






The Week Ahead…
by Larry Janezich
The last week of the year is a quiet one. The political and civic organizations which CHC regularly covers have no meetings scheduled.







The Week Ahead…
by Larry Janezich
The last week of the year is a quiet one. The political and civic organizations which CHC regularly covers have no meetings scheduled.
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To Patronize Restaurants, Bars, Gyms, and Other Private Venues, Proof of Vaccination Must be Shown

Bowser to Impose City Wide Vaccine Requirement Effective January 15
by Larry Janezich
In a Situational Briefing today, Mayor Bowser said that on January 15, patrons of many indoor venues in DC will need to show proof of having received at least one corvid vaccination, and by February 15, two.
Venues include restaurants, bars, nightclubs, indoor cultural and entertainment facilities, indoor recreation and exercise facilities, and indoor event and meeting establishments. The requirement is for patrons and not staff – it is not an employer mandate.
Groceries and churches will be exempt. Additional information on exemptions will be forthcoming.
Here a link to the Mayor’s PowerPoint presentation today. https://bit.ly/3qd5BoO





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Bowser Reinstates Indoor Mask Mandate Starting Tomorrow
by Larry Janezich
Posted December 20, 2021
Mayor Bowser announced the reinstatement at a scheduled 11:30am Situational Briefing on Monday. The Mayoral Order on the indoor mask mandate will begin at 6:30am on Tuesday and last until 6:00am on January 31, unless extended.
Other major points from the briefing are as follows:
Here’s the Mayor’s PowerPoint presentation: https://bit.ly/3FiQXm8
Here’s the entire Situational Briefing on Twitter: https://twitter.com/search?q=mayor%20bowser&src=typeahead_click
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Down to the Wire: Rosedale and Hill East Fight Ward 7 Annexation
by Larry Janezich
Posted December 20, 2021
Tomorrow, the DC Council will hold a final vote on the Ward Redistricting map. Residents of ANC6A in Rosedale and north Hill East have mounted a last ditch effort to sway the Council against extending Ward 7 boundaries to include these two neighborhoods.
A petition circulating in ANC6A against the move declares, “We do not want to be pushed out of Ward 6.” The petition states, in part:
In November 2021, after nearly a dozen public hearings and receiving extensive public input, the Redistricting Subcommittee produced a map that preserved Rosedale in Ward 6 to avoid the racial segregation. But Chairman Phil Mendelson arbitrarily rejected that proposal and sent a new map to the full Council to move Rosedale to Ward 7. We cannot let this happen.
Ward 6 is already experiencing massive gentrification, and Ward 7 is already approximately 95% Black. Moving Rosedale to Ward 7 is yet another boost to gentrification. We urge you to contact Councilmembers today – in particular, Charles Allen, Christina Henderson, Elissa Silverman, and Anita Bonds. Impress upon them that you oppose moving Rosedale to Ward 7 because it politically disenfranchises our community.
You still have time to tell the Council you support the ANC’s request, or another approach to redistricting if you do not agree with the “final” map.
ANC6A Commissioner Sondra Phillips-Gilbert, a long time outspoken opponent of extending Ward 7 to Rosedale, said of the upcoming vote:
“Rosedale should remain in Ward 6 to maintain the “Racial Equity” (Black Electoral Vote and Voice) of one of the largest and oldest Black communities on Capitol Hill. Placing Rosedale in Ward 7 will not add “Economic Equity,” but will disenfranchise 69% of the black vote, or 79 % of the total non-white population in my Single Member District. Based on “CORE’s Racial Equity Assessment Report” Bill 24-0371 will likely exacerbate racial inequity in the District of Columbia. The Redistricting Committee further agreed to preserve “Racial Equity” by keeping the Rosedale Community in Ward 6 in their final report.
Forcing Rosedale out of Ward 6 is not legally justifiable (given that the redistricting legal thresholds do not require this displacement). Chair Mendelson used his prerogative to make deals to slip in his map without any public scrutiny, while our elected leadership on all levels watched it happen. This is the question I would like to leave with our elected officials whom will vote on Tuesday, December 21st. How can you advocate becoming the 51st state in the Union, while you’re in the business of “disenfranchising and gerrymandering “a poor and disadvantaged Black Community in our Nation’s Capital?
In Hill East, former ANC6B commissioner Francis Campbell said residents were unhappy about extending Ward 7 boundaries to include them. “Many feel,” Campbell said, “that CM Charles Allen didn’t fight hard enough to keep Hill East in Ward 6.” Hill East south of East Capitol is caught in a hard place – resentful they had no voice in the development of Ward 7’s Reservation 13 despite being the neighborhood most affected, and still wanting their closely knit community to remain with the Ward with which they most identify.
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The Havana Tobacco Mart Smoke Shop at 607 Pennsylvania Avenue is open, marketing cigars, hookah products, CBD, Kratom, and Delta 8.





