The Hidden Economy: Power, Precarity, and Possibility

Breakout Session

Room: Reception Room
Session Length: 75 minutes

Baltimore’s neighborhood economies are sustained by more than formal businesses alone. Across the city, informal entrepreneurs, community-based sellers, makers, service providers, and small operators often fill critical gaps while navigating systems that were not designed with them in mind.

This session explores the hidden economy as a real and necessary part of neighborhood life. Participants will examine why people operate informally, what barriers make formalization difficult, and what kinds of support can help entrepreneurs grow without losing the flexibility and trust that make their work possible.

Featured Speakers

Ashiah Parker

Executive Director, No Boundaries Coalition

Will Holman

Executive Director, Open Works

Donte Hayes

Founder & CEO, Another Man’s Trash

What to Expect

Welcome & Framing

The session will begin with a welcome and framing conversation on why Baltimore’s hidden economy matters to neighborhood stability, opportunity, and survival.

Storytelling Conversation

Participants will hear from community voices and practitioners through a storytelling-style conversation focused on informal entrepreneurship, visibility, support, and systems gaps.

Gallery Walk & Interactive Installation

Participants will engage in an interactive gallery walk centered around the prompt: “What hidden business keeps your neighborhood going?”

Attendees will contribute reflections and responses through sticky notes and shared community observations, helping surface the often unseen businesses, people, and systems that quietly sustain Baltimore neighborhoods.

Closing Reflection

The session will close by inviting participants to think more honestly about what it means to support entrepreneurs who are already creating value in their neighborhoods, even when their work does not always fit traditional business structures.