Senator Theatre Auction Countdown: 24 Hours & New Info

Senator-color-adSome new bits of information come to light. Some may be considered hopeful rays of light, peeks into political machinations, others visions straight out of our worst nightmares as the we count the final hours to the city’s public foreclosure auction, tomorrow at 11am at The Senator Theatre (Note: If you find this post too long, please click here to jump to our “Bottom Line”).

From “Loyola might buy Senator Theatre at foreclosure auction” by Larry Perl of The Baltimore Messenger:

  • Loyola College said July 20 it is considering bidding to buy the Senator Theatre at a scheduled foreclosure auction July 22.
    Spokeswoman Courtney Jolley would not comment on what Loyola would use it for or how high in price Loyola would be willing to go.
    Jolley said the college is acting because it is “a committed member of the York Road community.”
    City Councilman Bill Henry, whose 4th District includes the theater, said he thinks the college might use it as a performance art, lecture and multipurpose center, with some uses for the college and some for the public.
    [Editor’s note: Uhm… Hasn’t he said over & over that no one would be coming to outbid the city?!?]
  • Also interested in operating the theater, according to pulished reports, is Baltimore-based Cordish Companies. Cordish officials could not be reached for comment.
    [Editor’s note: We haven’t heard this name mentioned since last March… Yet he said to be a longtime friend of CHAP member Bob Embry who we understand was the prime mover behind the move to apply restrictions on the interior of The Senator – at the objection of the owner & others who said such actions had (and would continue to) narrow the field of potential buyers.]
  • Kiefaber wants to create a nonprofit group to run the theater and expand its mission, with live entertainment, a liquor license and programming for area schoolchildren
    [Editor’s note: Partially correct. Kiefaber and many others, including us, believe the theatre’s ownership should be transitioned to a community-based arts, education & entertainment non-profit. Kiefaber himself has said time and again that, regardless of how this turns out, his family will no longer be owner of The Senator Theatre. A non-profit, The Senator Community Trust did form, but we’ve not had any official news from them in some time.]

From the “Response to Bill Henry” (referencing a recent letter sent to constituents by the District 4 Councilman) by Tom Kiefaber – Read the responses in their entirety via Astrogirlguides.com:

  • What is shockingly absent from Bill’s assessment of the auction’s inherent risks is critical information that he has chosen not to acknowledge to a concerned community, information that’s asserted in a recent quote from Kim Clark, Executive Vice President of the BDC, in a recent Sun paper article.

“If someone is willing to come and bid the million dollars, that’s acceptable, and they’ll own a theater,” BDC executive director Kimberly Clark said. “We’ll work with those folks on an outcome that’s best for the community.”

Clark said she has heard from at least two prospective bidders — one from Maryland, one from outside the state — with the financial wherewithal to pay at least the minimum price for the theater. Plus, she said: “I’m hearing from other parties that they have been contacted. There seems to be definite interest out there.”

Note that this is yet another instance where the official story keeps changing, but few people are motivated and able to follow the contradictory twists and turns. This straightforward quote by Ms. Clark predicts a probable outcome to the auction that is diametrically opposed to the reassuring scenario Bill describes to his constituents. Note that Ms. Clark directly states on the record that she has recently spoken directly to interested parties with “the financial wherewithal” that she fully expects to be bidders on 7/22. So what happened in the past three weeks since Clark announced this in the Sun, and why is Bill Henry saying the exact opposite?[-Tom Kiefaber]

