Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all need to get behind Councilwoman Brooke Pinto’s Secure DC initiative. Please read up on it. It is not perfect but it is a start and she is the only one taking about this.
For those of you in Ward 3- please bombard Matt Frumin’s office with emails, Tweets etc and ask him to take a stand on this bill. He has not come out in favor of it. When I have tried contacting him to ask for his opinion and support I get no response. This is unacceptable. We must push him to stop his waffling in this important issue.
Is this how to get behind it? Anything else? I agree, she is the only Councilmember even remotely acknowledging the spike in crime.
Yes this is very important. Please join the several people that I know of in my neighborhood who have committed to calling/ emailing Frumin on a daily basis until we get a response. He is ignoring us at his peril.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's ludicrous that we live in such a dangerous city AND 911 is dysfunctional AND the crime lab is dysfunctional. I hope people will call as many of these folks as you can tomorrow and just let it rip!
https://dccouncil.gov/councilmembers/
As recently as 2009, the rate of adult illiteracy in D.C. was 36% overall. In some Wards, including Ward 8, the rate was well over 40%.
Gentrification helped lower that rate, by pushing the illiterate people out of DC and into PG and other parts of MD.
D.C. has a long history of being dysfunctional. You will not want to hear this (and resist accepting the reality) but it all began with home-rule.
I was born right here in DC and have long been opposed to statehood. I am just fine with Congress stepping in when things get wacky. By the way, where are they? STEP IN!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all need to get behind Councilwoman Brooke Pinto’s Secure DC initiative. Please read up on it. It is not perfect but it is a start and she is the only one taking about this.
For those of you in Ward 3- please bombard Matt Frumin’s office with emails, Tweets etc and ask him to take a stand on this bill. He has not come out in favor of it. When I have tried contacting him to ask for his opinion and support I get no response. This is unacceptable. We must push him to stop his waffling in this important issue.
Is this how to get behind it? Anything else? I agree, she is the only Councilmember even remotely acknowledging the spike in crime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Mayor has proposed new legislation on crime, the ACT NOW Act: https://mayor.dc.gov/release/mayor-bowser-announces-new-legislation-support-safe-and-effective-policing-address-retail
I called Frumin's Office to express that crime is my family's #1 priority and we expect him to support crime prevention and consequences. This includes the Mayor's Act, Pinto's Act and any others that address crime.
I hope everyone else who feels concerned by this crime wave can contact their Councilmembers. You can click through to the Council Members below. I usually call the general contact number for each, which goes to constituent services --
https://dccouncil.gov/councilmembers/
Only in DC does making already illegal things even more … illegal’er…. count as “doing something”.
Pathetic. Residents of this city are getting exactly what they deserve. They voted for each and every one of these idiots.
Anonymous wrote:The Mayor has proposed new legislation on crime, the ACT NOW Act: https://mayor.dc.gov/release/mayor-bowser-announces-new-legislation-support-safe-and-effective-policing-address-retail
I called Frumin's Office to express that crime is my family's #1 priority and we expect him to support crime prevention and consequences. This includes the Mayor's Act, Pinto's Act and any others that address crime.
I hope everyone else who feels concerned by this crime wave can contact their Councilmembers. You can click through to the Council Members below. I usually call the general contact number for each, which goes to constituent services --
https://dccouncil.gov/councilmembers/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure how this is fixable in the current environment
https://twitter.com/MusserRyan/status/1716093626315415728
Unreal. That needs to be sent straight to the news investigation. People die when 911 isn't answered.
It’s honestly scary. The city has given up and there is no capacity or competence to perform basic state functions.
The only things that the mayor or council seem willing to do is shovel money to favored NGOs and companies or create new high paid government positions for “coordination”.
No one is willing to commit to just make basic government functions work for residents unless someone else can make a buck off it.
"If DC had statehood they would finally have the resources to address these issues."
I agree that our prosecution system is complicated, with the federal/local split. And that impacts the crime we are seeing. I am trying to figure out who is responsible for the chronic undercharging of gun crimes. The Feds or us or both. Other than that, we are over resourced. We are just dumb with how we use our resources.
Why not just start with the things fully within DCs control that are completely out of control?
- 911
- Crime Lab
Before anyone worries about what the Feds is doing or not doing, DC is fully empowered to fix these things on its own without anyone help.
These are the low hanging fruit and it’s deeply concerning that there is no will to do anything about it.
Mendelson and Bowser’s plan is to ask the Feds for a special appropriation for the crime lab.
Robert White’s plan is to fix 911 through offering hiring bonuses.
Does any of this sound serious considering how deeply dysfunctional these organizations are?
Anonymous wrote:This problem can’t be solved through politics or policing. I just witnessed a group of teens coming out of a CVS pockets full of soda and chips, laughing their butt off. These were middle class kids (in no DC), all thinking it was soooooo funny. How do we solve that? It’s not policing. I don’t even think parenting. It’s as if everyone has lost the ability to live in a society where THINGS MATTER. It’s all just a joke to these kids. How do we get them to care?
Anonymous wrote:Welfare reform - start enforcing the time limits like almost every state does
Stop building luxury high rises in neighborhoods where the existing residents couldn’t afford the rent. Instead build smaller buildings that existing residents could afford with a small stretch
Mandatory reading and math tutoring for high school students to ensure that students graduate high school being able to read and do basic math. Also provide dyslexia screening in all schools at regular intervals.
Anonymous wrote:This problem can’t be solved through politics or policing. I just witnessed a group of teens coming out of a CVS pockets full of soda and chips, laughing their butt off. These were middle class kids (in no DC), all thinking it was soooooo funny. How do we solve that? It’s not policing. I don’t even think parenting. It’s as if everyone has lost the ability to live in a society where THINGS MATTER. It’s all just a joke to these kids. How do we get them to care?
Anonymous wrote:Y’all just trying to restart the school-to-prison pipeline for Black kids.
Anonymous wrote:It was bad in the early 90s, and then the city voted Tony Williams in. He was practical and smart. We need to vote out people on the council and ANCs who pretend crime is not an issue. Need Tony Williams 2.0
Anonymous wrote:Y’all just trying to restart the school-to-prison pipeline for Black kids.