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Friend,
I love Thanksgiving around Ward 6. I've joined
neighbors in Southwest to hand out turkeys, watched as our small and
local businesses gear up for the holidays, and enjoyed seeing every
neighborhood in the Ward find ways to come together to help each other
out and enjoy what makes this a special place to call home. And before
we all dive into the kitchen to start preparing the big meal (or
hitting the road to do so), I thought I'd send out a short newsletter
update. The Council is quickly approaching the end of this council
period, so the final month is going to be very busy legislatively. And there's
plenty happening in the ward, so lots of updates below.
Before we jump in, I've been
getting a lot of questions this week about trash and recycling
collection around the Thanksgiving holiday. DPW has shared that if
your regular trash or recycling day is Thursday (11/24) or Friday
(11/25), the collection will slide to this Saturday (11/26). So keep
an eye on crews making the rounds on Saturday, and don't set your cans
out or let them overflow on Thursday or Friday. Okay, with that, let's
jump in.
Quick Links: Shop Local | Capitol
Hill Tree Lighting | 2022 Brickie Awards |
Public Safety Update | New Climate-Focused Bills | Leaf Collection Delays | DPW Zero Waste | Community Office Hours | Free Weatherization Tools | Safeway Feast of Sharing | Color the Curb Applications | My School DC Lottery | Constituent Services
Spotlight
Shop Local This Saturday and Support DC Businesses
As your inbox starts getting stuffed with Black Friday deals before
you've had a chance to finish your first serving of turkey and
stuffing, don't forget about our local businesses on Small Business
Saturday. I'll be touring around Ward 6 this afternoon to highlight
some of the great businesses in our ward that deserve your time and
dollars this weekend, and sharing details of my stops on Instagram.
Lots of our local businesses have great deals going to help you find a
good deal and the perfect gift, all from your neighborhood spot that
hires local and gives back right here where you live. It's a
win-win!
Related: Check out the $5 gift card promo for
shopping small on Saturday from our friends at Eastern Market Main
Street!
Holiday Tree Lighting on Capitol Hill
And after you've shopped until you've dropped at all our great
local businesses, join me and the Capitol Hill BID at Eastern Market
Metro Park this Saturday, November 26 at 5:30 pm as we turn on the
lights for our 20-foot holiday tree and officially kick-off the
holiday season. All
the details are here.
The Brickies Awards Are On Dec 7. But Nominate a
Neighbor Today.
The
Brickies are back! After a two-year run as a virtual-only event, I’m
excited that the 16th
Annual Ward 6 Brickie Awards will be back *in person* for the first
time since 2019. If you haven’t been before, this is Ward 6’s annual
get-together, with free food and drink from some of our favorite local
restaurants and businesses. And we take time to give some neighbors
literal bricks as a way of saying thanks for their contributions to
what makes the Ward 6 such a great place. Join me to celebrate the
Ward 6 neighbors, organizations, groups, and businesses that go above
and beyond to make Ward 6 a great place to call home. We'll be
awarding Brickies in the following categories: Neighbor Award,
Community Organization Award, Business Award, Civic Pride Award, and
Public Service Award. Make sure to submit your nominations and RSVP if you haven't already! I'm thrilled we'll be
able to safely get back together in person to celebrate our Ward 6
community and neighbors. Hope to see you there.
Public Safety Update
In the past two weeks, I’ve met with several different groups
of neighbors around the Ward and brought together community leaders,
MPD, and others as we work to find public safety solutions for each
specific neighborhood. Everyone has the same goal and concern:
responding to public safety concerns and making our neighborhood safer
for everyone. Each meeting can be different. Sometimes it is helpful
to have MPD take time to walk through recent incidents, as well as
their progress in an investigation and outline adjustments to
recognize patterns. Other times, we have other agencies or community
groups outline their efforts to respond to the community. But all of
it is geared to focus on improving safety for everyone.
One update I’m happy to report is that MPD has agreed to my
request and committed to installing a camera at
15th and Independence Ave SE, something
neighbors have been asking for after a series of dangerous
incidents.
I’m also glad to share MPD successfully made arrests in a few
open carjacking cases, including one on the 200
block of A Street, NE, a carjacking earlier this
month at 13th
and I St, NE, and unauthorized
use of vehicles (the charge for driving a car you
don’t own) across the Ward.
It takes a both / and approach to making long-term
gains in public safety. We need accountability even as we make
investments to reach people who are most at-risk. These aren't things
that take effect years down the road, but they are urgent and focused
immediate steps. When harm happens, we need to make sure folks face
swift and certain consequences. But we also need to be reaching the
next kid at-risk right now. As Chair of the Committee on the Judiciary
and Public Safety, this has been my approach and one I’m seeing the
executive branch embrace in a serious way more
recently.
Related: Building Blocks DC Grant Cycle Now
Open: The grant cycle is now open from Building
Blocks DC to apply for funding. If you are a community-based
organization, and your work helps reduce gun violence and increase
public safety, this funding is meant for you. These are $5,000 grants
aimed at the many groups already doing important work on the ground to
help reach young people, and intervene in neighborhood disputes.
Apply
today.
Two Bills Looking to An Affordable and Electric Future, For
Everyone
Last week I introduced two bills aimed at ensuring DC is ready for
the coming transition to a more electric, and greener, future. And
both bills are focused on ensuring these benefits reach households of
all income levels, not just those who can afford solar panels and a
new electric vehicle right now.
First, I introduced the Healthy
Housing and Electrification Amendment Act will help low- and
moderate-income households make the switch from gas stoves and heating
to electric, cleaning up the toxins in the air inside many DC homes
right now and helping the District as a whole transition off of fossil
fuels in the home. For households earning somewhere around 80% or less
of the area median income, this transition would be free because the
bill lines up with federal incentives to help in the Inflation
Reduction Act passed earlier this year. It also includes a fee for
permitting to install new gas appliances. I've laid out an ambitious
target to reach 30,000 homes. DCist
has a great story on the bill's goals.
