Recent comments in /f/baltimore

munchnerk t1_j6zx8ts wrote

Yeah, ever heard of Heathbrook? If you look at the census info, the Heathbrook subneighborhood is where all the white people live (on Roland Heights and Wood Heights). Evans Chapel is the street with the access problems. That's the original parcel passed down by Grandison Hoes. That's where all the Black folks still live, and Hoes Heights as a historic neighborhood is still predominantly Black. The Census has awesome information if you don't try to wield it like a sledgehammer.

The closed street was entirely blocked with concrete (then plastic) barricades. It's a coarsely paved and then-unmaintained road that wasn't designed or suited for folks in a wheelchair. The opened street is moving forward with a park redesign to improve pedestrian access and make it safer. I'm sure you've also noticed the extensive road-diet changes on 41st which, as a pedestrian resident, have genuinely made it safer to move around here without a car. It is actually better to get in and out of the neighborhood on foot than it was before, and that has fuck all to do with the road around the tower.

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bmore t1_j6zw1s3 wrote

Try doing it in a wheelchair and I think you'll see the difference between having that cut through as access or trying to navigate to the intersections drivers are complaining are too far to drive and too dangerous to cross.

It's simply not safe as a shared street in present condition.

And there's no erasure here. Maybe look at the census.

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munchnerk t1_j6zuxs6 wrote

Here's the fascinating thing though - this park doesn't really provide extra pedestrian access to HH. No matter which way you slice it. I move on foot through 21211 and honestly without any actual changes made to the roadway things are exactly the same for pedestrians as they were during the closure. There are still crosswalks and lights where there were crosswalks and lights before. If anything, the street closures were dangerous for our (again, largely elderly) neighbors because they *don't* walk due to mobility issues, drive instead, and had to deal with legitimate driving hazards to get out of here. This is the feedback that was given at our community meetings and it was remarkably unilateral. You can still walk through the park, and the park will still get a redesign. And FWIW the neighborhood is still predominantly Black, please take your erasure of Black Baltimoreans elsewhere. Historically Black acknowledges that this is a neighborhood that has been a safe haven for Black families while surrounding neighborhoods blocked them from residence.

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bmore t1_j6zu09c wrote

With the tower road closed to cars but open to walking, biking and rolling, there were two ways to get from the majority white neighborhoods to the majority white neighborhoods (let's be real on what historically Black means) by car and one way if you were using a mobility device. Now there are three ways by car and zero ways by mobility device. The older residents who own cars may win, but the residents with mobility challenges or without cars who were entirely invisible in this second process of privileged organizing under the banner of equity may as well continue to not exist.

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munchnerk t1_j6ztdz9 wrote

There will still be a park! If anything, this decision puts to bed the most contentious part of the design process so that actual design can now move forward. Basically, parks are good, but this was not a neglected space in need of park-ifying, it was an actively used access point to a neighborhood with a history of Black intergenerational wealth in a heavily segregated part of the city. So there will be better usage of existing green space (which is already used as a gathering place for neighborhood residents) as well as maintained access to the neighborhood.

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munchnerk t1_j6zshvp wrote

Hi, I'm a Hoes Heights resident. There will still be a park at the base of the tower, and this decision means the design of that park (and traffic calming on the opened street, for pedestrian priority within the park) can move forward. This was a situation where the Roland Park Community Foundation took up the task of renovating the tower, which is awesome, but made the case to close the streets without considering the input of Hoes Heights residents, whose only easterly (and northeasterly) access point is this road. It would have been fucked up for the community organization of a historically segregated neighborhood to take an actively used, necessary entrance to a historically Black enclave and pave it over because it would be "better" as a park, which is what was happening. The racial history of Roland Park, Hampden, and Hoes Heights is fascinating, and I appreciate that the mayor saw the status quo as perpetuating a subconscious racial inequity in the history of these neighborhoods and made a decision which favored the voices of Hoes Heights residents.

This decision has also been the result of several years' worth of traffic calming efforts to try and make the other entrances and exits to Hoes Heights along Evans Chapel safer. We had meeting after meeting with DOT, Councilman Torrance, and Councilwoman Ramos, and they understood that leaving the road fully closed was literally a hazard. I personally witnessed two car crashes involving someone trying to get into/out of Evans Chapel while the tower roads were closed - people speed like demons around here and that south exit is nearly blind. God help anybody who had to leave this neighborhood by car during rush hour. I originally wanted the road closed (because green space, sure!), but over the past couple of years, and through listening to the voices of the people who have lived in this neighborhood longest - who are Black and working class and largely elderly - my mind was changed. In general, this is a highly walkable area with a substantial bit of existing public green space. (How about that pending parcel of park land from the RP country club, 1/4mi away!) The road around the tower isn't some massive panacea, and there will still be a new park designed there. But speaking as a resident of this neighborhood, this was necessary.

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TheCaptainDamnIt t1_j6zruze wrote

>It wasn't too long ago that I was getting recycling picked up every week

Recycling hasn't been picked up weekly since a little after covid after started. From what I remember BPD hasn't gotten back to the staffing levels they had pre-covid. My guess is like everywhere else the labor shortage is preventing them from returning to the same staffing levels as before for the same budget. So ironically they probably need to spend more of 'your tax dollars' to hire the workers.

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