  • [Regarding the possibility of a church group bidding at auction]
    We’re not attorneys, but we wouldn’t want to be a lawyer or politician decreeing to a religious organization that an historic theatre it owns is in fact no longer a theatre, as a ruse to cancel the long term critical parking easement for The Senator Theatre. Desperate attempts to sever parking easements and impose other restrictions after the fact would in all probability ignite controversial and highly charged church vs. state battles, to the detriment of all concerned. It’s a lose/lose scenario, but so far no one but us is raising the issue.
    The last public comments by Councilman Henry on this subject that we know of were made at a recent YRP meeting, where Bill assured all concerned that David Cordish had told the Mayor’s office that he would handle the situation, because Cordish controls The Senator’s parking easement. Why Councilman Henry chose that recent public opportunity to invoke Mr. Cordish and put his name on the record in relation to these controversial matters remains a mystery. [-Tom Kiefaber]
    [Editor’s note: Hmm… Mr. Cordish’s name mentioned twice in as many days. Coincidence? And no one available for comment?]
  • Live entertainment restrictions – The Senator Theater is zoned B-2-2, as is most of the York Road commercial corridor. While this zoning permits a wide range of business uses, live entertainment is not one of them. Yes, there have been live concerts at the Senator many times over the years; regardless, they are technically not permitted by the current zoning. I suspect that the City has turned a blind eye towards enforcement over the years because the primary use was within the law – the live concerts were only occasional and never caused any problems… [-Bill Henry]The assessment above is more ill-advised municipal advance planning by restriction and overt manipulation of zoning regulations. It seems to come quite naturally to the politicos as a handy port in a storm, whenever a desperate fix to a bungled action is needed after the fact.
    It’s also worth noting that the BDC’s RFP for The Senator, to be issued after the auction, but only if the city retains ownership, includes specific guidelines stipulating that the new owner or operator must include a wide variety of live performance programming in their proposal. Go figure. [-Tom Kiefaber]
  • Deferred maintenance and renovation costs
    Note also that the city is acting as substitute trustee for the bank in this auction process. As such, the city has a regulated mandate to use reasonable efforts to maximize the sale price of The Senator Theatre, which is private property. In publicly talking down the value and condition of the theatre without the proper documentation to back it up as a city representative, Councilman Henry may well in be in technical violation of the city’s fiduciary obligations as trustee. [-Tom Kiefaber]
  • Balto. City owned Mayfair Theatre

    Balto. City owned Mayfair Theatre

    The Nightmare Scenario #1 – The Mayfair Theatre


    We know from the city’s handling of its ownership of The Mayfair Theatre, which they acquired and then shamefully allowed its demolition by neglect to occur, that Baltimore’s track record with its historic properties is dismal, and that was before the recession. [-Tom Kiefaber]
    Photos of The Mayfair Theatre can be seen here & in the film short Baltimore: A City of Theatres.

  • The Nightmare Scenario #2 – The Real Estate Speculator
    We fervently feel that the possibility of a real estate speculator is the one big fat glaring scenario that could soon prove to be the most problematic at the auction sale. Our fears in this regard were recently compounded the other day with a visitor to the theatre who wanted to look around before the upcoming auction. He arrived out of the blue, quickly scoped out the theatre, and expressed no interest at all in touring the projection booth or even going up to the art deco mezzanine level, for that matter.

    The Senator Theatre: closed & boarded shut

    The Senator Theatre: closed & boarded shut

    On the way out, when asked about his interest and why he rushed the nickel tour with change left over, he briefly described an extremely scary scenario. He claimed that in Baltimore we think small, we often don’t know what we have here in town and its potential value to others, and that if he bought the building for a million and shut it down, boarded it up and set a sale price at two million, after “they” realized they were not in a position to take it from him, he’d get his price because some “public/private” partnership or group would be forced to ultimately raise the funds in desperation to purchase the theatre and get it reopened. He spit out that nightmare scenario and left us standing with our jaws hanging open. [-Tom Kiefaber]

  • The state, facing the probability of having their position disappear on Wednesday, as predicted by Bill Henry (but not the BDC according to Ms. Clark), may have otherwise preferred to help further the non-profit conversion of The Senator by potentially converting their lien to a grant, if it served to facilitate a bona fide, non-profit conversion. That’s not known, however, because the city is not communicating with the applicable state representatives, and to the best of our knowledge, has never even asked the state if they would be willing to do so. The BDC clearly does not want to deal with the state as a respected partner in determining the fate of The Senator Theatre, which wouldn’t exist if not for the state, my family, and past contributors, and instead, the state’s interest is getting kicked to the curb at auction. Why is that?
    Another key factor to be aware of from our perspective, is that the State of Maryland economic development agencies are demonstrably far beyond the city in their hands-on understanding of the Main Street commercial dynamic… unlike the city, which has a disgraceful record of repeated failure in that regard. So what is going on?

Not as brief as we normally like to be (and these are excerpts!), but some food for thought. Just don’t think too long.

Bottom Line:

  1. The theatre goes to auction tomorrow at 11AM.
  2. If you don’t like the idea of an unknown entity
    OR the city walking away with ownership,

    contact Maryland and Baltimore City officials to let them know – TODAY.
    Tell them you want the city & state
    (who stands to lose their entire investment) to work out a way to transition the theatre to a community-based non-profit instead.

