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Friend --
The weather is (sort of) cooling
down, the kids are back in school, our local coffee shops are breaking
out the pumpkin drinks, and fall is just around the corner! Fall also
means the legislative calendar at the Council kicks into full gear,
because the current Council session ends December 31, and all bills
that are going to pass need to do so by then. So it’s going to be a
heavy legislative sprint to the end, and you’ll find the latest in the
newsletters as they happen. If you want to learn more about the
Council work coming up this fall, take a look at this roundup from DCist, which first highlights my Metro for DC bill. Of course, life in Ward 6 is also
picking up – don’t miss the H Street Festival this Saturday and Art
All Night next week at Eastern Market. So let’s jump into a long
newsletter. Feel free to use the quick links to hop around. And as
always, you can reply to this email or reach me or my team here with any
issues.
Quick Links: Public
Safety Update | H Street
Festival | Fresh Food in SW | COVID Boosters | Back to School Vaccine Deadline
| Utility Cut-Off Warning |
Deadline for Early Childhood Care
Educator Fund | H St. Bridge |
Apply to be an Election Worker | Home Purchase Assistance
Program | Small Business Grants | DPR Fall Programs | Automatic Voter
Registration Expansion | DCRA Split | Office of Migrant Services | Diverse City Fund Grants |
New Circulator Route | Phone and Broadband Discount
Program
Public Safety Update
As I do in most of my email
newsletters, I want to dedicate a significant portion to public safety
updates. Improving public safety remains a top issue in the city for
residents and for every elected leader, myself included. In recent
weeks, I’ve joined neighbors for a community safety walk on H Street,
joined ANC Commissioners and MPD for a community forum on public
safety, and have convened meetings of various public safety agency
leaders to analyze trends and outline specific steps the city is
taking to target violence. Our goal is to stop the violence from
happening in the first place, but when it does happen, I connect with
our MPD leadership and District commanders after and talk through
their plans to adjust patrols accordingly, provide updates on
investigations, and more. To that end, I want to share that in talking
with Commander Bryant, her leadership team is making several patrol
adjustments specific to target recent car-jackings. In addition, the
Regional Car-Jacking Task Force is engaged to review video and
evidence to hold suspects accountable. Everyone should feel safe in
your home and in your community, and anything less is unacceptable.
And for too many people, the District is not where it needs to be on
public safety and gun violence, in particular.
But I've also seen that when
tackling complex problems, reaching for quick and simple solutions
almost always misses the mark. Unfortunately, I’ve seen a few opinion
pieces recently that misled people on the challenges the District, the
region, and the country are facing. It's not the first time, and
likely not the last, when someone will try to hold up smart public
safety responses like the District's Youth Rehabilitation Act (YRA) as
a bogeyman to a community's legitimate fears and concerns. And in
doing so, they oversimplify real challenges a community faces, and in
this case, undermine an important law we’ve worked hard to reform in
recent years (and the young people who are succeeding with its
support) that works to actually stop them from reoffending. This column last week and this one before rightly capture the urgency to intervene
with young people, but wrongly - and without any evidence - blames the
YRA for crimes we see in the District today. In fact, it seems to
blame the old version of the law from 1985, before I led the Council
to pass major reforms in 2018 to overhaul how it works and also
importantly, build in regular evaluations to measure impact.
I want to make sure you have the
facts. Without going into too much detail on sentencing law (more here. if you really are
interested), the YRA is a
tool for young adults that creates an opportunity after a young person
has done harm, after they've been convicted of that crime, and after
they've *successfully* completed their sentence, to go back to the
court to show the judge how they succeeded and demonstrate their
rehabilitation. This then allows them to request that their criminal
record as a young person be sealed so it no longer outright bars them
from lifetime housing, financial aid, jobs, and more that can help
them be successful in society and prevent them from reoffending.
Nothing about it is automatic or easy, but it's exactly the kind of
sentencing reform that improves public safety. The evidence is
very clear that when a young person is successful at completing their
sentence and having their record sealed, they're much less likely to
reoffend and cause harm. In short, second chances quite literally save
lives in the District.
