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Friend –
It's nearly time for the holidays!
No matter how you celebrate, I hope that means a little downtime for
you. Here at the Wilson Building, we wrapped up Council Period 25 on
Tuesday. The Council operates in two-year legislative sessions,
meaning any legislation not passed by the Council will need to be
re-introduced in 2025. If you have a bill you care about that didn't
advance, don't worry – plenty of legislation gets picked up again.
It's also been announced that I've been asked to continue chairing the
Council's Committee on Transportation and the Environment for the next
term.
At our final Legislative Meeting on Tuesday, we took time to honor Ward 7 Councilmember and former Mayor Vince
Gray, who has had an incredible career in public service as an
agency head, Ward 7 Councilmember, Chair of the Council, and Mayor.
Councilmember Gray has stepped back from public service, and for the
first time in many years, will not hold elected office. We sat next to
each other on the dais and I've known him for more than 20 years. It
has been an honor to serve with him across many different issues,
ranging from improving healthcare facilities east of the river to
supporting our childcare industry (more on that below) to partnering
on many public safety initiatives. He will be missed, and I wish him
all the best in his retirement.
QUICK LINKS: Rumsey Modernization |
Public Safety Updates | Plazas
in the Future | Market Goes Year-Round | Fake Tags | Regulating
Delivery Services | Supporting Our Childcare
Industry | Keeping Out Flavored Tobacco |
A New Stop Sign | Sidewalk
Improvements | Site Visit with DOB | J.O. Wilson Leads the Way | Filing ABCA Complaints | Southwest Survey | Councilmember
Trayon White | Holiday Hours
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First Meeting for Rumsey Pool
Redevelopment
Thursday night, we kicked off the first community planning meeting
for the reconstruction of the Rumsey Pool on Capitol Hill. I've worked
hard to secure $37M in the city budget to rebuild this crucial
facility for our community. The building is on its last legs and is
getting harder and harder to maintain in between forced closures. The
funding will allow us to completely rebuild and reimagine this vital
space. When I asked neighbors to join me in the community process,
they did not disappoint! More than 150 people attended the first
meeting!
I've met with representatives from DC Wave, the Water Wizards, lap
swimmers, neighbors, water aerobic classes, and more. Far and away,
the No. 1 thing people want to see more of in the new pool is more
lanes and more water. With more lanes, we will also reduce conflicts
and competition for the many uses of the pool – swim team practices,
laps swimming, water aerobics and bikes, swim lessons, free play, and
more. We also heard great feedback about the need for better and
different locker rooms and changing rooms, how the pool could once
again host swim meets, how this project could help improve and
activate the dead spaces in the alley and on C Street, whether a
zero-entry area would be good for kids and seniors, and much, much
more.
Next steps: Around February, DPR and the design team will launch a
community survey to gather more feedback. That will be followed by
another community meeting in the spring to share initial designs for
feedback. There will be several more meetings to review and finalize
designs over the summer, with the goal to have construction kick off
around this time next year.
This is a major project that I think is generational in scope. It's
in the heart of Capitol Hill, nestled right next to the historic
Eastern Market, and has a lot of history itself. I'm excited to work
with you all on this project to make it the very best and something we
will be very excited about.
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Public Safety Updates
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Barricade Resolution in Navy Yard: MPD safely
resolved a barricade situation inside an apartment complex in the 1100
block of First Street SE on Thursday, Dec. 12. Four suspects were
arrested and charged with armed burglary and kidnapping after holding
an occupant against their will. Seven weapons and illegal drugs were
recovered from inside the unit, leading to additional charges against
the apartment’s occupant.
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Suspect Sought in Southwest Shooting: MPD is
investigating a shooting that happened the morning of Saturday, Dec.
14, on the 1100 block of 4th Street SW. Anyone with information should
call 911 with Incident No. 120240647126.
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Arrest Made in NE Armed Robbery: Just after noon on
Sunday, Dec. 15, First District officers responded to the unit block
of H Street NE for the report of a robbery. Shortly afterward, MPD arrested and charged a 16-year-old male with
armed robbery.
