Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fed refusal to go back to work is killing Metro as well; and Metro is already reeling from the pandemic drop in ridership (as well as the crime issues). Do you like being able to take Metro to the Caps or the Nats? They can't run an entire system for the benefit of Nats Park and the Verizon Center. I also just flat out don't believe that people are as efficient working from home 5 days a week. They just aren't---whether private or public. And young people cannot learn job skills (soft or hard) sitting on their sofas at home. We need a reasonable compromise on the work week---maybe Tu-We-Th becomes the new "in office" work week and Fri and Mo are the universal "work from home".
Subway ridership in NYC is still at about 60% of pre-pandemic levels also. So don't just blame federal workers; the private sector workers aren't using subways either. It would be nice if, instead of focusing on easy solutions (like forcing people into the office against their will), metro leadership focused on cleanliness, fare-jumping, crime, safety, and reliability.
Don't forget that DC metro is a lot more expensive than NYC subway where your ticket price is fixed no matter what distance you go and you can purchase a monthly pass for 100 something bucks to ride unlimited on subways/buses, often subsidized by your employer and given for free to public school kids. DC metro isn't affordable for people who need it. For people who have options to drive metro has become undesirable due to crime.
It is not encouraging that WMATA is now trying to bully and prevent the Safety Commission from appropriately doing its job when the transit system has never proved that it can operate safely without that oversight - god forbid the Board would be expected to provide oversight. I’m not interested is riding in an unsafe transit system on trains that have a defect that causes them to derail that has not been identified that are operated by a transit system that doesn’t take safety seriously. No thanks.
That’s not my impression of what Wmata is doing. Seems like WMSC is trying to micromanage them. If Wmata managers can’t make relatively small and simple decisions how can they do their jobs? The operator training hoops they’re having to jump through doesn’t make anything safer, it’s a bureaucratic check the boxes exercise.
(Btw l don’t work for Wmata but follow it with interest)
Anonymous wrote:To be clear, no one is asking for Federal handouts. At all.
I agree that the city needs to get rid of camping on sidewalks. That is a blight and not a good long term solution for unhoused people.
DC government needs to get better at looking critically at developers and creating a good plan for how the city should look in twenty years. I believe it's too early to say that workers will never return to offices at all. But things won't be going back to how they were. That much is clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who would live downtown if they converted office buildings to housing? There is nothing open in some areas, it is empty at night and there are homeless people camping all over the place. I work downtown and it sucks now.
If you make it affordable enough people will come.
I don’t think the mayors goal is to turn downtown into a low income neighborhood. That’s not likely to have the economic effect that is hoped for and it’s also unlikely that any office conversions would take place because they won’t pencil out at affordable rents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fed refusal to go back to work is killing Metro as well; and Metro is already reeling from the pandemic drop in ridership (as well as the crime issues). Do you like being able to take Metro to the Caps or the Nats? They can't run an entire system for the benefit of Nats Park and the Verizon Center. I also just flat out don't believe that people are as efficient working from home 5 days a week. They just aren't---whether private or public. And young people cannot learn job skills (soft or hard) sitting on their sofas at home. We need a reasonable compromise on the work week---maybe Tu-We-Th becomes the new "in office" work week and Fri and Mo are the universal "work from home".
Subway ridership in NYC is still at about 60% of pre-pandemic levels also. So don't just blame federal workers; the private sector workers aren't using subways either. It would be nice if, instead of focusing on easy solutions (like forcing people into the office against their will), metro leadership focused on cleanliness, fare-jumping, crime, safety, and reliability.
Don't forget that DC metro is a lot more expensive than NYC subway where your ticket price is fixed no matter what distance you go and you can purchase a monthly pass for 100 something bucks to ride unlimited on subways/buses, often subsidized by your employer and given for free to public school kids. DC metro isn't affordable for people who need it. For people who have options to drive metro has become undesirable due to crime.
It is not encouraging that WMATA is now trying to bully and prevent the Safety Commission from appropriately doing its job when the transit system has never proved that it can operate safely without that oversight - god forbid the Board would be expected to provide oversight. I’m not interested is riding in an unsafe transit system on trains that have a defect that causes them to derail that has not been identified that are operated by a transit system that doesn’t take safety seriously. No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who would live downtown if they converted office buildings to housing? There is nothing open in some areas, it is empty at night and there are homeless people camping all over the place. I work downtown and it sucks now.
