Regionalism

Uniting our region, strengthening our community

For almost 200 years, Baltimore County and Baltimore City were one entity. When Baltimore County was created in 1851, a border was created but not a divide. The City and County have always been joined at the hip through water and sewer systems, shared roads and bridges and overlapping economies.

Thousands of County residents work in City institutions like Johns Hopkins, the Port, or City agencies, while City residents rely on County retail, hospitals and schools. When Baltimore City falters—whether through spikes in crime, disinvestment or failing infrastructure—the County feels it directly. When our families can not find affordable housing or our graduates can not find jobs, they leave our county and go to the city or to another neighboring county.

This deep relationship is not a weakness but an opportunity. And it is an opportunity that we share with our neighbors– The City, Anne Arundel, Carroll, Harford and Howard Counties.

That’s why Nick believes in building stronger partnerships together. We should be pooling our resources because our goals are shared and our values are aligned. We all want governments that work for everyone. We want safety, affordability and opportunity. For all that Baltimore County offers within, we gain as much from outside.

But we need more than cooperation—we need coordination. That means:

City–County Infrastructure Compact

Shared Transit & Mobility Plan

Cross-Jurisdictional Public Safety Task Force

Regional Economic Development Council

Coordinated Housing & Smart Growth Strategy

Annapolis Regional Caucus

As County Executive, Nick will not treat regionalism as a buzzword. He will make it a guiding principle.

When our neighbors succeed, we all succeed. The future of Baltimore County depends on how well we work together.