventually lose his job (in an ELECTION) because of this plan then he will call it off and accountability will have played its role.

At the very least I think last night’s exercise demonstrated that if the BDC does not change its tune soon things are going to get even more embarrassing. AnotherBDCisPossible.org is run by some young people who have some kinks to work out of the organization, but I think they will become more focused and polished over time.  Jay Brodie was very proud of the pie charts the BDC has produced, well perhaps the AnotherBDCisPossible.org people could present this little table to him next time. I think it helps explain why he has been able to stay in charge for the last 15 years…

Candidates Account Contributor Name(Address) Amount Date Received Contribution Type
Dixon, Sheila Friends For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211-2239)
$100.00 05/13/2009 Individual
Dixon, Sheila Friends For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211-2239)
$300.00 08/09/2007 Individual
Dixon, Sheila Friends For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211-2239)
$200.00 07/18/2007 Individual
Dixon, Sheila Friends For MENASHA BRODIE
(609 CRAYCOMBE AVENUE ,
BALTIMORE, MD, 21211)
$100.00 06/01/2003 Individual
Gladden, Lisa Friends of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craymore Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 01/06/2006 Individual
Hammen, Peter A. Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 11/05/2004 Individual
Harris, Kenneth Sr. Citizens For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycomb Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 07/01/2003 Individual
Remarks: Fundraiser
Haynes, Keith E. Committee To Elect Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 12/07/2005 Individual
Remarks: Contribution
Haynes, Keith E. Committee To Elect Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 12/03/2004 Individual
Remarks: Contribution
Haynes, Keith E. Committee To Elect Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 11/28/2003 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Remarks: Contribution
Hoffman, Barbara Friends Of Georgene Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$75.00 09/03/2002 Individual
Holton, Helen Citizens For Thomas Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$1,000.00 04/18/2005 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Holton, Helen Citizens For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 07/25/2003 Individual
Jones, Verna L. Friends of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 07/11/2007 Individual
Jones, Verna L. Friends of Brodie Enterprise
(7441 Mink Hollow Road ,
Highland, MD, 20777)
$200.00 01/09/2007 Business Entity
Jones, Verna L. Friends of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 01/11/2005 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Jones, Verna L. Friends of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 01/13/2004 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Jones, Verna L. Friends of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 01/09/2001 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Kraft, Jim Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 02/25/2005 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Marriott, Salima Siler Campaign Committee Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 07/28/2005 Individual
Marriott, Salima Siler Campaign Committee Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 06/01/2003 Ticket purchases by Individuals
McIntosh, Maggie Citizens For Menasha and Georgene A. Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 01/10/2006 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Mitchell, Keiffer Jackson Jr. Friends Of Menasha & Georgene Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 03/27/2003 Individual
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211-2239)
$200.00 04/27/2010 Individual
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Georgene Brodie
(609 Craycombie Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 10/11/2006 Individual
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211-2239)
$100.00 10/11/2006 Individual
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$150.00 12/09/2005 Individual
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$500.00 06/13/2005 Individual
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$250.00 10/21/2004 Ticket purchases by Individuals
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$70.00 03/12/2004 Ticket purchases by Individuals
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$500.00 04/25/2003 Individual
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$70.00 03/19/2003 Ticket purchases by Individuals
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$250.00 04/24/2002 Ticket purchases by Individuals
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$70.00 03/11/2002 Ticket purchases by Individuals
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$250.00 05/29/2001 Ticket purchases by Individuals
O’Malley, Martin Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$70.00 03/12/2001 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Pugh, Catherine E. Committee to Elect MENASHA BRODIE
(609 CRAYCROMBE AVE ,
BALTIMORE, MD, 21211)
$100.00 04/24/2003 Individual
Rawlings, Pete Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Balto., MD, 21211)
$125.00 07/11/2002 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Rawlings-Blake, Stephanie For Baltimore Manasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$500.00 01/03/2011 Individual
Rawlings-Blake, Stephanie For Baltimore Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211-2339)
$200.00 07/27/2007 Individual
Rawlings-Blake, Stephanie Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 08/09/2005 Individual
Rawlings-Blake, Stephanie Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 05/03/2004 Individual
Rawlings-Blake, Stephanie Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 03/28/2003 Individual
Reisinger, Edward L. Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$30.00 10/27/2004 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Remarks: 1 ticket
Reisinger, Edward L. Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 07/01/2003 Individual
Remarks: Guest Sponsor
Reisinger, Edward L. Friends Of Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 04/08/2003 Individual
Remarks: Guest Sponsor
Rosenberg, Sandy Citizens For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$200.00 05/26/2009 Individual
Rosenberg, Sandy Citizens For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$250.00 07/09/2007 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Rosenberg, Sandy Citizens For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$125.00 09/09/2005 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Rosenberg, Sandy Citizens For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$100.00 10/25/2004 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Rosenberg, Sandy Citizens For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$150.00 06/11/2003 Individual
Rosenberg, Sandy Citizens For Menasha and Georgene Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$50.00 08/13/2002 Individual
Rosenberg, Sandy Citizens For M.J. and Georgene Brodie
(609 Craycombe Av. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$75.00 09/22/2000 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Spector, Rikki Friends Of M.J. Brodie
(609 Craycombe Ave. ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$50.00 12/18/2000 Individual
Stukes, Melvin L. People For Menasha Brodie
(609 Craycombe Avenue ,
Baltimore, MD, 21211)
$55.00 03/15/2003 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Welch, Agnes Committee For MENASHA BRODIE
(609 CRAYCOMBE AVE. ,
BALTIMORE, MD, 21211-2239)
$250.00 05/07/2007 Ticket purchases by Individuals
Remarks: CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION
Young, Bernard C. Friends Of MENASHA BRODIE
(GEORGENE BRODIE 2217 FOXBANE SQUARE,
BALTIMORE, MD, 21209)
$100.00 07/07/2003 Individual
Young, Bernard C. Friends Of MENASHA BRODIE
(GEORGENE BRODIE 2217 FOXBANE SQUARE,
BALTIMORE, MD, 21209)
$100.00 01/15/1999 Individual