Baltimore City

Hon. Sheila Dixon, Mayor
mayor@baltimorecity.gov
410-396-3100
100 N. Holliday St., Rm. 400
Baltimore, MD 21201 

Andy Frank, Deputy Mayor
andrew.frank@baltimorecity.gov 

Stephanie Rawlings Blake, Pres. City Council
CouncilPresident@baltimorecity.gov
410-396-4804
Baltimore City Council, City Hall
100 N. Holliday St., Rm. 400
Baltimore, MD 21201 

Bill Henry, 4th District Council Representative
bill.henry@baltimorecity.gov
410-396-4830 OFFICE
410-303-8838 CELL
Local District Office: 5225 York Road
Baltimore, MD 21212 

Kim Clark, Executive Vice President
Baltimore Development Corporation (BDC)
kclark@baltimoredevelopment.com
410-779-3868
36 South Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21201 

William L. Beckford, Director of Commercial Revitalization
wbeckford@baltimoredevelopment.com
410-837-9305
36 S. Charles St., Ste 1600
Baltimore, MD 21201 

Kristy Taylor,
Mayor's Office of Neighborhoods, Northeast Baltimore
Kristy.Taylor@baltimorecity.gov
443-984-3964 

Maryland 

Governor Martin O’Malley
mom@gov.state.md.us
100 State Circle
Annapolis, Maryland
21401-1925
410-974-3901
FAX: 410-974-3275 

State Senator Joan Carter Conway, District 43
joan.carter.conway@senate.state.md.us
Miller Senate Office Building, 2 West Wing
11 Bladen St., Annapolis, MD 21401
(410) 841-3145,
(301) 858-3145

Delegate Maggie Macintosh, District 43
delmaggie@msn.com
maggie.mcintosh@house.state.md.us
House Office Building, Room 251
6 Bladen St., Annapolis, MD 21401
410-841-3990
410-841-3509 

Delegate Ann Marie Doory, District 43
annmarie.doory@house.state.md.us
House Office Building, Room 131
12 Bladen St., Annapolis, MD 21401
410-841-3476,
410-323-0401
FAX: 410-323-0401 

Delegate Curt Anderson, District 43
curt.anderson@house.state.md.us
House Office Building, Room 314
6 Bladen St., Annapolis, MD 21401
410-841-3291 

Terrell Warren, District Court Coordinator,
State's Attorney Office, Northern District
twarren@stateattorney.org
410-878-8186 

Federal 

Barbara Mikulski, U.S. Senator's Office
senator@mikulski.senate.gov
410-962-4510
503 Hart Office Building, Washington D.C., 20510
Phone: (202) 224-4654 / Fax: (202) 224-8858

Benjamin L. Cardin, US Senator
http://cardin.senate.gov/contact/email.cfm
202-224-4524
509 Hart Senate Office Building, Washington, DC 20510

John Sarbanes, U.S. Representative
http://sarbanes.house.gov/federal.asp
426 Cannon HOB
Washington D.C. 20515
PH: (202) 225-4016
FX: (202) 225-9219 

Elijah E. Cummings, U.S. Representative
https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml
410-367-1900
2235 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington , D.C. , 20515
Phone:   (202) 225-4741
Fax:   (202) 225-3178 

Charles A. Ruppersberger, US Representative
http://dutch.house.gov/writedutch_za.shtml
410-628-2701,
410-628-2708
Washington Office
2453 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515-2002
202-225-3061 phone
202-225-3094 fax

SENATOR Theatre’s Kiefaber in Tell-All Interview

Tom Kiefaber return appearance to WCMB’s Tom Marr Show today at 11:30AM may prove to be more revealing than others.

Fellow blogger, Astrogirl, has published part 1 of a no-holds barred interview with the 20 year owner of The Senator Theatre.

The SENATORs Kiefaber paints a broader picture of how/why his theatre was manuevered into auction

The SENATOR's Kiefaber paints a broader picture in extensive interview: The situation is being badly bungled, and what is happening over all is a corrupt outrage with a virulent grudge at its core.

In this piece Kiefaber breaks his silence about city officials, their maneuverings, their deals that have kept “uncharacteristically mum” and details about how/why the nearly 70 year old theatre is headed to a foreclosure auction on July 22nd.

Until recently my family was in too precarious a position for me to be forthcoming and publicly discuss the situation with The Senator and what’s taking place behind the scenes. While we’re still stuck in an agonizing double-bind, The Senator’s future is also precarious, the situation is being badly bungled, and what is happening over all is a corrupt outrage with a virulent grudge at its core. It’s madness really when you examine what’s happening, who planned it and why, and the rush to get there. The bottom line is, this homie don’t play that.

