Councilman Kristerfer Burnett introduced a bill Monday that will raise penalties for businesses that violate a curfew policy for minors, following a shooting last week at the Edmondson Village Shopping Center that left one Edmondson-Westside High School student dead.
A portion of city code prohibits minors under the age of 16 from being in βany public place or any establishmentβ between 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m., when they should be in school. It also establishes a nighttime curfew.
Parents or business operators, as well as their employees, can be cited and fined if they are found to βknowingly permit any minor to remain on the premisesβ during those hours. Under the current law, the offense is a misdemeanor, and if convicted, a business operator can be fined up to $500.
Parents who violate the policy for the first time can be issued a civil citation with a $50 fine, or agree to go to family counseling sessions with their child. Ensuing violations can be fined up to $500.
But that amount, Burnett said Monday, clearly βisnβt motivating businesses to follow Baltimore City law.β
Burnett hopes to change behavior, he said, by either raising the fine associated with violations or by taking other action in committee. βWhatever we can come up with to change the behavior of businesses serving young people during the school day,β he said Monday. βSomething has to change,β he added.
The bill follows a shooting outside Popeyes at the Edmondson Village Shopping Center last week, which killed a 16-year-old boy and injured four others. All five were students at Edmondson-Westside High School, which is across the street, and were on lunch break, officials said.
Officials believe two shooters opened fire on the group as they stood in front of the restaurant.
The incident raised questions about the curfew policy for surrounding businesses, and about why students left school during the day. The curfew would not have applied to the students, who were all ages 16 or older.
Burnett said that school leaders and community members have employed a myriad of efforts to keep students on campus during school hours, including the enforcement of the codified curfew.
βYouβd have a hard time finding a single shop in that business that isnβt aware of the curfew law, and I can only say this because Iβve been in every single one of them, posting signage, talking to the cashiers, talking to the management, talking to the owners, about what the current law is,β Burnett said Monday.
Most, he has previously said, were receptive to the conversations. But some turned heated: βFrom their perspective, theyβre refusing money,β he said.
Baltimore City Public Schools CEO Sonja Santelises told the Banner Wednesday that Edmondson-Westsideβs principal, Karl Perry, had also asked businesses around the school not to serve students during school hours because students tend to be less safe if they leave campus.
Edmondson-Westside has employed other measures to keep students on campus, Burnett said, like arranging for food trucks to visit the parking lot during lunch periods and hiring school monitors who keep tabs on studentsβ comings and goings.
Some businesses have been fined for failing to adhere to the code. Records reviewed by The Baltimore Banner show that on Halloween of last year, Popeyes was cited for being in violation of the daytime curfew code.
BPD gave other establishments in the shopping center a verbal warning on the same day, including Kimmyβs, Americaβs Best Wings, Royal Carryout, and Bryanβs Chicken.
Burnett said Monday that βeverybody bears some responsibilityβ for keeping young people safe, βmy office included, this body included,β he added.
βBut at the end of the day we need the business community to be partners as well,β he said. βAnd Iβm hopeful that this bill will spur conversation, will spur dialogue about how we can better work together to protect the young people here.β



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