Jay Brodie’s days as president of the BDC are numbered thanks to AnotherBDCisPossible.org

Posted by ameister on Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

M.J. “Jay” Brodie is currently the President of the Baltimore Development Corporation, but after listening to him during Monday’s AnotherBDCisPossible.org event it became glaringly obvious that his time as President is near an end and the BDC itself may be about to change direction. When we look back on history I believe that yesterday’s event will be seen as a turning point for the BDC, and the Occupy movement in the form of the targeted AnotherBDCisPossible.org wing will be see as major catalyst of the BDC changes that are probably on the way.It is absurd to have a 75-year-old architect leading an organization which sets much of the economic tone for a 41-year-old mayor and a City Council that is about to get a lot younger. Brody presented himself as a nice man, but it is clear he is not in touch on many different levels.

Sorry to leave all of you in suspense, but I must go work the polls for the general election now. I will update this post after 10AM, for now follow these guys on Twitter.

UPDATE IS HERE.

Jay Brodie of the BDC will meet with the public on Monday thanks to AnotherBDCisPossible.org

Posted by ameister on Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

You can meet with the head of the BDC! Here is the Facebook event invite. An excerpt from the invite:

“We’ve invited the Baltimore Development Corporation to a public meeting. President Jay Brodie has accepted that invitation. So on Monday, we are going to have a little chat. Outside, on the steps of the BDC. Please come out and show your support!

The Baltimore Development Corporation should, as a publicly-funded organization entrusted with the public mission of promoting local economic development, be accountable to this city’s residents. Instead, we find that the BDC uses technicalities and legal loopholes to hide from democratic control and accountability behind its technical status as a private non-profit, making deals ostensibly in the name of Baltimore—and more often than not involving Baltimore’s tax dollars—without Baltimore getting any real, effective say in what those deals are. This is an unacceptable and untenable situation.”

This is pretty big news, some would say it is unprecedented.

Some of the AnotherBDCisPossible.org organizers are part of the Occupy Baltimore movement. This is a very productive “action” because it focuses on a specific local institution that many citizens have issues with. I have been suggesting these types of easy to understand and identify with actions for a few weeks.

I doubt the BDC is going to suddenly become transparent because of this, but at least the media attention surrounding the meeting (and I expect there to be a good amount of mainstream coverage of this event) will help educate citizens about the BDC and possibly increase the number of people who are vocally fed up with the BDC. This should be interesting.

Occupy Baltimore at a crossroads

Posted by ameister on Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

The Occupy Baltimore movement is about to get a lot of negative publicity. Here is some of what is coming their way.

