Ex Officio Mayor Bernard C. โ€œJackโ€ Young speaks at a press conference on April 2. Photo by Ethan McLeod.
Ex Officio Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young speaks at a press conference on April 2. Photo by Ethan McLeod.

Four weeks into his tenure as ex officio mayor of Baltimore, Bernard C. โ€œJackโ€ Young has steadfastly refused to join a chorus of calls for Catherine Pugh to resign following her โ€œHealthy Hollyโ€ scandal resulting from Pugh selling of hundreds of thousands of childrenโ€™s books to politically connected businesses, nonprofits and others.

But today on the air during โ€œMiddayโ€ with Tom Hall on WYPR-FM, Young let slip that heโ€™d really prefer she just step down as she simultaneously recovers from pneumonia.

Shortly before the 30-minute mark, Hall asked Young if Pugh could conceivably come back to City Hall amid the fallout from her scandal.

โ€œThereโ€™s nothing to preclude her from returning back to work,โ€ Young replied, stating a fact.

โ€œWhat would that look like if she were to return back to work?โ€ Hall continued.

โ€œI really donโ€™t know,โ€ Young responded with a laugh. โ€œI would hate to see it.โ€

Young stopped short of calling for Pugh, 69, to step down, noting, โ€œthatโ€™s self-serving for me to even mention that. Iโ€™m wishing the mayor well, and hope that she has a speedy recovery and gives us some kind of idea if sheโ€™s coming or if sheโ€™s not coming back.โ€

Youngโ€™s words were the furthest heโ€™s gone publicly in pushing for Pughโ€™s resignation. All 14 members of the Baltimore City Council wrote to Pugh on April 8 requesting that she step down โ€œeffective immediately.โ€ The cityโ€™s House delegation, 16 lawmakers in all, added to the call one day later with a similar message. And three days thereafter, the Greater Baltimore Committeeโ€™s board of directors, comprised of 64 local power players in business, religious and other organizations (some of them Pugh allies), issued a similar unanimous call.

Pugh has defied them, however, saying through a spokesman that she plans to return once sheโ€™s completed her recovery. She was hospitalized in late March with pneumonia, and for the last month her camp has said she is still recovering.

โ€œI havenโ€™t spoken to her, I think, in almost two and a half weeks,โ€ Young told Hall today.

โ€œI have no idea other than what I read in the paperโ€“that sheโ€™s still battling pneumonia, and sheโ€™s trying to get her health in order. Thatโ€™s all I know.โ€

Amid her paid leave, Young has suspended six Pugh staffers (also with pay), declining to say why other than that itโ€™s a personnel matter.

Baltimoreโ€™s Ethics Board and Office of the Inspector General have launched investigations into her conduct as a member of the Board of Estimates, which approves spending decisions for the city every week. The Office of the State Prosecutor is also investigating Pughโ€™s book deals, worth close to $800,000 in total, at Gov. Larry Hoganโ€™s behest.

Reporters have uncovered that Pugh sold copies of her โ€œHealthy Hollyโ€ books to companies and organizations for whom she later voted to approve city contracts, including Kaiser Permanente, the cityโ€™s main municipal health insurer, and Associated Black Charities, which received more than $1 million to steward the Youth Fund initiative.

Since Pugh canโ€™t be removed from office under state law unless convicted of a crime and fired by the governor, council members now sit waiting idly for her to make a move. โ€œThere is no other avenue right now,โ€ Councilman Brandon Scott (2nd District) told Baltimore Fishbowl April 9.

Council members have said theyโ€™re working on legislation to change that policy, but it would take awhile. Members would first need to pass a bill to amend the city charter to allow for the removal of a mayor from officeโ€”and thereafter, voters would still need to approve that change in a ballot referendum that, at the earliest, would come during the November 2020 election.

Pughโ€™s team did not respond to an email Monday asking for a timetable of when she plans to return.

Today, Hall asked Young how it would work if Pugh did in fact did do just that, or if he thinks she might resign.

โ€œI have no idea,โ€ Young said before referencing the wave of calls for her to step down. โ€œBut itโ€™s her personal decision. And because thereโ€™s no mechanismโ€”Iโ€™ll keep repeating thatโ€”to remove a mayor, it could be indefinite.โ€

Ethan McLeod is a freelance reporter in Baltimore. He previously worked as an editor for the Baltimore Business Journal and Baltimore Fishbowl. His work has appeared in Bloomberg CityLab, Next City and...