| Tenleytown has gotten dirtier and less safe over the last 10 years or so. |
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Did anyone watch this meeting? You can see it here (second and third from the top): https://dc.granicus.com/viewpublisher.php?view_id=2 I didn't watch all 7 hours, but I went through and listened to about 50 of the speakers, and the vast majority of them were advocates for criminals who were arguing that the criminal justice system in D.C. is far too harsh. About half of the speakers were wearing the exact same “Protect Second Look, Care Not Cages” t-shirts. |
Oh come on. Nowhere near half were wearing the shirts you claim. While Frumin is an idiot whose few policy ideas are harvested from his former primary opponents, but he isn't an advocate for criminals. |
| Like many elected officials, Frumin mistakenly took his election as a mandate when his R opponent actually received a high percentage of votes for this area, including mine. He leans progressive, which is fine, but he adopted the more extreme progressive/libertarian agenda of some of his primary opponents and it is hurting him with his base. Crime is a top concern in ward 3, schools are a second, and he better pay attention if he wants to get reelected. And people in Chevy Chase and Cleveland Park do not want their neighborhoods to become like NoMa, Why can't DC have different kinds of neighborhoods? |
Are you looking at the right video? "Committee on the Judiciary & Public Safety, Public Hearing, Brooke Pinto, Chairperson," they added a few so it's not longer second and third from the top. If people here don't have time to watch it, I invite them to spend 30 seconds clicking around. Anyone who does will immediately see the exact same pro-criminal shirt (it's the black t-shirt with white lettering) worn by a large percentage of the witnesses at the hearing. |
This is false. You can go back to Polly Shackleton and Jim Nathanson and on to Kathy Patterson and Mary Cheh to see that the relative percentage of votes received by Frumin was consistent with Ward 3 voters back to the beginning of Home Rule. |
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Actually, I just looked
https://electionresults.dcboe.org/election_results/2022-General-Election Frumoin received almost 76% of the vote. The Ward average going back is closer to 70-72%, so he actually outpolled historical norms. Next time, please post with facts. |
Yep, he outpolled Mary by a few points. Also, the snowflakes on this forum are ridiculous. Yes, there are a few homeless people who have taken root in areas around the Tenley retail area. They generally don't bother anyone. One of them has been here for like 10 years. Walking around the Tenley neighborhoods, what do you see? People out in their yards, neighbors walking or biking around. It's quiet. It's clean. It's ... upper middle to lower upper class. Is it some cloistered, gated community with cul-de-sacs? No. And if you want that, then gtfo of the city and move to the burbs. |
Mary eventually came to the correct realization that Ward 3 was on a dangerous crime trajectory and made a series of passionate and courageous statements (for a DC Democrat) on the subject. Frumin, a retirement aged career politician who ran for Congress, amazingly does not appear to have ANY thoughts on the crime crisis. He’s just “listening”, as usual. I think most folks have fairly low expectations of the Council who are collectively an unimpressive lot with almost no possibility for gainful employment outside elective office. There was some hope that Frumin could be a counterbalance given that he has no ambition for higher office. But, so far he’s been an absolute disappointment on our block which had three stolen cars and one of the looted CVS. |
| While I am aggressively anti-crime and think that the way tenant cities are headed in regards to criminal justice is a travesty, I lol a bit at this thread. When I grew up Tenleytown was an absolute mad house when school would get out, and it was a lot more hood kids, gangs, etc. Pre-addition Wilson used to be a nasty spot — graffiti and trash everywhere. M not sure if it’s backslid at all, but I still can’t imagine tenley in 2023 being worse than tenley in the mid and late 2000’s. |
I’ve worked in Tenleytown for 20 years and it is completely different now than then. That was just rowdy kids and chaos at the crosswalks. Not ideal but not that much of an issue. Completely different from today. |
| Yes. Troubling. |
| +1. Lived here 30 years. This is the worst I’ve seen it. |
| I was happy to read this this morning. Apparently this crew was involved in the shooting outside of JR: https://www.axios.com/local/washington-dc/2023/07/06/kennedy-street-crew-dc |