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Old 06-23-2016, 01:48 PM
 
5,289 posts, read 7,428,277 times
Reputation: 1159

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https://www.baltimorebrew.com/2016/0...ally-divisive/


As planning vote nears, critics call Port Covington racially divisive

Kevin Plank’s proposed mini-city on the Middle Branch triggers wildly different reactions


Making a big ask of a bruised and cash-strapped city, Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank has been working for months to persuade the public that the massive mixed-use development he wants to build at Port Covington is just what Baltimore needs, and worth the $660 million public financing package he seeks to build it.
The campaign, waged by a team of publicists hired by Sagamore Development, Plank’s real estate firm, has paid for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of print and prime-time broadcast ads, sent mailers to households across the city, intermingled with elected city officials in Las Vegas and kept up a steady stream of social media messaging.
Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake has taken to Twitter to tout the project, not just calling it “a game changer” (the same phrase she used to promote the Baltimore Grand Prix), but rebutting critics who see the tax increment (TIF) bonds that Plank is seeking as a sweetheart subsidy for a billionaire.
Here was one exchange:
“Oh ok, so we pay to fix current crumbling infrastructure and have to buy PC new infrastructure too? #WhyPeopleFleeBaltimore,” @tinyb2000 tweeted.
“You do understand the TIF is not a tax break correct?” @MayorSRB replied, with a link to the Port Covington-produced YouTube video titled, “What is a TIF?”
“Yeah and I realize when my mayor is being condescending,” @tinyb2000 shot back.
An online exchange over Port Covington between the mayor and a Charles Village resident earlier this month. (Twitter)

As the project approaches another milestone in its dash toward approval today, with the Planning Commission expected to approve the Port Covington Master Plan, it’s a battle that is being joined not just in 130 characters, but in detailed analyses by some of the area’s most prominent progressive voices.
“The Port Covington Master Plan is a prime example of structural inequality on a massive scale — and of the same old waterfront-focused economic development approach that hasn’t worked to reverse Baltimore’s decline, and may have contributed in fact to the disinvestment in other neighborhoods,” wrote Barbara Samuels of the American Civil Liberties Union, in a 13-page critique of the Master Plan.
Arguing that the waterfront development will worsen Baltimore’s already extreme racial divide, Morgan State University Professor Lawrence Brown calls today’s vote “one of the defining planning moments in the history of Baltimore city.”
“Will we create a plan that will affirmatively further fair housing as the 1968 Fair Housing Act and the 2015 HUD rule mandates?” Brown writes in comments being submitted to the commission. “Or will we intensify segregation in Baltimore by creating a luxury community and a majority White residential area?”
“Potentially Extraordinary”

Brown’s critique comes as part of a petition that calls, as does the ACLU of Maryland and the Public Justice Center, for the Master Plan to be rejected and a more inclusive deal negotiated.
Rejection doesn’t appear likely given the project’s strong support from City Hall and the generally pro-development stance of the nine-member Planning Commission.
At an earlier public hearing on the Master Plan, the commissioners asked few questions, and most of the speakers – many of whom wore yellow Port Covington tee-shirts – were supportive.
The 65-page document that is the subject of today’s public hearing, scheduled at 2:30 p.m. on the 8th floor of 417 East Fayette Street, lays out the street configuration, building uses and massing for the 260-acre project.
Centered around a new world headquarters for Under Armour, Port Covington is envisioned by Sagamore to include restaurants, retail space, public parks, boat slips, hotels, an artificial lake, and more. In its application to the city, there are promises of apartments for 12,073 residents by year 2040 and projections of 16,758 office jobs.
Much of the residential construction would not take place until after 2030, while more than half of the infrastructure costs – to be paid by TIF bonds – would occur in the first four years of the build-out.
In a media statement, Sagamore president Marc Weller said the company has been inclusive, working with faith leaders, non-profits and community groups, while in an op-ed in the Baltimore Sun, Plank Industries CEO Tom Geddes said that the “potentially extraordinary” new community laid out in the Master Plan will benefit the city.
“The larger redevelopment around Under Armour is being designed with public transit, good diverse jobs, environmental improvements, workforce development and neighborhood inclusion as top priorities,” Geddes wrote.
He added, “It cannot meet every unmet economic need of every family in Baltimore, but its impact will be considerable.”
“Virtual Gated Enclave for Millennials”

The project’s critics argue the opposite will happen.
The ACLU and Public Justice Center analysis concludes that Port Covington will be “a brand-new racially and economically segregated city within the city, a virtual gated enclave, inhabited by millennials and empty nesters making an average income of $100,000.”
Port Covington is “expressly targeted to attract a high wage employment as a waterfront destination for the creative class: ‘highly educated millennials and Baby Boomer residents seeking a high quality live-work-play environment,’ ” the authors note, quoting from Sagamore’s TIF application.
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Old 06-23-2016, 01:51 PM
 
5,289 posts, read 7,428,277 times
Reputation: 1159
I'm laughing at this spectacle!
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Old 06-23-2016, 01:55 PM
 
5,289 posts, read 7,428,277 times
Reputation: 1159
Quote:
Port Covington is “expressly targeted to attract a high wage employment as a waterfront destination for the creative class: ‘highly educated millennials and Baby Boomer residents seeking a high quality live-work-play environment,’ ” the authors note, quoting from Sagamore’s TIF application.
*When I retire, I'll be making considerably well over $100,000 a year, if not more. I want to LIVE and PLAY in a community like this. Highly educated, highly creative and talented with very little crime and foolishness from Baltimorans and their poverty consciousness and petty behavior.
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Old 06-24-2016, 07:17 PM
 
Location: Hellimore, MD
110 posts, read 202,910 times
Reputation: 64
I am looking forward to and keeping an eye on the Port Covington development.
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Old 06-25-2016, 02:32 PM
 
1,310 posts, read 1,512,259 times
Reputation: 811
“Virtual Gated Enclave for Millennials” Interesting...at present the place is difficult to drive to and almost impossible to walk or bike to. No black or white people live there. Without a big plan, nobody is going to live there. I have a problem with the amount of public subsidies on the table but let's get real... At present this place hardly even exists. The real question is how much we are willing to pay to make it exist.

Me? If I were mayor, I would offer $350 Million in TIF bonds and see what they say. If were in SRB's (very stylish) shoes, I wouldn't care.
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