Data also shows us that while less
than 10% of all crime is committed by juveniles, we're seeing a
disturbing trend in young people both committing carjackings and being
victims of gun violence. Those trends are true not just in DC, but
across the region and in other cities around the country. But to
suggest the YRA is a cause of the current young people being arrested
for carjackings is simply not true and not backed by any data. The YRA
is a tool that judges can use on a case-by-case basis as they review
the facts of each case before them. It allows for
developmentally-appropriate sentencing that makes us all safer. And
one other important item to note: when I took over the Council's
Committee on the Judiciary and Public Safety and found that the old
version of the law had never been evaluated, I not only had a full
and independent evaluation completed, but also built into the law
that there have to be ongoing reviews every few years to see what is
working and what isn't. That's how policymaking should work, and in
this case, it has. The data from the evaluation showed that young
people reoffend much less frequently when they can move
forward.
I don’t mind criticism in the
press. It comes with being an elected official. But I do mind when
sound policies, crafted in careful consultation with many different
people with expertise at all points of the criminal justice system,
are held up as a bogeymen in place of more substantive, challenging
conversations about how to reduce violence. I wanted to take time to
speak to it here, because I know many people are feeling anxious about
safety across the District, and like me, aren't satisfied with where
things stand today. But we truly won't move the needle without being
both smart and just on safety.
Legislatively this fall, I’ll be
leading the Committee to advance a wide range of bills as we head
toward the end of the Council session in December. The first
major bill I'll move forward is a significant expansion of
services and rights provided to victims and survivors of crime
(here’s WTOP’s take on the bill when I
introduced it last year).
In fact, it was just unanimously approved this afternoon in committee
and next heads to the full Council. I talk and meet with victims and
survivors of crime regularly. And too many are shut out of the
programs and help the District could be providing. Through the city's
budget process, I've added millions of dollars to expanding victim
services, but this legislation will help fix and strengthen the supports victims need. Helping victims is an important way
to begin to heal after a traumatic event and also a critical way to
break cycles of violence.
My bill, created in close
partnership with and strongly supported by organizations serving
victims and survivors in DC, does a few things (this list is not
exhaustive):
- Expands
eligibility and smooths the process to apply for crime victim
compensation;
- Creates
an independent crime victim counselor to work with victims in the
aftermath of their experience;
- Takes
steps to make our hospital-based violence intervention programs even
more effective. You may recall DC is one of the first jurisdictions in
the nation to place violence interrupters inside emergency rooms to
intervene immediately when someone presents at the ER with a gunshot
or stab wound;
- Creates
a new crime when a stay away order is violated to ensure MPD can
intervene quickly; and
- Prohibits the execution of arrest warrants on sexual
assault victims and victims of serious violent injuries while they’re
seeking emergency medical treatment or medical forensic
care.
Finally, I want to once again share
the proposed Gun Violence Strategic Reduction
Plan, an actual plan to
reduce gun violence in the District. I can’t tell you how often I’m
talking with residents following a serious incident and folks tell me
they appreciate the quick response from MPD and others, but they want
to know the plan. I couldn’t agree more. This plan was put together
through the District’s Criminal Justice Coordinating Council, an
agency focused on coordination and data collection around public
safety. It is thoughtful, specific, and well-rounded. You've heard me
say before that the city is resource rich, but coordination poor. Just
earlier this week I was meeting with leaders of MPD and DC's Gun
Violence Prevention Director about the need for more coordination
between all those agencies to drive down gun violence and improve
public safety in our city. So what's critical is coordination; now
that we have a plan, let's implement it together.
Ward 6 Public Safety Updates
H Street Festival is Back!
Join me for one of Ward 6’s
best events of the year this Saturday! The H
Street Festival stretches 11 blocks long and puts on display some of
DC’s best music, poetry, artwork, fashion, food, and more. The
festival runs this Saturday from 12-7pm, and I hope to see you there!
