Community Wealth City: Baltimore, Maryland
In the 2000 census, Baltimore had a population of 651,154
residents, a decline of 11.5% from 10 years before. The city's
racial composition is 64.3% African American, 31.6 % White,
1.7% Hispanic, and 1.5% Asian. Baltimore used to be an industrial
town, with an economic base driven by steel processing, shipping,
and manufacturing and the city's largest employer was
Bethlehem Steel. Now the leading employer is Johns Hopkins,
which operates the city's largest university and hospital.
Indeed, according to the Economic Alliance of Greater Baltimore,
nonprofits and federal agencies constitute the Baltimore area's
seven largest employers.
Community wealth building groups in Baltimore have played
a large role in the city and have helped rebuild a number
of neighborhoods. From 1991 to 2005, the national funders'
collaborative Living Cities provided more than $13.1 million
in loans and grants to Baltimore's CDCs through Enterprise,
a leading community development intermediary. Baltimore was
also designated an Empowerment Zone in 1994, gaining a $100-million
federal grant and $250 million in federal tax incentives.
These funds helped Baltimore CDCs to develop over 5,000 units
of affordable housing. The building of a 30-block biotechnology
center next to Johns Hopkins Hospital, combined with political
pressure and the intervention of the Annie E. Casey Foundation,
has led to the development of a 10-year, $1 billion community
improvement project, which is expected to add 6,000 jobs,
1,200 homes, and a mix of new schools, recreation facilities,
and retail to the neighborhood.
While community development corporations are the most visible
community wealth builders in Baltimore, the city also has
a wide variety of foundations, community development banks,
campus-community partnership centers, cooperatives, and employee-owned
companies. An overview is below:
Community Development Corporations
Coppin
Heights Community Development Corporation
www.coppin.edu/CHCDC
The Coppin Heights Community Development Corporation (CHCDC)
is a not-for-profit organization established in 1995 by Coppin
State University. The group supports basic community planning
and improvement efforts (lead safety, managing vacant property)
in the Greater Coppin Heights/Rosemont community, as well
as supporting service-learning opportunities for Coppin State
students in the community.
Druid
Heights Community Development Corporation
www.druidheights.com
Founded in 1974, Druid Heights CDC works in the fields of
housing development, project management, property management,
housing construction, housing renovation, financial packaging,
housing counseling, community organizing and human resource
management. Before 1990, the organization primarily engaged
in community organizing, housing counseling and facilitation
of community input relative to City plans and services. Since
1992, DHCDC has engaged in the construction and/or renovation
of affordable housing for low- and moderate- income buyers.
Patterson
Park Community Development Corporation
www.ppcdc.org
Founded in 1996, the Patterson Park Community Development
Corporation (PPCDC) has invested more than $60 million into
the neighborhood through a variety of innovative urban renewal
programs, including park restoration projects, community-building
events, and hundreds of home rehabilitations. PPDC has also
developed 170 units of affordable rental housing, providing
decent housing for low-income residents, many of them refugees
and immigrants.
Community Development Financial Institutions
Baltimore
Community Lending
www.bclending.org
A nonprofit community loan fund, Baltimore Community Lending
provides a variety of programs to support community revitalization
efforts, including the Vacant House Loan Program, the Single
Family Construction Loan Program, and the Baltimore Homeowner
Emergency Loan Program (HELP). For buyers interested in purchasing
a house to occupy as their primary residence in the city of
Baltimore, the Vacant House Loan Program offers financing
for the acquisition, rehabilitation and closing cost that
is incorporated into one loan. Its Single Family Construction
Loan Program offers existing Baltimore homeowners the opportunity
to refinance and rehabilitate their houses. Its HELP Program
helps households faced with foreclosure. Baltimore Community
Lending also partners with a number of the city's CDCs.
Faith
Fund
faithfund.mlkuenzel.com
Faith Fund is a community development financial institution
(CDFI) providing loans and technical assistance to support
the development of affordable housing, microenterprises and
small businesses, and community facilities in the Baltimore
region's underserved markets The Faith Fund received
a $200,000 grant from the U.S. Department of the Treasury
in 2003 and raised the rest of its start-up money from religious
groups, local foundations, and individuals. As of July 2005,
it had lending capital of $3.5 million and had loaned approximately
$3.1 million to not-for-profit organizations. Faith Fund loans
have helped nonprofits rehabilitate homes for sale or rent
at prices that working people can afford. Other Faith Fund
loans have preserved transitional housing for immigrant families,
stopped the foreclosure and conversion of 74 affordable rentals
in west Baltimore, helped to build senior housing and arts
and recreational centers, and financed job-training programs
for disadvantaged youth.
