• OSI-Baltimore Statement on the Gun Trace Task Force Convictions

    CONTACT: Evan Serpick, Open Society Institute-Baltimore evan.serpick@opensocietyfoundations.org; 410-234-1091 We are grateful to the federal investigators and prosecutors for their work bringing members of the Baltimore Police Department’s Gun Trace Task Force to justice after their outrageous criminal activities. Trial testimony implicated officers beyond members of the task force and, combined with citizen reports of misconduct […]

  • OSI’s Young, Gifted and Underfunded report in the news

    Last week, Open Society Institute-Baltimore released a new report, “Young, Gifted, and Underfunded: Strengthening the Relationship Between Philanthropy and Youth-Led Movements,” as part of a multi-step effort to build and strengthen connections between local funders and youth-led organizations that drive essential change in our region. The report, which was overseen by Glenn R. Love of Equilove […]

  • OSI Community Fellow Meshelle named as Baker Artist Award Finalist

    Congratulations to 2010 OSI Community Fellow Meshelle Foreman Shields, who was recently named a finalist for a Baker Artist Award for Performance. Forman Shields, who performs under the moniker “Meshelle, The Indie Mom of Comedy” developed Goaldiggers The Sankofa Project to connect young women in Baltimore of African descent to their ancestry, and to build leadership […]

  • Baltimore Harm Reduction Coalition to co-host talk on safer consumption spaces

    On February 21, OSI grantee, Baltimore Harm Reduction Coalition will join Nurses for Justice Baltimore to present Safer Consumption Spaces, a panel discussion at Red Emma’s Bookstore Coffeehouse. The panel will discuss how this harm reduction approach to drug use can save lives. Participants will hear from advocates in Baltimore who are working to bring […]

  • OSI Grantee Dr. Susan Sherman talks to WYPR about fentanyl testing

    This week, OSI grantee, Dr. Susan Sherman, a professor in the Department of Health, Behavior, and Society at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, spoke with WYPR’s Sheilah Kast about her research into fentanyl testing. Listen to the full podcast here. The synthetic opioid fentanyl is 50 to 100 times more potent than […]

  • OSI releases report on funding for youth-led movements

    CONTACT: Evan Serpick, Open Society Institute-Baltimore evan.serpick@opensocietyfoundations.org; 410-234-1091 BALTIMORE—Today, Open Society Institute-Baltimore releases a new report, “Young, Gifted, and Underfunded: Strengthening the Relationship Between Philanthropy and Youth-Led Movements,” as part of a multi-step effort to build and strengthen connections between local funders and youth-led organizations that drive essential change in our region. Based on focus […]

  • Peter Edelman to discuss new book “Not a Crime to Be Poor” with Lester Spence

    Join OSI and the Enoch Pratt Free Library on March 8th for a talk with Peter Edelman and Lester Spence at the Church of the Redeemer. Edelman, the Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Law and Public Policy and the faculty director of the Center on Poverty and Inequality at Georgetown University Law Center will be discussing his book, […]

  • Baltimore magazine names OSI Fellows “Visionaries”

    The February issue of Baltimore magazine, which went online today, profiles 30 Baltimore “Visionaries,” described as “change-makers who are shaping the future of our city.” Among the 30 are two OSI-Baltimore Community Fellows: 2017 Fellow Shantell Roberts, founder of Touching Young Lives, Inc., and 2015 Fellow Gianna Rodriguez, founder of Baltimore Youth Arts. Among the other […]

  • OSI and Charm City Tribe to talk about “Opiates in Our Communities”

    This Wednesday, Feb.7th, OSI-Baltimore will join Charm City Tribe for a special event as part of its “Beit Midrash” (house of study) learning series, on “Opiates in our Communities,” a discussion of how the opioid crisis affects the Jewish community and Baltimore communities overall. Michael Walter, a program specialist in OSI’s Addiction and Health Equity program […]