Please remember that if you have non-festival plans on Saturday, be
aware that H Street NE will be closed from 3rd Street to 14th Street
beginning early in the morning and running into the evening. If you
need to travel around H Street, it’s probably best to plan to take
either North Capitol Street on the west or use Maryland Avenue to
connect to the Starburst Intersection on the east.
Working in Southwest to Bring Fresh Food to Seniors and
Families
Earlier this week, I joined
members of the Southwest BID and neighborhood leaders to pack and
distribute more than 150 bags of fresh food to homes in need. Food
insecurity impacts more than a third of DC residents - with little
access to fresh food and groceries. I was excited to lend a hand to
this effort that packs up fresh food and produce from DC Central
Kitchen each Monday and partners with neighborhood leaders across
Southwest to get the food exactly where it’s needed most. Check out my
longer
post and video on this to see how it all works and why it’s so
important!
Second Boosters and Flu Shots Now Available
Great news! The Bivalent COVID
boosters (also known as the Omicron boosters, targeting the BA.4 and
BA.5 variants) are now available at DC Health COVID Centers and pharmacies throughout the District. And
now that we’re heading into fall, flu season is also right around the
corner, so you can save time and receive both your COVID booster and
flu shot together. Here is the latest vaccine and booster guidance
from the CDC:
- People ages 6 months through 4 years
should get all COVID-19 primary series doses.
- People ages 5 years and older should get
all primary series doses, and the booster dose recommended for them by
CDC, if eligible.
- People ages 5 years to 11 years are
currently recommended to get the original (monovalent) booster.
- People ages 12 years and older are
recommended to receive one updated Pfizer or Moderna (bivalent)
booster.
- This includes people who have received
all primary series doses and people who have previously received one
or more original (monovalent) boosters.
- At this time, people aged 12 years to 17
years can only receive the updated Pfizer bivalent booster.
- People who are moderately or severely immunocompromised have
different recommendations for COVID-19 vaccines, including
boosters.
With most schools back in person
and the weather cooling off, both COVID and the flu are expected to
circulate more this fall and winter. Make sure to protect yourself and
your community and get your shots! Here are locations near Ward 6 offering the
Bivalent.
Related: DC Health
continues to operate COVID Centers in each Ward. You can receive free
masks, vaccines + boosters, and testing. The Ward 6 location is on
Barracks Row at 507 8th St., SE. Hours and other locations
here.
Deadline for School Immunizations Pushed Back
Speaking of shots, the deadline I
emphasized in my last newsletter for getting your kids their routine
pediatric immunizations (RPI) and COVID vaccines for school has been
pushed back. Originally, kids had to provide immunization records
within 20 days of school starting. The new guidance is as
follows:
- For RPIs
(excluding the COVID vaccine), pre-K to 5th graders must be vaccinated
by October 11.
- 6th-12th
graders need to be vaccinated for their RPIs (excluding COVID) by
November 4.
- All
students 12 and older must be vaccinated for COVID by January 3,
2023.
I know that every parent, guardian,
and teacher wants to see our kids in school, as we know in-person
learning is critical. Spread the word and make sure to protect your
kids and community by getting them up to date on shots. Visit
https://dcpsstrong.com/vaccines/ for more details.
Alert from OPC About Utility Disconnections
The Office of the People’s
Counsel for DC has flagged some utility disconnections that occurred
in July and August. This is due to the moratoriums on disconnections
in place because of the pandemic ending, as well as seasonal
temperature laws that prohibit disconnections when the heat index is
over 95 degrees. If you’ve received a notice of intent to disconnect
or are behind on utility bill payments, act soon to avoid any
service shutoffs. If you’re unable to
make your regular payments, contact the utility company to ask about a
payment plan and inform them of any special circumstances (like a
resident with medical equipment that needs electricity). If you’re
unable to arrange a payment plan, contact OPC at 202-727-307
before your service has been
disconnected.