When idealistic young people and Baltimoreans with serious mental and drug issues get together and try and share a space, bad things can happen. Baltimore has a terrible homeless problem. The people who make up this population suffer from all sorts of afflictions that need professional help and maybe even imprisonment. Young middle class idealists are not properly equipped to handle what these seriously messed up people bring to the table in a communal situation. I have been to Occupy Baltimore and to Occupy San Francisco and some of the people sleeping at and roaming around these locations are homeless people who could care less about a “99% movement”. Occupy Baltimore people who want to focus on Baltimore’s economic problems should not be burdened with taking care of people that are virtually impossible to take care of.

There is no need for me to go on about the obvious problems that setting up an encampment (that has some free food) in a drug infested city will bring about. I hope the rational members (and I know a few personally) of Occupy Baltimore use the current situation as a jumping off point for a more focused and stronger Occupy Baltimore movement.

The following post by Casey McKeel from the Occupy Baltimore Google Group beautifully sums up what the movement could easily be (I predict big things for Casey in Baltimore):

“I think it’s time that we pay some thought to how we want to move forward and how we want to use our time and energy. We are faced with several hard challenges, and at the moment, I don’t think we have the resources to take them all on successfully. Do we want to create a safe encampment or do we want to focus on actions that work to truly raise awareness and bring about change in Baltimore? I feel that both are ambitious and noble causes, but are the two simultaneously achievable? In an ideal world, I’d like to say they are, but in light of recent events, I feel this might need to be reconsidered. Right now, I can personally say, more of my time and energy is being used to work to maintain an encampment, rather than work on the actions (marches, rallies, public meetings, teach-ins, etc) that I’m truly passionate about and that I feel are of great importance in this moment of global action and energy.

Occupy does not have to mean encampment. This is a movement, as a friend put it very well, that transcends any location. The people that have come together, the ideas and passion that have been shared here in Baltimore, and across the country, is incredibly inspiring. And I don’t think it needs to come to an end. But I do think, it is time to reconsider what we want our occupation to look like here in Baltimore. In order to be successful, we don’t have to replicate what’s going on in New York or in other cities. We need to do what works best for our city and the people involved here. This is what will build a lasting movement that is sustainable and effective.

At the moment, my personal opinion would be to end the encampment. To find a way to help those that are homeless, find a place to go (I’m not saying to abandon them!), and to redirect our resources. We could still use the square for General Assemblies, for teach-ins, for speakers, as a starting point or actions and marches, even for a shared nightly meal. But there are also other options, perhaps relocating, perhaps an indoor location, whatever the group feels is best; or if the Occupation is to continue the encampment at McKeldin, perhaps all logistical matters pertaining to the on-site location should be taken over by those sleeping over. However, I do think it’s time to think about this and how we want to move forward if our goal is to create a lasting change. I understand this will be a sensitive subject to those that have been down there every night, around the clock. But try to look at this long-term, about what is sustainable, and what would allow the most people to get involved.

I’m going to throw it out there – perhaps a transition from Occupy Baltimore to Liberate Baltimore…”

AnotherBDCIsPossible.org and early voting thoughts

Posted by ameister on Friday, October 28th, 2011

Today I was made aware of this site: AnotherBDCIsPossible.org. Click on the site to read what this is all about.  I know that some of the people involved with this are part of Occupy Baltimore.  The final paragraph on the site states the following:

“We thereby call upon the Baltimore Development Corporation to account for their conduct and their shortcomings in the areas above, and to work with the residents of the city in whose interest they claim to operate to address these pressing problems. Because so many of these problems have the BDC’s lack of transparency at their root, we we are calling upon officials of the BDC to meet with us in public, outside their offices at 36 South Charles Street, on Monday, November 7th, at 5PM, where some sunlight can hopefully be cast upon these matters. If the BDC refuses to meet, we will meet without them at the same time and place to collectively discuss what further actions their refusal merits.”

Today is the first day of early voting for the general election.  What a waste of money. We should not even have local elections in off years.  The incredibly low turnout that this round of early voting will deliver should wake everyone up and inspire us to alter the local election cycle.

Uggghhh……

“Early voting centers will be open 10am to 8pm on Friday, October 28, 2011, Saturday, October 29, 2011, and Monday, October 31 – Thursday, November 3, 2011.”

Have a great weekend. I hope that I will be able to catch up on everything this weekend and deliver some longer posts next week.

