Take Action


Are you a resident or community association involved in reporting blight? 

Click below and tell us more about your data needs.

Are you a real estate developer, construction company, public health researcher, etc. interested in blight data?

Click below and tell us about your data needs.

 You can make an immediate difference in three ways:

  • Reporting the blight 

  • Donate today & help Fight Blight Bmore to renovate the Hack Hub. 

  • Spreading the word 

  • REPORT

    Invite Fight Blight Bmore to your community to conduct a blight survey using the mobile App. We will come and train community members to use the App to collect data on blighted properties in the designated area. Then, we will analyze the data collected, which we will present to the community for their use in making community development decisions and for reporting to the Department of Housing and Community Development so that this may conduct strategic code compliance activities. 

    LEARN HOW TO REPORT CODE VIOLATIONS WITH 311

    *Guide on reporting code violations created by Baltimore Heritage and the Community Law Center.

  • DONATE

    Your donation will allow us to completely renovate the Hack Hub, our youth innovation and incubation space. The space will provide access to training on how to take a bright idea and turn it into a prototype, on how to start a business as well as provide access to Wi-Fi, 3D printers, programmable robots and the creative collisions that occur when innovators work in close quarters.

  • SPREAD THE WORD

    Tell your friends and family about Fight Blight Bmore. Connect with us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube and be sure to report blight to your designated city official. Tag us and use #FightBlightBmore when you notice a city blight issue that has a delayed resolution. Blight is not just an eyesore, it also results in environmental and health hazards.

Baltimore’s most blighted neighborhoods Sandtown-Winchester, Harlem Park, Upton, and Druid Heights have life expectancies more than 10 years less than Baltimore’s least blighted neighborhoods.

— Baltimore Neighborhood Indicators Alliance Vital Signs 15