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Illegal Pot Shop Closed Down Next to Legal Medicinal
Shop: ABCA announced
the closure of two more illegal pot shops. The reason I'm noting this
one here is because of what MPD and ABCA found at one of them: pounds
of cocaine, meth, and firearms. As I emphasize every time I highlight
one of these closures, these illegal shops are totally unregulated in
the product they are selling, the cannabis sold or gifted is often
laced with dangerous drugs, and many closures have firearms found
alongside them. These closures are happening now because of
legislative action I led the Council on earlier this year. We need to
get to a place where we have well-regulated, good businesses that
aren't competing with illegal shops.
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New Chief Judge Raises Alarm on
Judge Shortage: Last Friday, I attended the investiture of new Chief Judge Milton
Lee, who is now tasked with leading the DC Superior Court, which
handles local criminal and civil cases in DC. I've known Chief Judge
Lee for a number of years and was honored to join him for this
important ceremony. The role of the Chief Judge is a significant one,
as the smooth operation of the DC Superior Court plays a critical role
in holding people accountable who cause harm, as well as delivering
fair and timely justice for defendants awaiting their day in court.
They also process everything in the civil system from evictions to
probate to divorces to child custody, so having strong leadership is
incredibly important for keeping our city going day to day. And I'd be
remiss without noting DC's Superior Court continues to have a large number of vacancies because they have not
been confirmed by the Senate. This impacts every DC resident, delays
justice in our city, and hurts public safety efforts. Vacancies at the
Court mean every judge and function of the court has to do more work
with fewer hands to help.
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Council Passes My Bill to Create Three New
Pedestrian Plazas, Help Seniors Park at Home
This week, the Council
unanimously approved my legislation to create three new plazas that
will modernize and expand how public spaces support active
communities, civic life, and small businesses. Some of the most
memorable destinations worldwide are plazas where people can gather
easily and safely without car traffic competing for that space. We’ve
lost some of that over time, and I want us to reclaim it. This bill
will identify three areas where opening a street to people and closing
a street to traffic will bring people together, allow businesses to
open their doors and put out tables, and create space to enhance civic
life.
The bill was an omnibus bill with several other
elements:
- Making it
easier to hold a block party on your street (we know Ward 6 loves a
block party!);
- Covering
the cost of installing a parking pad on the property of a senior
homeowner as part of the Safe at Home program I created to help
seniors age in place; and
- Requiring that when DDOT evaluates a
street's performance, it looks at all road users on the street, not
just traffic.
Read more about the PLAZA Act and these other
provisions.
ICYMI: Watch my
video recapping Tuesday's meeting.
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H Street Farmers Market Celebrates 20
Years, Now Open Year-Round
Speaking of spaces that are closed to
cars and welcoming to pedestrians, on Saturday, I was glad to stop by
the H Street Farmers Market to help celebrate
20 years of this H Street destination, which is now going to run
year-round (I grabbed my weekly produce while I was there)! Whether
it's there, Eastern Market, Southwest, or Mount Vernon Triangle, we
know that farmers markets don't just connect us to fresh food – it's
where we gather and feel welcome. Congrats to those who make the
market special every weekend and create a place we all look forward to
visiting as part of our weekend.
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Council Strengthens Laws on Fake
License Plates
A key part of getting people to drive more safely is ensuring
accountability. It's far too common right now to see a car drive
dangerously that has a fake license plate, expired temporary tags, or
has otherwise obscured the ability of the city to track down the
driver of the vehicle. These are clear efforts to get away with
driving recklessly, and it’s, frankly, a hole in our efforts to get
people to drive slower and follow the rules of the road. This bill, which now heads to the Mayor’s desk for her
signature, takes the same approach as my STEER Act in prioritizing ways to immobilize and
tow vehicles that are breaking the law. It also includes a point
system for safety-related parking violations and vehicles with expired
tags. The goal here is not to take away people’s cars. It’s to get
people to recognize we all benefit when people drive safely and follow
the law. That requires accountability. I’m glad to see this
legislation from Councilmember Brianne Nadeau move forward.
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Delivery Service Use Has Skyrocketed.
New Law Brings Standards to Protect DC Residents.
At our final Legislative Meeting, the Council passed an expansive
bill that brings greater regulation and enforcement to food delivery
services, which you might have noticed have skyrocketed in usage,
particularly with a major increase in the number of moped drivers. I
like getting my food delivered quickly and hot as much as anyone else,
but we need to ensure there are safety standards. This bill gives the
Department of For-Hire Vehicles greater authority to respond to the
changing marketplace and ensure the industry benefits the workers and
the customers.
