Posts Tagged ‘City Council’

Important question about Jack Young’s false alarm reduction program hearing

Posted by ameister on Monday, September 26th, 2011

City Council President Jack Young wants hold a hearing about Baltimore’s false alarm reduction program. In this Jack Young press release it says:
“In 2002 the Baltimore City Police Department responded to more than 125,000 burglar alarm calls, 98 percent of which were false”

I hope that 2002 is not the last year of data the city has! This program has been going on since at least 2004, one would think that the Council President could call police headquarters and ask them how many burglar alarm calls were responded to in 2010 or 2009. If the number went down substantially then the program is effective and the following statement is not as true as it once was:
“The volume of false alarm calls that our police officers respond to on an annual basis is staggering.”

Do we really need a hearing on this issue if the false alarm numbers have drastically dropped since 2002? The public deserves to know a recent false alarm statistic before any hearing is called for.

If a hearing is necessary then I would love to know how often police noticed other issues at other properties when responding to a false alarm. In many neighborhoods police walking around for a few minutes can be a deterrent to other criminal activities.  I believe it is better to have a policeman walking around Druid Hill Avenue responding to a false alarm than having him parked on the Eutaw Place median strip sitting in his car.

Feasibility study of drastically lowering Baltimore property taxes

Posted by ameister on Sunday, September 25th, 2011

Click here to view a feasibility study of two city council bills that were supposed to drastically lower property taxes and temporarily increase the rate at which homestead property tax credited properties’ taxes could increase from year to year.

Lots of information from this report has been covered before. A few points that jumped out at me follow:

  • There is no talk about putting a cap (even a temporary one) on spending. We can not keep spending at the current rate. Despite losing population we continue to spend more than ever before. In the conclusion section they finally mention one possible cut. I have always said that if we want to have a serious property tax discussion we must also talk about cutting wasteful spending. We all know it’s out there, the time has come to call waste what it really is and to eliminate it so we can be a leaner meaner city with lower property taxes. One drastic cut we could easily make is getting rid of the current city election cycle and replacing it with city elections when we have state elections in 2014, 2018, etc… I will discuss this issue in a future article.
  • If the property tax plan includes an increase in the 4% rate at which property taxes can increase on homestead property tax credited properties then why return the rate to 4% in 2020? Why not 5% or 6%? I would be happy to have my property taxes go up 6% a year instead of 4% a year from 2020 until I die if it meant 100,000+ more owner occupied houses in Baltimore.
  • The report did not seem to understand why it is a good idea to shoot for an identical (or lower) Baltimore County Tax rate ($1.10) Baltimore County is our main competitor for residents. We need to offer a competitively priced product.
  • Part of the theory behind drastically lowering the property tax rate and announcing it (and making a big deal out of it) before it happens is that this will inspire people and businesses to move quickly and the effect will be felt quicker than the report predicts. This is a matter of opinion, but I am a strong believer in the confidence in Baltimore such an announcement would produce.

Some thoughts about what this election will lead to

Posted by ameister on Friday, September 16th, 2011

Here are some links to stories about the 7th District election:

“Some political observers say the lawsuit likely cost her the election.

“Belinda’s Conaway’s mistake was not so much that she may have had a place of residence out of her district, but she chose to make such an issue of it by filing a lawsuit,” said Matthew Crenson, a professor emeritus of political science at the Johns Hopkins University.

“If she had just let it go by,” Crenson said, “she may very well have been re-elected. She was the victim of her own political miscalculation.”

Some interesting election facts:

  • Nick Mosby received over half of the votes in the 7th district race (2770/5273= 52.5%).
  • Nick Mosby received more votes than Frank Conaway did in his bid for mayor! (2770 to 2007)
  • Mary Pat Clarke supported Belinda Conaway.

