What We Do

Fight Blight Bmore is an economic, environmental, and social justice initiative led by the community and informed by data to address the issue of blight. Fight Blight Bmore has three main functions to:

  1. inform individuals about blight and its impact

  2. create a mobile application to identify, report, and analyze blight data

  3. to support the development of real property that is visioned, led, implemented and owned by the community’s existing residents.

The application will give users guidance on identifying blight and provide information on how blight impacts quality of life and community wellness. Additionally, the mobile system will provide an easy-to-use method to document blighted conditions. After the user documents blight, the mobile system will automatically report conditions to the appropriate parties. The application also will allow users to view and use a variety of analytic tools, as well as follow and update reports of blight. 

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OUR STORY

On Mother’s Day 2016, I witnessed what could have been an awful tragedy. A few children were riding their bikes down the sidewalk of Fremont Avenue, crossing Lafayette Street, where four brownstones were being demolished. The demolition site was filled with debris, gaping holes about six feet deep in the ground, and no gate to prevent site access. I witnessed the potential danger associated with these unsafe conditions such as a child falling into the unsecured debris. That day, I began researching, documenting, reporting and tracking environmental hazards created in part by the demolition sites around the city and the structures that preceded them. That effort and research has resulted in the development of an environmental justice innovation titled Fight Blight Bmore.

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WHAT WE'VE ACHIEVED 

  • Held Displacia I, II III

  • Published Anatomy of Baltimore’s Blight 

  • Conceptualized and designed Hack Hub 

  • Launched Mobile App

  • Created Blight Analytics 

  • Co-created the SOS Fund 

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“People living in neighborhoods with blight are not only losing access to home equity, community history and public sector improvements, they are also being exposed to community based trauma resulting in long term stress from fear of unsafe property implosion, toxic exposure, and crime.”  

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

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Support the Stop Oppressive Seizures (SOS) Fund

Co-founded by Nneka Nnamdi the Stop Oppressive Seizures Fund (SOS Fund) aims to disrupt and dismantle predatory systems that erode property rights and ownership within the black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) community while decolonizing our understanding of property and wealth while encouraging a transition to a framework for collective land stewardship. While expanding the collective understanding of land stewardship.  For more information about our work, the Tax Sale Bailout or to get help, click here for the SOS Fund Website.