Window Closing For Early Childhood Care Professionals to
Apply for Supplement Payment
I want to remind early
childhood educators to apply for the Early Childhood Educators Pay Equity
Fund, a program that can
provide up to a $14,000 supplemental payment to eligible educators!
Time is running out - the deadline to apply is next Tuesday
September 20! Feel free to reach out
to Chris Laskowski or Anthony
Thomas-Davis on my team if
you have questions.
This funding, providing a
much needed boost for our childcare professionals, was possible as
part of the Homes
and Hearts Amendment that I fought to include in last year’s
budget. It’s a transformational piece of legislation, funded by a
modest tax increase on the highest earners, that also made possible
our new, groundbreaking monthly basic income program and historic
increase in housing vouchers. Early childhood educators have the
critical job of nurturing our city's youngest residents. And they do
it because they are passionate about it, not for money. This support
will help them stay in their chosen careers and thrive in a city that
is getting increasingly expensive. Spread the word to any early
childhood educators in your community or at your family’s childcare.
H Street Bridge Environmental Approval
Good news to share for
anyone eagerly awaiting the massive modernization of Union Station.
First, we have to fix the “hopscotch” bridge on H Street so it will
meet grade for the new Union Station and align for maximizing the rail
capacity growth below it. And in order to start that project, we need
a clean environmental assessment, which was delivered this week and represents
a big milestone toward a
once-in-a-generation upgrade for Union Station. Check out the latest plans, which I think are fantastic and a major
upgrade over the shell of a station that we have today. As exciting as
this is, I’ll temper my enthusiasm on the timing, as the work isn’t
scheduled to start right away, and we’re looking at a time frame of
many, many years to see this through. But still, this is an exciting
and major milestone to cross.
Election Workers Needed for the November Election
Now that the primary has
passed, the Board of Elections is gearing up for the November General
Election and needs poll workers! Poll workers are paid, and student
poll workers (must be at least 16 years old) can earn either service
hours or payment. Learn more, and apply
here.
Home Purchase Assistance Program
Are you looking to buy your
first home in the District? The Home Purchase Assistance Program
is available to first-time
buyers in DC to provide gap financing to assist with purchasing a
home. The program will provide assistance on a down payment and
closing costs in the form of a deferred interest-free loan for
first-time District homebuyers in very low to moderate income levels.
Learn more here.
Small Business Grants Through Comcast RISE Investment
Fund
For small business owners:
Comcast RISE Investment Fund will provide 100 $10,000 grants to small
businesses in DC owned by people of color. The application window will
be open October 1-14, and more specific info and the application can
be found here.
DPR Fall Fun
The Department of Parks &
Recreation has a full slate of fall activities for kids, adults, and
seniors! Learn more and register for the many sports leagues, youth
development programs, and classes like cooking and computer skills
available this fall.
Additionally, DPR announced it will
be offering a series of Saturday field trips to kids ages 6-12. The
trips will be free, and DPR will be providing transportation, meals,
and entrance fees. There are some really fun trips lined up, and here
are the dates and destinations:
- Saturday, September 17 – Hershey Park
- Saturday, September 24 – Adventure Park USA
- Saturday, October 1 – St. James Sports Complex
You can register for the field
trips here.
Related: Although
fall is upon us, we still have some warm September days ahead. In case
you missed it, DPR will be keeping all the standalone spray parks open
until September 30 (they usually close after Labor Day). Find a spray park near you.
DC Has Great Automatic Voter Registration. Can It Be Even
Better?
This morning, I held a
hearing on a bill I introduced to expand DC’s automatic voter
registration system (which I also created in 2017). It would
improve how the system works
and include more source agencies for registering potential voters,
like the Department of Health Care Finance, which handles Medicaid
enrollment (read this recent piece highlighting the
bill). DC’s
system, as detailed in this 538
article, has already been
very successful at registering *and turning out* new voters, bringing
more people into our elections process. I'm proud that I introduced
the bill to bring AVR to DC and am always interested in how we can
improve and expand it -- as we also did last year when we added the
Department of Corrections and Department of Youth Rehabilitation
Services to the program.