The Week Ahead…and Some Photos from the Past Week
Tuesday, December 21
ANC6B’s Executive Committee holds a virtual meeting at 7:00pm to set the agenda for the January meeting of the full ANC.
To join the meeting, go here: https://bit.ly/3qeaZIn
Note: This meeting date has been adjusted to avoid conflicts with holidays or religious days.
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DDOT Plan to Speed Up 8th Street NE Buses Between Florida Ave to East Capitol Street
by Larry Janezich
Posted December 18, 2021
DDOT will implement a plan to speed bus traffic between Florida Avenue and East Capitol by 2023. 8th Street NE will join a half dozen existing bus corridors already in moveDC’s Bus Priority Network. The Bus Priority Network is made up of 70 miles of the busiest bus corridors across the city where improvements are needed to make transit faster and more reliable. DDOT says that by 2032, 75% of all commute trips will be by non-auto modes.
Last Tuesday night, ANC6A Transportation Committee, chaired by resident committee member Maura Dundon, heard a kickoff presentation on the 8th Street Bus Priority Project by DDOT Project Manager Yohannes Bennehoff who said DDOT wants to make sure everyone knows this is happening as well as seek input from the community.
The Bus Priority Program uses over 20 tools – or treatments – to boost bus operations, including pedestrian improvements to ensure bus stop accessibility, bus lanes to reduce congestion delay, and transit signal programing which will give buses priority and queue jumps. Another tool is rebalancing of bus stops so that buses make fewer stops along the route, which reduces delay associated with entering the bus stop and re-entering traffic.
Initial concept design will begin in the spring of 2022 and construction in FY 2023. 8th Street, SE, south of East Capitol will be brought into the project at some future but uncertain date.
For more information and to provide feedback, go here: https://ddot.dc.gov/page/bus-priority
For more information on Bus Priority Plan tools, go here: https://bit.ly/3sjgo3A
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ANC6A Committee Meets to Air Restorative Justice Issues
by Larry Janezich
Last Monday, ANC6A’s Community Outreach Committee, chaired by Resident Committee Member Roni Hollmon, held a two hour discussion on restorative justice issues.
Members of the discussion panel included CM Charles Allen, representatives of the US Attorney’s Office, and First District MPD officials, as well as representatives from community/civic organizations, including Pranav Nanda, Moms Demand Action; Ms. Thompson El, Co-Chief, Cure the Streets; Naïké Savain, DC Justice Lab; and Gary Zottoli, Defund MPD/Metro DSA.
Allen took the opportunity to hammer home his support for restorative justice programs, saying that two years ago, after the budget had zeroed out all violence prevention efforts he had to put it back as well as funding for victim supports services.
Allen said, “In the most recent budget I put a million extra dollars into restorative justice, doubling the program in the Attorney General’s Office…put millions more to expand Leadership Academy with the Neighborhood Engagement Safety Office, and expanded our Pathways Cohort for the young men and women that come into that program….” He said that at the last minute – because of the shooting at Nationals Park and on 13th street, SE, there was support for adding money exclusively for hiring new police officers; “We had just had a meeting with the Police Chief who said ‘I can’t hire any more than what I’ve got.’ We worked on it…and decided to add some officers but split the funding proposal in half and focused half on violence prevention and community based investment. That’s the way we move forward.”
He added, “Plenty people try to beat me up for it but that’s the kind of investment we’ve got to make…we’ve got to be willing to say, ‘It can’t be a police only response’. Those are the decisions we have to make…how to find a balance – how to make investments…and how do we push back.”
At the close of the meeting, the Committee voted to support two resolutions offered by Committee Outreach Committee resident member Marc Friend: 1) a resolution of support for Councilmember Henderson’s RESTORE ACT to reduce barriers to employment and housing for those who have been arrested but not convicted of a crime or who have served their time and are returning to the community, and 2) a resolution to urge the City Council to increase funding for violence interruption programs such as Cure the Streets.
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The Week Ahead …and Some Photos from the Week Past
by Larry Janezich
Monday, December 13, 2021,
ANC6D holds a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.
To join the meeting, go here: https://www.anc6d.org/virtualmeeting/
Among items on the draft agenda:
ANC6A Community Outreach Committee will hold a virtual meeting at 7:00 pm.
To join the meeting go here: https://anc6a.org/community-calendar/
Among items on the draft agenda:
Tuesday, December 14
ANC6B will hold a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.
To join the meeting go here: https://bit.ly/3GEC3a6
Among items on the draft agenda:
Presentations:
Alcoholic Beverage Control Committee
Planning and Zoning Committee
