Mayors Fall Cleanup Announced
Mayor’s Fall Clean Up 2006
Saturday, October 21, 2006
Beginning at 8:00 am
Registration Deadline: MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2006!!!!
The MWIA represents the residents of the Mount Washington Neighborhood in Northwest Baltimore City. This Blog represents a quick look at the going-ons in our neighborhood.
Mayor’s Fall Clean Up 2006
Saturday, October 21, 2006
Beginning at 8:00 am
Registration Deadline: MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2006!!!!
$6.2 million deal preserves 48 acres in
By Doug Donovan
Sun reporter
Originally published
Mayor Martin O'Malley is set to announce today a $6.2 million plan to lease 48 acres of undeveloped land in Mount Washington for 80 years, a deal that adds the most significant swath of open space to Baltimore's park system in decades.
The University of Baltimore-owned park off
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After nearly a year of negotiations among city, university and community leaders, the deal comes as a relief to neighborhood activists who have feared the loss of fields used for soccer, baseball, dog-walking and golfing. The park will temporarily be called
"Knowing that those fields are going to be locked away from development is a tremendous boon for our community," said Mac Nachlas, president of the Mount Washington Improvement Association. "This is such a good deal for everybody it's hard for me to fathom why anyone would stand in the way of doing this."
The city's five-member Board of Estimates, which authorizes spending and is controlled by O'Malley, is scheduled to vote on the deal Wednesday. The University of Baltimore, as part of the state education system, would still need approval from the Maryland Board of Public Works.
"While we're very optimistic about this partnership ... the university doesn't have the ability to green-light this on its own," said Peter Toran, a university vice president.
In 2004, the university began discussing various developers' requests to buy the property that it has owned since 1952, community members said. The neighborhood association quickly mobilized and made a pitch of its own, imploring university President Robert L. Bogomolny to preserve the park.
"Everyone saw it was a significant asset to the quality of life in the community," said Jackie Carrera, executive director of the Parks & People Foundation. "They did everything they could to tell the powers-that-be that they love this park."
The powers listened. Nachlas credits Bogomolny for heeding the community's concerns.
City Solicitor Ralph S. Tyler said university and city officials discussed whether "adding this large piece of land to the city park system was desirable."
"The answer was yes,"
Carrera said the project got a great boost when O'Malley threw his support behind preserving the land rather than allowing it to be developed, which could have resulted in more homeowners paying property taxes that finance city services.
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It also helped that this is a political year. One of the Democratic mayor's biggest criticisms of Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. is that the Republican governor has not done enough to preserve open space.
But most believe parks, not politics, fueled a deal that has been crafted to satisfy all parties, including the park's neighbor - an assisted-living facility for seniors called the Wesley.
"They could have easily developed those fields," Nachlas said. "This took some real creative thinking."
The city will pay the university $6.2 million, spread over the next five years, to lease the park for 50 years. The additional 30 years will cost $2.
The deal provides a steady revenue stream for the university more lucrative than the money it has made from the fees charged to sports leagues that play there and the golf driving range it operates at the park.
The university will get additional revenue through a provision that authorizes the school to sell its development rights to the Wesley, which is prohibited from expanding on its adjacent 13-acre site. By obtaining the additional building rights, the seniors facility will be permitted to build a much-needed addition, said Sumner Miller, the Wesley's chief executive officer.
"The citizens of Mount Washington will have the open space that they enjoy, and it will enable us to expand our facility and services," Miller said.
He said he is still negotiating how much the development rights will cost but that he expects the Wesley will pay for them over several years.
Nachlas said the community wants the Wesley to remain in the neighborhood, and that his association supports its expansion.
"They are great corporate neighbors," Nachlas said.
The city has also negotiated other provisions that will allow it to make improvements that are standard for any park. And the lease allows the city to block the university from selling the property.
If The Wesley does not purchase the development rights within the next seven years, then the university has the right to market the property for sale. But the city has the right to purchase it first.
If not, the city can nullify the university's right to terminate the lease by paying an additional $4 million. The university, however, has a strong disincentive to sell the land because it would have to pay the city back all of its previous rent.
"This is the first significant acquisition of parkland in about 30 years," said Connie A. Brown, director of the city parks system.
The BonnieView Apartment, located on
It is our understanding that a citation has been issued to BonnieView and that a court date of
We encourage
Thanks for your help
CC: Councilman Kevin Kamenetz, Timothy Kotroco, Edward J. Pettinella,
The Institute for Urban Research at
Clement Anyadike, Project Director
Institute for Urban Research
(Phone) (443) 885-1249
(Fax) (443) 885-8274
(Email) anyadike@morgan.edu
ALL DPW PRESS RELEASES CAN BE FOUND AT: www.BaltimoreCity.gov
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Labor Day is Monday, September 4
Baltimore City Public Works’ Offices will be Closed
No Municipal Trash Pickup; Parking Meters Will Not Be in Effect
Contact:
Kurt L. Kocher or David Brown
Telephone: 410-545-6541 Telephone: 410-361-9296
Public Works Director George L. Winfield today issued a reminder to citizens that Department of
Public Works’ offices will be closed on
There will be NO collection of trash, bulk or recyclables in
Yards will be CLOSED.
TRASH
Citizens, whose regular trash collection day is on Monday, are asked to place their trash out on their
next regularly scheduled collection day, Thursday, September 7.
Monday, September 4 is not a scheduled recycling collection day for City residents.
There will be no monthly bulk trash collections on
for the first Monday of the month will be picked up on
pickups, citizens should call 311.
Parking meters will not be in effect on Labor Day,
must be observed.