DCRA’s Split Into Two New Agencies
If you’ve heard of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory
Affairs, hopefully it's because of something good! But we know the
agency has long had problems stemming from the fact that its purview
is simply too broad. In late 2020, the Council approved
splitting DCRA into two agencies, which is set to take place in just a
few weeks on October 1st. This will establish two new agencies, the
Department of Buildings (DOB) and the Department of Licensing and
Consumer Protection (DLCP) that will each take on different parts of
DCRA’s portfolio. DOB will have a focus on construction and housing,
while the DLCP will issue business and occupational licenses and
enforce consumer protection laws. You can visit https://dcratransition.dc.gov/
to learn more about the transition to these two new District
agencies.
Tuesday Vote on Creating the Office of Migrant Services
As I am sure you've heard,
the governors of Texas and Arizona have been engaging in a public
stunt to politicize a humanitarian crisis by busing migrants from the
Southwest border to DC, dropping them off with little to no guidance
and at all hours of the day and night. Our local nonprofits, mutual
aid groups, and neighbors have been volunteering their time and effort
to coordinate logistics and provide resources. Frankly, our local and
federal government response to supplement this effort hasn't matched
the work of our community and nonprofit organizations. We’re now
finally making some progress on the local level. The Mayor recently
declared a public health emergency, allowing the city to access $10
million to aid newly-arrived migrants. We'll also be voting Tuesday to
authorize the establishment of the new Office of Migrant Services to provide additional support and services.
I’ll share more as I have it.
Art All Night in Capitol Hill
Next Friday, September 23,
Eastern Market Main Street and Barracks Row Main Street are putting on
a fun event called Art All Night, showcasing visual and performing arts in
the neighborhood. Public and private spaces will become pop-up
galleries and performance venues from 4pm to midnight. Come join for
an evening of great art!
Diverse City Fund Grants
The Diverse City Fund is a
grantmaking organization focused on investing financial and social
capital in racial and social justice work. Its Fall 2022 Grant Program
is open for groups and coalitions focused on mobilization, advocacy,
organizing, healing, and liberation. Groups and organizations can
receive up to $5,000, while coalitions of 3+ organizations can receive
up to $15,000. Applications close on Friday, September
30th. Learn more and apply at the
Diverse City Fund
website.
Proposed New Circulator Route Serving Wards 6 and 7
DDOT released its DC Circulator Transit
Development Plan, which includes a proposal to add a new Circulator
Bus route from Deanwood to Union Station, which would serve both Ward
6 and 7 by traveling East Capitol Street from Deanwood, past RFK
Stadium, to 3rd Street NE, then to Union Station. DDOT is still
evaluating and accepting comments on where this line should have stops
located. I agree with ANC 6B’s recommendation that the route have a
stop located at Lincoln Park to better serve and connect the
neighborhood to this new route. As you may know, the DC Circulator
presently runs six routes, with rides costing only $1.
Phone and Broadband Discount Program for Low-Income
Residents
The Lifeline Program, under the
Federal Communications Commission and the DC Public Service
Commission, helps make phone and broadband services more affordable
for low-income residents. Eligible consumers get a discount on monthly
phone and/or broadband service that can be applied to either a wired
or wireless service (but you can't receive discounts on both at the
same time). DC’s Lifeline program is called Economy II and is offered
through Verizon. Wireline phone service for those under 65 years of
age is $3.00 per month and $1.00 per month for those over $65 and
includes unlimited calling in the DC metropolitan area. Check eligibility status and learn how to
apply here.
Alright, I'll wrap it up now.
Thanks for reading along if you've made it this far - I hope this has
been informative and interesting! And if you're looking for an after
work Friday activity today, I'll be tapping a keg at Wundergarten's
Oktoberfest kickoff at 5pm. Hope to see you there or at any of the
other great neighborhood events I highlighted above.
Have a great weekend!
Charles Allen
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