Comment

Grosso Makes Housing Strategy Recommendations

Washington D.C. -- Today, Councilmember David Grosso (I-At Large) issued a comprehensive list of new strategy recommendations to address the affordable housing and homelessness crisis in the District of Columbia. Grosso and staff devoted the summer months to taking a close look at existing affordable housing initiatives and published two blog posts focusing on the correlating factors that impact housing and homelessness.

"Preserving and creating affordable housing are major steps in addressing the homelessness crisis in D.C.," said Grosso. "Without a comprehensive housing plan, we will continue to revisit this issue. I have proposed a list of new strategies that I believe the District of Columbia government should begin working on within the next 12 months. I thank the advocacy groups that flood Council offices advocating for investments in the annual budget to tackle the homelessness issue. The next step is for city officials to enhance the wrap around services for homeless individuals and families and for anyone at risk of becoming homeless."

Grosso's strategy recommendations include: 1) Creation of a standalone Committee on Housing and Community Development; 2) Convening of a Housing Policy Council to discuss strategic housing plans and evaluate new trends; 3) Stabilization of the Housing Production Trust Fund with annual commitments for financing the construction of new housing, rehabilitation or preservation of housing; 4) Creation of a Low-Income Housing Tax Credit; 5) Establishment of a fast-track permitting process at the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs for the renovation or creation of affordable housing; 6) Investment in financial literacy programs that educate residents on budget and debt management, homebuyer education and foreclosure prevention; 7) Comprehensive approach to addressing homelessness crisis; 8) Creation of a centralized housing database; 9) Overhaul of existing agency performance measures; and 10) Establishment of a D.C. Housing Land Trust.

For the full list of recommendations click here.

View the first and second blog posts in the series.

###

Comment

5 Comments

Affordable Housing Policy: From Homelessness to Homeownership

Part 3 of the New Neighbors:  A Three Part Series

By:  Councilmember David Grosso & Katrina Forrest

Access to housing is a fundamental human right.  Like clean air and water, everyone deserves a habitable dwelling to ensure personal safety, shelter and peace of mind. This view should not be subject to change.  Regardless of changes in political leadership, creating and maintaining affordable housing in the District of Columbia must always be a top priority.  For this to happen, we must be willing to candidly discuss past policy failures, to improve on existing policies and to create better policies moving forward.  As was discussed in the previous blog post, D.C. has seen numerous housing initiatives started and stalled over the years. This reality necessitates a need for a comprehensive look at our housing policies and strategies to ensure that all D.C. residents have access to quality affordable housing. 

Below is a list of recommendations that we believe the District of Columbia government should begin working on within the next twelve months. These recommendations are not intended to be comprehensive and we encourage any and all feedback, comments, questions and suggestions.  Many of these recommendations are nationally identified best practices, some were included in Mayor Gray’s affordable housing plan released last year, and others are new strategies.

 

 1.      Create standalone Committee on Housing and Community Development at the D.C. Council.

Housing is an important issue separate and apart from economic development. Creating a standalone Committee on Housing and Community Development will provide greater oversight of all housing related agencies including the Department of Housing & Community Development (DHCD), the District Housing Finance Agency (DCHFA), the District Housing Authority (DCHA) and others to ensure performance goals are being met and the creation and preservation of affordable housing is a top priority that is in line with all of the city’s housing strategies. Additionally, important aspects of the agencies responsible for providing services to the homeless will fall under the purview of this committee to ensure that the full spectrum of housing issues, from homelessness to homeownership, are prioritized.

 

2.      Convene a Housing Policy Council.

The Housing Policy Council should consist of agency directors from DHCD, DCHFA, DCHA, Department of Behavioral Health (DBH), Office of Planning (OP), Office of Zoning (OZ), Department of Human Services (DHS), Department of General Services (DGS), the Office on Aging, nonprofit organizations, local banking institutions and other lenders, developers, and community residents.  The Housing Policy Council will examine the District’s regulatory and policy framework, identify redundancies; gather data about the District’s programs and how they have performed; and, finally, prepare a report offering recommendations.  Every two years the Housing Policy Council will reconvene to evaluate the District’s comprehensive housing strategy and assess current needs based on the District’s housing market and consider initiatives happening around the country.  The Housing Council should also establish an annual interagency symposium with all interested D.C. agencies and other stakeholders to discuss their strategic plans as they relate to housing and evaluate new housing trends.  This will encourage stronger collaboration and coordination.

 

3.      Stabilize the Housing Production Trust Fund with annual commitments.

The Housing Production Trust Fund (HPTF) is used to provide pre-development loans for non-profit and for-profit housing developers, grants for architectural designs for adaptive re-use, loans for first-effort model projects, financing for the construction of new housing or rehabilitation or preservation, financing for site acquisition, loans or grants to finance on-site child development facilities and more. We must commit to providing, at a minimum, $80 million a year to the HPTF so that we are not solely relying on deed recordation and transfer taxes, which can make funding the HPTF volatile due to the fluctuation of the real estate market in any given year.  Additionally, the HPTF should only be used for its mandated purposes; this means programs like the Local Rent Supplement Program (LRSP) should no longer be funded through HPTF (LRSP should still be fully funded through the General Fund).  Yearly commitments to the HPTF demonstrate a long-term commitment to housing and DHCD should fully utilize all funds available to ensure that the District is continuing to preserve the existing affordable housing stock and providing the means to increase affordable options. $79.3 million has been committed to the HPTF for FY15.  Additionally, under the FY15 Budget Support Act, 50% of future year-end unrestricted surpluses will be committed to the HPTF once all required reserves have been achieved.

 

4.      Establish the District of Columbia Housing Land Trust.

The D.C. Housing Land Trust should be created to assist the city in preserving more units of affordable housing.  The land trust would be seeded with public money and would be tasked with identifying housing units throughout the city that could be bought and made affordable. The units would include single-family homes, apartments, apartment buildings, etc.  D.C. would acquire the properties and put them into the land trust to be managed and maintained by a third-party contracted organization. The properties would then be used to supply affordable housing in perpetuity.

 

5.      Create a District of Columbia Low-Income Housing Tax Credit.

As mentioned in a prior post, D.C. is currently at risk of losing 45 Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) buildings within the next five years.  City officials should create a District of Columbia LIHTC program to supplement the federal program.  Presently, 16 other states have implemented some form of a state-based LIHTC program.  This program would provide funding for the development costs of affordable housing by allowing investors to take advantage of both the federal and a District tax credit equal to a percentage of the cost incurred for the development of affordable units in a rental housing project.

 

6.     Overhaul existing agency performance measurements.

Currently, the performance measures for city agencies are not strong indicators of housing performance in the District of Columbia.  All agencies should tailor their performance measures to properly align with D.C.’s housing plan.  This will enable the D.C. Council to better hold agencies accountable as they strive to reach targeted housing goals that will properly assess how the city is preserving the existing affordable housing stock and working to increase it.  It will also help the Council to ensure homelessness to homeownership practices are being employed citywide.

 

7.      Build a centralized housing database.

DCHA and DHCD should collaborate to build a centralized database that is public, user-friendly and offers, at a minimum, the following information:

  • Affordable housing finance information (to include a list of available tax expenditures)
  • Detailed inventory of all D.C.-funded affordable housing options by Ward to enable the city to quantify the number of affordable housing units created or preserved
  • Tenant & Homeowner education information
  • List of certified housing counselors in the District of Columbia

 

8.     Establish fast-track permitting process at the Department of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs

The District of Columbia government should create a fast-track permitting process for the renovation or creation of affordable housing.  Additionally, fee waivers and reductions (building permit fees/impact fees) should be implemented to reduce the costs associated with affordable housing renovation or development.

