I agree too. Having housing choice is critically important. Up til now, they have really only focused new development on maximizing housing units and amenities for 20-30 somethings. What is happening is that these millennials that moved to NOMA are now realizing that it is a terrible neighborhood for kids and want to move to NW instead because it is more comfortable for kids - but cannot afford it. So now the pressure is to create more housing in NW and turn NW into NOMA. A little bit of foresight could have considered that Millennials would age out of these massive apartment blocks and consider that perhaps making each neighborhood friendly to raising kids so that people don't need to migrate around the city over time to meet their needs would be a much better plan. But that would have gotten in the way of developers maximizing their profits and there seems to be an overeager group of people who view any attempts to temper developers to improve community sustainability as tantamount to commiting racism. So now, here we are. |
+1 Plus, the pools and sports fields were closed for most of last year. It was a devastating year for families with younger children. No wonder many have fled. |
Closure of the fields and rec facilities just exacerbated the main issue, which is that most neighborhoods in DC have inadequate parks and green space. The city had an opportunity to rectify that a little bit with this decade long development binge and decided as a matter of policy not to. It was not their priority. |