Occupy Baltimore should name local names and help Shannon Sneed

Posted by ameister on Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

There are two growing political stories in Baltimore that I feel should mesh into one story. Below this post is the full Shannon Sneed write-in campaign press release. Most of you know that I feel Baltimore write-in campaigns are next to impossible long shot maneuvers. 13th district incumbent councilman Warren Branch is so “establishment” and so horrible that right off the bat the very likable Sneed should at least be thinking about an outside of the box attempt to defeat the incumbent via a write-in campaign. Sneed will only have a shot if she has an army of volunteers who are fed up with the establishment and corporate influence over politics. Where would she find such an army? More on that below.

The following is constructive criticism of the Occupy Baltimore campaign/event/movement. I REALLY hope that some people in that movement take my words seriously and consider my ideas.

Local leaders with names like Spector, Branch, Welch, and Conaway are breathing a big sigh of relief today. The BDC is loving life right about now.   For the last 24 hours or so a bunch of frustrated citizens have been protesting next to a tourist trap and not naming a LOCAL adversary while Baltimore’s own hereditary monarchs and oligarchs peacefully go back and forth between their homes, businesses, and political offices.  The Occupy Baltimore people need to understand that in Baltimore we have our very own form of  local dictators and dictatorial families that have ruled for decades! Frank Conaway Sr. and Frank Conaway Jr. are Baltimore’s versions of  Kim Jong-il and Kim Jong-un.

Protesters need to clearly focus on specific local leaders and  institutions or else they are going to just end up part of a solidarity movement with Occupy Wall Street (there is nothing wrong with that, but in Baltimore they have an opportunity to do so much more!).

I am sure many people are pleased with the media coverage that Occupy Baltimore has received. At one point early on Tuesday it seemed like there were only a few more protesters than reporters. The media grabbed on to the large numbers of people who had RSVP’d online and compared it to the actual number of people in attendance on Tuesday morning (and yes I know the numbers were higher at night, but when you deal with the media you end up at their mercy and if they show up when numbers are low then you have to deal with it).   The Facebook attendance discrepancy is something I have been worried about for years. In the real world you make a difference by acting, not by flaking out and saying you are going to show at something and then not showing up at that event. Facebook RSVP numbers are not a show of strength, if too many people flake or only RSVP to make others feel happy then the numbers will be interpreted as a sign of weakness.  The numbers look terribly ironic (and people in the comments section of the Sun are pointing this out) when it appears only 1% of the people who said they would show up actually show up! One of the slogans behind the Occupy Movements is “We are the 99%”.  It sucks when certain media outlets make it appear that you are a 1% type of movement, but this generation brings this kind of criticism on itself by its lack of understanding of what it takes to actually create change and that posting something on the Internet is not going to change anything on its own. STOP FLAKING OUT!

Their numbers may not be in the 1000′s, and online advocates may far outnumber actual physical participants, but what has taken place at the harbor is still impressive. People did give a darn to actually show up for a protest! I know that sounds basic, but in this day in age that is impressive. Imagine if the 25 or 50 or 100 or 225 people who actually showed up found  a worthy and easily identifiable local target to direct their anti-financial/political establishment frustration toward. If all of these people took only one hour out of their days on one of the days leading up to the November 8th general election and dedicated that hour to helping Shannon Sneed’s write-in campaign then we would have an incredible chance for an earth shattering type of change at the City Council level.

The 13th district is the epicenter of Baltimore’s social destruction and urban ills. The empty houses, the drugs, the poverty, the owned by the developers politicians, it is all right there in a part of East Baltimore that is majority Black. If you want to include Black people in your movement then go to where they live and address an obvious issue! It really is that simple. The take down of developer funded Warren Branch by Shannon Sneed would be historic and it would bring new life and hope to a down part of East Baltimore. Write-in campaigns need an army of volunteers to have any shot!

By the way, I do not mean to pick on the Occupy Baltimore people, the stop the youth jail marchers are not going to accomplish anything either unless they target a specific leader.  I do give them credit for at least latching on to a local issue that is easy to understand and recognize.

People are talking about  overthrowing oligarchs, well it starts here by overthrowing our hereditary dictators! You can not change the world until you clean your own backyard. Any movement that facilitated the defeat of an incumbent city councilperson by a write-in community activist would gain instant respectability, legitimacy, and influence in ALL corners of Baltimore.

A leaderless group has a hard time finding a focus. I understand it is an evolutionary process of sorts. One positive of being a leaderless group is that it only takes a small vocal part of the group to alter the direction of the group and clearly define its purpose on a local level.

