Yearly Archives: 2013

The Week Ahead….

The Week Ahead….

by Larry Janezich

Tuesday, February 12

ANC6B meets for its regular monthly meeting at 7:00pm in Hill Center. 

On the agenda: 

Zoning adjustment request for converting 200 5th Street, SE, from a dentist office and four residential units to six residential units.  This is a development by Capitol Hill resident Jeff Levine, is scheduled to go to BZA in March.  The ANC Planning and Zoning Committee has sought assurances from Levine that he will attempt to minimize the impact on parking if the expansion is approved. 

830 C Street, SE

820 C Street, SE

Historic Preservation Application for construction of a new townhouse on the empty lot at 830 C Street, SE, where the demolition by neglect was interrupted by city demolition and subsequent tax sale.  Commissioners and neighbors of the project were critical of the lack of outreach and candidness by the architects – and indirectly, the developer.  When the project came before the Planning and Zoning Committee, both commissioners and neighbors also expressed concern about the view from public space of the rear of the house and the fact that architects had no drawings showing the perspective from that view.  At that meeting, neighbors also rose to express objections to the design, construction methods, the extension of the house six feet beyond the rear of the adjacent houses, the butterfly roof, and the likelihood that construction would likely damage the historic properties on either side.  Commissioners emphasized that since the construction is being done as a matter of right, their hands were tied regarding many of the issues raised by neighbors, since their only purview was whether the proposed structure fit into the historic district.  The neighbors were aware that they would have to pursue these issues on their own and were advised by one commissioner that they might have to hire an attorney.  The Committee voted 8 – 0 to take no position pending receipt of an additional perspective from the architect and evidence of further consultation by the architect and developer with the neighbors. 

ANC6B will also consider a letter to DC Department of Energy regarding their concerns about emission limits and health issues related to the Architect of the Capitol’s request to continue operating the Capitol Power Plant at higher emission levels. 

Thursday, February 14

ANC6B Zoning Regulation Task Force meets at 6:00pm in Hill Center.

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Wrapping up the Week…. Hine, Security Cameras, New Development, Parking, Etc.

Two new town houses are slated to replace this white brick building facing Stanton Park, at 513 C Street, NE

Two new town houses are slated to replace this white brick building facing Stanton Park, at 513 C Street, NE

Wrapping up the Week…. Hine, Security Cameras, New Development, Parking, Etc.

by Larry Janezich

Hine Project to Get Underway Mid-Summer

According to word from Stanton Development, neighbors of the Hine project are likely to see the beginning of demolition activity at the Hine site mid-summer as the building is boarded up for asbestos removal prior to demolition scheduled to begin in the fall.  Still to be hammered out with neighbors are the details of the construction management agreement.  Group representatives will meet with the ANC reps and Stanton soon to begin this process.   

Security Cameras for Eastern Market Metro Plaza and Nearby Streets?

ANC6B Commissioner Ivan Frishberg has asked Tommy Wells’ office and other city officials for information on costs of high tech security cameras in order to explore the feasibility of tapping into the Performance Parking Fund for this new crime fighting technology.  MPD Chief Lanier has embraced the use of cameras as a crime fighting tool, noting that while the new technology is very helpful it is expensive.  Software associated with the technology looks for certain movement such as the gathering of crowds and fast motion.

Regulations provide that a portion of the parking fees derived from the Performance Parking Pilot be funneled back to the community for non-automotive transportation projects.  Frishberg says he thinks the cameras would contribute to a walkable neighborhood.  The funding of such projects is limited to the area in which the parking restrictions are actually in force, which would include Eastern Market Metro Plaza, the area around Eastern Market, nearby Pennsylvania Avenue.  “The idea is exploratory at this stage,” Frishberg emphasized, “saying the ANC should see what the costs and options are.” 

New Development:  Two “Elegant” Townhouses to Face Stanton Park

Plans are in the works for development of two “elegant” town hours (read $1.5 million+) for the space now occupied by the building pictured above at 513 C Street, NE, on the south side of Stanton Park. 

Architect Carmel Greer of District Design brought the concept designs before the CHRS Historic Preservation Committee last Monday, which as usual, wanted to see some tweaking.  The concept drawings will go before HPRB in March. 