 

9.      Invest in Financial Literacy Programs.

Through the Minimum Wage Amendment Act of 2013, the District of Columbia has demonstrated a commitment to ensuring that all residents are able to earn a basic minimum wage.  Still, it is incumbent upon city officials to recognize that a minimum wage is not the same thing as a living wage.  In light of that reality, the government should make programs available so that residents know and understand how to best manage their finances.  DCHFA, Department of Insurance, Securities and Banking (DISB), Department of Employment Services (DOES), DHCD and other city agencies should work to promote and advertise existing programs and services and collaborate to create and enhance programs that include:

  • Budget and Debt Management (to assist residents in understanding their credit, savings techniques, etc.)
  • Homebuyer Education  (to include informing residents about budgeting and credit, helping them to understand the mortgage transaction and preparing them for home ownership)
  • Foreclosure Prevention (to include information about loan modification and refinancing programs, deed in lieu of foreclosure, etc.)

 

10.   Comprehensively address the homelessness crisis.

City officials must work to enhance the wrap-around services for homeless individuals and families and for everyone at risk of becoming homeless.  The District of Columbia should at a minimum do the following:

  • Fully commit to the Statement of Principles as presented by the Way Home Campaign (Ending Chronic Homelessness in D.C.)
  • Fund more care coordinators, social workers and mental health providers in shelters who can identify problems impacting moves to permanent housing (unemployment or underemployment, mental health issues or substance abuse, domestic violence or any other traumatic incident, etc.) 
  • Provide homeless individuals and families the tools they need to commit to education opportunities and workforce development training
  • Invest more money in the annual budget for permanent supportive housing; the Local Rent Supplemental Program; Emergency Rental Assistance Program; and Rapid Rehousing.  In particular, we need to reform the rapid rehousing program to allow participants to remain on the program past the one year mark when necessary.

5 Comments

Comment

D.C. defense attorneys want juveniles released from shackles in court

By Keith Alexander, August 24, 2014, Washington Post

She had just turned 13 when she ran away from home and got into a scuffle with the police officer who found her.

Charged with assault, the teen was housed in a youth center operated by the District’s Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services. When it was time for her first appearance in D.C. Superior Court, a DYRS agent instructed the teen to kneel on a chair and placed iron shackles, which were connected to a metal belt around her waist, onto her ankles and wrists. She waddled into the courtroom.

“I felt like a dog on a leash. Like an animal,” the teen, now 16, recalled. Embarrassed and frightened, she remembered seeing her mother in the courtroom and several adults she did not know. She started to cry, but couldn’t wipe her tears because the restraints kept her from raising her arms to her face. Her attorney, Penelope Spain, asked that the shackles be removed for the hour-long proceeding, but the judge denied the request.

The girl’s case and others like it have led advocates and defense attorneys to call on the court to end its practice of routinely shackling incarcerated youths during court proceedings — and to instead use the restraints only in instances where a juvenile is deemed to be a risk.

While some say the restraints keep defendants and observers safe in situations that can become tense, opponents argue shackles are demeaning and unnecessary in a system aimed more at rehabilitation than punishment. They note that adult defendants in the same courthouse, even those who have been convicted of violent crimes, can have their restraints removed in court.

The practice in D.C. Superior Court differs from other courts in the Washington metropolitan area. Court and police officials in Montgomery, Prince George’s and Fairfax counties, as well as Alexandria, said the decision about whether to shackle a juvenile defendant in court is made on a case-by-case basis. In Fairfax and Montgomery counties, for example, shackles are removed from the juveniles once they enter the courtroom, officials said.

With backing from the National Juvenile Defender Center, D.C. Lawyers for Youth and the D.C. Public Defender Service, D.C. Council member David Grosso (I-At Large) is championing proposed legislation that would eliminate universal shackling of juvenile defendants and instead seek to have judges make a determination based on each youth’s history and behavior since their arrest. Grosso said he hoped the bill would go to a vote by the end of the year.

“They have been shackling kids who have no violent past. It’s a horrible thing. A lot of these kids are nonviolent offenders. We don’t want to send them down the wrong path by shackling somebody who doesn’t need to be shackled,” Grosso said.

The District is unusual in that it is the only place in the country where U. S. marshals escort juvenile defendants. In most places, youth rehabilitation services, sheriffs or police transport and oversee young defendants.

David Neumann, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service, said the service’s policy requires all prisoners, regardless of age, to be in restraints when in the courtroom. An exception is made during jury trials, he said, but youths are tried before judges. Neumann said if a judge orders the restraints on a juvenile be removed, the marshal must confer with a supervisor “to ensure that alternative security measures are in place.”

One U.S. marshal, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he did not have authorization from the service, said even youth held for nonviolent crimes can become volatile without warning. Restraints, he said, protect the defendants and those around them.

In a 2012 study, Suffolk University Law School professor Kim M. McLaurin found that 36 states allowed for indiscriminate shackling of juveniles in court. But at least 11 states, including North Carolina, Florida and New York, had banned the practice, she said.

McLaurin said unnecessary shackling sends the wrong message. “Juvenile court is supposed to be about rehabilitation,” she said. “You don’t achieve that by putting children in handcuffs.”

D.C. Court officials said in a prepared statement that judges can order removal of a youth’s restraints: “When appropriate, a judge can require a juvenile’s hands to be unshackled. At the time of this request, the judge will work in conjunction with the U.S. Marshals, who are charged with protecting juvenile courtrooms, to ensure the safety of the juvenile in custody, the judge, court staff, and spectators,” court spokeswoman Anita Jarman wrote.

But some defense attorneys argue juveniles should not be shackled in court unless a specific reason is given. Alec Karakatsanis, a defense attorney and co-founder of Equal Justice Under Law, a nonprofit civil rights law firm, said the handcuffs distract juvenile defendants from concentrating on their case and prevent them from writing notes to their attorney.

On three recent Mondays, a Washington Post reporter was permitted to watch juvenile court. About two dozen teens appeared on charges that included shoplifting, assault and carrying a weapon. The Post generally does not identify juveniles charged in crimes.

Several D.C. public defenders asked that their clients be released from the shackles during the proceedings. Each time, prosecutors did not object to the request and the judges deferred to the marshals who then denied the request.

In a case involving a 17-year-old charged with carrying a firearm, Magistrate Judge Julie Breslow told the juvenile he could sit at the table, which she said would help relieve the pain to his wrists. “I appreciate your request. I understand the policy of the U.S. marshals is to have them shackled. It’s not a policy I get to make a decision on,” Breslow said in court.

In another case, Magistrate Judge Tara J. Fentress asked a DYRS representative who was standing next to a 14-year-old charged with assault whether the shackles should be removed, as the teen’s attorney requested. The DYRS employee responded: “It’s the policy that all defendants be shackled.” Fentress denied the request.

David Shapiro of the National Juvenile Defender Center said that having juveniles — many of whom are only charged with a crime and not yet convicted — shuffled into the courtroom shackled makes them feel as if “they are less than human.”

“We’re not asking to take out all shackles completely. But if you’re going to put kids in chains, there should be a justification for it,” he said.

The teen charged with assaulting the police officer had several hearings, during which she was shackled, her attorney said. She eventually admitted responsibility for her crime and was committed to a youth facility for a time. Today, she’s living with her mother and finishing high school.

She said she still remembers the feeling of the restraints. “It’s just not fair,” she said.