Large and reasonably priced loft style condos from older buildings would be a huge attraction, but there just isn't enough of that type of building I think to make it happen. A lot of DC's commercial building stock is 1970s/1980s generation. Maybe Metro Center area has some buildings that could be attractive for conversions? Not many though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fed refusal to go back to work is killing Metro as well; and Metro is already reeling from the pandemic drop in ridership (as well as the crime issues). Do you like being able to take Metro to the Caps or the Nats? They can't run an entire system for the benefit of Nats Park and the Verizon Center. I also just flat out don't believe that people are as efficient working from home 5 days a week. They just aren't---whether private or public. And young people cannot learn job skills (soft or hard) sitting on their sofas at home. We need a reasonable compromise on the work week---maybe Tu-We-Th becomes the new "in office" work week and Fri and Mo are the universal "work from home".
Subway ridership in NYC is still at about 60% of pre-pandemic levels also. So don't just blame federal workers; the private sector workers aren't using subways either. It would be nice if, instead of focusing on easy solutions (like forcing people into the office against their will), metro leadership focused on cleanliness, fare-jumping, crime, safety, and reliability.
Don't forget that DC metro is a lot more expensive than NYC subway where your ticket price is fixed no matter what distance you go and you can purchase a monthly pass for 100 something bucks to ride unlimited on subways/buses, often subsidized by your employer and given for free to public school kids. DC metro isn't affordable for people who need it. For people who have options to drive metro has become undesirable due to crime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who would live downtown if they converted office buildings to housing? There is nothing open in some areas, it is empty at night and there are homeless people camping all over the place. I work downtown and it sucks now.
If you make it affordable enough people will come.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fed refusal to go back to work is killing Metro as well; and Metro is already reeling from the pandemic drop in ridership (as well as the crime issues). Do you like being able to take Metro to the Caps or the Nats? They can't run an entire system for the benefit of Nats Park and the Verizon Center. I also just flat out don't believe that people are as efficient working from home 5 days a week. They just aren't---whether private or public. And young people cannot learn job skills (soft or hard) sitting on their sofas at home. We need a reasonable compromise on the work week---maybe Tu-We-Th becomes the new "in office" work week and Fri and Mo are the universal "work from home".
Subway ridership in NYC is still at about 60% of pre-pandemic levels also. So don't just blame federal workers; the private sector workers aren't using subways either. It would be nice if, instead of focusing on easy solutions (like forcing people into the office against their will), metro leadership focused on cleanliness, fare-jumping, crime, safety, and reliability.
Anonymous wrote:Who would live downtown if they converted office buildings to housing? There is nothing open in some areas, it is empty at night and there are homeless people camping all over the place. I work downtown and it sucks now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
+1. People who live in DC often take a very narrow-minded view of the suburbs and think that they're just full of people who would live in DC but are priced out. The truth is that many of us are totally happy in the suburbs, and we really only come into DC for work and don't find anything about DC to be particularly enjoyable. I'm sure this is true of other major cities as well; not everyone has bought into the idea that you can't have an exciting and fulfilling life if you don't live in a city.
Suburbanites are parasites on host cities. Film at 11.
Perhaps you should tell our employers to pay us enough to live there then. Given the cost of housing in DC, this isn't an "avoiding property taxes" thing.
The amount of money that I would need to be paid to live in DC in an equivalent safe neighborhood on a large lot on a quiet, tree lined street would be unconscionable. In any case, where I live the infrastructure and government services are much better so even if I was paid enough for the equivalent lifestyle it would not be an equivalent exchange. Particularly since it is vastly more convenient to get around and shop.
LOL, how many people (especially younger people) can afford to have a "large lot on a quiet tree lined street" anywhere? Most cannot afford to buy a home in the suburbs anyway, if you have one and can afford one this doesn't make it reality for everyone. Many people will have to resort to apartment living, and apartment living is objectively nicer in urban grid setting in the city vs. in the suburbs if you reduce crime and homelessness.
There is a reason that Howard County is growing as fast as it is. Others just leave the region entirely and move to the south or southwest. The people who would otherwise be the middle class tax base can afford a single family home with a yard if they move out far enough and the are increasingly willing to do it. DC is left with those wealthy enough to stay, those young enough to not care yet, and those too poor to leave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This isn't an issue unique to DC. Every city now has more teleworking folks than before. The issue is that DC has terrible traffic, terrible crime, terrible public transportation, and a terrible homeless problem, so lots of people have no desire to come into DC unless forced to do so for work reasons.