Delay in Extension of the Performance Parking Pilot Restrictions North of Pennsylvania Avenue

Extension of the Performance Parking Pilot parking restrictions north of Pennsylvania Avenue to East Capitol has been delayed by a bureaucratic snafu.  City attorneys have informed ANC 6B that city regulations will have to be amended before extension of the program owing to the unusual inclusion of different parking restrictions for Saturday and Sunday in some parts of the plan.  Faced with the decision of plunging ahead with a half measure of parking under the normal Performance Parking restrictions and going back to change signage after the regulation change, or wait out the regulation change before doing anything at all, the ANC Transportation Committee elected to wait for the city to change its rules.  Additional background can be found here: https://capitolhillcorner.org/2012/09/14/anc-votes-to-expand-performance-parking-and-to-protest-ambar-liquor-license/

Disgruntled ANC6B Unhappy with Dysfuntionality of DDOT

ANC6B Commissioners plan on testifying before the City Council at the March 4th DDOT Oversight hearing.  The consensus of the ANC’s Transportation Committee was that while DDOT deserves credit for some projects such as the 17th and 19th Streets Project, the 11th Street Bridge Project, and Capitol Bike Share, the list of grievances against DDOT is a long one.  Among the items the ANC is unhappy about are problems with DDOT’s administration of public space, unilateral decisions affecting traffic control infrastructure made without public notification and input, administration of the Performance Parking Fund,  lack of attention to the Barney Circle Project, lack of follow-through on ANC requests and a general lack of responsiveness to ANC concerns.   

ANC6B  Zoning Regulations Task Force

Zoning Regulation Task Force has had three meetings and continues, according to Chair Dave Garrision, to work through the process.  The Task Force hopes to have recommendations for the ANC’s Planning and Zoining Committee to consider by the Committee’s March 5 meeting.  Garrison noted that there will be two opportunities for ANC input:  first, when the recommendations of the ANC go to the Office of Planning, second, when the Office of Planning submits the final proposal to the Planning Commission later in the spring.   The Task Force has scheduled two meetings this month on Thursday, February 14, 2013, at 6:00 pn, and Thursday, February 28, 2013, at 6:30 pn.  Both meetings will be held in Hill Center.

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ANC6B Wants AOC to Justify Higher Power Plant Emissions Request

ANC6B Wants AOC to Justify Higher Power Plant Emissions Request

Will Sierra Club File Suit on Emissions Plan?

by Larry Janezich

ANC6B seems set to ask the DC Department of Energy (DDOE) to force the Architect of the Capitol (AOC) to justify the request to set baseline emission limits for future operation of the Capitol Power Plant – including the planned two new cogeneration burners – at the higher levels experienced during the cold winter years of 2007 – 2008 rather than lower levels of more recent years.  In addition, the ANC is likely to ask DDOE to test air quality near the plant to assess impact on the local health index since DDOE doesn’t currently monitor air quality in the power plant neighborhood. 

At Tuesday night’s ANC6B Planning and Zoning Committee meeting, chaired by Francis Campbell, commissioners agreed that their purview is emission limits and health concerns.  The corollary issue of whether the plant should eliminate the use of coal – a position supported by neighbors of the plant and environmental activist groups including the Sierra Club – is evidently not within the authority of the DDOE and hence, not a question which can be considered by the ANC.  To that end, Councilmember Tommy Wells has introduced legislation to limit or end the use of coal as a fuel in DC. 

The application of the AOC for the higher limits on emissions translates – for opponents – into permission for the AOC to continue burning coal at the plant.  The AOC has indicated that this would only be in emergency circumstances, but this stipulation would not be enforceable. 

The Planning and Zoning Committee agreed by a vote of 8-0 to forward a letter to DDOE on the issue to the full ANC for consideration at the February 12 meeting.  The purpose of the letter, according to one commissioner, is to make sure the AOC doesn’t get more emission authority than it needs and to urge that emissions in the nearby neighborhood are measured and given consideration regarding the impact of the plant on the health of the neighbors and schools in close proximity to the plant. 

Approval of the letter at next Tuesday’s meeting is likely, if not assured.  While DDOE apparently cannot require the plant to eliminate the use of coal, it can require the use of a lower baseline for emissions.  One knowledgeable source familiar with the issue speculated that if the application goes forward as is, the AOC will face a Sierra Club lawsuit.  For additional background see postings on this blog on January 25 and December 18.

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When Rats Win: What Recourse Do Residents Have When Restaurants Make Bad Neighbors?