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Three Years Ago, DC Made a Modest
Increase on Taxes for Highest-Income Earners to Save Our Childcare
Industry. It's Working.
DC is standing out across the nation for a very good reason: We're
stabilizing our childcare industry and making sure our childcare
professionals can earn a living wage doing so. Ask any parent:
Childcare is outrageously expensive. It's probably the second-highest
monthly expense, right after a mortgage or rent. And yet, childcare
worker wages aren't nearly enough to be a true living wage. That
disparity is almost entirely related to the necessary ratio of
teachers to infants and toddlers. People need to earn a living wage,
but for safety reasons, you can't scale up too high the number of
children being cared for. That gap between cost and salary was
threatening to undermine our entire childcare industry, and for the
majority Black and Brown women who do the work, it was undermining
their ability to stay in their chosen profession. And I'll just state
the obvious: We want to attract the very best workers to our childcare
facilities here in DC. We're talking about the folks who take care of
our youngest children and who get them started on their path to
adulthood.
As part of the debate on the 2021 budget, I led the Council to pass
a discrete and focused package that asked individuals (not combined
family income) earning more than $250,000 to pay a small amount more,
and in doing so, we put funding into the Council's landmark Birth to
Three legislation to stabilize and protect our childcare industry. I
write all of this to say that the steps we took are working. NPR
has a great feature piece looking at how my amendment is impacting
people and the industry more broadly. For those whose taxes were
raised, thank you for chipping in a little more. I don't take it for
granted nor did I suggest this path forward lightly. I hope we can all
see the impact this decision has had.
But there are also warning signs that we may have to fight for
these gains again. Last spring, the Mayor's proposed budget slashed
pay for childcare workers before the Council was able to restore it.
This week, Washington City Paper reported that the
Mayor is planning to eliminate these pay increases for childcare
workers and destabilize our childcare centers again. I hope this isn't
correct and that the Mayor changes her mind – but if not, I'm ready to
fight again for working families.
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You Can't Do That: Flavored Tobacco Company Hit
with Steep Fine
Last week, Attorney General Brian
L. Schwalb announced that the makers of Zyn nicotine pouches
will pay $1.2 million to resolve allegations the company facilitated
the sale of tens of thousands of flavored products in DC, violating
the District’s 2022 ban on flavored tobacco and nicotine
products.
In 2021, I was proud to co-introduce the bill that would create this ban, and as the
Chair of the Council's Judiciary Committee, I shepherded it through
the Council despite lobbying by Big Tobacco. We knew then that
flavored tobacco products were hooking a new generation onto smoking,
and it was leading to major health inequities. The companies didn't
seem to care then, and they certainly don't now without enforcement,
so I'm glad to see AG Schwalb holding them accountable.
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Common-Sense Safety Improvements
Coming to 5th and Independence SE
For years, neighbors and I have known the crossroads of 5th Street
and Independence Avenue SE to be dangerous, with numerous traffic
collisions at the two-way stop intersection.
A few weeks ago, I sat down with DDOT Director Sharon Kershbaum and
pushed once more for this intersection to be converted into an all-way
stop with a stop sign added to the one-way Independence Avenue, and
she agreed.
DDOT says this stop sign should be installed in March, and I'm glad
this overdue safety improvement is finally happening. Thanks to
neighbors for all their advocacy!
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Lincoln Park Gets Some Much-Needed
Maintenance
Last week, the National Park Service shared that the north
playground at Lincoln Park has reopened! This followed more than two
months of the playground being closed for work (weather delays)
to replace the retaining wall, fix the gate latches, and complete
other minor repairs such as power washing the equipment and touching
up paint.
However, I've also heard from residents that the lights along the
south side of the central lawn haven't worked for weeks. I reached out
to NPS, and repairs have been made to almost all of the lights. They
are all back on except for one, which needs some additional electrical
work. Thank you to ANC 6A04 Commissioner Amber Gove for continuing to
work with my office and NPS on this issue.
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Safer Walks Ahead: Sidewalk Repairs
Underway
DDOT is tackling four big sidewalk
repair projects in Ward 6. While I know this construction can be
inconvenient, these improvements mean safer and smoother paths for
pedestrians are ahead. Work was scheduled to begin already, with all
projects planned to be complete by Friday, Jan. 3:
- I Street from South Capitol Street to Half Street, SW
- I Street from 7th Street to 3rd Street, SW
- East Capitol Street from 11th Street to 17th Street, NE
(pictured)
- Maryland Avenue from 8th Street to 10th Street, NE
Crews are contracted to work from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday. Curbside parking could be restricted: If that’s the
case, you’ll see emergency “No Parking” signs displayed.
