Baltimore Sun

9/11 community cleanup carries on

Together We Serve spruces up East Baltimore spaces

- By Christine Condon

For months, Scott Goldman and his colleagues at The 6th Branch, a Baltimoreb­ased community service group, figured they wouldn’t be able to hold their annual cleanup day on 9/11.

The event, Together We Serve, traditiona­lly draws hundreds of volunteers from Baltimore corporatio­ns like T. Rowe Price Group to clear vacant lots in East Baltimore and help establish community gardens and green spaces.

But as COVID-19 cases skyrockete­d across the region and the country, organizers at The 6th Branch, a group led by military veterans, worried the event wouldn’t take place this September — for the first time since 2011.

“It still meant something to us to commemorat­e the anniversar­y of 9/11, with some kind of service and I think we were trying to be creative with something virtual or something like that, but I did not expect to do anything,” said Goldman, the group’s executive director.

Then the organizati­on’s corporate partners chimed in and suggested holding several service days with small groups of volunteers to maintain social distancing.

This week, several small groups of Amazon employees have worked to clear vacant lots along North Montford Avenue in the city’s Broadway East neighborho­od, removing trash, debris and even old slabs of concrete to pave the way for plantings.

And on Friday, the 19th anniversar­y of the Sept. 11 terror attacks — and into next week — small groups from companies like T. Rowe Price, McCormick & Co. and Starbucks will work there and at a site in nearby Johnston Square.

At that site, which is along Hillman Street near East Hoffman Street, volunteers will be preparing garden beds and planting vegetables and flowers, Goldman said.

Regina Hammond, a longtime Johnston Square resident and president of the Rebuild Johnston Square Neighborho­od Organizati­on, said her group hopes to distribute food from the garden to the community, and perhaps start a business selling freshly cut flowers, with the goal of employing local youth.

“That’s our vision, and tomorrow is the first step,” Hammond said.

The 6th Branch has been working on the lot for roughly a year, Hammond said.

“You’ll see 6th Branch members out there in 90-degree weather making sure that grass is cut, which wasn’t always the case. You could ride by Hoffman Street once upon a time, and the grasses would be up to your shoulders,” she said.

The lots The 6th Branch works on are either vacant or abandoned, Goldman said, and the group accesses them through the city’s “Adopt a Lot” program or through the city’s nuisance abatement process.

During the pandemic, Goldman said, the demand for the group’s services, such as their fresh produce distributi­on in the city’s Oliver neighborho­od and its cleanup efforts, has only grown with the proliferat­ion of food insecurity and the difficulti­es associated with trash pickup during the pandemic. So, lately, volunteers from The 6th Branch have been going out to their community garden and other sites individual­ly and in small groups, Goldman said.

This year’s 9/11 event is rather different, Goldman said, but one thing remains the same.

“Every year, Under Armour sponsors a

T-shirt,” Goldman said, “and it’s fun to see people show up in their shirts from five years ago. People keep coming back.”

Goldman, who served in the Army, remembered watching the events of 9/11 unfold on the first day of his sophomore year in college, sitting in a dorm room with some 20 other students.

“I’m sure I would not have ended up joining the Army years later, if not for that,” he said. “Each year I think of 9/11 as the day we turn what was obviously one of our darkest days into a day of service.”

Regional events commemorat­ing the anniversar­y of 9/11

Anne Arundel County: At 10 a.m., Anne Arundel County Fire Chief Trisha Wolford, Interim Police Chief William Lowry and County Executive Steuart Pittman will lay a wreath on the 9/11 memorial at 8495 Veterans Highway in Millersvil­le. The event will be livestream­ed on the police department’s Facebook and Twitter pages.

Fire communicat­ions will announce an All Call at 10 a.m. to commemorat­e the 19th anniversar­y of the attacks at the fire station on 8501 Veterans Highway in Millersvil­le. The organizati­on encourages fire personnel to gather at the station flagpole to observe a moment of silence.

Heroes of Severna Park will have an official name dedication for the 19th anniversar­y of Sept. 11 at 11 a.m. at the Severna Park American Legion post, 832 Manhattan Beach Road in Severna Park.

Baltimore County: McAvoy’s Sports Bar & Grill in Parkville is holding its 10th annual Spirits in the Night 9/11 Candleligh­t Vigil at 7 p.m. Friday.

There will be a commemorat­ive flag wave at the Essex Park and Ride from 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., hosted by the Chesapeake Alliance of Baltimore County Republican­s and Tim Fazenbaker for Congress.

Carroll County: The Hampstead American Legion Auxiliary Unit 200 will host a free luminary display to honor those who lost their lives Sept. 11, 2001, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday.

The #WalkAwayMa­ryland group, with help from members of the Carroll County Republican Central Committee, will also honor those who lost their lives Sept. 11, 2001, holding a Day of Remembranc­e rally Friday at Baker-Simpson-Bowlus Pop Up Park in Mount Airy. The event will coincide with the mayor’s weekly broadcast of the national anthem at the Mount Airy Town Hall at noon.

Carroll County representa­tives will gather at the Carroll County Public Safety Training Center 9/11 Memorial at 9 a.m. to commemorat­e the anniversar­y of the 9/11 attacks. The memorial service will be small with a limited number of participan­ts due to the ongoing effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Those interested in the event are strongly encouraged to refrain from attending and instead watch the recording on the county’s Facebook page or YouTube channel, or on Comcast Channel 24.

Harford County: Harford County residents are invited to gather for a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. Friday— the time the first plane struck the World Trade Center in New York — followed by a brief ceremony outside the county government administra­tive building at 220 S. Main St. in Bel Air.

The Bel Air office of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServic­es PenFed Realty will be setting up a pop-up lunch and dinner counter on Friday at Shamrock Park for first responders (lunch from noon to 2 p.m. and dinner from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.).

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