I believe that with the infusion of youth onto the Baltimore City Council (Mosby is 32 and new 2nd district councilman Brandon Scott is 27) that the Internet will play a bigger role in local politics, constituent services, and elections than it previously did. This change bodes well for local political blogs like this one.

There still are plenty of controversial people left on the City Council.  Pete Welch and Warren Branch are the first names that come to mind. Both men got less than 39% of their district’s vote and both men have been accused of living off of their relatives’ last names.  Will one of these men pull a Belinda Conaway and put a nail in the coffin of his city council career? Stay tuned.

Now that Belinda Conaway’s frivolous lawsuit against me has come back to end her City Council career there is a committee chair opening. Will Jack Young do the right thing and make Bill Cole the new Chair of the Budget and Appropriations Committee?

Mosby wins! Belinda Conaway’s attempt to destroy me leads to her own political destruction

Posted by ameister on Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Nick Mosby accomplished something that was once considered politically impossible in Baltimore when he defeated an incumbent with the last name of Conaway. This City Paper article shows that since single member districts were established for the 2003 primary election that only one City Council incumbent has lost an election. That “incumbent” was Vernon Crider. Crider was never elected to his office, he was appointed by the city council to fill a vacancy when his predecessor left.  Nick Mosby was just involved in the biggest City Council upset of the last thirty years! How did we get here?

In March of this year I wrote an article about a home Belinda Conaway and her husband own in Randallstown. This was the first time that this easy to find house was talked about in any publication. The house was listed under Conaway’s married last name (Washington), but Conaway had recently reported owning the house on ethics filings which can be viewed by anyone on the top floor of City Hall in the library.  Anyone could have found out that Conaway owned a house in Randallstown. The crossing guard on my block would eventually tell me that she even knew about the house. The Washingtons were not trying to hide the fact they owned a house in Randallstown.  A reporter should have researched this house a long time ago.

Since I was the first person to report the existence of this house, I was also the first person to report the existence of the homestead property tax credit that Belinda Conaway received for this house. The information was easy to find online. My original blog entry provided a PDF copy of a Belinda Conaway signed real estate document that showed she said the house was her principal residence. In order for a house to be your principal residence you have to live there.  Belinda Conaway said and continues to say she lives at 3210 Liberty Heights in Baltimore. Something was clearly wrong here.

My story caused a little stir. A few other media outlets covered the story in March and early April. Despite the important tax/political/residency issues my story raised, it was soon forgotten. The Baltimore Sun did not bother to mention it in its print edition. For some reason (that only Belinda Conaway truly knows) Belinda Conaway decided to sue me for libel on May 10, 2011, almost two months after the story was first viewed on my little blog. She thought $21million was an appropriate amount of money to sue for. Belinda Conaway did not know it then, but she had just put the nail in her city council coffin.

A two term city council incumbent never faces a serious challenge because they have already become so ingrained into the public consciousness in the district that it is virtually impossible to defeat them. Belinda’s lawsuit against me quickly destroyed huge chunks of her unquestioned authority in he 7th District. She went from being viewed as a “nice lady” to being seen as a bully trying to hide something. Numerous media outlets covered the filing of the lawsuit (Belinda’s lawyer sent out a press release to announce the suit!). The coverage was unflattering to say the least. Few logical people could understand her reasoning.  She was basically inviting a legitimate contender to run against her in September. Nick Mosby answered the challenge. He said the lawsuit played a large role in his decision to run.

On August 1, 2011 Belinda Conaway eventually had to drop her frivolous lawsuit against me. The humiliating end of the saga further hurt her image. At this point I was free to start writing about her again without the fear of her trying to bring up my blog posts in the now dropped case. I did not hold back. I am proud to say that I have been helping Nick Mosby’s campaign since August 1, 2011. It has been an awesome adventure. I am very proud of what this campaign stood for and what it brought about.