Second, I introduced the Comprehensive
Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Access, Readiness, and Sustainability
Amendment Act to require the District to install at least 7,500
charging outlets for electric vehicles by 2030. As we make the
transition away from gas-powered vehicles, the District needs to not
just be ready. My bill lays out a road map (some pun intended) to make
sure these public charging stations are installed across the District
for drivers in every neighborhood and at times that make sense -- like
whenever we're already doing major streetscape projects. This
bill would get DC’s EV infrastructure on the way to a time when people
can trust they will find a charging station just as easily as they
could a gas station. That’s how ambitious we need to be right
now.
Leaf Collection Delays
I expressed my skepticism in previous newsletters about DPW
leaf collection being on schedule, and with good reason – they're
already behind schedule this year. DPW has a map
where they are reporting out the blocks they've
completed, and I've found it so far to be more or
less accurate.
The frustration over this is completely understandable, I
don’t think DPW should be sending out schedules they cannot stick to.
Based on what I’ve seen, I'd estimate they're about a week or two
behind schedule to get to your blocks from what they had initially
indicated. I will share updates as I get them, but
please feel free to reach out to me or my team with questions or
concerns in the meantime, and be sure to check the map to see if
they've reported already being on your block.
DPW Zero Waste Public Input
Period
DPW is accepting public comments for a final time until
December 30 in response to the Zero Waste DC Plan’s
draft
framework. The draft was influenced by the over 500
public comments received during the fall public comment period and 18
engagement sessions. Don’t miss your chance to view and provide
comments on proposed actions before the final Zero Waste DC Plan is
released in Spring 2023. This plan outline the actions that the city
must take to achieve Zero Waste at all levels, from education and
outreach, incentivizing waste reduction, reuse, and recycling, to
rethinking the built-environment to provide more equitable access and
increase waste diversion potential. It will impact individuals,
household, businesses, and neighborhoods - make sure to provide your
input before December 30!
Community Office Hours at Red Bear
Thanks to everyone who joined me at Radici last Friday for
community office hours. If you weren’t able to make it, we’ll be
holding another one at Red Bear Brewing in NoMa on
Friday December 2 from
4-5:30pm. This is time we set aside regularly
and around various community site to help make sure Ward 6
constituents can connect with me on whatever they want. There’s no
agenda or set schedule. You
can RSVP on my website. Hope to see you
there!
Get Free Winter Weatherization Tools
Just another reminder about an item in my last newsletter –
you can receive free winter weatherization tools from the DC Public
Service Commission at eight public libraries on select days, while
supplies last. Check
here for dates and
locations.
Safeway's Thanksgiving Feast of Sharing is
Tomorrow
For anyone, especially our seniors, who could use a good
Thanksgiving meal and some fellowship, a reminder that tomorrow,
Wednesday November 23 is Safeway’s Thanksgiving Feast of Sharing at
the Convention Center. The event in partnership with Events DC is back
in person for the first time since the start of the pandemic. Instead
of the usual sit-down dinner, this years’ feast will be a grab-and-go
meal box with a Thanksgiving lunch, as well as a gift bag of winter
clothes and other items. There will also be live music, special
guests, and a COVID and flu vaccine clinic. Doors open at 10am for
seniors and 11am for general admission.
Calling District Artists – Apply for the Chance to Paint
An Intersection!
The Color the Curb program is a project from DDOT, the DC
Commission on the Arts and Humanities, and DCPS. It supports artists
to design a work of art at select intersections located near public
elementary schools where curb extensions have been installed to
improve safety near the selected schools. The works of art elevates
the importance of road and pedestrian safety by highlighting the
extended curbs with colorful works of art by local artists. Ward 6’s
Miner Elementary has been chosen as a location this year. If you’re an
artist interested in painting a work of art near Miner, learn
more and apply here! The deadline for applications is
Friday December 2.
My School DC Lottery Applications Open Next Month
The application period for the My
School DC Lottery begins on December 12. The
application is to enter a lottery in order to attend certain DC Public
Schools and public charters. All participating schools accept only the
My
School DC application and each student can apply to
up to 12 schools. This resource is helpful for parents in
the run-up to what can feel a little stressful for parents. So if
you're gearing up for your application, use these tools to help be
informed on the entire process.
Constituent Services Spotlight: DC Water Work on A
Street NE Between 5th and 6th Streets Ticket Issue
Resolved
I want to shout out my constituent services team for their work
helping our Ward 6 residents resolve an issue related to improper
ticketing because of a DC Water project. Residents parked on A Street
NE between 5th and 6th Streets received $50 parking tickets
immediately following “Emergency No-Parking” signs going up on these
blocks.
In conjunction with DC Water, we were able to determine that the
issue was that a DPW Parking Officer had not requested verification of
the signs, which would have indicated they went into effect after the
72-hour activation window, but began enforcing them immediately after
the signs went up. All tickets issued have since been voided and the
residents affected were contact by DC Water. Thanks to my team for
helping get this issue resolved! Each month, my team fields more than
a hundred requests for assistance. If you have an issue or concern my
team can help with, please
contact the constituent services team member for your
neighborhood.
That's all from me today - I'll keep it short so you can get to
your turkey, stuffing, and pie preparations. I hope you have a restful
and safe Thanksgiving holiday and have a chance to support our local
District and Ward 6 businesses this weekend! Stay tuned for more Ward
6 holiday fun as we head into December.
See you around the neighborhood,
Charles Allen
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