D.C. Public Defender Andrew Crespo remembers a 2011 case where his client, who was 8 at the time, was led into the courtroom in 2-pound restraints. The boy, who weighed about 60 pounds, sat in a chair with his feet dangling. Prosecutors said the boy allegedly touched a little girl inappropriately at his birthday party hours earlier and he was arrested for sexual assault. Before the hearing, Crespo said, his client kept whispering: “My mommy said I can still have my birthday cake. I can still have my cake, right?” Crespo recalled. The charges were later dropped.

Comment

Comment

Affordable Housing in D.C. through the Years

Part two of the New Neighbors Three-Part Series

By Katrina Forrest

Public housing has a complicated history in the United States.  Though well-intentioned, over the years, subsidized apartments have become the housing of last resort due to the high concentrations of poverty, property mismanagement, and more.  There is no one factor that has led to the failure of public housing but, throughout history, we have seen defining moments that have forever changed the housing landscape in cities across the country.  Unfortunately, we must reckon with a painful truth:  much of the housing ills of today were born out of government-sponsored discrimination.

In 1933, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) was created as part of the New Deal to refinance mortgages that were going into foreclosure.  During its short three-year existence, only one percent of HOLC’s assistance went to Black mortgage holders.  Further, HOLC policy followed closely to the already well-established principle in the real estate industry at that time: White neighborhoods were more stable and presented the lowest risk.  In 1935, the HOLC would create “residential security maps,” to indicate the level of security for real estate investments with four color grades.  The communities “redlined” on those maps were viewed as extremely high risk.  The vast majority of those neighborhoods were comprised of largely Black populations.  Around the same time, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) developed a “risk rating system.”  Its underwriting manual specifically noted that mixed-race areas were not viable because they would inevitably lead to declining property values. 

The message was loud and clear:  non-White neighborhoods were risky.  The effect of these federal policies was to strip people of color of the opportunity to access credit and for decades, people of color would be denied the great American dream of owning a home; one of their few opportunities to pass along generational wealth.

The Housing Act of 1937, also known as the Wagner-Steagall Act, sought to address the needs of low-income families by increasing the affordable rental housing stock in cities and allowing for federal subsidies to be paid to local public housing agencies.   Not surprisingly, however, public housing was not exempt from the historical patterns of racial segmentation.  Under new public housing programs the racial character of a neighborhood would dictate the race of the occupants for public housing.  In 1938, Langston Terrace Dwellings opened in the Kingman Park neighborhood of Northeast D.C.; it was the first federally funded housing project in the District of Columbia and only the second in the nation. 

Public housing was essentially a band-aid for housing reform.  With no loans available to people of color, public housing was their only viable option and even its design kept residents poor.  Properties did not receive timely maintenance and upkeep, crime was rampant, and there were few social services available to help meet other needs. 

Even for the people of color who were able to purchase their homes, their American Dream would soon be cut short.  Prior to the 1950s, the Southwest quadrant of D.C. was home to many Black-owned businesses and largely Black homeowners.  This was a thriving community; however, city planners working closely with the federal government would determine that Southwest should undergo massive “urban renewal.”  What this meant was that some 550 acres of small Black-owned businesses, row homes and more were completely leveled to make room for new office complexes, shopping centers and residential high rise buildings.   The effect of this project was to eviscerate the culture of a thriving historic Black neighborhood and displace residents in volumes.  For communities of color it became evident that the government, neither federal nor local, had their best interest in mind.  Residents and civil rights leaders would protest the conditions, but not much changed.

Known as a “cultural decade,” the 1960’s was a time of great political and social unrest.  The nation was in the midst of the Vietnam War, John F. Kennedy was assassinated and the civil rights movement continued on after some key legislative wins—but when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated on Thursday, April 4, 1968, riots erupted in cities across the country. Washington, D.C. burned for four days.  When the dust settled on April 8, twelve were dead, over 1,000 were injured and roughly 1,200 buildings had been set aflame. 

The riots devastated the D.C.’s urban corridors and with the destruction of businesses came the loss of jobs, increased crime, depressed property values and the flight of residents to surrounding suburbs.  The crack epidemic of the 1980’s only helped to exacerbate things, leaving little hope for economic prosperity.  These events, coupled with patterns and practices of racial discrimination facilitated by the United States government, significantly contributed to decades of community disinvestment in D.C.  Rebuilding the local economy after such catastrophic financial events did not occur overnight.  With a diminished tax base, D.C. would need an enormous financial commitment but economic challenges would persist for the city until the late 1990s when new leadership and energy was ushered in.   

Both locally and nationally, the 1990s brought about significant change in housing policy and strategy.  In 1992, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development established the HOPE VI program to provide funding support to revitalize the nation’s most severely distressed public housing.  The program represented a dramatic policy shift, moving away from providing project-based assistance for the low-income to promoting mixed-income housing and the use of housing subsidies.   This program would prove to be pivotal for D.C.

In 1999, Anthony Williams was elected as the city’s fifth mayor.  His two terms in office brought about incredible transformation.  Under his leadership, Mayor Williams balanced the city’s budget, a previously unconscionable feat as the city lay in financial crisis resulting in the commission of a Financial Control Board.  Mayor Williams attracted new businesses to D.C. spurring billions of dollars of investment, but public frustration would arise as many low-income residents found themselves priced out of their communities due to the gentrification taking place across the city. Furthermore, the issues with public housing that had not been addressed for decades continued.

In October 2001, the District of Columbia’s Housing Authority (DCHA) would receive a $34.9 million HOPE VI grant award to revitalize the Arthur Capper/Carrollsburg community located near the Navy Yard in the Southeast quadrant of the city.  With the addition of private funding and public investment, this initial grant award grew to more than $750 million, forming one of the largest urban redevelopment projects in the country.  To date, DCHA has received seven HOPE VI grants but progress has been slow.  The Arthur Capper/Carrollsburg project, when completed, will be the first HOPE VI project in the country to provide one-for-one replacement of demolished public housing units in the same footprint as the original developments. 

Drawing on the HOPE VI model, Mayor Williams launched the New Communities Initiative in 2005.  The project’s goal was to address the needs of poverty-stricken and crime laden neighborhoods by reinvesting in communities and breaking up concentrations of poverty.  New Communities promised to deliver the one-for-one replacement of existing affordable housing units, the creation of mixed-income housing to end the concentration of poverty and build new housing to minimize displacement.  The original plan only intended to redevelop the Northwest One neighborhood in Ward 6.  The plan would have served as a pilot and given the District the opportunity to measure the intended outcomes; however, under the Fenty administration, an additional three neighborhoods, Park Morton in Ward 1, Lincoln Heights-Richardson Dwelling in Ward 7 and Barry Farm in Ward 8, were added.  This decision, in hindsight, likely contributed to the painfully slow progress of this initiative—too much at once.

One of the greatest challenges for government officials, as it relates to housing, is the lack of continuity in setting an agenda.  From one administration to the next, plans and priorities constantly change.  The New Communities Initiative has suffered through three administrations and while the program is slowly getting back on track, the families in those affected communities have been trapped in limbo for nearly a decade.  Making matters worse, the affordability of housing in D.C. continues to erode as evidenced by the impending loss of 45 low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) properties in the next 5 years.