Neighbors At Odds With These Food Service Venues

Neighbors At Odds With These Food Service Venues

Rat Holes In Yard of Resident Behind Restaurant

When Rats Win:  What Recourse Do Residents Have When Restaurants Make Bad Neighbors?

City Is Unable or Unwilling to Regulate Health Concerns Effectively

by Larry Janezich

Pizza-Iole Pizza by the Slice, the B Spot and “il Capo di Capitol Hill” (the re-named Mi Vecindad) all contribute to an ongoing trash, rat, and noise issue distressing residential neighbors near 12th and Pennsylvania Avenue, SE. 

Neighbors have a long and well-documented history of efforts to resolve issues concerning properties owned by Mahmoud Abd-alla at the above location, including 14 calls to the city between October 2011 to August 2012 concerning the trash issue and six calls since March 2012 complaining about noise or late night construction work.  Neighbors have also reached out to ANC 6B and Councilmember Tommy Wells.

The city has responded by dispatching inspectors on a regular basis to address the neighbor’s concerns about food trash which contribute to an infestation of rats in nearby yards.  Baiting with poison has ameliorated but not eliminated the problem. 

But despite the strenuous efforts of residents, problems continue.  Recently the trash dumpsters that are the likely culprits for attracting rats were moved – not to mitigate the rat problem, but to place them out of view from neighbors’ windows so they could no longer take pictures of them.  In fact, the dumpsters were moved closer to residents’ homes. 

Most frustrating, according to one neighbor, is the failure to get city officials to say what the city has required the venues to do and how the city is following up to ensure compliance.  The answer to what the consequences will be for failure to comply appears to be that there are none.  Because of off and on temporary compliance, and casual monitoring by Department of Health Code Enforcement, neighbors will bring the issue to ANC6B next Tuesday. 

Capitol Hill restaurateur Henri Mendoza has leased former Pacific Café Vietnamese restaurant from Abd-allah – reportedly, a 15 year lease.  Initially opened as a Cuban restaurant, the place has recently converted to an Italian menu.  The liquor license for the establishment comes up for renewal this spring and will be on the ANC agenda in April or March, which may provide neighbors with some leverage with respect to a voluntary agreement. 

Meanwhile, the former proprietor of Pacific Café has re-emerged as a manager Pizza-Iole adjacent to the restaurant.  Above the fast food is The B Spot described on their website as “a multi-purpose Art Gallery, Juice Bar and Tea Room located in the cultural corridor of Eastern Market.”  The event space is available for catered events, and noise from that space has spilled out onto a rear deck, contributing to the neighbors’ unhappiness with the commercial strip.  As readers of local city news know, spaces that are catered do not operate under the same regulatory burden as spaces that are established bars or restaurants serving liquor.

Much of the problem seems to be unwillingness on the part of these establishments to be good neighbors – a problem that is by no means restricted to this particular strip.  Recently, neighbors brought the issue of non-compliance with a voluntary agreement by Chipotle on Barracks Row before the ANC.  Similarly, residents of 8th Street, SE, point to the differences in food trash existing among three restaurants on 7th Street opposite Eastern Market:  Tunnicliff’s being among the worst, and BoxCar and Acqua al Due among the best.  As the photos below illustrate, there is a wide disparity between what the city will tolerate and what a good restaurant-neighbor will voluntarily provide, and it is unrealistic to place the entire burden on residents to become de facto regulators, willing to cite each and every infraction, in order to bridge the gap.

Rats continue to be a problem for residents bordering the 12th and Pennsylvania Avenue strip.  Neither the ANC nor Councilmember Wells’ office has as of yet stepped in to demand, devise, or mediate a satisfactory and long-term solution.   

Alley View of Boxcar

Alley View of Boxcar

Alley View of Acqua al 2

Alley View of Acqua al 2

Alley View of Tunnicliff's

Alley View of Tunnicliff’s

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The Week Ahead….

The Week Ahead….

by Larry Janezich

February 4, Monday

CHRS Historic Preservation Committee meets at 6:30pm in Kirby House, 420 10th Street, SE.

February 5, Tuesday

ANC6B Planning and Zoning Committee meets at 7:00pm at St. Coletta of Greater Washington, 1901 Independence Avenue SE.

