Local Businesses Save the Day for Neighborhood Kids

From Baltimore’s Examiner:


Mayor Dixon (center), gets ready to ride with Belair neighborhood kids.

Early Friday morning, some kids in the Belair-Edison Neighborhood woke up bright and early.  By 7:30 am, the event they had been looking forward to all summer was about to take place: their bike ride alongside Baltimore City Mayor Sheila Dixon. The kids, along with the event’s coordinators, the non-profit Belair Edison Neighborhoods Association (BENI), were counting their blessings.

As it were, the event almost didn’t happen.

A week before the event, all the helmets, pumps and bikes the kids had been primping all summer leading up to this event, were stolen from the old maintenance shed in Herring Run Park where they had been stored since the beginning of the program.


One of the children who received new bikes.

“For the kids, it was so disappointing,” said Mary Warlow, Marketing Director for the Belair-Edison Neighborhood Association. “They had put so many hours into rehabing their bikes and they got very attached to them.”

That’s when a group of local business owners, headed by Tania and Nicolás Ramos from Arcos Restaurante and including Central Realty, the Hispanic Business Association, Eber Portillo from El Salvador Restaurant, Mi Bandera Supermarket and Gelmin Portillo from Latin Service LLC, came to the rescue. Within a couple of days, these businesses, aided by the Baltimore Mayor’s Office and the Baltimore Police Department, had already collected over 20 bikes — almost twice as many as they originally had. 

The case is now under investigation at the local Police Department. As for the kids, Ms. Warlow added, “they are just thrilled to ride their new bikes.”

 

Fernando Parada, Vice President of the Hispanic Business Association — one of the contributing entities — said they were very excited to help make a positive impact on the community’s kids. “It gets to your spirit when you hear of something like this happen. This was an opportunity for our businesses to make a connection with the community at large.”

For the Belair-Edison Association, this means they can now continue and expand their program to include more children who can earn bikes through acts of community service — mostly gardening at the community gardens in the park and helping out with the Movies in the Park program they organize every summer. “We are so glad that so many minority businesses in the area turned out for us,” Ms. Warlow added. “It was really exciting to see people respond so positively to this. This means so much for our kids. It’s been almost overwhelming.”


Neighborhood kids receive the donated bikes.

But for Mr. Parada, the implications of Latino businesses uniting for a common cause are much deeper. “The Hispanic community is younger than other communities and participating in this kind of things together, be it a non-profit event or a community cause, will help us all,” he said. “The more we do this, the better we’ll understand the bigger picture, what it means to unite as a business community.”

As the children rode off next to the Mayor around the beautiful park they work so hard to help maintain, their beaming smiles seemed to agree: amazing things do happen when a community comes together.

For more information about the kids program or to support the Belair-Edison Neighborhood Association (BENI), visit their website or call 410-485-8422.

Bike stolen/kids caught

A young teenager stole a bike from a backyard.

A Shomrim responder [a group that works with the police/checking out the neighborhood] saw this event and followed the kid……….police were there within a couple of minutes because of the "responders" directions.

3 kids were arrested and the bike was picked up by the owner.

Tour du Greater Homewood on August 2!

Before heading out to the Third Annual Waverly Village National Night Out Kick-Off Parade, please join us for the Tour du Greater Homewood! This relaxed bicycle ride will go through some of GHCC’s neighborhoods, including Hampden, Remington, Station North, Waverly, and Ednor Gardens. The ride will end at 35th and Greenmount, just in time for the start of the parade and the Baltimore Bike Pageant.

To ride, meet us at the Roland Park water tower (Roland Avenue and West University Parkway) at 9:30 a.m.
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Tour du Port

Registration is now open… with
an early bird discount until August 15th

 

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Tour
du Port – October 4th 2009 – Baltimore

Register
at: https://onelesscar.org/page.php?id=156

 

Join thousands of riders at
Baltimore’s Canton Waterfront Park to kick off the 16th Annual Tour du Port!
Routes range from a 12 mile ride to a new half Century, 50 mile ride! The Tour
route travels through many historic neighborhoods, waterfront areas and parks.
This fully supported Tour includes lunch, refreshments at rest stops, map, SAG
and a post-ride celebration at the Tour’s end. Tour is One Less Car’s annual
fundraiser – all fees go directly to advancing the programs and advocacy
efforts of One Less Car, the non-profit organization dedicated to walking,
bicycling and mass transit in Maryland.

Last weeks rides from City Hall in pictures

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If you have not checked out the rides from City Hall you are missing out on a fun time. Someone asked about Critical Mass in Baltimore IMHO these rides are Baltimore’s version, more fun without any of the negativity that Critical Mass can bring.

