Winds of March in the Black Butterfly
The winds of March sweep through Broadway East, stirring up more than seasonal change β they expose the ongoing struggle for justice, transparency, and environmental safety in the Black Butterfly.
A towering structure at Chester & Oliver, dubbed the “Dragon Buildingβ ,Β casts a long shadow over legacy residents. Funded by public tax dollars and praised by Southern Baptist Church leadership, this development raises urgent questions:
- ποΈ Who truly benefits from this project?
- π΅ How will residents’ benefits from the use of public tax dollars?
- π Why are community complaints met with silence?
- π£οΈ Who is the voice for this “Dragon Building”?
- βοΈ Is there a conflict of interest in leadership and funding?
Listed below are Maryland-registered organizations potentially connected to the development:
- Mary Harvin Limited Partnership
π Formation: 08/31/2022
π€ Resident Agent: Zublin Culver
π 206 Del Rhodes Suites 202, Queenstown, MD 21658
2.Β Mary Harvin Transformational Center Southern Streams LLC
π
Formation: 01/10/2020
π€ Resident Agent: Emerson Dorsey Jr.
π One Pratt Street, Suite 901, Baltimore, MD 21202
π’ Principal Office: 1701 N Chester Street
3. Mary Harvin Center GP, LLC π
Formation: 09/24/2014
π Business Type: FOREIGN LLC (Ohio)
π€ Resident Agent: Zebulin Culver
π Suite 202, 206 Rhodes Avenue, Queenstown, MD 21658
π’ Principal Office: 500 Front Street, 10th Floor, Columbus, OH 43215
4. Mary Harvin Transformational Center Community Development Corporation
π
Formation: 02/28/2007
π€ Resident Agent: Donte Hickman
π 1701 N Chester Street, Baltimore, MD 21213
β Just a Coffee Question from the Black Butterfly
How will residents benefit from the use of public tax dollars when their voices remain unheard?