With this much at stake I’ve come to terms with the fact that it’s now or never, so it’s time to speak up and assess the situation from our perspective. For years the prudent advice I’ve received has indicated that if I ever really “go there” and publicly relate what’s really gone on between me and a small group of these characters from my perspective that I would surely lose ownership of The Senator in the process. Well, that’s no longer an issue at this juncture. What’s at stake now is not my ownership of The Senator, because that should change. The critical issue is will The Senator and its future ownership entity be not-for-profit and oriented towards the arts, education and the extended community, or from a commercial development perspective. That crucial difference is not well understood, and it should be, because there’s so much at stake for all concerned at this fork in the road.

Get yourself a nice beverage, sit back and read part 1 of this extensive interview for yourself.

Senator Conway’s Senator Theatre Meeting Reveals Bottom Line

[Updated May, 22: video clip added]

We’d like to thank all of the Maryland state and Baltimore city officials who actually came out to the meeting last night to answer questions about The Senator Theatre mess.

We especially thank Maryland Senator Joan Carter Conway for calling the meeting to help the community sort it out.

We encourage folks to read Astrogirl’s take on the overall meeting, but we’d like to convey what we saw as the bottom line, publicly brought to light last night, thanks to a question posed by Kathleen Harris to Tom Kiefaber about the meddling of Baltimore City’s Commission for Historic & Architectural Preservation (CHAP).

Mrs. Harris stood up and asked Mr. Kiefaber, if CHAP had kept their nose out of The Senator could all of this mess with Baltimore City, the State of Maryland and 1st Mariner been avoided?

The short answer: YES.

Why?
Because, as stated before, Mr. Kiefaber was already in negotiations with parties interested in purchasing the theatre (and keeping it as a theatre) when CHAP announced their intentions to impose their unprecedented controls on the interior of the theatre.

Within 24 hours of the CHAP announcement negotiations broke down, because the parties saw this move by the city as a sign that the city (or someone talking to the city) already had plans for the building/property and they weren’t welcome.

Even Kim Clark of the BDC (present as a city representative) stated,

“We thought the CHAP designation was unnecessary and ill timed”.

See/hear for yourself in this video shot by Astrogirl

So there you have it.

The city group meddled, not only without consulting with the current owner, but actually against his wishes and not once, but TWICE. BOTH times scuttling negotiations!

Which is why now the city now must:

  • Use $950,000 ($600,000 collateral already held for the 1st Mariner mortgage & $350,000 from the city’s Economic Development fund) to buy the 1st Mariner mortgage note
  • Take time/spend money to set up & widely advertise their own foreclosure auction.
    At which we hope a theatre-friendly individual/group will outbid the city. If not…
  • Have the Baltimore Development Corporation (BDC) spend time/money drawing up an RFP to try and find a buyer (or an operator who is willing to lease the theatre)

Sounds like an awful lot to have to go through (and a lot of money spent) when you consider none of it was probably necessary…

Had CHAP left alone (at least until we knew who the next owner would be).

LINKS:

State Senator calls PUBLIC MEETING about City’s Senator Theatre AUCTION

That’s right, despite what you may have heard the theatre
IS STILL GOING TO AUCTION!

You’ve probably heard/read the local media telling everyone
that Baltimore City now owns The Senator Theatre
THIS  IS  NOT  ACCURATE

However, you will have a chance to get the truth,
from government representatives!

MD Senator Joan Carter Conway

MD Senator Joan Carter Conway

Maryland State Senator Joan Carter Conway has called for a public meeting this coming Wednesday, May 20th at The Senator Theatre in response to constituent concerns!

Please spread the word to friends, neighbors, preservation groups & other “theatre nuts”!

Senator Conway has invited representatives from:

Scheduled government representatives to date include:

Topics scheduled will include:

  • State of Maryland’s financial investment in The Senator Theatre
  • State of Maryland’s position in Baltimore City’s upcoming foreclosure proceedings
  • City of Baltimore’s purchase of the 1st Mariner mortgage note
  • Rising concerns of the extended North Baltimore residential and business communities.

AND

  • Baltimore City’s public auction process intended to transfer ownership of The Senator Theatre

In order for the city to ‘clear’ the remaining debt,
it must hold its own public auction!