Agenda includes:

Variance for conversion of 200 5th Street, SE, from four residential apartments and a dental office to six residential units

New construction for the empty lot (razed by the city) at 820 C Street, SE

February 6, Wednesday

ANC6B Transportation Committee meets at 6:30pm in Hill Center, 921 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE

Agenda includes:

Discussion of DDOT’s Pennsylvania-Potomac Avenues intersection pedestrian safety study

Update on expansion of Performance Based Parking north of Pennsylvania Avenue, SE

February 7, Thursday

PSA 107 meets at 7:00pm meets downstairs at Southeast Library, 403 7th Street, SE, with Lt. Eddie Fowler

Friends of Southeast Library meets at 5:30pm downstairs at Southeast Library, 403 7th Street SE

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Tommy Wells: New Police Contract “the highest priority for me”

Tommy Wells:  New Police Contract “the highest priority for me”

by Larry Janezich

Friday afternoon, Councilmember, DC Council Public Safety Chair, and prospective mayoral candidate TommyWells told listeners of NPR’s Kojo Nnamdi program that “every day there’s not a new contract with police officers, I think it’s a day we’re less safe.” 

When asked if he is pushing for a new contract to be signed, Wells replied, “Absolutely, that’s the highest priority for me.”  Wells took over as chair of the City Council’s Judiciary and Public Safety Committee with oversight of the MPD in January. 

Wells’ comments came amid a spike in crime on Capitol Hill and a deep morale problem on a police force which has not had a raise in 7 years.  Wells did not address the question put to him by NBC Tom Sherwood as to whether the failure to sign a contract was the result of a personal dispute between Chief Lanier and Kris Baumann, Chair of the Executive Committee of the Fraternal Order of Police.  The Executive Committee is empowered to act on behalf of the police union’s Labor Committee.  Council Chair Mendelson stated on January 10 that a contract had not yet been agreed upon because “management and the FOP don’t get along.”

Wells also announced on the program that he will launch an exploratory committee and listening tour to determine whether he should run for mayor, saying that he will make a decision in mid-spring.  Tom Sherwood observed on the program that it has been obvious that Wells has been looking to run for mayor for some time.  The official kick-off of Wells’ forthcoming listening tour is Monday (tomorrow) night in Ward 8, at the Big Chair Coffee and Grill in Anacostia.  The primary purpose of the exploratory committee is to hire people to organize a campaign. 

Wells has told several sources that it is “likely” he’ll run.

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Police Negligence Charged in Shooting Aftermath on Capitol Hill: Are Morale Problems Plaguing the MPD?

Police Negligence Charged in Shooting Aftermath on Capitol Hill:  Are Morale Problems Plaguing the MPD?

by Larry Janezich

A little after 3:00 pm on December 26, 2012, suspects in a stolen vehicle riddled their targeted victim at 14th and K Streets, SE, with fifteen bullets and then fled the scene.  Moments later, the suspects turned the car into an alley on Capitol Hill and hit a standing wall.

A witness who heard the crash viewed the suspects from a distance and observed them taking flight.  The witness gave chase, but, unable to keep visual contact, did not actually encounter the four men involved until the park between Pennsylvania Avenue and D Street and 8th and 9th Street, SE. 

In the foot chase that followed, the witness observed the four going underground to the Eastern Market Metro Station.  The witness then stopped pursuit and ran to a Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) vehicle parked on the small triangle outside of Dunkin’ Doughnuts at 8th and Pennsylvania.  It was raining and cold, and the witness had to knock on the window to get the attention of the officer seated in inside.  According to the witness and a subsequent complaint filed, the conversation proceeded as follows:

“Officer, a bunch of young guys just stole a car and crashed it.  They ran into the Metro.  If you come down with me, I can finger them for you.”

The officer, who was filling out paperwork and was likely ending his shift, replied, “Go down yourself.  I’m busy.”

“But officer, I’m unarmed.  I don’t even know if these guys are armed.”

“Get the Metro Transit Police if you’re scared.”

Once it was clear that the officer had no intention of getting out of the car, the witness left him and went down into the Metro alone.  After a brief conversation with the Metro manager on duty, who said no transit police were in the station at that time, the witness returned to ground level and made a note of the squad car number of the officer who had refused assistance.

Only later did the witness discover that the men in question were wanted in connection with the shooting at 14th and K, SE.  The witness filed a complaint with the MPD several days later, after no arrests had been made in the case.

For complaints other than excessive use of force, the MPD’s review process is entirely internal and conducted through Internal Affairs.  The witness/complainant sat for an interview with MPD in mid-January, and stressed the importance of obtaining Metro video which would clearly show the witness/complainant entering and exiting the Metro station alone.