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Taking Action on a Neglected Vacant Home on 12th
Street SE
When residents told me a vacant
property on 12th Street SE had been causing concerns, I decided to
check it out firsthand with my staff member Kimberly. We brought the
Department of Buildings to come along as well, given their key role in
assessing violations as a first step. As we approached, we could see
construction debris, and as we got closer we found the building was
unsecured and structurally unsound. It also had expired permits. DOB
is securing the property and addressing the issues. If you believe
there's a vacant property near you and are worried about its
condition, file
a complaint here.
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Big Congrats to J.O. Wilson
Elementary!
The DC Ed Fund recently honored J.O. Wilson Elementary with the School
Improvement Award at its annual Standing Ovation event! The school
community earned this award for outstanding academic growth, cutting
absenteeism, and fostering a thriving school culture. Kudos to the
students, teachers, and the entire school community for this
well-deserved recognition!
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Have a Complaint for ABCA?
Residents can file complaints about both licensed and unlicensed
alcohol and cannabis establishments with the Alcoholic Beverage and
Cannabis Administration in two simple ways:
-
Online Complaint Portal (Recommended)
This
portal is mobile-friendly, and you can attach supporting files, such
as photos. Submissions receive a tracking number for
follow-up.
- By phone at 202-442-4423
Callers can use the virtual auto
attendant, select their preferred language preference, and request a
callback instead of holding.
Find more information on ABCA's website, or email [email protected].
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Help Shape Southwest
Share your thoughts on the Southwest neighborhood in this quick,
anonymous survey. Just a few minutes of your time can help
shape the Southwest Business Improvement District's priorities for the
coming year.
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Council Determines Appropriate
Punishment for Councilmember Trayon White is Expulsion; Vote in
2025
Finally, I want to share an update on a serious action taken by the
Council on Monday, on a very serious issue. On Monday morning, the
Council held a public meeting of what's called an "ad hoc committee" –
essentially a special Council committee – to review an independent
investigative report commissioned by the Council into whether
Councilmember Trayon White violated District ethics laws and the
Council's Code of Conduct in allegedly accepting bribes in return for
contract steering. And, if so, what actions the Council should take in
response. I'm mentioning this in the newsletter because the
allegations are very serious, and I want Ward 6 residents to know my
position.
The Council’s internal process for discipline is separate from a
criminal trial, and ours isn't about determining guilt in a Court, but
rather if there’s enough evidence to show that a Councilmember
violated District law and our own Council ethics code to warrant
expulsion. And in this case, the evidence against Councilmember Trayon
White met that standard. I told The
Washington Post over the weekend that I believed the only
course of action the Council could take was expulsion – and all of my colleagues agreed when it came to a vote
this week.
Councilmember Trayon White remains in office for now and will have
the opportunity next month to present to the Council any evidence in
his defense at a hearing. A vote to expel him would take place
sometime after Jan. 28, the soonest date the Council can act. This is
a sad day for the Council and the District. An expulsion also means
the residents of Ward 8 will not have Ward-level representation on the
Council during the vacancy, although I and my at-large colleagues will
continue to step up to make sure constituent cases are addressed.
However, we can't jeopardize the public trust, and taking government
funds in exchange for using your position to contract steer couldn't
be more serious. When someone breaks the law, they must be held
accountable for their actions.
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Happy Holidays
As the year winds down, I hope you
find time to celebrate with loved ones. Our office will be closed over
the next few days, but we’ll still be checking email for urgent issues
— just allow a bit more time for responses. We’ll be ready to dive
into the new Council Period starting Jan. 2!
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The Caps Are (Surprisingly) Good This
Year! Win tickets for the New Year.
Well, you made your way through the last Ward 6 Update of 2024.
Celebrate that AND 2025 by seeing the Washington Capitals take on the
Montreal Canadiens at 7 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 10: Just respond to this
email for a chance to get tickets.
See you around the neighborhood,
Charles Allen
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Councilmember Charles Allen · 1350 Pennsylvania Ave NW,
Suite 110, Washington, DC 20004, United States This email was sent
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