City representatives are emphatic that they expect to be the only bidder at their own auction, BUT, since it will be a PUBLIC auction anyone with the financial wherewithal could walk away with the ownership of the historic Senator Theatre!

Friends of The Senator Theatre
challenge the media to get their stories right this time:

Come to the meeting,
listen to what everyone has to say
(including community members & theatre advocates)
and then
report the truth about The Senator Theatre!

ADDITIONAL LINKS:

City Board of Estimates OK’s $ to buy The Senator Theatre

One day after CHAP decided to rule in favor of placing severe restrictions upon most of the Senator Theatre’s interior spaces (even in the face of testimony exposing how such proposals have had negative affects on attempts to save the theatre), Baltimore City’s Board of Estimates approved the nearly $1 million needed to purchase the theatre’s mortgage note from 1st Mariner Bank.

Of course, the local media picked up on this (links below) and some have been prematurely stating Yet again) that the theatre is now saved. They did the same thing when the mayor’s office accepted the city’s Senator Strategy Group recommended buying the theatre & then reselling it (at a higher price than it could have gone if 1st Mariner’s auction had taken place).

City Comptroller Joan Pratt

City Comptroller Joan Pratt

Anyway, the motion passed, but not without a fight. City Comptroller, Joan Pratt calls the move a “bailout” and would rather loose the $600,000 invested in the theatre rather than see nearly $1 million spent to take ownership and then resell or lease it.

However, we think she is missing the point that the city has also invested millions in the Belvedere Square revitalization and business owners there, who call the theatre “a cherished landmark”, say they have already seen a drop in customers since the theatre has had to rely on internet advertising (their website, blogs & Facebook groups) to get word out about their “streamlined” programming aimed at keeping the theatre from going completely dark.

(Ed. To clarify, we agree with Comptroller Pratt on principle. We don’t believe the city should be in the business of owning the theatre either, however this auction scenario is much better because the starting bid won’t be “bargain basement” and we hope it will attract serious bidders who will… “Reimburse” the city for this outlay of cash.)

District 4 Councilman Bill Henry

“I know that it feels like a bailout but the bailout is not for Tom Kiefaber and it’s not for 1st Mariner.  If anything, the bailout is for the residents and the businesses in the York/Belvedere area.”

“Letting this theater sit there dark and not fulfilling its function as an economic anchor is going to continue to have really awful repercussions for that area.”

Current owner, Tom Kiefaber:

“It’s something very precious that’s been in my family for 70 years; will no longer be, but it’s really about The Senator and not me or my family.”

Want the big picture? Click the  “What’s Going On?” link, under our search box (top right).

STORY LINKS (Please keep in mind -The purchase has NOT been completed regardless of what local media states!)

More evidence we can’t leave the fate of The Senator to officials

Too many folks still think that because the mayor’s office agreed to a recommendation to foreclose on The Senator and then buy out the 1st Mariner mortgage that the theatre is “saved”.

This Could Still Happen... And apparently the City believes it should.

This Could Still Happen

Nothing could be further from the truth. See our “Situation” page for our take on where things stand (Especially the controversial upcoming CHAP hearing on 5/12).

On top of that, consider some of the recent news stories involving city government not doing right by its citizens:

Feb 2009 by hoodwatch

Feb 2009 by "hoodwatch"

And, let’s not forget the Mayfair Theatre – closed in 1986 & owned by the city for years now, has been left to rot. The roof collapsed all the way to the basement in 1998. Only now are officials getting around to doing something with the building… Apartments & retail space.

Still feel comfortable with the idea of your officials being in charge of the theatre’s future, without supervision and/or community input?

Neither do we.

So, at the risk of sounding like a broken record, please contact your elected officials to let them know:

Supporters are also encouraged to attend the upcoming CHAP hearing next Tuesday, May 12 @ 2pm at the Department of Planning, 8th floor Phoebe Stanton Conference Room, located at 417 E. Fayette Street.

Auction Countdown: Canceled… But Senator Theatre not out of the woods yet!

Update 3:46pm: Balto. Sun reports 1st Mariner Bank has canceled the theatre’s auction. However, my sources say keeping it off the auction block is contingent that the city’s plan to buy the theatre goes through… So, the rest of this entry is still pertinent.

While others seem to be celebrating (and others berating “another bailout”, even when it isn’t) Mayor Sheila Dixon’s announcement that Baltimore City would move ahead with their Strategy Group’s recommendation to buy The Senator Theatre, I’ve been… Cautiously optimistic.