Days later, at a PSA 108 meeting which CaptitolHillCorner attended, an MPD officer provided an account of the shooting contrary to the facts as indicated by the witness/complainant.  After providing information that could be used to locate a house where the witness lived – inaccurate information, as it turned out – the MPD officer went on to say that the witness/complainant had successfully located a police officer in the Metro, and he made no mention of the refusal of service.  It was uncertain why the officer chose to reveal the information about the witness, and it was unclear why the officer made it sound as though the MPD had acted appropriately that day. 

There are other problems with the MPD handling of this case.  CaptitolHillCorner attended a public safety meeting the night before the PSA 108 meeting.  At that meeting, officials of the MPD, including Chief Lanier, described the investigation into this case.  The accounts provided on the two consecutive nights differed in several aspects, including the number of suspects in custody and whether any had been charged.  On the second night, when asked if any of these developments had transpired in the previous 24 hours, the MPD officer providing the briefing said “no.”  When CapitolHillCorner contacted the MPD to clarify the details and to confirm the information that had been given at these public meetings, officials of the MPD requested that the blog refrain from publishing details disclosed to the public at these meetings. 

Does the MPD Have an Attitude Problem?

Widespread reports of the study by Human Rights Watch that accused the MPD of dissuading victims of sexual assault to file charges have been met by Chief Lanier with sharp rebuttals, including her insistence that anecdotal accounts of appalling behavior by detectives or officers are isolated and not in line with the character of her department.

But message boards and listservs discussing the Human Rights Watch study have included numerous anecdotes in line with a culture of dismissiveness toward DC citizens who wish or need to file a crime report.  Though not as serious as the allegations in the cases of sexual assault, other examples traded among neighbors and friends in recent days confirm that police officers can and have discouraged the filing of police reports in the cases of property crime, and sometimes they have flatly declined to do so. 

While few anecdotes aired reach the level of contemptuousness reported by the witness/complainant for 12/26, it is clear that one of the biggest problems facing Chief Lanier in the sexual assault debacle is that many residents recognize the MPD attitude of dismissiveness described in the report. 

What Accounts for the Attitude Problem?

It’s possible that the pattern of dissuading citizens from filing reports can be traced to an informal policy of the MPD to keep crime numbers as low as possible.  If so, then the MPD’s current tack could be viewed as a strategy either of management or of workers trying to appease management, roughly analogous to teacher-abetted cheating on school exams.  Viewers of the television series, “The Wire,” for example, will be familiar with COMPSTAT, or the practice of police management that focuses on upward or downward trends in crime statistics and rewards officers and police districts accordingly. 

Another possibility is that police officers can be just plain lazy.  This explanation at least provides a context for understanding the behavior of the patrol officer on 12/26, but it seems imperfect at best.  Officers know that, inevitably, they will be called upon to file police reports, so their resistance to doing so has to be seen at least as somewhat strategic – discouraging certain reports over others.

Finally, another possibility is that the entire MPD is suffering from a deep morale problem.  MPD officers have not had a cost of living raise or a compensation raise since 2007.  They have not had a collective bargaining agreement since 2008.  Mayor Fenty delegated negotiation of contracts to Chief Lanier, most likely in an attempt to shore up her ability to manage and execute her priorities.  That authority expired last April and Lanier signed a new five year $1.2 million contract last year which did not contain that authority. 

Federal workers familiar with stagnant salaries can understand how work performance suffers, though few (if any) would defend jeopardizing public safety as a result. And it would be too much to claim that officers and detectives of the MPD are engaged in an unannounced and informal job action to protest the failure to sign a new contract.  But it is not too much to suggest that the deep morale problems that seem to pervade the department are in part the result of this failure.      

Is the Attitude Problem Affecting Service Delivery?

Capitol Hill is in the midst of a crime wave, though its exact duration and dimensions cannot be determined yet, owing to a technical transition in how the police compile statistics and the delay that this transition has caused. 

Obviously the refusal of the officer on 12/26 alleged by the witness/complainant imperils public safety.  The suspects who remained at large that day have turned up in other crimes – including as a victim, as the MPD claims that one of the four suspects was subsequently a homicide victim. 

