I used to stop by the Wawa every once in awhile but it's been feeling less and less safe. Now I don't feel safe at all! What is happening? |
I'd follow your instincts. There was the recent huge melee inside/outside WAWA and Tuesday this assault by juveniles by the metro/Target/escalator. Is that still the only escalator working? If so, like fish in a barrel. Deal and JR have to be engaged and help identify the kids. |
Absolutely, the interest rates right now are definitely holding people back. I love DC but this is insanity right now. We shouldn’t be living like this. |
Independent here and agree with you but you can't ignore the democratic local politicians who have removed SROs from schools. |
I can’t ignore the politicians that are filling my building with homeless and mentally ill. |
Been here for over 40 years and DC is better than it was in the 80s and 90s. However, it and surrounding suburbs have been steadily and rapidly declining since 2020, and no I don't blame it just on the pandemic. |
It’s not the rates but also the lack of inventory. I know a family that sold up in Bloomingdale last year and have been renting an apartment in downtown Bethesda since waiting for anything to come on the market under $3 million. If Montgomery County did what the YIMBYs want and make it easier to build duplexes, it would absolutely destroy DCs tax base because so many people would leave. |
Been here 35 years and Ward 3 is the worst it’s ever been. |
Yep, a lot of areas in Ward 3 are worse than they’ve ever been. For instance, apartments on Connecticut Avenue. I know people who have lived there for decades that are set to move because the city moved a bunch of violent criminals into their buildings at the same time the city decided it wasn't going to enforce any laws against the criminals. So it’s open season against the law abiding residents there.
Tenleytown definitely seems sketchier than I’ve ever seen it before. I used to be there a lot at midnight, and it was empty. I was there at midnight the other night and I saw a number of disheveled individuals pulling on doors trying to get the closed establishments. I’ve even seen tents at Ft. Reno, which I never saw in the past. A student tried to shoplift at the CVS some decades back, he was detained by the manager, numerous police cars came, they photographed him, banned him from the store, and told Wilson (now Jackson-Reed). A few weeks back I saw a kid just openly shoplift right in front of a police officer at the Whole Foods. To his credit, the police officer stopped him, but the kid didn’t seem to care at all, and was just acting annoyed and ignoring the officer. These people know that nothing will happen to them. Did anyone read the recent DC Crime Facts article? A woman took a gun and tried to murder another woman with it. She was sentenced to probation - zero prison time for attempted murder. |
This is absolutely true. Maybe only Spring Valley and Wesley Heights are better. Everything else unquestionably true. |
https://wallethub.com/edu/cities-homicide-rate/94070
We are once again the murder capital. |
Yes. You need to keep your head on a swivel when walking on Wisconsin. Once you hit the Maryland line at Friendship Heights, everything feels safe again. But going south into Tenleytown feels very sketch. It was never like that. What the hell happened over the past three years? And no, it's not Covid. Clearly, all of DC needs new leadership. And new judges. And new prosecutors. And new jails. And new juvenile detention centers. We're losing the city to a few hundred repeat offenders who fear nothing. |
DC Needs:
Nightly street cleaning crews, like Europe Union Station cleaned up and back in business Gum scraped off sidewalks Rat eradication Booting and towing Md and VA tickets paid Petty crime (turnstile hopping addressed) A crime plan and more |
What happened was that there was a slow build up over time where Ward 3 was getting less safe and worse, predominantly driven by two factors. First, new development in other parts of the city attracted the young professionals away, and second, the city has had an intentional policy of “burden sharing” which has basically meant that a Ward 3 has been first in line to accept a lot of unhoused residents, many of which are significantly disturbed. A third factor, which has always been true for DC but more salient in the last few years are families with school aged kids moving out. Combine all of this together and this is the result. |