Baltimore Sun

‘Ambassador­s’ to keep watching squeegee kids

No negative interactio­ns reported, Downtown Partnershi­p says

- By Yvonne Wenger

Downtown Partnershi­p “ambassador­s” in fluorescen­t green vests have been deployed to key Baltimore intersecti­ons at morning and evening rush hours to monitor interactio­ns between “squeegee kids” and motorists, while also pointing the young people to job training services and other resources to help meet their needs.

Michael Evitts, a spokesman for the group, said guides will be deployed in pairs to Conway Street and President Street each day for the foreseeabl­e future.

Although first characteri­zed by the organizati­on as security guards, Evitts said they are an extension of the organizati­on’s hospitalit­y and tourism ambassador­s. They are not armed and have no arrest powers.

“We have trained them to be hospitalit­y ambassador­s, not security guards,” Evitts said. “The mindset matters.”

Evitts said no negative interactio­ns between the youngsters and the guides have been reported to Downtown Partnershi­p since the monitors were first deployed earlier this month.

Theorganiz­ation decided to spend about $3,000 a week on the guides after hearing an increase in concerns from people visiting and working downtown about the young window washers who work for tips. Some of them allegedly threatened drivers, drew obscene images on their vehicles, and hit their windows with their squeegees. Money for the guides comes from the Downtown Partnershi­p’s budget, derived from a surcharge on commercial properties in the106-block business district.

The squeegee issue — a perennial one for the city — received renewed attention after some high-profile incidents in recent months.

A 10-year-old was struck in late October near President and Pratt streets while trying to clean windshield­s. The child was taken to the hospital and the driver remained on the scene. Earlier that month, a squeegee kid allegedly smashed a car window at Hamburg and Russell streets when the driver said he refused the service.

Police, however, have not provided data to show whether squeegee activity, arrests or crimes associated with the window washers have increased. The department says officers’ focus is on engaging with the young people and connecting them to opportunit­ies, such as job training programs.

Mayor Catherine Pugh says she is raising money so she can spend $2 million a year to entice 100 young people to permanentl­y leave the street corners in exchange for a stipend and joining an educationa­l and job training program. The kids have an assortment of needs — some, for instance, have dropped out of school; others are homeless. Pugh said the new program will be built on other efforts by her administra­tion, including “pop-up” car washes and a special youth employ- ment program for 25 youngsters recruited on city corners.

“Real solutions are in our grasp, and I’m confident that we can put forth a sustainabl­e program for the squeegee kids of our city,” Pugh wrote in an op-ed published in The Baltimore Sun last month.

Community activist Terrell Williams said the youths need more than “BandAid” solutions. He runs the “Turnaround Tuesday” program for Baltimorea­ns United in Leadership Developmen­t, or BUILD, which is a program for the city’s long-time unemployed men and women that is part therapy and life-skills training and part guided problem-solving. He is raising money to start a similar program for the squeegee kids.

Williams predicted the guides won’t have any meaningful effect on the kids’ lives, and he worries that an interactio­n could go wrong.

“It’s like anything else, we always have these Band-Aid approaches to big problems,” Williams said. “Why not really invest the money to get to know these kids? They’re in difficult places. That is why they’re on the corner spraying water on people’s windows.”

The issue of panhandlin­g in intersecti­ons is prominent across the country, said Steve Hillard, president of Streetplus, a company that provides safety and hospitalit­y services to downtown improvemen­t districts in 11 states. The practice is unsafe, he said, especially when children are involved. They’re at risk from distracted drivers and those with road rage.

“Well-trained profession­al people, like the ambassador­s, can be a deterrent,” Hillard said. “I love the idea to engage these individual­s and get them into other things that are productive.”

 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS ?? Baltimore Police Officer Chavonda Smith, working under a contract with the Downtown Partnershi­p, watches as squeegee kids at Conway and Charles streets clean a car’s windshield during Thursday afternoon’s rush hour. The program began earlier this month.
KARL MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS Baltimore Police Officer Chavonda Smith, working under a contract with the Downtown Partnershi­p, watches as squeegee kids at Conway and Charles streets clean a car’s windshield during Thursday afternoon’s rush hour. The program began earlier this month.
 ??  ?? A squeegee kid holds his equipment. The Downtown Partnershi­p began its program after hearing concerns about safety from people working and visiting downtown.
A squeegee kid holds his equipment. The Downtown Partnershi­p began its program after hearing concerns about safety from people working and visiting downtown.

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