Baltimore Sun Sunday

Apology needed to council and city

- By Phylicia Porter, Ryan Dorsey, Kris Burnett, James Torrence, Zeke Cohen and Odette Ramos

Our Democracy is hanging by a thread. Less than two years ago, we witnessed a full scale insurrecti­on in Washington, D.C., where rioters assaulted Capitol Police officers and threatened to assassinat­e the vice president and members of Congress. It is against this backdrop of recent political violence that makes the behavior exhibited at Tuesday’s City Council hearing so troubling.

As members of Baltimore’s governing body, we collective­ly condemn the outrageous and dangerous behavior exhibited at City Hall. The free exchange of ideas should never be accompanie­d by petty, personal insults or thinly veiled threats of a riot.

Before last night’s hearing, City Council President Nick Mosby held a news conference with the Neighborho­od Assistance Corporatio­n of America (NACA). The Boston-based organizati­on provides counseling and loan brokering for low-income homebuyers. According to a media advisory sent by NACA, the purpose of the news conference was to support President Mosby’s Dollar Home Legislatio­n and “expose Mayor Brandon Scott’s opposition to the legislatio­n.”

As we entered the City Council chambers, a long line of people waited outside to get in. Many wore yellow shirts with “NACA” printed on them. The hearing — the ninth to date on Dollar Homes — began uneventful­ly, with city agencies offering testimony. (In the prior meeting we voted seven for and seven against the legislatio­n, with one member absent, which counts as a no vote. The legislatio­n had failed to advance.)

About an hour into the hearing, as public testimony got underway, the chamber was filled with yelling and chanting coming from the hallway.

Rather than pause the hearing in order to restore order, the council president elected to let the emotions build. As the first speaker concluded their testimony, and President Mosby invited NACA CEO Bruce Marks to the podium, the energy in chambers shifted from tense to chaotic. Mr. Marks, who had been walking in and out of the chamber mostly maskless, led the crowd in a chant about Mayor Scott and then took to the podium.

During his remarks he stated that Mayor Scott was, “bought and paid for by the real estate industry.” He also claimed that Councilmem­ber Odette Ramos — an expert and longtime advocate for affordable housing — opposed the legislatio­n because she was “in the pocket of developers,” a charge so wildly inaccurate it was obvious to anyone with a cursory familiarit­y with her background. Mr. Marks repeatedly told the council that there were “700 people” waiting outside the chambers (we counted about 150) and that he was trying to prevent a riot from occurring. We interprete­d this as a veiled threat about what would happen if we continued to vote against the Dollar Homes bill.

President Mosby should have immediatel­y removed Mr. Marks from the chamber. But he didn’t. He let the show go on, putting the entire City Council and the mayor’s staff in harm’s way, essentiall­y condoning the behavior.

It raises the question: How did a Boston-based housing organizati­on with a questionab­le past find its way to Baltimore to argue for legislatio­n that wouldn’t impact its city or state? We received an email Wednesday morning from a participan­t who was disgusted by the events that took place and felt manipulate­d into supporting a program that would not affect them as a non-citizen of Baltimore. And though we assume that NACA members were invited to quell our concerns about the Dollar House bill, we fail to see how their mortgage program — backed by Bank of America — would be helpful to our residents.

President Mosby has repeatedly invoked the need for decorum at City Hall. Yet, he partnered with an organizati­on that led an angry crowd to search City Hall for Mayor Brandon Scott and bang on his door, while threatenin­g a riot. That President Mosby did not have Mr. Marks immediatel­y escorted out of the building demonstrat­ed a profound lack of judgment or respect for the body over which he presides.

We are elected by the residents of Baltimore City to do one job: make Baltimore better. The people we serve deserve a

City Council that is profession­al, debates policy issues with dignity and has our city’s best interests in mind. We owe them that. Our city has serious challenges and enormous opportunit­ies. In the weeks ahead, the council members who are writing this op-ed, will introduce a package of bills meant to advance good governance, racial and economic justice in our city.

President Mosby has since apologized to “the men and women who work” in the building and the police officers helping to secure it for actions at the hearing that were “completely disrespect­ful to the institutio­n of the City Council.” But that’s not enough. We, the undersigne­d members of the Baltimore City Council, believe that President Mosby owes Mayor Brandon Scott, the City Council — especially Councilwom­an Odette Ramos — and all of the citizens of Baltimore a public apology.

Phylicia Porter (phylicia.porter@baltimorec­ity.gov), Zeke Cohen (zeke.cohen@ baltimorec­ity.gov), Ryan Dorsey (Ryan. Dorsey@baltimorec­ity.gov), Kris Burnett (kristerfer.burnett@baltimorec­ity. gov), James Torrence (James.Torrence@ baltimorec­ity.gov) and Odette Ramos (Odette.ramos@baltimorec­ity.gov). The writers are members of the Baltimore City Council.

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