This lack of continuity has also hindered the growth of the city’s inclusionary zoning program, which was initiated by a vote of the D.C. Council in 2007 and became effective in 2009.  The program requires residential developers to set aside eight to 10 percent of new dwelling units for low and moderate-income residents at below-market rates; however, at the end of 2012 not a single IZ unit had been rented or sold.  While participation in this program will likely pick up, District residents cannot afford to wait four or 10 years before the housing they deserve is finally ready for their move-in.  This is particularly true when considering that more than 70,000 people were waitlisted last year for the 8,000 existing public housing units, forcing DCHA to close the list in an effort to reimagine it and increase the program’s effectiveness.   

There are many factors that have contributed to the city’s housing crisis; from years of federal government-sponsored discrimination, to social unrest, to uneven local attempts to address the problem and unchecked personal bias; we have all, in some way, contributed to the problem.  Moving forward, we must work to ensure that all citizens, regardless of race, disability, age, religious affiliation, etc. have the same opportunities and access to housing and banking services, capital and education. There must be a concerted effort to identify and address the barriers that continue to perpetuate segregation and isolate poor communities of color.  So how do we bridge a path forward?  How do we foster inclusive communities to promote diversity and access to opportunity for all?

Part 3 to follow….stay tuned!

*This post is part of an ongoing series of posts by Councilmember Grosso’s staff to support professional development. All posts are approved and endorsed by Councilmember Grosso.

Comment

Comment

What We're Reading: August 28, 2014

Social Justice Still Drives Howard University | Perry Stein, August 20, 2014

At the heart of Howard University is a social activist mission that continues to draw students to the private historically black school.  It is part of the university’s brand and is indispensable even in today’s post-segregation era.

How the Supreme Court Protects Bad Cops | Erwin Chemerinsky, August 26, 2014

Chemerinsky, a prominent scholar in United States constitutional law, takes a look at some recent rulings from the United States Supreme Court that has made it increasingly difficult for victims of prosecutorial misconduct or excessive use of force by police to find recourse or justice.

‘Poor Door’ in a New York Tower Opens a Fight Over Affordable Housing | Mireya Navarro, August 26, 2014

A new apartment complex in Manhattan with a segregated entrance for affordable units has brought out an outcry in New York City. But some housing advocates are split in outrage. Is it better to simply have affordable units in proximity to market rate condos or is the spirit of inclusionary zoning laws only achieved when the units are fully integrated into the rest of the development?

Can Cities Ease Homelessness With Storage Units? | Kriston Capps, August 25, 2014

A look out at how providing storage units for the homeless helps to bring stability and dignity to their lives. In 2007, DC passed a progressive law known as the Evictions With Dignity Act, which requires the city to pay for a tenant’s stuff to be moved to a storage unit for 90 days during an eviction instead of dumping a tenant’s belongings onto the street. Unfortunately, that provision was never funded.

Why Did Developer WC Smith Buy Up Most of Congress Heights? | Aaron Wiener, August 20, 2014

It’s not uncommon for a developer to go all-in for a neighborhood, but WC Smith’s domination of Congress Heights is different. It looks like the developers patient investments will finally start to pay off.

Metro Pays Nearly $5M to Settle Whistleblower Lawsuit |Martin Di Caro, August 25, 2014

The transit authority has agreed to pay nearly $5 million to settle a whistle-blower lawsuit that dealt with allegations that Metro awarded a $14 million no-bid contract to a Virginia firm. Looks like the region as a whole needs to reform its procurement practices and oversight.

This High-End Hair Stylist Gives Free Haircuts to the Homeless | Bryce Covert, August 22, 2014

Mark Bustos, who works for the high-end hair salon Three Squares Studio in New York City, spends his days off giving haircuts to homeless people who want them. What an awesome way to give back!

States With Medical Marijuana Have Fewer Painkiller Overdose Deaths | Olga Khazan, August 26, 2014

A new study suggests that in states where it’s legal, some people use pot to manage their chronic health conditions, rather than more addictive—and deadly—prescription opioids.

Generation Later, Poor Are Still Rare at Elite Colleges | Richard Perez-Pena, August 25, 2014

A series of federal surveys of selective colleges found virtually no change from the 1990s to 2012 in enrollment of students who are less well off, even though there was a huge increase over that time in the number of students going to college. “…Colleges are well intentioned but simply ineffectual in addressing economic diversity.”

Comment

2 Comments

New Neighbors: A Three Part Series

By:  Katrina Forrest

Editor’s Note:  Katrina is a Legislative Assistant for Councilmember Grosso covering Transportation & the Environment, Health and Housing.  This three-part blog post will explore why the affordable housing stock has declined in the District, attitudes toward affordable housing and recommendations to bridge a path forward.

 

I stood on the corner of Minnesota Ave. and Benning Road in Northeast patiently waiting for my cab to arrive.  When it did, the driver and I shared an interesting exchange.  After explaining that I did not look like I lived in the neighborhood, he remarked that while D.C. has experienced great change, no amount of money could lure him to this particular Northeast community.

As we drove past Park 7, a new mixed-use housing development, I began to think critically about housing, attitudes toward housing affordability and who is most impacted.  Washington, D.C. is a unique city with a rich culture.  In 1990, the District was just one of five major cities with a majority Black (66%) population.  Today, that number has seen a sharp decline, due in large part to gentrification, which has displaced many low-income people of color, who are now heavily concentrated along the city’s eastern periphery.

As a southern Virginia transplant, I frequently find myself describing the District much like F. Scott Fitzgerald described New York’s Long Island in the Great Gatsby.  A true ‘tale of two cities,’ D.C. is divided into four quadrants (Northwest, Northeast, Southwest and Southeast) and separated by the Anacostia River.  West of the park is characterized by racially homogeneous affluence, while the communities east of the river have developed a reputation marred by high rates of unemployment, poverty and homelessness.  Like other urban cities across the country, the District is facing an affordable housing and homelessness crisis.  Nearly 20 percent of District residents live in poverty.  Our homelessness rate outpaces New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago and the overwhelming majority of these individuals are concentrated in Wards 7 and 8, where 95 percent of residents are Black.

Conversations about affordable housing and homelessness can be uncomfortable because they necessitate a broader discussion about race, wealth, class and affordability.  They also require self-reflection and a willingness to confront our own personal biases in order to improve the livelihood of all District residents. 

According to a 2013 Urban Institute study, White families on average earned about $6 for every $1 that Black and Hispanic families earned.  In dollar value, the average White family had about $632,000 in wealth as compared to $98,000 for Black families and $110,000 for Hispanic families.   Adding another layer of inequity, since 1954 the Black unemployment rate has consistently been twice that of Whites.

While these numbers account for the economic slight felt by middle-income individuals, they do not begin to capture the daily struggles faced by low-income families surrounded by poverty, low performing schools, limited transportation options, little or no employment opportunities and so much more.  For these reasons, this cannot be understated:  where affordable housing options are located matters

By concentrating the affordable housing stock in historically underserved sections of the city we are perpetuating the isolation of low-income residents and people of color—keeping them from accessing a plethora of opportunities.  Racial and residential segregation is intimately related to the concentration of poverty in urban core areas.  Sound policy encourages preserving the existing affordable units while also increasing the affordable housing stock—evenly distributing it across all wards of the District, but combating neighborhood opposition is an uphill battle.

We are all familiar with the pretext.  A new affordable housing development proposal is presented and residents report to community meetings in droves to claim, “You can’t build this here!  This will decrease my property value.”  We know what is meant.  The term “affordable” carries with it a negative connotation, plays on preconceived notions and is often met with fierce opposition, particularly from communities enjoying great economic prosperity—but what is affordable housing and to whom is it affordable? 