Harbor
Bank
www.theharborbank.com
Harbor Bank of Maryland opened in September of 1982 with $2.1
million in asset, and as of December 31, 2005, had increased
its assets to $256.6 million. Harbor Bank has emerged as one
of Maryland's premier community banks and conducts general
banking business in six branch locations primarily serving
the Baltimore metropolitan area. Harbor Bank's Mortgage
Department was the first in the State of Maryland to receive
Fannie Mae funding under the Community Development Financial
Institution (CDFI) Program.
Cooperatives
Red Emma's
www.redemmas.org
Red Emma's Bookstore Coffeehouse is a worker-owned and collectively
managed bookstore and coffeehouse located in Baltimore's Mount
Vernon neighborhood. The coffeehouse serves organic coffee
and espresso as well as a selection of vegan and vegetarian
food. The bookstore stocks books and periodicals on a wide
range of topics, with a focus on radical politics and culture.
Red Emma's also offers free Internet access, both through
their wireless network and their public terminals.
The
Village
www.baltimorevillage.org
The Village is a natural food cooperative that provides locally
produced and organic goods and provides education on cooperative
principles, sustainable living, environmental conservation,
personal health and consumer issues. In addition, it works
to establish beneficial relationships within the local community
and the global cooperative movement.
Employee Ownership
Clinical
Trials and Surveys Corporation
www.c-tasc.com
Clinical Trials & Surveys Corporation (C-TASC) was founded
in 1989 and has conducted the design and conduct of clinical
trials, cohort studies, cross-sectional studies and case-control
studies for over 15 years. C-TASC is 100% employee-owned;
its staff includes MDs, PhD Biostatisticians, and MS Statisticians
with experience in coordinating all types of studies.
Green
Contracting Company
www.greencontracting.com
Green Contracting Company, Inc. was founded in 1959 as a general
mechanical contractor specializing in Power Plant Construction.
In its 47-year history, the Company has been reorganized twice
with the last reorganization occurring in 1999. At that point,
the Company became an ESOP owned 100% by the company's
90 employees.
Maryland
Brush Company
www.marylandbrush.com
Maryland Brush Company was established in 1851 and is a leading
manufacturer and supplier of industrial brushes to customers
on every continent. A subsidiary of Pittsburgh Plate &
Glass from 1901 to 1989, it was spun off and incorporated
as ESOP in 1990. It is 100% owned by its 27 employees. Because
of the involvement of the United Steel Workers union in the
sale, the union and management each received three seats on
the Board of Directors, with a seventh person selected by
mutual agreement of the parties.
Foundations
Abell Foundation
www.abell.org
When the Abell Foundation was inaugurated half a century ago,
the founding board members set an agenda that allocated grants
for schools, hospitals, and human service organizations reaching
out to the disadvantaged in the Baltimore community and the
region. In the past two decades, the Foundation has sharpened
its focus to address complex challenges to break through the
cycles of urban poverty. The Foundation has seven broad program
areas of interest: community development; workforce development;
education; health and human services; conservation and environment;
and arts and culture.
Annie E. Casey
Foundation
www.aecf.org
The Annie E. Casey Foundation's Baltimore Direct Services
Grants Program annually funds a wide range of not-for-profit
community-based or community-serving organizations that work
directly with disadvantaged children, youth, and families,
primarily in Baltimore City. Since the program began in 1995,
Casey has made between 20 to 30 new awards ranging from $2,000
to $20,000 each year. Grants may be used to start or enhance
direct services or programs such as health care, education,
job training, counseling, violence prevention, recreation,
cultural arts, and child care.
Baltimore Community
Foundation
www.bcf.org
The Baltimore Community Foundation is the fourth largest grant-maker
among Maryland's charitable foundations. In 2006, BCF
distributed $29 million to hundreds of nonprofit organizations
in the Baltimore region and beyond. With assets of $176 million,
BCF comprises more than 500 different charitable funds. Founded
in 1972, BCF is governed by a 30-member board of trustees,
made up of a cross section of Baltimore.
Baltimore
Neighborhood Collaborative
www.bncbaltimore.org
Housed at the Association of Baltimore Area Grantmakers, the
Baltimore Neighborhood Collaborative (BNC) is a funders'
collaborative that brings local and national funders, public
sector agencies, business and civic organizations together
to strategically invest in the community. Since 1996, BNC
has raised $5.7 million to support revitalization activities
in Baltimore. BNC's Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative
focuses on the development of thriving mixed income neighborhoods
by integrating homeowner investment, targeted housing development,
and foreclosure prevention. BNC's Transit-Centered Community
Development Initiative helps city neighborhoods benefit from
regional housing and job opportunities. Innovative strategies
are focused on revitalizing neighborhoods city transit hubs
including the MARC station in West Baltimore and the area
immediately adjoining Penn Station . BNC is also hosting a
newly emerging Asset Building Initiative focused on helping
individuals and families stabilize their finances and build
for the future.
