The City of Baltimore processed 462 property deed applications during the first week of the manual workaround put in place to move property transactions forward amid the city's computer system outage, according to a statement released by the Baltimore City Mayor's Office. 

Staff at the Abel Wolman Municipal Building processed 42 applications on Monday, 90 on Tuesday, 142 on Wednesday and 188 on Thursday. 

According to the statement, the city typically processes between 150 and 175 applications on a typical workday. 

This workaround allows the city to issue manual lien certificates given that the applicant signs an affidavit and promise to pay all liens once the computer systems are restored. 

Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young announced the workaround recently to help move property transactions forward that were delayed by the RobinHood ransomware attack that crippled the city's computer systems. 

The cyber attack affected staff email accounts, phone systems and the online billing data necessary to pay bills and process real property transactions. 

Friday is the last day of extended hours at the Abel Wolman Municipal Building on 200 North Holliday Street to process transactions through this workaround. 

Next week, the building will return to regular hours of operations.