The first page of pictures was on Wednesday, nice ride up the Gwynns Falls Trail and back. On the second page starts an event that uncovered a very heart warming story . The Belair-Edison neighborhood could not afford a recreation center so they offered bike rides in Herring Run Park. Then someone stole all the bikes but Velocipede came to the rescue and donated a bunch of kids bikes.
Continue reading “Last weeks rides from City Hall in pictures”

Maryland Pedestrian Safety Enforcement Initiative

* Street Smart is an annual public education, awareness and behavioral change campaign in the Washington, DC, suburban Maryland and northern Virginia area. Since its beginning in 2002, the campaign has used radio, newspaper, and transit advertising, public awareness efforts, and added law enforcement, to respond to the challenges of pedestrian and bicyclist safety.
* The Street Smart program emphasizes education of motorists and pedestrians through mass media. It is meant to complement, not replace, the efforts of state and local governments and agencies to build safer streets and sidewalks, enforce laws, and train better drivers, cyclists, and pedestrians.
* The StreetSmart campaign is expanding to the Baltimore Metropolitan area in 2009.
* More information on the StreetSmart campaign is available at https://www.mwcog.org/streetsmart
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Maryland Strategic Highway Safety Plan

Emphasis Area #3d – Make Walking and Crossing Streets Safer

Typically, between 95 and 110 pedestrians are fatally injured on Maryland’s streets and highways each year. Pedestrian fatalities comprise about 20 percent of all traffic deaths. About 12 percent of fatally injured pedestrians are 15 years or younger and another 19 percent are 65 years or older. Nearly 3,000 pedestrians are injured annually, more than one-third of which occur in Baltimore City and more than another one-third of which occur in Baltimore, Montgomery, and Prince George’s Counties. Pedestrians 15 years of age and younger are particularly vulnerable to being injured – over 30 percent of injured pedestrians are in this age group.
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Artscape pictures and comments:

Riding this weekend was great. I live near Prettyboy Reservoir so a friend and I drove to Towson and rode to artscape from there saturday morning. In all my years in baltimore county Ive never ridden downtown and have only owned mountain bikes til now – what a freakin blast!

Thinking it was probably the easiest route we took York/Greenmount down to 31st to Howard which would have been fine if it was smooth pavement. Still couldnt have taken longer than 30 minutes. I’m always amazed how easy it is to get around on a bike. Cars are just so oversized sometimes, especially when theres a few big ol streets in the city which are shut down for weeekend.

Having the bike parking area was a great surprise. We were going to the UB student center and rolled up right in front of a well supervised bunch of barricades dedicated to bikes and some helpful information about riding in and around baltimore.
-RR

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Have bike bell or horn, then make music!

contemporarymuseum


 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Mobtown Modern Goes Guerilla for Summer Spectacle

Saturday, July 18, 2009
3:00 p.m.

The Metro Gallery

1700 North Charles Street
Station North Arts and Entertainment District, Baltimore

The Contemporary Museum’s Mobtown Modern concert series will take New Music to the streets with an interactive performance of composer Mauricio Kagel’s Eine Brise (‘A Breeze’) for 111 bicyclists, on Saturday, July 18, 2009 at 3 p.m.

Riders will begin and end their trek at The Metro Gallery in the Station North Arts and Entertainment District. The posse of performers will use bells, horns, and utterances and whistling to replicate the sounds of a crisp breeze during their “round the block” performance. Eine Brise begins with jingling to announce the coming breeze, climaxing with a crescendo of a frenzied chorus of “wind sound” vocalizations from performers.

Anyone with a bicycle and a bell or horn is invited to participate in this guerilla-style music making experience. To participate, e-mail info@mobtownmodern.com. Space is limited.

For more information about the Contemporary Museum and Mobtown Modern, visit www.contemporary.org or www.mobtownmodern.com.


About the Contemporary Museum:
The Contemporary Museum promotes the art and culture of our time by producing and presenting new works, new thinking, and new practices that are immediately relevant. The Contemporary has earned international acclaim for its thought-provoking exhibitions, innovative programming, and unique collaborations with artists, curators, critics, and members of the community.

Join Baltimore Bicycle Works for a Hand Built Bike Show

During Artscape BBW Will Host a Hand Built Bike Exhibit & Demonstration
July 18th and 19th
Saturday from 12-7pm and Sunday from 12-5pm

Come meet some of Baltimore’s premiere frame builders. Chris Bishop, John Hollands, Tommy Nash, and Tom Palermo will be at Baltimore Bicycle Works to display their artisan hand-crafted frames and will be holding a brazing demonstration at 3pm on Saturday.

Stop by and check out the incredible craftsmanship that is going on right here in Baltimore!

P.S. Artscape will be offering bike parking and special gift packs to all those who ride to the festival. Hope to see you there!

Continue reading “Join Baltimore Bicycle Works for a Hand Built Bike Show”