ANC 6A Transportation & Public Space Committee will hold a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.
To join the meeting go here: https://anc6a.org/community-calendar/
Among items on the draft agenda:
Wednesday, December 15
ANC6A Economic Development & Zoning Committee holds a virtual meeting at 7:00pm.
To join the meeting go here: https://anc6a.org/community-calendar/
Among items on the draft agenda:
Zoning relief and special exception zoning relief to construct a third story and rear addition, and convert to a flat, an existing, attached, two-story with cellar.
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Give Art for the Holidays: Capitol Hill Art League Holiday Art & Gift Show on Saturday
Please join twelve artists from the Capitol Hill Art League at the Holiday Gift and Art Show at the Capitol Hill Arts Workshop on Saturday, December 11, from Noon – 6:00 PM.
This special pop-up show to kick off the holiday season will feature a wide range of creative gifts including framed paintings, prints, cards and paper creations, photographic art, and some very unique tiny house sculptures.
Noon – 3:00 pm: Nancy Arbuthnot, Tammy Barnes, Tara Hamilton, Karen Van Allen, Marcie Wolf-Hubbard and Karen Zens.
3:00-6:00 pm: Steve Kunin, Molly Pauker, Iryna Smitchkova, Jamie Sonnenberg, Nan Raphael, and Carolyn Rondthaler.
Capitol Hill Arts Workshop, 545 7th Street, S.E.
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DC Lawmakers Shake Up Hill East Redistricting
by Larry Janezich
Posted December 8, 2021
On Tuesday, the DC Council – meeting virtually as the Committee of the Whole – approved a shakeup of the Hill East redistricting plan. Acknowledging the legitimacy of CM Vincent Gray’s complaint that Ward 7 was getting short changed in the redistricting process, the lawmakers approved a redistricting plan to make Ward 7 larger. The vote was 11 – 1 – 0, with CM McDuffie voting “No” and CM Gray absent after being hospitalized suffering from bronchitis and a mild stroke. There will be a second and final vote on December 21.
Last week, during an ANC6B Special Meeting on redistricting, Council Chair Phil Mendelson pointed out that Ward 7 was barely over the minimum number of residents in terms of the required equity among Wards, making it the smallest ward in the city. Mendelson said he hoped that would be resolved by a conversation between councilmembers.
That conversation apparently happened, and as the result, Mendelson changed the proposed Redistricting Subcommittee map to make – among other changes – two major changes that will have a significant impact on Hill East.
One of those changes moved the Ward 7 Boundary so that both Kingman Park and Rosedale would be in Ward 7. Mendelson said the change would increase the population of Ward 7 by 6,000. (The Redistricting Subcommittee had recommended taking Kingman Park from Ward 7 and including it in Ward 6 and leaving Rosedale in Ward 6. Rosedale’s ANC6A commissioner Sondra Phillip-Gilbert had fought to keep Rosedale in Ward 6.)
The other change pulled back the Redistricting Subcommittee’s proposed Ward 7 boundary from extending south of Potomac Avenue, leaving the 2,300 residents there in Ward 6.
(Ward 6 took another hit in that the lower end of 8th Street- part of Commissioner Kirsten Oldenburg’s ANC6B04 including the area bounded by Virginia Avenue, 11th Street, SE; 7th Street, SE; and M Street, SE – will be included in Ward 8. This area is also part of the Capitol Hill Historic District.)
The total effect of the changes would be to make Ward 7 the 4th largest ward instead of the 8th largest. The adjusted boundary brings everything east of 15th Street from Benning Road to Potomac Avenue, SE, into Ward 7.
Here is the effect of Mendelson’s changes on the Hill East ANCs:
At a press conference on Monday where he announced the boundary changes, Mendelson said that there was a lot more drama around splitting neighborhoods between wards than is warranted. He said, “Wards 7 and 8 did not grow the way Ward 6 has and Ward 6 has to lose population. The choice is, where? Any redistricting map is going to make some neighborhood unhappy. The objection that the Redistricting map left Ward 7 minimally over the limitation is legitimate and it is not in the interest of Ward 7 to redistrict to the low end of the population average.“
CM Charles Allen, speaking of Hill East projects he had worked on and specifically singling out Gilbert-Phillips and Alcorn, said, “While they will no longer be in Ward 6 I won’t be walking away from those partnerships and commitments that I’ve worked on with neighbors.” Looking ahead at what will happen to the ANCs in Ward 6, Allen said he hoped a small number of residences in the Historic District in a small part of the Navy Yard (residents of Potomac Avenue and lower 8th Street) which are becoming part of Ward 8 under the redistricting could be part of Ward 6 ANCs. Mendelson had noted that prior to being elected to the city council, he had served as an ANC commissioner on an ANC which had been divided by ward boundaries, and the ensuing double representation had been advantageous.
All of this means there will be radical changes in ANC boundaries within both Wards 6 and 7. Those changes will be the discussion of community meetings over the next couple of months.
Here’s the schedule for rest of the redistricting process:
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