Baltimore Sun

What is the plan to fix Baltimore’s Central Business District?

- — Benjamin Rosenberg The writer is chairman of Rosenberg Martin Greenberg in Baltimore

David Tufaro catalogs with brutal clarity many of the serious and long-standing problems that affect the Central Business District and many other areas of Baltimore (“DLA Piper move continues neglect of central business district,” Sept. 4). He correctly points to the silence of business and civic leaders who for years have supported policies that promote shortterm gain at the expense of long-term growth.

Decay of the CBD did not happen overnight. But it has accelerate­d recently as businesses and their customers became reluctant to venture downtown. When was the last time a major employer announced a move to the CBD or an expansion of its existing presence?

Gov. Hogan’s proposal to relocate several thousand state employees to the CBD was welcome news. But in economic terms, it’s a Bandaid on a gaping wound. The CBD is in desperate need of new, private investment. There are literally millions of square feet of usable office space in the CBD that have been vacated in recent years. What is being done to attract new tenants?

Baltimore continues to suffer from feckless political leadership that refuses to grapple with this complex problem that was created over the course of many years. It will not be solved by “holistic” methods and platitudes.

Mr. Tufaro has brilliantl­y described the condition of the CBD. What is the plan to fix it?

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