Right now tourists and commuters are seeing the signs of the Occupy Baltimore protesters and then driving back in their SUVS to their exurb houses that are mortgaged to the gills and then sitting in front of their big screen televisions to watch the so-called 11PM news. They wake up the next morning and read a blurb about the protests in the Baltimore Sun while they drink their Starbucks coffee they purchased with their  Bank of America debit cards.  These mindless members of the 99% may like the signs they read, and they may honk their horns in support, but they are too deep in the game to leave their daily routine.  I understand that these people need to wake up and change, but no peaceful protest is going to break the spell they are under.  Forget about the tourists and suburbanites and get the Baltimore City voters out to the polls or in front of the BDC! I don’t want the protesters to end up as entertainment for commuters stuck in Pratt street traffic. Make it local, make it clear, bring down Warren Branch and his Developer funders, call out the BDC and the Baltimore hereditary monarchies, and truly understand how Baltimore Politics works so everyone in Baltimore can wake up and stop electing these corporate shills!

Below is the Shannon Sneed write-in campaign press release. It is a great sign that third place finisher Antonio Glover has given his support to Sneed:


Media Advisory For October 11, 2011
Contact:     Kim Wiggins
(443) 812-5343 or AdvocateOfDistrict13@gmail.com

Shannon Sneed Makes Write-In Campaign for City Council Official with District 13 Kickoff Event

WHAT: Official Kickoff for Shannon Sneed for City Council Write-In Campaign
WHEN: Tuesday, October 11, 6:30pm
WHERE: The Door, 219 N Chester Street, Baltimore

Since nearly unseating incumbent city councilman Warren Branch in last month’s primary election, political newcomer Shannon Sneed has received an outpouring of support from neighbors and residents across District 13. That support has come in the form of enthusiastic emails and phone calls urging her to keep running, and it has even come in the form of substantial write-in campaign donations.

As a result, Sneed has decided to stay in the race, this time as a Democratic write-in candidate on the November 8 ballot—and she will be publicly kicking off her general election campaign with an event at an East Baltimore community center on October 11.

Sneed narrowly lost the primary election by a margin of 43 votes. Her near-win surprised many political observers in a city that rarely turns incumbents out of office.

“I simply went out and talked to the voters,” said Sneed. “I knocked on almost every door in the district, and I listened to citizens’ concerns. I think my message of a cleaner, safer East Baltimore with a responsive city councilperson really resonated with people. It explains a lot of the success of the campaign.”

In fact, Warren Branch received only 39% of the vote in September, with the remainder split between Sneed and three other candidates.

One of those candidates, Antonio Glover, has publicly thrown his support behind Sneed for the November election. “This is about the constituents of District 13. We need to start dealing with our problems in East Baltimore, and the first step is to elect a responsive councilperson who will work with the residents to make our communities more livable. Writing in Shannon Sneed is that first step.”

Beth Braun is an active resident of the Butchers Hill neighborhood, part of which was recently folded into District 13 as part of the city’s redistricting process. “I met Shannon, and I have a high regard for her,” said Braun. “I feel she’s the candidate who is more likely to address our neighborhood’s issues. I’ll be writing in Shannon Sneed on November 8th.”

“I’ve been touched by the support I’ve gotten since the primary election,” Sneed said. “At the end of the day, I want what’s best for the neighborhoods and the people of East Baltimore.”

My advice to the Occupy Baltimore movement

Posted by ameister on Sunday, October 2nd, 2011

Yesterday I briefly mentioned a new movement called Occupy Baltimore. This local movement is one of many popping up in cities across the country that are trying to build off of the ongoing Occupy Wall Street situation in New York. Occupy Baltimore is holding a planning event tonight according to this Facebook event page.

I hope the Occupy Baltimore participants keep their demands, messages, and goals simple and local. They should be persistent and not only occupy a space. Marches around Baltimore to various spots would also be effective. On a Google group I suggested that they demand open Baltimore City primary elections and an end to the Baltimore Development Corporation (the BDC). Open primaries and the absence of a BDC dictated development agenda would weaken the corporate power over the political process in Baltimore and give more political say to all voters of Baltimore no matter what their party affiliation is. They should use 13th district councilman Warren Branch as the prototypical Baltimore political corporate shill that is financed and influenced by corporate entities and desires instead of the people of Baltimore. This Baltimore Brew article could be used as a rallying point for those who want election/BDC reform in Baltimore