According to the U.S. Dept. of Housing & Urban Development, housing is “affordable,” if a family spends no more than 30 percent of their household income to live there.  This seems reasonable but 30 percent of $500,000 is far greater than 30 percent of $30,000.

The average one-bedroom rental in the District is $1,692/month.  Affording this rent would be challenging even for a single individual earning a mid-level salary as depicted below:

The reality is that across the region there is a serious lack of affordable housing and in some cases, middle-income individuals are living in the District’s low-income units.  Reframing the conversation is the first step to addressing the District’s housing challenges, because where you live greatly influences where you go to school, where you work, who your friends are, what you eat, your access to quality healthcare and so much more.

Still, while critical to effecting any positive change, confronting our biased attitudes about who is “low-income,” what is “affordable,” and where “affordable housing” is located does not address other realities.  Since 2000, the number of low-cost rental units in the city has fallen by half, and the number of lower-value homes fell by nearly three quarters.   This reality has made reinvesting in communities in a way that fosters inclusivity challenging due to the gaps in infrastructure and the disappearing housing stock—so how did this happen and where do we go from here?

Parts 2 and 3 to follow….stay tuned!

*This post is part of an ongoing series of posts by Councilmember Grosso’s staff to support professional development. All posts are approved and endorsed by Councilmember Grosso.

2 Comments

Comment

What we're reading: August 22, 2014

Ferguson, MO and Police Militarization (VIDEO) | Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, August 17, 2014

Why it’s so hard to find a cheap apartment in Washington, D.C. | Lydia DePillis, August 19, 2014

DePillis takes a look at one question every D.C. resident has probably asked themselves. Turns out there are plenty of new homes in the District, but fewer options for those who are cash strapped and/or have children. Aaron Wiener at Washington City Paper agrees with this assessment. Speaking of kids, we also read and recommend DePillis’ article, “It’s hard to build cities for kids. But do they really need them?”

Regulators, Cabbies, Uber Agree: Illegal Street Hails Have To Stop | Martin Di Caro, August 18, 2014

Regulators, cab drivers, and Uber have agreed on very little in the District over the last year, but they agree that more must be done to stop “rideshare” drivers from illegally picking up street hails in the District.

This is how much it’s costing one D.C health center to treat influx of 'unaccompanied minors’ from Central America | Tina Reed, August 15, 2014

The border crisis has become a major issue in the past year as more than 57,000 children have entered the country. Some D.C. health centers are starting to see the impacts.

DDOT Releases Proposed Rules Requiring Safe Routes for Pedestrians and Bicyclists near Work Zones| August 18, 2014

Check out DDOT’s proposed rules requiring safe routes for pedestrians and bicyclists near construction work zones. The comment period runs until September 13, 2014.

Los Angeles to Reduce Arrest Rate in Schools | Jennifer Medina, August 18, 2014

More and more school districts around the country are recognizing the negative impacts school discipline policies can have on students. After years of arresting students for on-campus fights and damaging school property, LA Unified School District is changing their policy. However, not too far from LA in Compton, CA, the school board there just voted to approve AR-15 rifles for campus police.

The District is shaping up to be a hot spot for fitness-related tech | Vicky Hallett, August 29, 2014

Over the past decade the District has welcomed dozens of new gyms, studios and nutrition-related businesses, so it’s no wonder we’ve become a hot spot for health technology. This article takes a look at some of D.C.’s new promising start-ups in this arena.

Rethinking Hospitals Restraints | Ravi Parikh, August 18, 2014

Thousands of patients are physically restrained every day for their own safety—but evidence suggests that the practice may be ineffective and even harmful.

By the Numbers: Crime and Policing in D.C. | Martin Austermuhle, August 18, 2014

The Metropolitan Police Department has published its annual report covering 2013. WAMU breaks down the numbers.

The Difference Between ALS and Ferguson Is That One Ill Can Be Cured | Jia Tolentino, August 18, 2014

There are different devils behind these two ways a man can die in America. ALS is the devil that leaves us blameless, and Ferguson is the devil that is us, the one we dance with every day. In both cases we bow down and get shot in the skull regardless, but one road to deliverance has been open for 150 years.”

Mo’ne Davis on this week’s national Sports Illustrated cover | Scooby Axson, August 19, 2014

Making the cover of Sports Illustrated at 13-years old is pretty awesome and a milestone worth celebration. If you haven’t been watching the Little League World Series, get on it!

 

Comment

Comment

Grosso’s Farm Tour: Increasing Awareness throughout the District

From weeding borage patches to transplanting “dinosaur” kale to tasting the freshest local produce, Councilmember Grosso’s Farm Tour this month was a success.

Councilmember Grosso and Team Grosso transplanting "dinosaur" kale at the Farm at Walker Jones in NW Washington, D.C.

Councilmember Grosso and Team Grosso transplanting "dinosaur" kale at the Farm at Walker Jones in NW Washington, D.C.

The Farm Tour was initiated after Grosso introduced the D.C. Urban Farming and Food Security Act of 2014. This legislation would establish an urban farming land leasing initiative, a nonrefundable tax credit for food commodity donations made to a District food bank or shelter, and real property tax abatement for unimproved real property.

As part of putting his sweat where his legislation is, David toured the UDC CAUSES Muirkirk Research Farm, the Millennial Farms at J.O. Wilson Elementary School site, and the Washington Youth Garden at the U.S. Arboretum. He and staff also volunteered at the Farm at Walker Jones.

At the Muirkirk Research Farm, run by the UDC College of Agriculture, Urban Sustainability, and Environmental Science, Councilmember Grosso met with Dean Sabine O’Hara to tour the farming facility located in Beltsville, MD. Vegetables grown hydroponically in mobile greenhouses and intricate aquaponics systems that contribute to raising both tilapia and produce are just two examples of how the site is promoting urban farming, sustainable living and environmental education in the District. It was also exciting to learn about their ethnic and specialty crops that cater to our city’s many immigrant communities.

Touring the Muirkirk Research Farm in Beltsville, Maryland.

Touring the Muirkirk Research Farm in Beltsville, Maryland.

Millennial Farms uses simple, cost effective, vertical farming methods to promote new jobs based around local farming economies. Claire Newbegin and Niraj Ray met with David to show him their work to de-industrialize the food system and contribute to local urban farming initiatives.

At the Washington Youth Garden, Grosso discussed not only the garden, but food education for D.C. youth as well. The garden teaches students and community members about soil, pollination, food systems and more through hands-on garden visits and installing gardens at local schools.

All smiles with Councilmember Grosso at the Washington Youth Garden

All smiles with Councilmember Grosso at the Washington Youth Garden

Mid-week Team Grosso spent all morning volunteering at the Farm at Walker Jones, located at the corner of New Jersey and K NW. The farm, run by local non-profit D.C. Greens, not only serves as a school garden for the Walker Jones Education Campus, but cultivates and sells fresh produce at a reduced price for neighborhood residents, and is as a base of operations for D.C. Greens’ work with school gardens and educational programs throughout the city. Team Grosso helped transplant seedlings, stake tomatoes, weed plant beds, and harvest produce.

As the summer winds down and we enjoy the bounty of locally grown foods, it is a perfect time to consider how we can promote urban farming and sustainable living. To that end, Grosso will keep pushing his legislative agenda, including the Urban Agriculture and Food Security Act of 2014, once the Council reconvenes in September. 

To learn about some urban farming efforts taking place across the District, visit the websites below:

D.C. Greens

Three Part Harmony Farm

Farm at Walker Jones

Millennial Farmers

Washington Youth Garden

Freedom Farms D.C.