Show me the city where this isn't a problem. Which city exactly doesn't have increased homeless problem, emptying office buildings and increase in crime?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
+1. People who live in DC often take a very narrow-minded view of the suburbs and think that they're just full of people who would live in DC but are priced out. The truth is that many of us are totally happy in the suburbs, and we really only come into DC for work and don't find anything about DC to be particularly enjoyable. I'm sure this is true of other major cities as well; not everyone has bought into the idea that you can't have an exciting and fulfilling life if you don't live in a city.
Suburbanites are parasites on host cities. Film at 11.
Perhaps you should tell our employers to pay us enough to live there then. Given the cost of housing in DC, this isn't an "avoiding property taxes" thing.
The amount of money that I would need to be paid to live in DC in an equivalent safe neighborhood on a large lot on a quiet, tree lined street would be unconscionable. In any case, where I live the infrastructure and government services are much better so even if I was paid enough for the equivalent lifestyle it would not be an equivalent exchange. Particularly since it is vastly more convenient to get around and shop.
LOL, how many people (especially younger people) can afford to have a "large lot on a quiet tree lined street" anywhere? Most cannot afford to buy a home in the suburbs anyway, if you have one and can afford one this doesn't make it reality for everyone. Many people will have to resort to apartment living, and apartment living is objectively nicer in urban grid setting in the city vs. in the suburbs if you reduce crime and homelessness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Shaw. Been here nearly 20 years. I’m very worried about the direction the city is going in— which is rapidly into a cesspool of crime, blight and vacancy. I think we can’t undo the remote work. I work in DuPont just two days a week and my spouse with full time. Our neighborhood is loud (constant construction which I now worry will sit empty), motorcycles/atvs, loud engines, etc). This has gotten worse, not better. The bike lines sound like a good idea, but have led to ore rush hour congestion, not less, leaving cars to idle longer in traffic, leading to more pollution exposure.
I feel like this is dire. We need big ideas to realign downtown that doesn’t bank on feds and k street suits coming back. We need to get enforcem no public camping and address violent crime with more police and get rid of this woke Coincil. How about converting buildings into live/work loft spaces, with a good number of affordable units. Incentives for small businesses, cafes, etc. destroy ugly, outdated and vacant buildings for green space? Make some core thoroughfares into pedestrian malls with semi permanent outdoor markets and streeteries?
Was just in Paris which was thronging with tourists, tons of restaurants, cafe, markets and small businesses. Besides their culture, what other things do they do to ensure their cities remain vibrant? I noticed street cleaning trucks out everyday picking up litter and washing the streets literally.
Paris is a real world class city, which DC never was. Cities like NY and Paris have tourists and hoarded of people who want to live there regardless of employment.
DC is a company town. Very few people would ever aspire to live here if they won the lottery. There has always been limited high end shopping and entertainment. The mayor and local government made a huge mistake going all in on Covid. While it was nice to go against and hurt Trump, they ended up only hurting themselves. Remote work to a certain extent is here to stay and it will likely take DC decades to recover.
I saw the writing on the wall during the protests and sold my property in DC. A city does not have a great future if it’s allowing that kind of behavior while keeping schools closed and punishing small businesses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
+1. People who live in DC often take a very narrow-minded view of the suburbs and think that they're just full of people who would live in DC but are priced out. The truth is that many of us are totally happy in the suburbs, and we really only come into DC for work and don't find anything about DC to be particularly enjoyable. I'm sure this is true of other major cities as well; not everyone has bought into the idea that you can't have an exciting and fulfilling life if you don't live in a city.
Suburbanites are parasites on host cities. Film at 11.
Perhaps you should tell our employers to pay us enough to live there then. Given the cost of housing in DC, this isn't an "avoiding property taxes" thing.
The amount of money that I would need to be paid to live in DC in an equivalent safe neighborhood on a large lot on a quiet, tree lined street would be unconscionable. In any case, where I live the infrastructure and government services are much better so even if I was paid enough for the equivalent lifestyle it would not be an equivalent exchange. Particularly since it is vastly more convenient to get around and shop.