I have always written with what some would call a “bias”. I definitely give an opinion. If I think something is wrong and that it helps bring down Baltimore then I am going to say how wrong it is. If you do not like my writing style then read something else. Freedom of speech is a beautiful thing. I can say what I want, but you do not have to pay attention. Belinda Conaway paid attention and it cost her an election. The victory solidifies what Belinda Conaway already notified the Baltimore political world of: Adam Meister covers Baltimore politics like no other writer or publication in this city. Had Belinda Conaway simply ignored me, she would still be City Councilwoman and my blog would be as unknown as it originally was. Belinda Conaway has sent Nick Mosby and I on to bigger and better things. I once again would like to thank her for her lawsuit against me. I also want to remind her and her family that I will continue to write about them and cover their issues that other media sources refuse to cover for some reason.  The Baltimore Brew sums things up nicely here:

“Seven lessons learned from yesterday’s primary
6. For an incumbent, getting booted out is tricky, but not impossible…

… incumbent Belinda K. Conaway, who lost her 7th District seat yesterday to Nick Mosby, and who apparently took one homestead tax credit too many. (Note to others on the council with similar skeletons in their closets: if blogger Adam Meister calls you on it, do not file a $21 million defamation suit against him that you’re going to have to drop.)”

Belinda Conaway has helped usher in a new era of local political coverage and influence. Larry Young has been defending Belinda recently. It was once believed that Young was a king maker of sorts. I am happy to say that the Mosby case shows the growing power of local Internet coverage and that “if blogger Adam Meister calls you on it, do not file a $21 million defamation suit against him that you’re going to have to drop”. The declining political influence of the Larry Youngs and Frank Conaways of the world is great for Baltimore!

Welcome to the new paradigm.

The above photo is of three guys who ran for city council in the 11th district in 2007. Nick Mosby, Adam Meister, and Bill Cole. It will be very interesting to see how two young council-members in neighboring districts work together on trans-district issues. I think we will see some of the positives that single member districts bring about.  Madison Park North has met its match!

I’ll write more about all my observations from yesterday soon enough. I was at the Hampden polling place for over thirteen hours straight! Belinda Conaway had some interesting people handing out literature for her at the polls, or at least they were supposed to be handing out literature. I especially enjoyed the police officers sitting in a running police take-home yellow Ford Mustang for four hours while they were supposed to be supporting the Conaway campaign….

Stop the Baltimore City Beverage Tax

Posted by ameister on Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

The other day I received a robo-call from the group “Stop the Baltimore City Beverage Tax”. I also received a two and a third page full color mailer that was paid for by the American Beverage association a Member of Stop the Baltimore City Beverage Tax”.  Here is a link to the campaign’s official website.

This coalition wants to repeal the Baltimore City beverage tax that was approved last year.  They only ask for your contact information. I assume they want to get this issue on the 2012 ballot or get the city council to create a bill that will repeal the original tax.  There really are no major specifics that I could find. They are clearly well funded.

The 9th District city council race is heating up

Posted by ameister on Monday, August 15th, 2011

I have suddenly found myself on 9th District City Council candidate Chris Taylor’s email list. I received the following email (posted below this post) a few minutes ago. It gives some insight (from Taylor’s point of view) into the 9th District race and the media’s coverage of the race. I am glad to see Taylor going all out in this race. He is one of four pretty well known challengers trying to unseat Pete (the son of Agnes) Welch. It is unfortunate that all these challengers may split the anti-Welch vote to a point where none of them can win. They probably should have had a pow-wow after the legendary vacant seat hearing back in January (Taylor was in attendance at the hearing although he did not apply for the job back then) and come up with a strategy where most of them would have dropped out and supported one challenger.

If Baltimore had many voters who did some research and did not just blindly vote for a last name then Welch would have no shot and there would be no problem with all these challengers.  In order to have a shot I would advise the challengers to rip down Welch as much as possible and avoid drama amongst the challengers.