Does the MPD’s more typical lackadaisical attitude undermine public safety?  It is impossible to know the answer to this question, though it seems reasonable to assume that the MPD is less effective in thwarting crime if it does not have an accurate picture of it in the first place.  The police union has gone on record disputing the figures cited by police officials to illustrate that city-wide crime has gone down. 

In the face of the crime spike, many Capitol Hill residents have gravitated toward a solution put forward by Councilmember Tommy Wells and, more recently, Council Chair Phil Mendelson:  hire more cops. 

It is unclear what this will accomplish.  First and most obvious, the MPD at 3,900 officers already has the highest ratio of cops to citizens in the country – a fact that has been true for a long time.  MPD traditionally points to the extraordinary number of events – like the inauguration – to justify its size, but these claims must also take the number of auxiliary forces in the area (Park Police, Capitol Police) into account as well.  Even in the face of events that drain staff, the MPD has a lot of cops.  Second, according to Council Chair Mendelson, new hires have been requested in order to beef up police presence in some dozen “hot spots” detailed in a new crime report that has gone to  – or will shortly go to – the city council from Lanier.  It is unclear what kind of difference these new cops will make regarding crime committed on residential streets.  Third, it goes without saying that new cops will not make any sort of difference if they sit in their cars as violent crime unfolds around them.  Finally, these new cops will not be on the streets for some time, so even if new hires represent some kind of solution, it is not a resolution of the current crime wave on Capitol Hill. 

It is highly unlikely that there is one “solution” to the crime affecting the neighborhood.  But it does seem clear that the MPD can and should elevate its conversation with the public.  It can and should: 1) insure that officers respond to requests for assistance, even if it’s raining; 2) file each and every crime report; 3) tell the public more about its strategies; and provide information at public meetings that can be backed up and confirmed by the MPD Public Information Office. 

At the January 16 Public Safety meeting, Chief Lanier alluded to a policing strategy that appears to be hot-spot policing, focusing on those locations where crime recurs.  But this is only a guess – and one that, if true, requires taking greater account of the need for patrol and police response in residential neighborhoods.  It’s possible that neighborhoods could benefit from other strategies.  Some of these include gun-intensive enforcement – prioritizing those crimes in which a gun was used; disorder policing – as New York City did under Mayor Giuliani where even little crimes were pursued with vigor (there are a lot of stolen packages in this neighborhood that the MPD should be more serious about); or community policing – where the police look to shore up relations with the community because it is usually the community that produces the most important information about crime (why do we encounter so much indifference from the police)?  It is safe to assume that we have all heard the lecture about using smartphones in public; some listen, and some don’t.  The police are not wrong to repeat this lecture time and again, but do they have anything else to say?

So far the police have had nothing to say about their actions on 12/26 or its aftermath.  Requests for comment on either police negligence on that day or the false information provided to the public about that day have met with the same response:  both matters “are currently under investigation.” The witness/complainant told me that despite an initiative taken by the witness/complainant, First District Commander Hickson has not reached out to discuss any of these matters or apologize for the alleged actions of officers under his command.

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The Week Ahead…..

The Week Ahead…..

by Larry Janezich

January 29, Thursday

ANC 6B Executive Committee Meets 7:00pm – 8:00pm, in Hill Center. 

January 30, Wednesday

Eastern Market Community Advisory Committee meets 7:00m-9:00pm in Eastern Market’s North Hall. 

January 31, Thursday

Pennsylvania-Potomac Avenue Intersection Meeting, 6:30pm – 8:30pm at Payne Elementary School, 305 15th Street, SE.  DDOT will discuss plans to change the Penn-Potomac intersection to improve pedestrian safety.

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Update on solvent

Dc water officials are on the scene and speculate that diesel fuel was introduced into the sewer system.  Workers are now taking steps to mitigate the odor and will continue their investigation.

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Persistent Smell of Solvent Brings Hazmat to Capitol Hill

 

Firefighters Investigate on 10th Street SE

Firefighters Investigate on 10th Street SE

by Larry Janezich

A solvent-like smell detected in a range of home east of Eastern Market brought several fire trucks and a two-truck HazMat unit to Capitol Hill this afternoon.

Residents who discovered neighbors with the same problem decided to call the city authorities.  The homes affected range from 10th St. SE, Independence Ave, C Street SE, and South Carolina Avenue.  The bathroom was commonly reported as the site of the suspicious odor.

After investigating, firefighters could not determine the cause of the odor and referred the matter to DC Water Authorities (WASA).

Check this blog for updates.

 

 

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