(BALTIMORE – July 14, 2025) – Baltimore is no stranger to crisis. From ransomware attacks to corruption scandals, from disinvestment to unrest, this city has weathered storms that would flatten others. But in the midst of it all, a new vision is quietly rising — and Mayor Brandon Scott stands at its front line.

This isn’t just about policy. It’s about a shift in tone, a change in energy, a long-overdue evolution. It’s what we call the New Baltimore.

Yes, we are still plagued by systemic issues — some of them older than the mayor himself. Crime, addiction, poverty, and a brittle public trust didn’t begin on his watch. But how one leads amid that chaos is what defines legacy.

When Scott took office in December 2020, the city was still in the grip of the COVID-19 pandemic. He inherited shuttered schools, overwhelmed hospitals, economic instability, and a frayed civic spirit. He had to guide Baltimore through vaccine rollouts, school reopenings, eviction crises, and public health fatigue — all while trying to rebuild trust in a city weary of broken promises.

Since then, Scott — youthful, unapologetically Black, and Baltimore-born — has navigated a relentless minefield:

  • A mass shooting at Brooklyn Homes that spotlighted youth violence and public safety gaps.

  • The BG&E underground conduit deal, where infrastructure collided with transparency.

  • The Fells Point tax revolt, revealing a tense divide between business districts and city services.

  • The police killing of Bilal “BJ” Abdullah, a beloved arabber, during what many believe was a mental health crisis.

  • The Key Bridge collapse, a blow to regional logistics and Baltimore’s infrastructure pride.

  • The relentless fentanyl epidemic, devastating families in every ZIP code.

  • And the 10th anniversary of Freddie Gray’s death, a painful reminder of promises deferred.

Yet through it all, Scott has remained focused — not just on managing crisis, but on reimagining what comes next.

He has backed P. David Bramble’s bold vision to redevelop Harborplace, transforming it from a tourist relic into a community-centered, modern destination that works for residents as much as visitors. Harborplace is no longer a symbol of what Baltimore was — it’s becoming a symbol of what New Baltimore can be.

He has also embraced and elevated a new era of Black leadership — long overdue in a majority-Black city:

  • The Baltimore Development Corporation (BDC) is now led by Otis Rolley, its first Black President & CEO in the agency’s history. His appointment marks a turning point for economic development in Baltimore — with equity, inclusion, and innovation at the forefront.

  • At the Downtown Partnership, Shelonda Stokes is reshaping how downtown functions — advocating for vibrancy, community partnerships, and small business growth.

  • David Anthony Thomas is driving critical work around workforce development and strategic investment — aligning the city’s future with its people.

And here’s where I need to be clear:
I believe in giving credit where credit is due. If I’m going to criticize a politician or a policy, then I must uplift with the same energy when it’s warranted. That’s integrity. That’s balance. That’s love for this city.

Because I don’t just work in Baltimore. I live here. I raise my family here. I walk these streets. So when I call for better, it’s not out of political convenience — it’s out of personal investment. I want to see good things manifest for all of Baltimore, not just certain areas. That selective investment — prioritizing communities with strong voter turnout while neglecting those historically left out — has been our downfall for decades. That can’t be the blueprint moving forward.

Unlike some of his predecessors, Scott has stayed scandal-free, unshaken, and grounded in purpose. He hasn’t ducked the tough conversations. He hasn’t played politics at the expense of principle. He’s led — even when the path forward was uphill.

We’ve seen mayors before him fall to scandal or get stuck in reactive cycles. Remember the ransomware attack that crippled Baltimore’s computer systems for weeks? That nearly brought City Hall to a standstill. And yet under Scott’s watch, Baltimore has kept going — even as bullets flew and bridges fell.

No, it hasn’t been perfect. But New Baltimore isn’t about perfection. It’s about persistence. It’s about building trust brick by brick. It’s about leadership that listens, adapts, and refuses to quit.

Brandon Scott hasn’t just survived the storm — he’s helping us build what comes after it.

And that, in a city long defined by struggle, is revolutionary.

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