Wednesday, January 15, 2025 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Yard 56, Bayview: Baltimore-based developer David Bramble brings life to a dead zone

A moment of triumph has arrived for David Bramble. A man whose parents once ran a corner grocery in West Baltimore has succeeded in developing a shopping center for his hometown with a big, bright, brand new supermarket. That’s a pretty good storyline, but just one way of looking at Bramble’s most recent accomplishment. There’s more here than meets the eye.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Wes Moore: Here’s what the American Rescue Plan could mean for Baltimore

I was not yet 4-years-old when my dad died from a rare, but treatable virus. He had just been sent home from the hospital hours earlier with instructions to get some rest, and with doctors asking my mom if he was prone to exaggeration. My family has long felt that race played a role in his care — or lack of it. Even beyond the emotional trauma, the economic damage to my family was severe. Thrust into single motherhood, my mom worked multiple hourly jobs to support my sisters and me. She couldn’t find full-time employment that included benefits until I was 13-years-old.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Our Say: Progress made on vaccine rollout, but still more work to do

Suddenly, progress seems real. The good news is mounting up. Just over 30% of the Anne Arundel County population has received their first COVID-19 dose, and 18.7% are fully vaccinated. Everyone in Maryland who is 16 or older will be eligible next week to get the coronavirus vaccine at any site offering shots in the state. Anne Arundel County will stop requiring preregistration for vaccination appointments, allowing the public to sign up directly for clinic openings on the schedule that will be released on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Georgia election flap underscores our collective action problem

The Georgia debacle is a perfect example of the rolling collective action problem of our democracy. A collective action problem, simply put, is when there is a goal that would benefit everyone — in this case, confidence in our machinery of democracy — but the incentive structure for the individual players makes it impossible to cooperate to reach the goal. The Georgia electoral mess goes back to the 2018 Georgia governor’s race — and every faction in that state has made it worse over the last three years.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Removing O’Donnell statue: a critical step toward aligning Canton with community’s values

A more inclusive Canton starts today. The Canton Anti-Racism Alliance, founded in July 2020, is a coalition of volunteers dedicated to effectuating long-term, impactful changes in our Baltimore City neighborhood to foster a more diverse, equitable, inclusive and welcoming community. Led by Canton Community Association President Mark Edelson, we represent a diverse group of residents, educators, and historians from Canton and throughout the city. We meet monthly to formulate strategies that will usher in transformative change.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
100 us dollar banknotes
A reckoning for Baltimore banks, asking them to invest billions more to help Black and Latino businesses and families

A man who has lived in Baltimore County for nearly 30 years wrote to ask me why Baltimore “hasn’t made itself into a model progressive city.” The city has had Democratic leadership for decades, he pointed out, and certainly the city should have benefited from the concentration of Democratic power in the Maryland General Assembly by now. Why does the city still need assistance? “I don’t know the political history of this area enough to answer my own question,” the man wrote.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
David Plymyer: Audit of COVID Test Kit Purchases Raises Questions That Deserve Answers

I believe that Maryland Department of General Services Secretary Ellington Churchill Jr. has a problem, and he knows it. According to a report by the Office of Legislative Audits, he authorized the ill-fated purchase of 500,000 COVID-19 test kits from LabGenomics last April. More scrutiny of what Churchill did, or failed to do, is necessary. Although the deal was negotiated by Gov. Larry Hogan with the assistance of his wife, Yumi, Churchill formally approved the procurement from the South Korean company.

Maryland commits human rights violations against its children

In 2018, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights released a scathing report against the United States’ treatment of children in the criminal justice system, concluding that “violations of children’s human rights on federal, state, and local levels” were rampant. Two years later, Human Rights for Kids (HRFK) released the first ever National State Ratings Report on Human Rights Protection for Children in the U.S. Justice System.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Kya Hector: Tolerance is taught, and public schools are the right places to teach it

In an ideal world, every person is given the same opportunity to become successful. The American Dream promises that if one works hard, pursues education, and is good to others, they can become realized citizens in the Land of the Free. However, this principle does not seem to hold true today. The path that some must take in their pursuit of happiness is often impeded by the traits they cannot control.

Frank DeFilippo: General Assembly Faces the Music, Votes to Shame That Tune

Songs and war go together like John Philip Sousa and the Fourth of July. Boots marching in the street, jets screaming overhead, and all the ships awash at sea, songs accompany our troops wherever they’re sent in times of war and peace. “Follow Me,” “Those Caissons Go Rolling Along,” “Wild Blue Yonder,” “Anchors Away,” and “The Marines’ Hymn” – all uplifting anthems of pride and military might. Every service has its band – The Marine Band, the Navy Band, the Army Band (“Pershing’s Own”) and the U.S. Air Force Band. There is even a U.S. Navy School of Music, originally in Anacostia, now in Virginia Beach.

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