Diversity out the ying-yang

I’ve been advertising somewhat for a roommate. My problem, diversity. I’m comfy with it, actually it benifits me. However potential roommates, problem. I don’t think a lot of people are comfortable with economic diversity. Can you stand to live next door to the poor? What about the working class, people who dump your garbage and clean your toilets at work, the guy who fixes the thing-a-ma-jig, the mover guys? Can you tolerate them kicking back after a weeks worth of work or coming back home after some fairly odd non-business hours? Can you also deal with the fact that your new neighbors who look like you are replacing those working class families? One day the woman who works at the bank as a teller with her 2 kids, next a single guy who is in charge of the IT department who went to Brown U. Or what about the gay couple who work for a non-profit that bought the house once owned by a retiree housing her kids and grandkids?

Now mix.

I have been encountering interviewees that I swear have only lived in strictly middle class neighborhoods, thinking of diversity only in terms of race or religion. They can deal with their own economic kind but anything that whiffs of poor and indescreet (they’re poor and they don’t keep it to themselves) screems ‘unsafe’ & ‘high crime’. Maybe that is true. Then there is the replacement factor, the new residents vs the old.

My block is diverse out the ying yang. My neighbor has decided to figure out who else is gay on the block and point them out (isn’t there some sort of rule against that? Anyway current count 5 gay men, and 1 suspected lesbian). There are the black families who have been on the block since forever, the one Latino family, the buppies (Black yuppies, I think I’m one), the Section 8s, the working class family, the working class-business man (works w/ his hands, gets paid WELL), professionals, various non-blacks, seniors, kids, just-outta college, Jews, Catholics, the 7th Day Adventist folks and what have you.

Diversity. Out the ying yang.

Neighbors,

I received a call from Ward Five Council Member VIncent Orange’s office

today, informing me that Council Member Jim Graham is going to hold a

public

hearing regarding the “Disposition of Square 553, Lot 844, also know as

the

Armstrong Adult Educaton Center, Approval Resolution of 2003.” As it

was

explained to me, the purpose of the hearing is to receive guidance as

to

whether Armstrong should be declared a surplus property in the

District’s

inventory. If it is declared a surplus property, then the District of

Columbia Government would be free to sell it, presumably, to the

highest

bidder or to dispose of it in some other way.

I am told that the hearing will take place on Tuesday, March 9, 2004,

in

Room 123 of the John WIlson Building, 1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.,

commencing at 1:00 p.m. If you would like to sign up to testify at the

hearing or would like to submit a written statement concerning your

point of

view on the matter, the contact person for making those arrangements is

Steven Hernández, Legislative Counsel Sub-Committee on Human Rights,

Asian-PI and Latino Affairs, and Property Management; Office of Ward

One

Councilmember Jim Graham, 202-724-8107.

Although the specific issue before the Sub-Committee concerns the

determination as to whether the city should give Armstrong a surplus

designation, I am certain that Mr. Graham would also be interested in

hearing the many different opinions that neighborhood residents have

with

respect to its next use, i.e., from luxury condos to charter school to

community center.

Best,

Jim Berry

ANC 5C

MONTHLY Meeting Notice

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Invited Guests Include Representatives from the Following:

Third District, Metropolitan Police Department

Department of PublicWorks

North Capitol Healthy Families Collaborative

Monday, March 1, 2004

Mount Sinai Baptist Church

3rd and Q Streets, N.W.

Rooms 1 and 2

7:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m.

For more information regarding the meeting and/or the Association,

contact

J. Berry at (202) 387-8520

WHAT!!!

Got the tax assessment. Someone is smoking some serious crack downtown. My neighbors got it worse, the city says their house is worth over 1/2 a million dollars. Nah! We got crack heads 1 block up. Even with the new kitchen the house isn’t worth that much.

I tell you, serious crack being smoked.

Not quite there yet

In the Washinton Post article they talk about businesses near the Convention Center that haven’t benifited yet from the Center. Part of the problem, I think, is that the are doesn’t look open for business. Even some open business don’t look open with the dirty windows and you can’t see the lights on. Despite the signs, nope, signs can be deceptive. As far as I know, you were open, but closed and never bothered to take down the sign. Also post hours, that’s my pet peeve, no posted hours.

Oh Joy

I was walking on S Street to the Shaw metro, not my usual route, but I had to drop something off at the Post Office on Florida, and saw them. Two wood art deco pieces of furniture, sitting on the sidewalk. I looked at them. They had all their drawers. One was a chest the other was a ….. about 3 ft tall, one drawer on top, a cabinet door… I debated about being late for work, getting a Flexcar and grabbing them and taking them home. I looked at my Palm for the time, I had missed the early train and I’d be 30-1hr late if I went to the R Street side for the car…. So I grabbed the little piece and dragged into the metro system.

It’s here with me at work. Getting it home might be a bitch. Getting it in the building and through security was a new one.

It is so cute. It has a glass door knob. It does have water damage on the top and sections of that wood will need replacing, the paint job is shot too.

But I’m happy.

Important Follow-up Session to Citizen Summit III

Neighbors,

Please be reminded that a follow-up session to Citizen Summit II will

be held tomorrow, Tuesday, February 10, 2004, at Trinity College, 125

Michigan Avenue, N.E., O’Connor Auditorium. This sessions is for residents of

Ward Five. Mayor Anthony Williams is scheduled to be present to tell us

what he learned at Citizen Summit III, as well as to respond to any questions

that residents might have with respect to neighborhood priorities. The

doors will open at 6:00 p.m. and the session is planned to begin at 7:00 p.m.

Hope to see you there!

One for Shaw – 2004-01-26 – Washington Business Journal

Too exciting for words if it were to come true.

They would be in my little 4 block world. Quick explaination, my 4 block world is what is immediately near my house, places I’m willing to venture out to when it is cold and dark. Having a big office, sorry UPO and Africa House don’t count, that would attract eateries beyond the greasy carryout become more of a possiblity when a bunch of offices come around. The negative is they attract people who don’t believe in leaving their cars.

State of the District

Today 7pm Lincoln Theatre, near Ben’s Chili Bowl

Mayor Anthony A. Williams will present the 2004 State of the District Address on Tuesday, February 3, 2004, at 7:00 PM at the Lincoln Theater, 1215 U Street, NW. Admission is free, and no tickets or reservations

are required. Doors open at 6:00 PM.

The theater is across the street from the Green Line METRO’s U Street/Cardozo/African American Civil War Memorial station’s 13th and U Streets entrance.

For more information, contact the Office of Community Outreach at 202-442-8150.

If you experience a power outage in the morning.

Neighbors,

Please find below a message from Pepco’s Ted Trabue re. possible power

outages.

Jim Berry

ANC 5C

“As you know the District of Columbia is expecting inclement weather tomorrow morning. In the event that the weather causes power outages please call our outage line 1(877) 737-2662. This is an automated line that can accept up to 100,000 calls per hour. Customer Service Representatives

can also be reached by calling this number. ”

Best Regards,

Ted Trabue, Pepco