A Cleaner South Baltimore

As someone who has lived in the most southern end of SoBo for the last 8 years, I can tell you that the cleanliness of the streets has always been a huge frustration.  I am lucky enough (please note my extreme sarcasm) to live on a block where the trash wind tunnel seems to collect so no matter how much me and my neighbors would try to pick up the trash, it was impossible to keep up.

But everything has changed for us in the last few months. Now every Thursday, an extremely friendly lady from the Baltimore City Department of Public Works comes by with a broom, dust pan and trash can and cleans the block spotlessly.  I can’t tell you how much of a difference this has made. It now allows people like myself to spend more time on our busy lives and not cleaning up an endless supply of trash that has nothing to do with anything we did.  I have also driven through Pigtown and other parts of the peninsula and have seen street sweepers as well.

So whether or not this change occurred as a result of our neighborhood association, City Council, or  our leaders getting disgusted from being listed #6 in America’s Dirtiest Cities in Travel and Leisure (a site that seems to be trashing us, Philly and DC at every chance) it is really appreciated!

So what causes all of this trash?  As someone who works from home and takes his dog on about four walks a day, I feel like I can accurately answer this question.  Public enemy #1 is sloppy recycling pick-up.  Sure recycling is great for the environment, but not when hundreds  of bottles and newspapers end up back on the street by people who don’t use a lid on their bin and as a result of sloppy collection by the recycling truck.   A windy day on recycling day is a recipe for disaster – so continue to recycle, but please everyone use a lid on their recycling bin, it will really go a long way in keeping the neighborhood clean!  

Public enemy #2 is sloppy trash pick-up.  People over-stuff trash cans and place barely closed trash bags in front of their house and on the corners.  If you have too much trash, there is dump less than two minutes from here in Cherry Hill.  When people place too much trash outside, a standoff ensues between the residents and the collector.  If they don’t pick something up, please take five minutes of your time and drive to Cherry Hill.

A third problem which has drastically decreased with the improvement of the neighborhood is people who just don’t care and litter.  Many of us remember the days when Heath St. was a festival of ugliness and  remember that many of these people passing would loiter, buy or use drugs and throw their bottles and candy wrappers all over the streets.

Luckily things are starting to seem to turn around and I am glad things are moving in the right direction – but there’s still more that needs to be done. If you are also frustrated about the trash problems in this neighborhood, please forward this article and tell people how to help.  As the spring soon approaches, hopefully we can organize some weed pulling gatherings in the neighborhood – I have a big thing of weed killer ready!

Here is a sample of what the block typically looks like now after a cleaning. We’ve done a good job on the weed problem. 

 

Here is a picture from at least a year ago on Google Earth. 

 


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discuss this post

  • Christine

    As even more of an incentive to keep our neighborhood clean, the City of Baltimore just announced their Clean Community Competition 
    http://content.govdelivery.com/bulletins/gd/MDBALT-2ed3c5

  • Ashleykh1

    People seem to think that the planter in front of my house is a trash can. 

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kevin-Lynch/1259877595 Kevin Lynch

      Yes, great point, also a problem.  Mine as well.  

    • sobomeme

      as there are people with rooftop decks that think their neighbors chimneys are bottle disposals….and I can’t stand walkers that let their dogs pee on flowers and flowerpots yuck..

  • sobomeme

    as I am driving into the city from AACO I just want to bring in my Weedwacker to do the sidewalks adn curbs..and its not just the old SB people its the newer homeowners that don’t take care of their fronts and police the area…I mean the leaves from fall were there forever..and maybe if the originals shared their childhood memories like scrubbing the marble steps every saturday the steps would be white again…. also I noticed people leave their weekly papers lay or just throw them in the gutters..

  • Nate

    I live on the 1600 block on Charles ( even side) and the trash and old leaves are out of control. Who do I ask to get someone in there to clean it up?

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kevin-Lynch/1259877595 Kevin Lynch

      South Baltimore Neighborhood Association organizes neighborhood cleanups as well as the city.  We’ll let you know when those are.  Easiest things to do is rally some neighbors and do it yourself and haul the trash down to the Cherry Hill Dump.  My Block looked really bad, once we removed some of the permanent dirt, trash, and weeds, it became much easier to maintain!  

      • Dave

        As a new homeowner on the 1700 block of Clarkson street, I’ll be keeping a lookout for community cleanups. I did my street this past week and got at least a 65 lb bag of trash from just one block. The alley behind Clarkson (between the houses and the dilapidated heath street building) is a different story. Between the loitering kids, careless trash-men and vagrants, I can’t keep up. Hopefully someone buys that factory and can renovate and post-up some kind of security or fencing to keep loiterers out. I’m hopeful with the new Charles street project that’s almost finished. Nice site by the way, found it through The City That Breeds Blog. I’m a Towson grad also. I’ll pass the link along.

        • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kevin-Lynch/1259877595 Kevin Lynch

          Thanks.  Hopefully 1901 S. Charles will fuel other developments on the SW tip of SoBo where there is lots of opportunities on Race and Hanover.  The building on Heath and Race received a 340k tax credit.  The sun is out, I’ll try to organize something soon!  

          • alev

            Kevin, the tax credit you mentioned is that for the large abandoned building that Dave was talking about? There has been a sign on the building forever that it was approved for 90some apartments, anything going on with that?

          • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kevin-Lynch/1259877595 Kevin Lynch

            I’ll look into it, everyone keeps asking.  I’m curious myself Thanks!