I know how frustrating lack of media coverage and minimization by the media can be in a race. I remember in 2007 when similar occurrences happened to me in the 11th district race.  Since the local media has virtually no coverage of city council races, not that many people expect their local media organizations to give them much useful information on local races. I would not worry too much about being minimized on a quick media piece because the likelihood that more than ten eligible voters in the 9th district were paying attention is not very high.   To use the slight to organize volunteers is a good idea though. I think door knocking is the best way to combat well known last name recognition. Good luck to all of you!


“Hey all,

I could really use 5-10 minutes of your time today.  We have to fight on every level of this campaign to have the best chance at winning.  Please read below and take action!

Last week, WYPR issued a podcast on its website about the 9th district city council race.  You can find the podcast here: http://www.wypr.org/news/baltimores-ninth-district-city-council-race. Please take a minute to read it.
In short, the reporter, Bobby Marvin never interviewed me (or several other candidates), but instead interviewed 3 of our opponents and labeled one of them, Abigail Breiseth as the “toughest challenger to Welch.”  He discussed Michael Johnson as the “executive director of the Paul Robeson Institute, an urban research group,” but if you try to google or look up this institute, it doesn’t seem to exist. He mentions me and other candidates in an aside at the end, without reaching out to any of us. The reporting was one-sided, not well researched, and uninformed and we’d like people to email or call WYPR to voice our concerns.
You can send an email or call:  Sunni Khalid at skhalid@wypr.org or call him at 410-235-1660 and request his extension at 1759.   If you can, please do this today.  It will be most effective if we all call within the same timeframe.
Here’s the basics and/or things to use in your email or phone call:
–On WYPR’s website, there is a podcast by Bobby Marvin about the 9th district city council race.
–In the podcast, he interviews 3 candidates and gives them air time, but says the rest of the candidates “an odd collection” who  ”are political novices.”
–Chris is labeled among the “political novices” as “a real estate developer”…As we know, Chris is not a political novice and here are some things you could mention:  he was elected as president of the Union Square association for five years and proceeded to build the largest community association in the 9th district. He has been an educator who co-created a program for at-risk youth in the Baltimore City Public Schools.  He is a small business owner who has created jobs in our district and given several ex-offenders the opportunity to change their lives. He has renovated over 20 vacant houses and brought much-needed tax revenue and investment back to our district.  And before he even got in the race, there were not many people within the city government and our community leadership that did not know him.
–Two of the three people he interviewed (Abigail Breiseth and Quianna Cooke have experience in education–not politics, but they are not labeled as “novices”).
–He calls Abigail Breiseth “perhaps Welch’s toughest challenger”…but where does that come from? What research was done to support that? What are her qualifications? He doesn’t mention any experience she has, only that she is a teacher (but doesn’t mention her job is at a private school that no one in our district can afford) or that most people in the district do not know who she is.  He cites that she has raised over $11,000.  Compare that to our campaign:  We have raised over $15,000 and are on track to raise over $20,000 and Chris has walked over 80% of our district, knocking on close to 5,000 voter doors.  If anyone is out in our communities, talking to the leaders, all the talk is that Chris has a real chance of beating Welch.  The “white guy with the faux-hawk” is out there.
–We are concerned with the lack of effort and research that went into the article and would request that a reporter attends one of the upcoming debates to see for him/herself:  St. Edwards Roman Catholic Church, 901 Poplar Grove Street, August 22, 6pm OR St. James Episcopal Church, 1020 West Lafeyette Avenue on Wednesday, August 24th at 6pm.
–We also believe he should do his research and re-do the article, interviewing all candidates.
THANK YOU!
Chris Taylor”

Media coverage of the conclusion of the frivolous Conaway lawsuit

Posted by ameister on Monday, August 8th, 2011

Keep in mind that the lawsuit may be over, but the story is far from over. With that in mind here are links to all the stories that came out last week pertaining to the frivolous Conaway lawsuit:

Examples of the power of incumbency in Baltimore

Posted by ameister on Friday, July 15th, 2011

Last Friday at 4:15 PM I went down to the municipal building next to city hall to pay my water bill.  On one of the counters were a bunch of full color “VOTE FOR MAYOR Stephanie RAWLINGS-BLAKE” flyers. Since it was the end of the work day/week it was pretty obvious that they had not just been placed there. This is another example of the advantages of being an incumbent. I do not think a challenger’s flyers would last very long in the municipal building.

