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Restoration Help
Commemorative Tree

Six Things Every Board
Member

Should Know About the
NEW 990
Carribean-American
Heritage Month

National Children's Day
Rally

June 14, 2009
Rec. Center Appreciation
Banquet

August 1, 2009
Father Daughter Dance

June 13, 2009
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4-H Family Day
@ Six Flags

June 13, 2009 |
WIA

June, 2009
Westport Coaltion

March 31, 2009
FoMB Meeting

May 6, 2009
Vote to rebuild Cummings Field

May 1, 2009
Harbor View Festival

July 10-12, 2009
DTV Coupon

August 20, 2008

Hazardous Waste
Drop-off
2007-2008 ACE Coalition Flu Clinic Schedule
Read the Cherry Hill Master Plan
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Mayor Dixon’s Proposed 2010 Budget Cuts Target Our Children
By Kim Trueheart
The children of Baltimore City will suffer big
reductions in programs that serve them if Mayor Sheila Dixon’s proposed
fiscal year 2010 municipal budget is passed by the City Council this
month. Austere revenue projections resulting from the ongoing global
recession have caused the Mayor to propose significant cuts in programs
that deliver services to our children and youth. These reductions loom
large in the proposed budget and have prompted complaints from tax
payers who are concerned and anxious about the reduction of youth
services that will go into effect on July 1st of this year.
Only the proposed cuts to the Fire Department, General Services and
Public Works are each individually larger than the proposed cuts in the
Department of Recreation and Parks budget which will be cut by just
under $2.75 million. If you add all the cuts proposed to services for
our youth in the budgets for the Enoch Pratt Free Library, the Community
Schools Program, Educational Grants, the Office of Children, Youth and
Families and the General Fund the total cuts to services provided to our
youth represent the single largest focus area of cuts in the Mayor’s
2010 operating budget proposal combining for more than $5.4 million.
Overall the Recreation and Parks Department budget will be cut by 8%.
The Mayor’s proposed budget includes the statement that “an overall
increase in structured and recreational programming for children and
youth” will result. This statement seems nearly impossible to achieve
when contrasted with the significant reductions in staffing (- 43) and
funding being proposed for the Department in the Mayor’s budget. The
fact that no details about the increased programming have been provided
is questionable and warrants further public scrutiny.
While residents clearly acknowledge the fact that the recession is broad
and deep, they reject the notion that children should be adversely
affected as a result of the economic down-turn and proposed cuts in City
services. Sentiments at one of the 20 recently held Recreation and Parks
Department community forums were universally opposed to the planned cuts
in Recreation and Parks services for the community of Cherry Hill.
Parents and children alike provided feedback to Recreation and Parks
representatives and convincingly conveyed their disapproval during the
standing room only meeting. First to the microphone at the April 8th
forum was 18 year old Marquisa Austin, a long-time participant in the
afterschool programs at the Patapsco Recreation Center where the
operating hours will be reduced 3 hours each day and the Carter G.
Woodson Recreation Center which will be turned over to the Baltimore
City Public School System. Marquisa said, “These programs have given my
life discipline and structure and have kept me out of trouble”. Mrs.
Betty Baze, the Chairwoman of the Cherry Hill Development Corporation
said that the well known rift between community factions will be
exacerbated by the closing of the Carter G. Woodson Recreation Center
and the community should anticipate a long and troubled summer. Several
adult males from the community provided feedback stating that the
recreation centers in Cherry Hill have provided male role models in the
form of the male employees who managed the recreation centers over the
years. These young men all stated that they also learned valuable life
lessons while participating in the afterschool programs from the
recreation center employees who often represented the only male
authority figure in their lives. Others expressed their disappointment
with the process the Mayor used to develop the proposed budget. Mr.
Michael Middleton of the Cherry Hill Community Coalition said, “The
Mayor’s process failed to include or solicit input from the affected
communities before her budget proposal was presented to the City
Council”, he added that a more inclusive process would have been
welcomed and would eliminate the heavy handed feeling that is prevailing
among the residents. Frustrated and displeased many attendees suggested
that the representatives of the Department of Recreation and Parks
Department and the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhoods in attendance should
take cuts in their own pay to make up shortfalls in the Recreation and
Parks Department budget. Noticeably absent from the forum was
representation from the Baltimore City Public School System who will
take control of one of the two recreation centers in Cherry Hill if the
proposed budget is approved by the City Council. The community has
received no information from the school system regarding its plans for
operating the recreation center after it takes control in July.
Children from communities neighboring Cherry Hill like West Port will
also be adversely affected by the budget cuts because they have
traditionally participated in the programs at both Cherry Hill
recreation centers. Mrs. Linda Towe, Executive Director of Project
T.O.O.U.R. says “The proposed budget cuts will have a dramatic impact on
the children of West Port and the youth programs that my organization
sponsors“.
Ms. Portia E. Harris, the Deputy Director of the Department of
Recreation and Parks, the most senior City official at the forum stated
that the Department will to work with the community to find alternatives
to the budget challenges, however to date no efforts have been made to
continue the discussions begun at the April 8th forum in Cherry Hill.
It has not been confirmed whether the Mayor and members of the City
Council have received feedback from the Recreation and Parks Department
community forums which ended on April 21st, but citizens also held a
small rally outside of City Hall on April 20th to further express their
disapproval of the proposed budget cuts. Citizens of Cherry Hill have
taken this issue a step farther and have circulated a petition that has
garnered over 400 signatures of citizens opposing the proposed cuts and
ask that the Recreation and Parks Department budget be fully restored.
The community plans to deliver the petition to the City Council
President at the Budget Committee hearing on the Department of
Recreation and Parks proposed budget which is scheduled for May 12, 2009
at 3pm.
The Baltimore City Council Budget Committee will begin holding hearings
on the Mayor’s proposed budget at City Hall beginning on May 11, 2009
and the public is invited to attend and provide comments. A final vote
on the budget is expected at the end of May 2009 and will allow the
budget to become effective on July 1, 2009.
This citizen-journalist will continue reporting on the impact of the
proposed 2010 budget cuts on the children of Baltimore City.
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