Less than one year before the bridge incident, the Democratic governor of Maryland appointed a DEI consultant to the state’s Port Commission
Maryland’s Governor Wes Moore appointed a DEI consultant to the Port Commission shortly before a container ship collision at Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge. The East Coast’s supply chain now faces uncertainties, requiring swift engineering solutions. The consultant, Karenthia Barber, aims to enhance inclusivity and maximize the port’s impact. The Commission, overseen by appointed members, seeks to bolster the Port of Baltimore’s global competitiveness.
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) put a diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) consultant on the Maryland Port Commission just months before a container ship crashed into Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge. The supply chain on the East Coast and beyond now hangs in the balance as authorities will have to swiftly undertake complex feats of engineering to reopen the port and, eventually, the bridge.
Moore named Karenthia Barber to the Commission last August. The headline of the press release announcing the hire hailed her as the “first black woman to serve as Maryland Port Commissioner.” Her Ports Commission bio says she is “the Founder and CEO of Professional Development Associates, LLC. [sic] a consulting practice that provides leadership and workforce training, coaching, and diversity, equity and inclusion audits and consulting,” and a volunteer for the Maryland Democratic Party.
According to an interview with Barber posted to the port website this January, part of her job was to bring her DEI expertise to the commission.
“In the words of our Governor, I want to make sure the MPA is leaving no one behind — that we are broadening our impact, our revenue, but also expanding the net of inclusion,” Barber said.
Barber did not return a request for comment from The Daily Wire on her qualifications. The Port Commission website says it “establishes policies directed toward improving the competitive position of the Port of Baltimore within the international maritime industry. Commission meetings are held once a month and include a session open to the public. Members of the MPC are appointed by the governor.” Its March 7 meeting included a “Safety Program Annual Report.”
The three current commissioners who were appointed by past Republican governors have expertise in managing major transportation hubs or maritime ventures. They are Edward McDonald, who served as chief of staff for the Maryland Department of Transportation; David Richardson, the former chief of staff at the Maryland Aviation Administration; and Brenda Dandy, who co-founded a marine business.
Moore — the state’s first black governor — appointed Barber and two other commissioners: Sandy Roberts, an attorney who has practiced civil rights and international transactions law and operates an airport concessionaire business; and Scott Webb, a member of the International Longshoremen’s Association labor union who worked on the water.
After a cargo ship collided with a pier on the Scott Key Bridge on Tuesday, leading to the massive bridge’s collapse, supply chains across America hang in the balance as authorities manage a cleanup of the Baltimore port that includes removing the wreckage of the bridge so that cruise chips and cargo freighters can pas through, determining how the catastrophe might have been prevented; and constructing a new bridge.
Barber’s website KBMotivator.com positions her as a professional motivational speaker, and pictures her hobnobbing with various Democrat politicians. It says Barber is “recognized as an engaging, inspiring and educational world class speaker” and hails her as a public speaker.
“Ms. Barber provides keynotes on a range of topics including: Leadership; Diversity, Inclusion and Equity; Generations At Work, and Communications,” it says.
Her bio said she served as chair of the Board of Trustees of Maryland Automobile Insurance, and the website said she had done “workshops and training sessions” for clients that included the U.S. Navy.
Her father was also a member of the longshoreman’s union. But there was little evidence of substantive maritime experience by Barber; the website said the goal of consulting at various agencies she worked was to “drive invention, inspiration, and innovation.”
Her biography brags that “the Baltimore native is a life member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. and the Baltimore (MD) chapter The Links, Inc., a national service organization of prominent Black women.” It also states that Barber is a recipient of “the Living Legend Award from the National Association of Negro Business and Professional Women’s Clubs.”
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