UDC College of Agriculture, Urban Sustainability and Environmental Sciences

Comment

Comment

What We're Reading: August 13, 2014

Irrigating the (Food) Desert: A Tale of Gentrification in D.C. | Vann Newkirk, August 11, 2014

Are grocery stores and farmers markets common components of gentrification? Newkirk examines what the new Safeway and WalMart in the Petworth area of the District mean for development going forward.

A spin with the D.C. bicycle crowd leads to a tad more sympathy | Courtland Milloy, August 10, 2014

After a testy response to his column about bicyclists in the District, Milloy goes on a ride with some advocates to see the road from their point of view. He’ll likely stick with his car going forward, but has a bit more sympathy for bicyclists after his experience.

Lunch lady rises to teachers union leader and takes on all comers, bluntly | Lyndsey Layton, August 11, 2014

Layton profiles Lily Eskelsen Garcia’s unlikely rise to the top of the National Education Association, the nation’s largest labor union representing  three million educators. Many challenges await her, but she’s up for the battle.

Protestors use hands-up gesture defiantly after Michael Brown shooting | Matt Pearce, August 12, 2014

One thing has been consistent in the protests in Ferguson, MO over the past few days – the use of the hands-up gesture and the chant “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot.” This article takes a look at its impact and the deeply personal meaning the protest has for many black men. Phillip Agnew, the Director of Dream Defenders, also speaks about the hands-up gesture on MSNBC.

Center City team romps, earns berth in Little League World Series | Max Cohen, August 12, 2014

We love this story out of Philadelphia where female pitcher Mo’ne Davis led her team into the Little League World Series after throwing a three-hitter on Sunday. She will become the 18th girl to play in the Little League World Series in 68 years.

Can You Fight Poverty by Paying Kids to Go to School? | Glenn Thrush, August 12, 2014

This article takes a look at the Memphis Family Rewards Program, a pilot that provides cash incentives to poor parents and their high school-age children. Modeled after conditional cash transfer programs seen in places like Mexico, Brazil, and Indonesia, students can receive checks for attendance, grades, doctor’s visits, and taking the SAT/ACT. Parents are rewarded for simply working full-time. Is it working?

Cops or soldiers? America’s police have become too militarized | The Economist, March 22, 2014

War Gear Flows to Police Departments | Matt Apuzzo, June 8, 2014

A couple of throwback articles, but as we watch the pictures coming out of Ferguson, MO we’ve seen a blurred line between cops and military. How have local enforcement agencies been able to afford such high tech gear? The Department of Defense and the war on drugs.

Comment

Comment

Councilmember Grosso's Summer Gallery Tour

The arts help to make D.C. a culturally vibrant city. The District is filled with a creative community that welcomes all different types of people who take part in developing our unique neighborhoods.

Councilmember Grosso is a passionate supporter of the role the arts and humanities have in the overall creative economy. He believes that a robust arts community not only promotes economic development, but it also enriches the everyday lives of our residents by increasing the general safety, welfare, and outreach in their neighborhoods. During his “Summer Arts Tour,” Grosso will visit various art galleries and studios throughout D.C. to promote engagement and support of the arts.

Please join Councilmember Grosso at the following sites:

Thursday, August 21, 2014
4:30pm - 8pm

Hamiltonian Gallery 1353 U St NW

Foundry Gallery 1314 18th Street, NW 1st Floor

Longview Gallery 1234 9th ST NW

Monroe Street Arts Walk 625 Monroe St NE

Friday, August 22, 2014
4pm - 6pm

Anacostia Arts Center 1241 Good Hope Road SE

Touchstone Gallery 901 New York Avenue NW  

Flashpoint Gallery 916 G Street NW

Follow Councilmember Grosso’s Twitter for more information and for a quick glimpse of the Summer Arts Tour!

Comment

Comment

What we're reading: August 8, 2014

Start of another gorgeous weekend in D.C. and Team Grosso offers some of the latest items we've been reading (and watching) for your consideration:

The Marijuana Series: Other Views | August 7, 2014

Councilmember Grosso’s Letter to the Editor of the New York Times on marijuana legalization was published. Take a look and share with friends.

Why D.C. Is About to Have Even Less Affordable Housing | Aaron Wiener, August 6, 2014

Apartments subsidized through the federal Low Income Housing Tax Credit program (LIHTC) must keep their rents below a specified level for at least 15 years. After that time, property owners can shift to rents based on the current market climate. Our office is well acquainted with the program, as we have been working with tenants in Ft. Lincoln who had their subsidies improperly ended early. In the next five years, 45 other properties in the District will reach the end of their mandated 15 years of affordability. Not sure if reports that D.C. is halfway to the goal of 10,000 affordable housing units takes this into account.

Are Great Teachers Born or Made? | Nick Romeo, August 6, 2014

“…teaching—like any other profession—has its geniuses. Better training could certainly make many mediocre teachers competent, but it’s less likely to make competent teachers extraordinary.” Romeo reviews the premise of Elizabeth Green’s new book, Building a Better Teacher. Which side of the debate are you on?

Some College Athletes Will Now Get Paid—a Little | Sean Gregory, August 7, 2014

Yesterday, the NCAA voted to allow 65 teams from the so-called power conferences (ACC, Big 10, Big 12, Pac 12, SEC, and Notre Dame) further autonomy to make their own rules. In addition to offering athletes a scholarship, schools will now also be able to offer money for extras like food, clothing, and post-season travel to visit family. Nothing could possibly go wrong, right?

With bike lanes, fewer riders on sidewalk, study says | Ashley Halsey III, August 7, 2014

PeopleForBikes survey results show that bike riders are abandoning the sidewalks as the District install more miles of protected bike lanes for them to ride.

People Just Won’t Give Up on Awful Neighborhood Apps | Kriston Capps, August 7, 2014

There is so much wrong with the new app ‘SketchFactor’. It's understandable to want to avoid areas that are proven to have high crime based on data so when you're walking or driving you lower the chances of being a victim of opportunity. However, we know that ‘SketchFactor’ is going to come down to rumor, race and poverty and that's it. We don’t want that for our city. We hope this app has the same fate as all the others.

Stephen Ritz: A teacher growing green in the South Bronx

Pretty inspiring TED Talk from 2012 after our week visiting urban farms around the District.

Comment

Comment

What we're reading: July 30, 2014

Train Delays? Waiting on your pizza delivery? Or just need a casual read while you enjoy your day? Check out what Team Grosso is reading (and watching) this week.

Judge Puts D.C. Handgun Ruling On Hold | Ann E. Marimow and Peter Hermann, July 29, 2014

A federal judge on Tuesday delayed a ruling overturning the District’s long-standing ban on carrying handguns in public, once again making it illegal to have firearms on city streets.

First Lady Obama's Real Answer on Being a Working Mom | Erica Williams Simon, July 24, 2014

The home life and work life balance is a struggle no matter who you are. For the millions of workers all around the country who don't have adequate flexibility in their jobs or employers who support and respect their needs, it's even harder. Fortunately for us all, the first lady totally gets it.

In Labor, In Chains: The Outrageous Shackling of Pregnant Inmates | Audrey Quinn, July 26, 2014

Early one morning in November 2011, Tina Tinen, a pregnant prisoner at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Westchester County, N.Y., woke with painful contractions. Guards called an ambulance to take her to the hospital and shackled her wrist to the bar of a gurney — despite a 2009 state law against shackling pregnant inmates during and after labor.

The Case for Marijuana Reparations | Jamelle Bouie, July 28, 2014

The war on weed was foolish and costly. If we can admit that, then we should also be able to admit that it’s time to make amends to those who were most harmed by those laws.