The 12th district race is going to show if incumbency is powerful enough to beat door knocking, grassroots endorsements/support, and sheer determination. I ran into Odette Ramos at the brand new Liam Flynn’s Ale House (an incredibly positive sight on North Avenue) on Saturday night.  Odette  was in a great mood considering that she is now running against incumbent Carl Stokes who was expected to run for mayor. I wonder if the citizens will care that the incumbent’s first choice was to run for higher office and is only using his current position as a back up?  The people who supported Odette in this video have not changed their minds so that is great news. I do not like flakes.

Odette and the other challengers are going to have a hard time dealing with the name recognition that Stokes brings to the table, although, since Robert Stokes is still in the race, there could be confusion, and Carl could end up losing votes to Robert. Robert is currently on Carl’s staff. The Stokes vs Stokes aspect of this race brings an added dimension to this race.

It is important to point out that Carl Stokes was appointed to his current seat by the City Council when Jack Young became City Council President in 2010. Stokes lost the city council president election in 2003 and the race of mayor in 1999. Stokes has not won an election since 1995!

Have a great Artscape weekend and be sure to check out 80′s Karaoke on the Charles Street bridge!

Nick Mosby has filed to run in Baltimore’s 7th councilmanic district

Posted by ameister on Sunday, June 26th, 2011

A few days ago I checked the 2011 Baltimore City Primary Candidate List on the Maryland State Board of Elections’ site and I noticed that Democrat Nick Mosby of Reservoir Hill has filed to run for city council in the 7th District. Mosby ran for city council in the 11th District in 2007. His house where he lives with his wife and daughter was placed in the 7th District during the 2011 redistricting process.

Targeted local reporting and government accountability in Baltimore

Posted by ameister on Friday, June 24th, 2011

The New York Times recently came out with an article entitled: A Federal Study Finds That Local Reporting Has Waned.   Even though the Internet has given more people the opportunity to report on local events, our leaders on a local level do not get as much quality coverage and scrutiny as they used to. This is definitely the case in Baltimore. It seems like media outlets are much more likely to trust our leaders and use the positive press releases they send out and call that news.

Up until recently I was worried about the Baltimore political news scene. The TV stations are filled with fluff pieces and the Sun fired a lot of quality people over the last few years. Our local leaders are hardly watched anymore and they can get away with just about anything (unless they are the mayor).

Despite the local media’s limited resources they should be able to efficiently use what they have at their disposal. There are definitely some local gotcha political stories floating around Baltimore that the media does not seem to have time for. These are the stories to dig into. I think a good news person has to really understand the inner workings and personalities of local government. How many reporters out there know the names of every member of Baltimore’s city council? If you take the time to learn a few things then you develop a gut instinct and a nose for stories. The time invested learning pays off with an expanded knowledge base that will allow a person to come up with numerous quality topics for stories in a week.

Reporters should not be scared to reach out to the community. There are many people in Baltimore who want to share information from the darker side of politics that they have become aware of. There are some great leads out there and they are free!  Email gives people a quick and efficient way to exchange pertinent documents and other useful information that an informant can provide.

Today the world is filled with people wanting to take shortcuts who only care about what the product (in this case political news) looks like on a superficial level when it is presented in their respective media. Editors and producers need stop focusing on easy to digest fluff pieces.  Hit our leaders hard with some strategic punches and the stories will begin to flow out of them. The more uncomfortable questions the media asks the more accountability we will have. Baltimore desperately needs some political accountability.