Why?
Well, I am heartened that the deal includes:

  • Release of Tom Kiefaber’s home in Sparks (the very least they could do for the man who’s fought for 20 years for The Senator’s survival and the good of its community)
  • The possibility the community may have a say regarding to whom the city will sell/lease the theatre.

These are not present in the 1st Mariner auction scenario.

But:

I know Annapolis wrapped up the session yesterday, but let’s get on those phones & email people! Get the state representatives to work with the theatre and the city on how to work out the state debt/loan issue!

More media links (thanks to Nicholas Evans’ help):

Auction Countdown: 7 Days… “Bailout?!”

Could be detrimental!

Questionable / detrimental!

Or “Why you can’t always trust the media

The story is now everywhere in the Baltimore news media, but… Why is it portrayed as a “bailout”?!

Maybe, they just don’t have the smarts to call it what it is, a buyout (BIG difference)?

Bailout infers that taxpayer money is being spent to allow business to continue as usual. This is clearly NOT the case here. As Sean Brescia (Clearpath Management), who has been helping Senator management through this difficult time, points out:

I think this is just indicative of the typical simple-minded journalism we see in this market.  It is very easy to latch onto a popular national buzz phrase as a weak attempt at sensationalism. If these “journalists” bothered to spend any real time or effort investigating the true details of the proposed plan, they would see that Tom [Kiefaber, current owner of the theatre] is still losing virtually everything he has spent his life building, being left with substantial personal debt, and out of business with no gainful employment.  I would hardly call that a “bailout.”

City Hall realizes this proposal is a smarter way of controlling the future of a nationally recognized landmark rather than allowing it to go to a free-for-all scenario at the 1st Mariner auction.

The city would pay off 1st Mariner and become the owner of The Senator Theatre (and presumably work a deal with state officials regarding their loan amount). Once the property has a clean financial slate, they would then either offer the theatre to a “qualified operator” via:

  • Property sale
    or
  • Long-term lease

In this scenario the city appears as savior to a piece of its history AND has a chance to make back the money spent.

If  sloppy journalism is not the reason for the bailout characterization, one’s mind begins to wander and wonder if there are connections to certain folks who would much rather it go on the auction block, thus painting the proposal as “yet another government bailout” would be helpful, wouldn’t it?

I’d also like to know why WBAL TV decided to edit my answer to today’s Watercooler Question of the Day: “Should the city be taking an active role in bailing out the Senator Theater?”

What follows is what I sent in. The bold text represents what was omitted during the airing of the answers. At first I thought it was due to length, however, the answer that immediately followed took up two screens to display – mine only took one (I meant to be as brief & to the point as possible):

Normally, I would say no to government intervention, but this plan should not only save the last of Baltimore’s single screen movie palaces from an uncertain future, it helps to ensure that the money poured into the revitalization of Belvedere Square years ago does not go to waste. And, last but not least, it includes a promise that will allow the man who has fought for the theatre’s survival & well-being of its community for the last 20 years.

Tom Harris

Notice they said “bailing out”? I decided to leave that issue alone when formulating my answer (just brevity’s sake). Interestingly, the complete text is on the Watercooler web page, with all the misinformed folks screaming, “No bailouts”.

Yet more reminders that one has to be careful not to take news at face value,  nor a single source as ‘gospel’.

-T. Harris

Senator Theatre Auction Countdown: 8 Days… City Agrees to Buy?!?

Baltimore Sun reports that city hall has finally decided to make use of The Senator Theatre Strategy Group recommendation to become the owner of the theatre.

At first blush, it sounds like a good thing is finally happening, but I’ll reserve judgement until I learn more.

Read the story here.

Developing….

-T.Harris

Senator Auction Date Set, BUT…

In a Baltimore Sun article published yesterday,

“C. Larry Hofmeister Jr., an attorney representing 1st Mariner, confirmed that the auction would be called off if the loan is made current.”

Meaning, if the Senator Community Trust (SCT) can raise $70,000, by direct donations or upcoming fundraisers, they still have a chance to convince the Baltimore city and Maryland state officials that their proposed community-owned, non-profit multipurpose entertainment & education vision should move forward.

The auction is scheduled for April 20,  10am at the Baltimore City Courthouse. As Laura Thul Penza of the SCT remarks, “That’s cutting it close.”

For more information about the SCT, or to donate, visit their website: http://thesenatorcommunitytrust.org