A decision on my future

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RawlingsBlakeReview

Your weekly update from Baltimore City Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake

ISSUE #264

September 11, 2015

Earlier today, I announced that I have decided not to seek reelection as Mayor of Baltimore.


This was a difficult decision. I love serving as Mayor and am proud that I have been able to serve the citizens of Baltimore for nearly 20 years as an elected official. However, as I prepared to engage in a vigorous mayoral campaign and participated in planning meetings with my campaign team and volunteers, I came to the realization that every moment that I spend running for mayor would take away from the urgent responsibilities to the City that I love.

 

This is a critical time for our City.  Over the next 15 months, my time would be best spent on continuing to move this City forward and build upon our progress, without the distraction of campaign politics. As I work with the U.S. Department of Justice to reform our police department, as I fight for more recreational opportunities for our youth, as I seek to attract new businesses and new investments to Baltimore, I do not want every difficult decision to be evaluated, questioned and critiqued within the context of how it affects a political campaign.

 

I am proud of my accomplishments as Mayor: instituting  pension reform, developing the City’s first 10-year financial plan, achieving our City’s highest combined bond rating in decades, implementing ethics reform, reducing property taxes, investing in repairing our police department’s relationship with the community, reducing unemployment by a third, attacking blight through Vacants to Value, providing job opportunities for youth through my Hire One Initiative, reducing teen pregnancies by a third, and securing more than $1 billion for school construction, among many others.  Many of these decisions were tough politically, but I have always believed in doing what was right over what was popular.

 

Much work remains to be done, and I will spend the remaining  15 months of my term as Mayor continuing to be focused on our City’s future and moving this City forward.  I will continue efforts to improve police-community relations and decrease violent crime.  I will continue to fight for City Council approval of my ambitious plan to invest $136 million in Recreation Centers for our communities.  I will continue to create opportunities for new jobs and attack neighborhood blight.

 

On a personal note, after nearly two decades in elected office serving the citizens of Baltimore, it is a little hard to imagine what is next for me, and for my family.  My 11-year-old daughter has never been alive at a time when I have not been in elected office. I am not sure we know what to expect.  But I do know that I am grateful for the opportunity to have served for all of these years.

 

I want everyone to know that the business of government will continue and I will continue to work to Grow Baltimore. 

 

I love this City, and I pledge to work for this City’s future, both during my remaining term as mayor and beyond.

 

Sincerely,

 

stephanie rawlings-blake signature

 

Stephanie Rawlings-Blake

Mayor, City of Baltimore

 

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact me at my website or at mayor@baltimorecity.gov. You can also follow the Mayor’s Office and be a part of the conversation on Facebook or Twitter.

Kew News

Baltimore Mayor Stepanie Rawlings-Blake announces she won't seek re-election

During her tenure, unemployment has dropped from 12.1 percent to 8.1 percent and the city’s added about 12,000 jobs. She shepherded a plan secure $1 billion for new school construction and opened the city’s first new recreation center in a decade. Sources say she’s also leaving office to spend more time with her 11-year-old daughter, Sophia, in the years before she heads to high school. (The Baltimore Sun)

 

READ MORE

 

Baltimore City leaders renew Bike Sharing program

Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake and other city leaders requested a proposal to renew Charm City's Bike Sharing plan Tuesday. The program hopes to provide convenient, on-demand access to bicycles for short distance trips for community members and visitors. (WMAR-TV)

 

READ MORE

Cloverdale Basketball Game

Along with various communities and Councilwoman Clarke, Mayor Rawlings-Blake celebrated Labor Day at the Cloverdale Courts Labor Day Basketball Challenge.

PrayerVigil

Mayor Rawlings-Blake, Congressman Cummings, and Commissioner Davis joined community members in Walbrook for an anti-violence prayer vigil during Labor Day weekend.

Baltimore leaders explore additional recreation options for city

One of the city's most successful recreation programs wrapped up this weekend. The Night Hoops basketball program started last summer with the aim of curbing violence among the city's youth. (WBAL-TV)

 

READ MORE


Maryland hospitals want to hire 1,000 new workers

Baltimore-area hospital systems want to hire 1,000 entry-level workers and are seeking a small rate increase from the state to pay for the program. The program, proposed by such systems as Johns Hopkins Medicine, the University of Maryland Medical System and MedStar Health, is a response to the frustration in poor Baltimore neighborhoods demonstrated by April's unrest. (The Baltimore Sun)

 

READ MORE

Community Events

Buying Into Baltimore: $5,000 Homebuying Incentive Event

Saturday, September 26, 2015 (8:30am-3:30pm)

Baltimore Polytechnic Institute - 1400 W Cold Spring Lane

 

Don't miss the biggest homebuying event of the year! Meet with real estate experts and community organizations, sit in on homebuying workshops, take our famous narrated bus tour of Baltimore neighborhoods, and preview homes for sale all across the city! Attendees become eligible for $5,000 in downpayment and closing cost assistance toward the purchase of a home, anywhere in Baltimore City! Visit livebaltimore.com for complete details and to register. $10 to attend.


Baltimore-Rotterdam-Xiamen: 30 Year Sister City Anniversary

Saturday, September 26, 2015 (12 pm-8 pm)

Creative Alliance - 3134 Eastern Avenue


2015 marks Baltimore’s 30 year anniversary of sister city relationships with Rotterdam, Netherlands and with Xiamen, China. On Sept 26, there is a daytime celebration with workshops and performances for the whole family with Dutch and Chinese themes, 12-6pm. In the evening there is an art opening reception and networking event, 6-8pm. More information at www.baltimoresistercities.org/anniversary2015.


Alpha Kappa Alpha, Epsilon Omega Chapter 

2015 Health & Wellness Fair

Saturday, October 3, 2015 (11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.)

Ivy Family Support Center - 3515 Dolfield Road

 

Free and open to the public! Featuring: Free HIV/Diabetic Screenings, the Colgate Dental Van, Blood Pressure Checks, Financial Advice, Heart Healthy Tips, Bone Marrow Screenings, Nutrition Tips, Asthma/Allergy Autism. Register Here.