How a New York Judge Struck Down a D.C. Gun Law | Zoe Tillman, July 28, 2014

U.S. District Senior Judge Frederick Scullin Jr. -- the federal judge who struck down the District of Columbia ban on carrying handguns in public for self-defense -- has a reputation as a no-nonsense jurist who sticks closely to the text of the law.

Why Is St. Elizabeths Such a Snoozer | Aaron Wiener, July 28, 2014

The results are in: Five teams are officially interested in developing a key portion of the city-owned St. Elizabeths East Campus near the Congress Heights Metro. A couple of the firms have extensive experience east of the Anacostia River, but what's conspicuous is the lack of heavy-hitter development firms in the mix.

My Son Has Been Suspended 5 times. He's 3. | Tunette Powell, July 24, 2014

I received a call from my sons’ school in March telling me that my oldest needed to be picked up early. He had been given a one-day suspension because he had thrown a chair. He did not hit anyone, but he could have, the school officials told me. JJ was 4 at the time.

What I've Left Unsaid | Michel Martin, July 26, 2014

Let's be clear: Women of every background face challenges when they try to balance careers and families, not least of which is the expectation that they should feel guilty for working outside the home even when they have no choice. But women of color often face additional pressures that white women are far less likely to encounter.

Traversing two D.C.s, from Dunbar High to Georgetown University | Emma Brown, July 27, 2014

When Johnathon Carrington makes a trip home to visit his mother or get what he considers a decent haircut, the Georgetown University student takes a G2 Metrobus that carries him four miles east across a divide that separates the city where he goes to school from the city where he grew up.

Why Can't the Banking Industry Solve Its Ethics Problems? | Neil Irwin, July 29, 2014

The financial crisis that nearly brought down the global economy was triggered in no small part by the aggressive culture and spotty ethics within the world’s biggest banks. But after six years and countless efforts to reform finance, the banking scandals never seem to end.

Windows Without Prison Bars | Rena Silverman, July 23, 2014

When Paulo Demetrick, a 29-year-old federal prison inmate in Virginia, was asked, “If you could have a window in your cell, what place from your past would it look out to?,” his mind began to race. After 11 years behind bars for robbery, how could he think of just one photograph?

Sentencing Guidelines Drop for Drug Offenders | Stacy M. Brown, July 23, 2014

As a result of the U.S. Sentencing Commission’s July 18 vote, more than 46,000 federal drug offenders will be eligible for early release, unless Congress makes a move to stop the plan by November 1. On average, sentences could be reduced by more than two years.

 

Comment

Comment

Grosso Applauds Implementation of the Sustainable D.C. Act

Grosso Applauds Implementation of the Sustainable D.C. Act

 Washington, D.C. - Today, Councilmember David Grosso (I-At Large) issued the following statement regarding the signing of the Sustainable D.C. Omnibus Amendment Act of 2014 and the launch of the District Department of the Environment's (DDOE) Anacostia River Sediment Project:

"The Sustainable D.C. Omnibus Amendment Act of 2014 is a comprehensive legislative package that creates a pathway to a sustainable future for the District of Columbia. The legislation supports the District building a benchmarking program by making data on energy and water use more accessible; it creates an environmental literacy program, prohibits the sale or use of polystyrene containers for food service and increases the District's tree canopy by requiring payment to offset the destruction or removal of a tree. I worked closely with advocates and the Committee on Transportation and the Environment to craft an amendment to this legislation, which accelerates the implementation deadline requiring food service ware to be compostable or recyclable by 2017 instead of 2018. The amendment was accepted and will help to put the District one step closer to becoming the most sustainable city in the country. With this legislation we will greatly improve the health and wellness of our residents and protect our natural environment.

Today also marks the launch of DDOE's Anacostia River Sediment Project, which will enable us to identify the hazardous toxins in the river and work toward a plan for removal. Recognizing the urgent need to remediate the river, I worked closely with the Committee to establish a statutory deadline of June 30, 2018 for DDOE to adopt and publish a Record of Decision selecting the remedy for remediation. It is my goal to one day swim and fish in the Anacostia, and through their efforts, DDOE is continuing to work to ensure that this goal is achieved."

Comment

6 Comments

Ensuring fairness for bicyclists involved in collisions

By Nikko Bilitza

Councilmember Grosso recently introduced the “Bicycle and Motor Vehicle Collision Recovery Amendment Act of 2014.” This bill would make it easier for cyclists to get compensation for damage sustained in accidents with cars, by ending the legal use of contributory negligence in automobile-bicycle collisions. Contributory negligence is a legal defense that argues that the plaintiff in a negligence case cannot receive compensation if they are even one percent responsible for the damage. For example, Driver A is making a left turn and hits Driver B, who was driving over the speed limit through the intersection.  Driver B sustains injuries and sues Driver A for negligence but loses because Driver B was driving over the speed limit, which contributed to the injury.

Only four states use contributory negligence, a legal defense that is unfair for traffic cases considering that plaintiffs often have to pay off expensive medical bills or vehicle repair bills. This bill will help cyclists who often get the raw end of the deal in traffic cases due to jurors or police misunderstanding how laws apply to cyclists. According to a study by the League of American Bicyclist, only 12% of fatal cyclist accidents resulted in any form of punishment for the driver or compensation for the family of the victim. These cases spurred  Councilmember Grosso to propose legislation switching to a comparative negligence standard, which stipulates that the plaintiff is compensated in proportion to their responsibility for the damage. This change is especially timely, as DDOT and Howard University recently reported a 130% increase in collisions involving cars and cyclists in the District from 2010 to 2012.

Source: Traffic Safety Statistics Report for the District of Columbia (2010-2012), D.C. Department of Transportation and Howard University.

Source: Traffic Safety Statistics Report for the District of Columbia (2010-2012), D.C. Department of Transportation and Howard University.

We need to make sure that cyclists affected in these accidents will receive fair and proportional compensation. The Councilmember is pushing to move the bill forward when the Council reconvenes after the summer recess on September 15.

*This post is part of an ongoing series of posts by Councilmember Grosso’s staff to support professional development. All posts are approved and endorsed by Councilmember Grosso.

6 Comments

Comment

What we're reading: July 23, 2014

If you need something to read on your next flight, while you’re waiting in line for your Starbucks order, or want a break from beach reading…here’s a look at what Team Grosso is reading (and watching) this week.

Why Poor Schools Can’t Win at Standardized Testing | Meredith Broussard, July 15, 2014

How can standardized test be gamed? “Not by using a beat-the-test strategy, but by a shockingly low-tech strategy: reading the textbook that contains the answers.” A good look at the economics of testing and the impacts on urban school districts.

Prison | Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, July 20, 2014

On Sunday’s episode of Last Week Tonight, John Oliver’s main story took a look at the racism and brokenness of America’s prison system. Watch the full clip above and make sure to stay to the end for Oliver's adorable "Broken Prison System" sing-along. "It's a fact that needs to be spoken," Oliver and the Muppets sang. "America's prisons are broken."

Gray Administration Launches New FOIA Website | Will Sommer, July 21, 2014

FOIA requests can now be submitted via this website. The Gray Administration in turn will post almost every FOIA response that the executive branch produces. Yay, transparency!

D.C. police use high-risk stings in battle against armed robberies | Ann Marimow, July 22, 2014

Undercover MPD officers are recruiting people they think are likely to commit armed robberies in high-risk sting operations. In the past two years, these operations have resulted in the convictions of more than a dozen men in federal court. “Critics ask how law enforcement officials can distinguish between someone who is just “puffing” and someone who intends to carry out a crime.” Good question.