Goldseker
Foundation
www.goldsekerfoundation.org
Created in 1975 the Goldseker Foundation supports nonprofit
organizations helping communities and individuals in the Baltimore
metropolitan area. During 2006, the Foundation authorized
seventeen community development grants and program expenses
totaling $1,270,000.
Healthy
Neighborhoods
www.healthyneighborhoods.org
Healthy Neighborhoods has established a loan program to support
the acquisition and/or rehabilitation of owner occupied homes
on target blocks in the ten Healthy Neighborhoods program
neighborhoods. The Healthy Neighborhoods Initiative is an
effort of area foundations and the City of Baltimore to invest
strategically in certain neighborhoods and target blocks within
those neighborhoods. On target blocks, special purchase-rehab
mortgages and home improvement loans are available. In addition,
city employees are eligible for an extra $750 as part of the
Baltimore City Employee Homeownership Program, bringing their
total incentive from that program to $3,750.
Living
Classrooms Foundation
www.livingclassrooms.org
Founded in Baltimore in 1985, the Living Classrooms Foundation
(LCF) is a not-for-profit organization serves at-risk youth
in Baltimore. LCF, which includes Living Classrooms and the
National Historic Seaport of Baltimore, generates nearly $120
million in annual output in Maryland each year and supports
over 1,820 full-time jobs. Of these totals, $104 million and
1,760 jobs are generated in the city of Baltimore, where the
lion's share of Foundation services is provided. The Foundation
also generates $43.2 million in personal income for City residents
each year, enough to support 1,363 households earning Baltimore's
median household income.
Open
Society Institute-Baltimore
www.soros.org/initiatives/baltimore/about
OSI-Baltimore was launched as a five-year initiative, which
has since been extended. From 1998 through 2005, the foundation
directed over $50 million toward targeted grants and technical
assistance to achieve lasting change in Baltimore's neighborhoods,
schools, prisons, workplaces and government agencies. Its
work has evolved so that it now focuses exclusively on four
initiative areas including tackling drug addiction, helping
youth succeed, reducing the social and economic costs of incarceration,
and Baltimore Community Fellowships.
Social Enterprises
Women's
Industrial Exchange
www.womansindustrialexchange.org
The Woman's Industrial Exchange began shortly after
the Civil War in the home of Mrs. G. Harmon Brown of Baltimore,
where women brought their handwork to be sold to local citizens
and visitors. In 1882 the State Legislature incorporated the
organization “for the purpose of endeavoring by sympathy
and practical aid to encourage and help needy women to help
themselves by procuring for them and establishing a sales
room for the sale of Women's Work.” The Woman's
Industrial Exchange continues to serve its non-profit mission
as an outlet of hand crafted goods made by needy women and
men intent on supporting themselves with dignity. Its 150-plus
consignors receive 65% of the sale price of the items sold
by the Exchange.
University-Community Partnerships
Johns
Hopkins, Urban Health Institute
www.jhsph.edu/urbanhealth
A center affiliated with the John Hopkins Bloomburg School
of Public Health, the mission of UHI is to marshal the resources
of the Johns Hopkins Institutions as well as other external
resources, to improve the health and well-being of the residents
of East Baltimore and the rest of the city of Baltimore. The
Institute also promotes solutions to urban health problems
nationwide. Established in 1999 to serve as an interface between
Johns Hopkins University and the Baltimore community in which
it resides, UHI has focused its efforts to date on three major
programs: the Caroline Street Clinic for the Uninsured; the
Historic East Baltimore Community Coalition—East Baltimore
Technology Resource Center; and a Community Health Worker
program.
University
of Baltimore, Community Development Clinic
http://law.ubalt.edu/template.cfm?page=413
The Community Development Clinic of the University of Baltimore
provides a wide variety of legal services to and advocacy
for historically under-served communities in Baltimore. Students
assist community associations, non-profit organizations, and
small business owners with the legal aspects of formation,
operations and financing, land use, real estate acquisition
and other matters. Projects include representing community
associations in negotiations for a community development plan,
drafting and advocating state legislation to remove a legal
impediment to the development of permanently affordable homeownership
opportunities in Maryland, and helping a nonprofit organization
acquire vacant land from the City.
University
of Maryland, Baltimore Community Outreach
Partnership Center
http://newdirections.umaryland.edu/index.html
New Directions Community-University Partnership (NDCP) is
a collaborative effort between the University of Maryland
School of Social Work and local community organizations in
the East Baltimore area. Its overall goal is to assist East
Baltimore community groups to gain the necessary skills to
build greater overall community wealth-building capacity.
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