Principals in U.S. Are More Likely to Consider Their Students Poor | David Leonhardt, July 22, 2014

We always hear that one cost-free way to help improve public education is improve expectations. Well, this recent study adds more evidence to that claim. The researcher finds that principals’ perceptions of disadvantage correlated more strongly with student performance than actual disadvantage. Perhaps expectations do play a role?

Man exonerated in 1982 D.C. killing; DNA reveals FBI error in conviction | Keith Alexander & Spencer Hsu, July 21, 2014

DNA evidence exonerates a man who spent 26 years in prison in the 1982 killing of a Washington woman. The decision came after a 2 ½ year review of all local convictions involving FBI hair matches that was launched after demands by the D.C. Public Defender Service. “I am free at last. I am humbled. I never gave up,” Martin said, hugging and high-fiving his attorneys. “I just want to live.”

Beyond Subprime Learning | Laura Bornfreund, July 16, 2014

The New America Foundation’s new report, Beyond Subprime Learning: Accelerating Progress in Early Education, provides recommendation for improving the quality of interactions between teachers and children at early ages. Their policy recommendations focus on increased and sustainable public funding and streamlining programs, standards, and eligibility requirements.

Comment

Comment

Marijuana Possession Decriminalization Amendment Act of 2014 Effective Today

The District's law decriminalizing small amounts of marijuana went into effect today. While Councilmember Grosso continues to push for full legalization, with taxation and regulation, he certainly supports the important step we took today. Here is some helpful information prepared by the office of Councilmember Tommy Wells about the new law and what it means. Please contact our office with any questions.

 

Marijuana Possession Decriminalization Amendment Act of 2014

Effective July 17, 2014

Decriminalization is not legalization. The use and possession of marijuana remains illegal, but possession of 1 ounce or less will now be treated as a civil offense, not a crime. Individuals caught with 1 ounce or less of marijuana will be fined $25 and will have all visible marijuana and paraphernalia confiscated.

The MPD has created an explanation webpage (http://mpdc.dc.gov/marijuana) that includes the Act, the MPD’s Special Order for officers, and a handy FAQ palm card.

What is no longer a criminal violation?

  • Possession of 1 ounce or less of marijuana.
  • Transfer of 1 ounce or less of marijuana to another person, so long as there is no payment made or any other type of exchange of goods or services.
  • ·Possession of marijuana-related drug paraphernalia (such as bongs, cigarette rolling papers, and cigar wrappers) associated with the use of 1 ounce or less of marijuana.

What happens when an individual is found with 1 ounce or less?

  • The individual will receive a $25 ticket; and
  • Any visible marijuana or paraphernalia will be seized.

What is still a criminal violation?

  • Possession of more than 1 ounce;
  • Selling any amount of marijuana to another person;
  • Smoking or consuming marijuana in public;
  • Driving or operating a vehicle or a boat while impaired;
  • Refusing to provide an officer with one’s name and address (however, there is no requirement to carry or display proof of identity).

What’s the deal with the smell of pot?

The bill states that the following factors, individually or in combination with each other, will not provide a law enforcement officer with reasonable articulable suspicion of a crime:

  • The odor of marijuana or burnt marijuana;
  • The possession of or the suspicion of possession of marijuana without evidence of quantity in excess of one ounce;
  • The possession of multiple containers of marijuana without evidence of quantity in excess of once ounce; and
  • The possession of marijuana without evidence of quantity in excess of one ounce in proximity to any amount of cash or currency.

The odor provision was included because if the possession or private use of marijuana is no longer a crime, then the smell of marijuana alone would not be evidence of a crime. However, these provisions do not apply when an officer is investigating whether a person is operating or in physical control of a vehicle or a boat while intoxicated, under the influence of, or impaired by alcohol or drugs.

What about the federal law enforcement agencies?

  • Federal law continues to prohibit the possession or use of any amount of marijuana.
  • Federal law enforcement officers may arrest anyone in D.C. for possession or use of any amount of marijuana as a violation of federal law.
  • Prosecutions for federal law violations would be done by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia.

Where do I get more information?

  • LIMS: http://lims.dccouncil.us/Legislation/B20-0409 and click on Bill History for the committee report, amendments, and the enrolled bill.
  • The MPD marijuana page mentioned above:  http://mpdc.dc.gov/marijuana includes a similar FAQ, as well as links to the Special Order the Department has issued to its officers and the palm card MPD is distributing to the public.

Comment

Comment

Media coverage of Grosso's school discipline reform bill

Councilmember Grosso's proposal to prevent suspensions and expulsions of pre-k students has garnered a lot of media coverage this week. The time is ripe for more discussion of discipline in schools and how it relates to the school-to-prison pipeline, and we hope that these news stories contribute that conversation. In addition to MSNB and Fox 5 (videos below) Grosso was also interviewed on Telemundo.

Comment

Comment

Pre-K Student Discipline Amendment Act of 2014

On July 14, 2014, Councilmember Grosso introduced the Pre-K Student Discipline Amendment Act of 2014. The bill follows on Grosso's earlier efforts to bring more transparency to discipline in D.C. Public Schools and D.C. Public Charter Schools, such as mandating the District's first report on school discipline. Grosso is committed to this work as part of addressing the school-to-prison pipeline.

Comment

Comment

Grosso Introduces Critical Legislation to Ban Pre-K Suspensions and Expulsions

Grosso Introduces Critical Legislation to Ban Pre-K Suspensions and Expulsions

 Washington, D.C. - Today, Councilmember David Grosso (I-At Large) introduced the “Pre-K Student Discipline Amendment Act of 2014.” This legislation prohibits the suspension or expulsion of a student of pre-kindergarten age from any publicly funded pre-kindergarten program operating in the District of Columbia. It also establishes annual reporting requirements for each local education agency on suspensions and expulsions data.

 Last month, the Office of the State Superintendent of Education released a report “Reducing Out-of-School Suspensions and Expulsions in the District of Columbia Public and Public Charter Schools.” The report found that during the 2012-2013 school year approximately 10,000 of the District’s 80,000 public school students were suspended at least once. One hundred and eighty one of those students were enrolled in prekindergarten programs.

While I understand that children at times can be difficult, I have a hard time understanding what behavior of a 3 or 4-year old would constitute an out-of-school suspension or expulsion,” said Councilmember Grosso. “We are beginning the school-to-prison pipeline before some students even have the opportunity to fully begin their educational pursuits.”

The adverse effects of out-of-school suspension and expulsion on a student can be profound. Data suggest that students who are involved in the juvenile justice system are likely to have been suspended or expelled. Further, students who experience out-of-school suspension and expulsion are as much as 10 times more likely to ultimately drop out of high school than are those who do not.

The District would not be the first jurisdiction to recognize that when it comes to our youngest students zero tolerance-style school discipline policies are not always appropriate. Just last month, the Chicago Public School Board of Education voted to prohibit the suspension of Pre-K through 2nd grade students except for cases involving extreme safety concerns. In Washington State, students in grades K-4 cannot receive long-term suspensions, and no student in grades K-4 can be suspended for more than a total of 10 school days during any single semester. In 2012, New York City decided that no student in grades K-3 shall be suspended for longer than 5 days.

“The conversation regarding student discipline is ripe in the District of Columbia. Regardless of which sector our youngest public school students begin their education, it is in the public interest that the most extreme options with regard to student discipline be age and developmentally appropriate.”

###

 

Comment